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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1922)
THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON SUNDAY MORNmGMmjARYil2S SILVERTON. Ore., Dec; 31. (Special to The Statesman) Mr. and Mrs. Ray Leach of Eugene aer visiting at! the home of Mr. end Mrs. Robert Ellis. ;; ;- - Mr. and Mra. L. E. Inmanj hars returned ! from Ashland where they spent the Christmas vacation! A TUBE FREE The Test Of Greater Holding Power Scientific laboratory testa have conclusively proved that the holding power between lay era of fabric in Hydro-Toron tires I 30 greater than in fabric not Toron-Treated. Toron treatment re lists water and air-lncreaaea tensile strength nd practically elimi nate inside wear. Hydro-Toron ar guaranteed for 10,000 miles against ton-bTiae, rim-cot and blow-oat. The Internal Hydrautie Expansion Process Con away completely with flclpa, bulges, Meters and -other hidden' delete that cee tires , lf blow out prematurely. Thry are. as blzVs cords, better. than . cvrdl and toll at standard fabric prices. , r To Introduce' Hydro-Toron .Tire wo will give a tube free with each ; tire bought, during the month of , January., , :.-: D.LSHRODE Phone 9 12th and Leslie Sts. Mr. Innian reports that he" never saw so many deer In the southern part or the state as be saf on this trip. In many places the d eer came to the barns to eat hay with the cattle. ; B. T. Tone! attended the ses sion of the. State Teachcis'-asso? clat'on held at Portland.! Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Ferfuson of Weston are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Graham. Mr. and .Mrs. Ralph Hauea of South Dakota are speudin? the winter with Silverton relatives. Mr. Han gen is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haugen, residents on East hill. . ' John Bakke of Portland 13 a gue3t at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Goplerud. Miss f Alice Godwin of Grays Rver is visiting her sister, Mrs. Orin Duval. