TIIE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OltEuON THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 7. 1921 5 CIT Y NEWS IN BRIEF Two Couple Appear- Marriage ' licences were issued Juesday to Fred It. Birch, baker, of Ealem, and Harriet M. Living ston',! bookkeeper, pf Salem; and to Sanitiel Eugene Adkins. far mer pf Scoots Mills, and Altha X. Greenfield, teacher, of Salem; I . For Bent a Cozy Three Room . Furnished apartment,, ground floor, T.p: Albert?8G4 Mill St. Adv. Wallace Farm Kntcrtalri Mrs. J. H. Adams of Marsh field, who has been visiting at the home of her parents,, Mr. and Mrs. Tv H. Wallace of? Salem route' s returned to her home Funday. Mrs, Walter Firth of I.awrene, Mass.. is also a visitor at the Wallace residence. She Is a sister of Mrs. Wallace. Judo HuhImtt III i ... m " A slight Illness i the cauao or County Judge Hushey'g absence from: his office for the past two days. Friends of the well known county official have i been reas- surea concerning a repon inai uc was seriously ill. maker enlisted in the United States navy May 7. 1917, and was discharged with the rating Of chief pharmacist's mate, June IS, 1919. He is now associated with a San Francisco clinical lab oratory, j. t L'ianoH for Kent i II. L. Stiff Fum. Co. --Adv. i Mr. People IUovrring j II. W. Wendeie is in Salem with Ks Bister. Hev. Bertha M. Peoples, who recently underwent a very serious operation; for tu mor. She is progressing as well as could be expected. Ihey are Old residents of Salem, iow liv ing at La Comb, Or., atad have many friends here. They are ac companied by Mrs. Peoples' son. Carl Morris. Mr. Wendelie is gen eral chairman and business agent of the International Brotherhood bf Firemen and Oilers of the pnion 1'acific system lineia. Chicken Dinner Kvrry Sunday Tables and counters. Jack's Cafei 1G3 S. Commercial St. -Adv Naval CVrtlfkate Ilegistcred County Clerk Hover yesterday received for recording the naval discharge . certificate of Ivan floyd Schumaker, former student of Salem high school.! Mr. Schu- "The Bronze Bell" An Oriental Surprize Coming: Sunday 'Deception.. . trowti Fitted at Tyler" Drug store by an expert in the business.- (Adv.) Notice to Irrigator Irrigators on flat rate will please observe the followjng rules. All houses having even 'numbers 'are limited to irrigate on; Monday- Wednesday, Friday and; Sunday; iodd numbers on Tuesdar, Thurs day, Saturday and Sunday. Hours for irrigating, 6 to 8 a.jnv, 5 to jJ p. . ro. Salem Water, j Light & Power company. Adv. ,' Charged With H per ding A. E. Oldenburt of route 8 de posited a bond of $3 in the pollcs Court yesterday; for his appear ance at a hearing at '11:45 this morning to answer a charge of speeding. He was arrested Officer Hayden for speeding Stats street. by on Reward Offers I i A reward of ." apice will be given for the return of Herbert West, aged 1". and Kaymond Kinger, aged 13, who escaped from the -state reform school Tuesday afternoon abont 4 O'cloe. West has blu? eyes, a ruddy complexion, and Fpeaks t.ith a husky voire because of throat trouble. Kinper has blue eves, with browu hair closHj (lipped. Adv. jieventv Onts in (liicatro 1 A Chicago man and his wii who are visiting in Salem, in con versation with a man up a tre yesterday the man was picking FLoyal Anne cherries Informen him that the Uoyal Amies sHl in Chicago at 70 cents a pound, it least that is what the man from Chicago paid ror them just before he left there late in June. Santa Barbara; Marshall, Hooper, Klamath Falls; A. J. Hudson and wife. Grand Ronde; Mrs. Clarence Bobson, Klamath Falls: V. T. Leitch, Vancouver; W. L. McCan aghy. Vancouver; J. M. ryott, Stayton; J. H. Culp. Albany; Rob ert Buell. San Francisco: C. L. Kaslof. L. A.; John E. Kreikson. Seattle; D. A. Crabtree, Chehalis, Wash.; F. A. Sikes. Corvajlis; B. Kauhe. Sidney; H. E. Marty. Eu gene; William Rithrath and wire, Seattle; Robert Alton. New York; Cliff Lancaster. New York. y. SESS1 PUUUS PARADE -t- Kruit to tw Kxhibitod i Manager T. K. McCroskey of the Commercial club on Wednes day sent to the State Chamber of Commerce at Portland, a box ot !ambert cherries on the incredi bly leaded limbs with the leaves still attached, and a boy of lo ganberries o the choicest strain grown anywhere around Salem The fruit is to be placed on exhi ition at the Portland headquar ters. fcon Stiff for Atvnin H. Li. Stiff FUrn. Co. Adv. Pallas Man Arrested j William Young of Dallas last night deposited $r withj the po lice as bond for his appearance at a hearing today. Yo:in was ar rested by Officer White, who charged him with cutting a cor ner while turning south! on High from State street. Legal RlanKs Get them at The Statesman of fice. Catalog on application. Adv. t A Classified Ad .! Will bring you a buyer. Hobo Caa.s Troubl A Mr. Sears of 1422 Lse street reported to police headquarters Tuesday night , that hobos had been bothering residents' in that vicinity. Officer Vlctorj was sent to investigate and having found the disturbers ushered 'them to the gates of the city. I !. Bet Makes of Standard ' talking machines Stlf fa. Adv. i at Hartman's Glasses i Easier and Better Wear them and tee HARTMAN BROS. ffaone 1255 galena, Oregon NOMKING fpiteln at 162 V. OemmarcUl rtrMt Cfcop Buy. ooai w ""' vaa dtakM. U man and Arlaks VT OP I " J ' j Special Snnday . tcc-alar S15.0O Thor Vacuum i CIcnner, Our; rrlce ' TfiLKUTIlia BlAClUNB ! EXCIN'EERINQ XJ. Fnrfoits $10 Bail John A. Wilson failed to ap pear in the police court; yesterday and - f orf e ted a 110 bohd to an awer to a charge of speeding. Just the Thing for Outing No. 4 Victrola. Stiffs; Adv. 137 Court St. Ihone 488 Motor IVFeler Stolm The loss of a motor meter from his automobile while he had It parked at Dreamland r?nk Satur day night, was reported to cniei Moffltt yesterday by Theron Hoover ot on.- iortft cottage street. A m;ter answering that description was among,1 the arti cles returned to the station by Chief Motrin which welre said to have been stolen by Roy Living ston, now under charge! of grand larceny. The meter at the station owner as yJt. V JUST RECEIVED Kasoos Perfect Llqnld TatoU Reasonable Prices Mill Wnnl Five loads of 16-Inch inside mill wood, $18.75. Buy now, prompt delivery; also prompt delivery on box -wood and planer trimmings. 1215 8. Coml St. Thone 1868 l"r Bprtof Tlntl Ordr Fwp The BALEM NURSERY 1 CO. si uaawvH, i r Capital ForBltura Hardware 0.spaalding Logging Co.-Adv. k& N Commercial rnon SulU Cleaned i... ..U..J I RIGDON & Cult PrARHAil ih - t W Salem Cleaners & Dyers SON Leading Morticians BALIM Webb&Clough Co. Funeral Directori We pay 2c aboye the tnarket orice for eggi and products i PEOPLE'S CASH STORE Do you u TURKISH BATHS If not, why nojtT No otber bathi or treatment eaa produce the permanent re lief to Ihe person ufterlng from dUareobl cold or all men t of this flesh or body like the Turkish Batas will. Open 8 a. m. untu lp.m. OREGON BATH rIOUSE Lady and Oentlemea attend- anU i (lovrrdale Orchards VlMitd Fruit Inspector S. H. Van Trump visited orchards Wedrte3 day in the Cloverdale and Pringle districts. He reports excellent conditions in orchards of those districts. In the Cloverdale sec tion, many loganberry growers are drying their product. Kinky Freight Siding Replaced by Company Salem used to have the crook odest railroad over built; crooked, that is, as to its rails. It was the freinht siding on the down town line of . the Southern Pacific be tween Hieh and Commercial streets. A snake track would oe a taneent comDared to it: a blind mole with only three legs would make a straight track beside this curious bit or construction. n looked like a fancy, trilling Eye- Talian singer with the ague sinK- ins " I Lo-u-u-u-ve Yo-u-u-u, and shivering with the cold to boot. But it is now no more. It has been straightened; heavy rails have been put in place of the kinky little curlicue steel ribbons that used t twist like barb wire with the passing traffic, and keep the twist out of pure cusseanesa. The new rails are twics as heavy and many times as straight; in deed, they've lost every mark of distinction, and so Salem has lost its one outstanding railroad land mark, that warped track that used to be the daily astonisher for everyone who expected it to crawl away into a hole and never come back. Thousands Will March In In Streets dt New York Sing Militant Hymns he added, would "Have to face the threat of farther depression. Tax llcvisoB luf l irst "It seems particularly inappro priate." he said, "to give present consideration . to the measur when we still have before us ttie pressing problem ef revising tte I SHAW HERE TG DIIVDDnnilPTC uu r uuuuid Ready to Take Any Kind Of Fruit Grown Here civil tax laws, and finding sum cient revenues to meet the exist-i " , line requirements of government i Th:s problem must be dealt with Sjjrj Jose Manufacturer !iu tne midst of .extreme and wiae- spread industrial depression. ; These conditions affect not., only j industry in our own country, but : are world-wide. ' . . NEW YORK, July 6. Ideals of j - our first concern, or course, i "" Christian cuiztuMiip drpw to New should be to make full provision! . kir in i tro innr York today M"f detegates from , for tne needs of tiisahled veterans. S JMmo HNU JLLLIuO IV! HUt. nearly all arti of the civiliz.-d To that obieet the rountrv t I world to at tend! the sixth world s pledged to give thou stint of ;;s: 1 " Christian Ejndtavor convention J resources. It would ! unfor; u- i ... . . which-opens; topight and contin- j nate in the extreme while we ar- uainorntan uommcnis un ues through July U. The last Utill strueclins: with thit nroi. em. vention was held I to dissipate our n-sunes in a jsweepini: plan for e-asth pavmenis embracing the i to able-bodied ex-soi.Iiers am; more than 1 0 , sailors. " t'itmftufiuce, Say iH-miM-rat Senator Cilderwood deseiihei; hill :i "rinl it inu 1 p(itiiiiifl it.A . iinf-y .nans ain ""j i"""1"-1 i l ne plan ot p-i,iiinc out ' cas:i In Canada was rjepresentea. , payments of t cmarteriv leaiure oi ine j wo.l)d Ilol ,he sodiers. He be a parade on ! challer. eed the lipmihif.-am rr internatiiMJal; coi), iu C'hijaco in 1M1 Thev delecatef reliaious faith Of denominations Societies with 4,000;Oim). Every srate in jthe A spectacular convention will Fifth iavenup Saturday manyi thousands tant hymns as 5or:esj of ilOatsl portaiit epochs Couple Secure IJcense A marriage licens? was issuen yesterday to Glenn A. Smith. clerk of Mill City and Mary E. Pearmme, also of Mill City. Mooro Answers Complaint An answer was filed yesterday In the act'.ot of August H. Ohms. against H. L. Moore. In his an swer the d'endant asserts that Mr. Moore has broken the eon tract and agreement made In con nection with the purchase of a parcel of land sold to Moore at. a purchase price of $12,750. By re moving more than a carload ot wood from th property wunoui paying stnmpage. Mr. Ohm con tends that the plaintiff has failed to live up to agreement ana bbks the court to grant a stay in plain tiffs action against him. Two Boys Escape from State Training School The escape of Herbert West, 16, and Raymond Kinger, 13, was re ported yesterday by Superinten dent Gilbert of the state training school. The boys escaped about 4 o'clock from the play ground. Both boys were trusties and had been in the school for some time It is thought that the boys will attempt to find work in some berry field before they try to reach their homes in Portland. Superintendent Gilbert has of fered a reward of $5 each for their return. He described West as having blue eyes, a ruddy com plexion, curly brown hair and a rather husky voice. Kinger haF blue eyes and brown hair, clipped close VALLEY TENNIS J TOURNAMENT OPEN (Continued from page 11 Firm Ordered to Pay Cost An order issued . yesterday by Judge Tercy R. Kelly requires the Kings products companj. ui lem. to pay circuit court com 1136.10 and supreme court cos- of 202.50 in the company s su't and anneal against S. V. Kamp and associated berry growers oi Marion county. I HOTEL ARRIVALS Willi 3 III C II One of Best Exhibits of Pis tols Anywhere Owned by Former Salem Man ? 4 i . i m i Home Builders Take Notice We can save you money on your numbing SupPe: will pay you to come, and se us about price. We ai waya have a aupplT t kind. ' - r ' 1 i i x "a " -i ':. ' Tenti, all iize$, prices , very low , CAPITAL 4 Bargain House V9 bu; and sell ererytblni Thone 198 -X1S Chomcketa 8U Why gamble? Many young people jare start ing out in life without any de finite aim. They lives from day to day, go ffrom Job to Job. Their wholo future )s an un certainty. ' Perhaps jthey will eventually be successful, per haps they will fall jit all de pends upon circumstances but tho odds arc agajnst them. i ' Why gamble with he future wen a definite plan aided by a little well directed effort, can MARION Those registering trom Portland are: J. A. Mott, W. W. Eclenn. M. H. Kenslvon. An drew M. . Anderson, Charles H. Ader. Phil Mctschen and wife, J. E. Gladne and wife, Harry in. Bowler, A. S. Weiant, 11. v. mc- Clease, W. W. Jones, Dorotny Robertson, A. P. Hammer, wuc and family. E. II. cousin, r. j. Hoffman. J. It. MueuenDerg, . r. Others, II. D. Fearey, A. J. Grace. Charles E. Heithempie, rat uiacK, Ben Rythe. P. E. Hartson, George Marr. Others registered are H. F. Tait, San Francisco; C. F. Wholry. St. Faul; W. R. Miller. Powers; Minnie C. Flegel. Eu gene; O. V. Hamilton, Xew York; J. B. King, Seattle; George H. Gill, The Dalles; S. W. Jarrick and wife. Stanford. Mon.; D. Buegel- on and family. San Fransico; Robert Pung and wife. Kellogg, Ida.; Johri Merfrer, New York; George E. Gibson, The Dalles; G. C. Fulton, Osborne; E. L. Wauder, Albany; G. A.' Waters, Spokane; Charles H. Fisher and wife, Eu gene; W. A. Dunbach, Seattle; S. C. Simmons, Eugene; G. A. Hof ertlpe, St. Louis; C. C. Temple and wife. Anacortes; J. B. Cox and wife, Kellogg, Ida.; O. J. Shilling and wife, Kellogg; G. E. Beadford, Los Angeles; Jotfn Jones and wife. Devils Lake, X. I. W. G. Samuel and wife, Forest Grove; E. Kelly, San Francisco; C. Dehman. New York; C. Quell malz, San Francisco, George A. Forbes, Fresno. BL1GH G. W. Schoffner. W. A. Morgan. L. A. Lyon. It. K. Dee, A. C. Bracken. M. P. Spiees. II. G. Fearey. II. E. Cherry. W. H. Doyole, A. E. Eastlund, A. E. Tlano. Jack H. Pendleton, C. K. Nelson, C. W. Fcrnn and wife, all of Portland. Mrs. Mabel Jensen, S. C. Worrell, formerly one of the employes at the state prison. and for the nast three years on the Portland police force, wher he is now a rerpeant, was visit ing friends in ,S;ilem Wednesday lie was a n niber of Company I Second Ore on regiment, that served in the Philippines in 18DS- 1899, enlisting from Albany. Mr. Worrell has one of the most interesting, though not yet th largest, collections of pistol in the state. There is one other in Portland that exceeds his in number, though he has more than 2,00 specimens in his list. Among them is an especially complete line of Colts revolvers and pistols more than T0 kinds from this one famous maker. One is the fam ous old dragoon model, weighing four and a half pounds, of the type that served in the Mexican war. Another is a specially made police model, .3K-caliber swing out pattern, gold plated, ivory handled and elaborately engrav ed, the finest revolver the Col factory ever turned out. ilt one of the most beautiful arm ever made anywhere. Mr. Worrell formerly had large collection of '"long guns but of later years has specialized on revolvers and pistols as more portable and occupying much less room for a proper display. For some years he has had a number of antiques in the Hauser Broth ers' loan collection m their Sa lem store, and still has their Al bany store walls well deoorateJ with strange and obsolete weap ons that made modern shooters stare and wonder what "those old ducks" used to do with such weapons. point you succcsswar .' We can help , you. .call for information. 4T Write or Capital Business College i Salem, Oregon j REALTY EXCHANGES Reported by Union Abstract Company Favors Nature Has Be stowed on Valley represent sn.ooo membership of est'.n line ef iroslnesa catastro phes of the past year.'v The coffee t dealr ot a tearfur Jolt that pall enormous tribute to the BraiiUaa growers and others oatside of Am erica. The rice dealer 'got . theirs", and other countries too their money. The sugar s men dropped uncounted millions Into the waiting laps ot the Cuban Hawaiian and other non-American growers. The American can ner. too. paid an nnbelievable tribute to the American trait grower, in exorbitant prices for fruit. . J In this last cae, however, the monev was all left at home and gradually, he says, will become canalized. Partly through this year's excessively low prices, but it stays in America and isn't cart ed away to any oft-colored foreign brother who saw the mime com ing and snneeited too hard. Mr.,, haw says that the time is ripe for more and better frnlts. and that the markets ot tne wona ar .u opn for the Oregon grower jwhl will get In and aig ana w p o head. ' ' In which will sing mili- they march. A will depict im in religious his tory. 1 After. Mile parade a mass meeting will bf held in Central park and W)Uian Jennings Hryan will deliver jthe! principal address. More than 2 ok) speakers of pro minence in the religious world will addrfss afternoon and even ing sessions; in armory. The Clark; founder the 71st regiment Itev. Francis E. and president, of he Vnited Society of Christian Endeavor, will preside at the penjhg exercises tonight. A choir ot 1000 voices, led by Homer Uodeheaver, will render a musical program and addresses wui De made; by representatives of the citv and delegates from other lands, j propose , a lump sum payment.1 which he said li -.vould support, and.'w hieh he declared wtU provide a '"stake" which miht enable soldiers to pet into busi ness, or'iuiy a home. The best service the Republi cans could-render '"to the soldier and to the country," Senator Cn derwood continued, would bo to "bring the cruintry back to stable financial and business conditions." where men would get a fair wast. Substitutes in the; land settle ment plan of, the bill were offeree by Senators I'tttman, Democrat, Nevada, and Itorah, ! RepubMcan, Idaho. i two C'jps; consolation. v v Five of the cups are offered by aleni firms. They are Hartman Brothers, C. P.! Bishop, The Gray Helle; The Spa) and Anderson & Brown. Today's Play. 9 a. mj Vincent vs. Stolz; Griffith vs.; Quiisenbury. vs. Ram stead; Barnard. Roberts vs, Mrs. 9:45 Dewey Crawford vs. 10; 30 Mrs. Jacobs. ! 11:15 Dorothy 2:00 p. m vs. Miss McRrid Floyd Wrigiht. i 2:i p. m aoiso; f)lin; Lewis vs. Sard am 3:30 p. nil. Cox vs. Bates 4:15 p.: m Small; Young :00 Ettinger Mrs. i Rlggs; Henry Stevens Garrett. 1:15 p. .jm. (-Froham vs lis; Miss Campbell vs. Miss Coo per. ; VS. vs. Lan- Mrs. Huntington e; I'ercy lewis vs. -Chenowelh vs. DeSouza vs. Crum; vs. - Gahrielson vs. Jamison. i -Gahrielson and Voting vs. Harbison anil i nieison Knickerbocker jind Bates vs. Crum and Johnson, j 30 p. 1 ni. Fletcher vs. lo- . f ....,! ney. . Iewey ant tanii vs. ' and Lewis. ; 6:1)0 p. in. Webb vs. Aldcn. Ill MEASUnE ' IS SffJI D,!tt; Senate Refuses to Agree on Nineteen Amendments Of Lower House MELLON WARNS AGAINST ! BONUS LEGISLATION fContiriued from page 1.) WASHINGTON.' July 6. Al though agreeing to the bulk oi the bulk of !th? provisions in the $409.000. not) naval appropriations bill as voted recently by the house in attempting to dispose - of differences between the two bod ies, the senat-? todav refused to yield on 19 amendments and sent the measure back to the house with a request for further confer ences. Tho amendments on Which the senate declined to recede In clude provision for two airplane carriers, aviation stations and in creased expenditures for battle ships under construction. l-eaders had not determined to night how to meet the technical de icit in fundg-for the navy re sulting from thi lr.ose Of appro priations with the close 6r the fis cal year June ;.0. It might be necessary, it was said, to adont a resolution continuing last year's ippropriations temporarily- until thfv rend'ng bill is enae'ed. Among the major provisions ot the bill d:sr,osed of finally by th"? senate's action on the conference report today were the Borah dis armament -amendment and that fix'ng the navy enlisted personnel it 0t;.iHMt men. Wtien u get a jar of jelly, jam. marmalade or fruit butter vith the label. "Tho Shaw Family he said ' ro'npan ou a 1,h"y l" epHraie yuurn-n ljmu n nuv quale piM'e of money, but like wise, you will divorce yourself from the suspicion that the deli cacv was made of cull?, of renr- vated frjiits. or benzoated picTtle to arrest the prtcesrt of incipient : decay. i It will have been made partly by tho man who spok at the Sa hem Rotarv clfib luncheon Ved i nesdav, K. R. Shaw of San Joss. rl' though he will say very modest lv that it Is his ue ami three ch ldien who are most largely responsible lor the sup?r excellence o' the quality product. Purchases to lx Made Here Mr. Shaw Is in Salem to ar range for .the purchase of practl cally every kind of pit and oerry fruit grown here loganberries, rarmberr'.es. blackberries, straw berries ' currants, cherries. The Shaws make up nothing but prJ serves and ms and jellies, they do no canning whatever. Tey hoDe to buy a eons derable quan titv of fruit her. Mr. Shaw him self will be returning to Callfor nla'.very shortly, but his son will bs here within the next few days. to look after the actual purtaase "We raise in the Santa Clara valley as good fruit as there '9 anywhere in Oregon, and we grow everything t'uat grows in the Unit- ed State," said Mr. Shaw "but w? heed more than we have, and we're coming -out after it. Oregon has only fairly begun to, realise what nature has given it in cli mate. In soil,' In productive posM bilit'es; You haven't gotten Into the realm of higher production a v e'v had to do. You have rais ed things easily, because, nature does so much for you. This ought to be a.wonderfql country when the peoplo fairly strike their gait. Cooperative Value) Proved Mr. Shaw says that the past year , has shown the .value oi co operation between buyer and man ufacturer," such as long bitter ex perience has brought to the Call- forn'a growers. California grow ers last year in many- cases sold their produces for ,lesa .money than the sky-rocketing Oregon growers got for theirs, but this year they are going along still under a full head of steam, and living price and .working capital for both grower and packer. They have gotten past the warring stage, a.nd are recognising the mutual neerslty of the two ele ments of tmsiness growing and manufacturing and there-are no more nerioun stampedes and no bitter heart-burnings. Many Line Hit Mr. Shaw mentioned ah Inter TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY KtK 8-U.R 0 -TAROS OP BATTUK- khp cork linolonm t Murf BROCCOLI PLANTS FOR SALE St. Valentine strain, tested by Oregon Agricultural College , t - $4 per thousand ' Dr. C. IL Bailey & Son. Roseburg, Ore. , Notables at Wharf When Ambassador Wallace Leaves J. I. and Krva L. Swanh to W. A. Burdick acres sec. oo-S-l-L, $10. R. 1. M. lirentano to Uika Brcntano. 3.!2 acres near St. Paul, $i0. Hattie F. and Western Hough ton to Cchyb r O. and Clara K. Tnttle. lot t and north half lot -block 7. Hoises second addition to Salem $10. Ceorge H. C.obrke and wife o Henrv t;ohrke. To. 20 acres near Hubbard. $1 and other. n...n n-.itv Kxchanc? in vestment company to Mrs. Lixzi Taylor, lot 1. block 14 Depot ad dition to Salem. ... . h Albert A. and Ethel A. W ebb to J C. Dawson, land In Silver ton, $100. - 600 Salerri Automobiles At Bay City on July 4 That ("0 Salem automobile were registered at Bay City- on July 4, i.-i the statement of A. " Moore who yesterday returned from a three days' visit to th j sea side pleasure resort. A free i-lam-bake, plenty of beef, a la barbecue with beacn pastimes and gam-s were features of the program Sunday and Mon day. Moore says that as the Ford flies. 4t i 70 mile? to May City with good ro;ds all the way px rept for a 'ive mile stretch rough dirt road between Hebo and Hay City. Th" route taken -by Mr. Moore was by tho Wallace road t Whfatland. thence to heridan and Hebo. would be serious injury ana josr to the whole community and n the long run, the Veterans themselves would lose far more man tney would caini I Oannot bring my sen to believe jthatthis would be 'ad- iusted compensation, for a ser vice j that was performed as the highest duty of citizenship and c saCrUice that (ian never be mea ured'i in terms hi money." Not the leasti disturbing feature, he continued. Was the bill'.'v-pian to postpone actual distribution or funds until neixt year, which, he sad, ?"tends to jmislead the people into! the belief! that In some war the proposed program can be ac complished without imposing a seriou3 burden! on the country." War ItuiMleni Would Inereawr "It must inevitably increase the wariburdert which the people have to bear," hie contended. "It could be financed ojnly by aduU:on to th burden of debt and taxes un der j which tjie country is now cto rr;.r.rinir i. llAttPVcr financefl, no sucli siim could be taXen out or the pubic treasury without throw ine a corresDohflin jr load upon tnr whole people jin the form of :n creased injerept chargrs. Increa ed taxes and increased cost of Uv ing.j i ! Cot of refnmding the parly turilies of .public (leht. the . cr" tar said, ,-would he vastly in creased, and tbe refunding opera tions thenvselves serfously embar rassed." IWhUrs of liberty bonds. Mr. Closed Car- Owner i How about those cush ions in your car"? Are they soiled and dirty 7 Do they look old and shabby ? If they do let us clean them for you. We will clean them per fectly I and make them look like new. r tV' After your 'car has been ' cleaned by us you will be more than tie lighted with the results. Those soiled cushion will have the same new appearance and soft fln ish as tne day your car was .bought, ( . , tj ? - Call ' us bn the ph&ric and we will come out and clean your car for you. Yqu will be more than satisfied with the re suits. Ish Ka Bibble Cleaning Co: 420 Ferry St. Thonc 1177 PARIS. July fi Notable among those at the ftat'on when retiring Ambassador Wallace leff.faris to day were Premier Hriantf, Kaon I Peret. president of the chamb"." of deputies: Prince Albert ot Monaco, .lub-s Canibon. French representative in the council of ambassadors: Marshals. Foch'and Petain and .). Kidgley Carter, renresentati ve in Paris or J. P. Morgan & f'o.. of New York. I'remicr Hriand. in the name of the French government, expressed appreciation for Mr. Wallace's services to France and to the al lied governments. We Carry The Trunk right up where it Is wanted. Our transfer service does not end at the front door. It aim? to bo complete and satisfactory In every dotal!. If you'are going away have us take your trunk and check It. When you' return hand us your baggage chocks and j we'll have your things up and in their iplaces as promptly as it is possible to get them there. i LARMER TRANSFER PHONES - $80 ,1. SMUTS TALKS WITH CARE ABOUT IRELAND (Continued from pace 1) of the haopiefct countries In the empire. Our forehearance ann self-sacrifice have paid us hand some dividends in our national li'c." ; E! "Social I Ambition" I I L A Istory of 1 I L the Far I I n North' I PW , Ma,ice B Aproiis the at- Moderrt housewives demand all enveloping and still very tractive apron as the garment worn during the housekeeping hours. 'Some of these aprons com plctely cover one others are dain ty affairs that you can slip over your afternoon dress for any need ed occasion. The materials are the best jringhams and percales. Our Prices 98c to $1.48 HOUSE DRESSES So splendidly made and of such ex cellent ping-hams rind percales are these house dresses now on dis play at Shipley s that you will find it more economy to buy them ready made than to make your own. Our Prices $1.98 to $4.98 Join the ranks of the "Pay As You Go" tieople all success results. 1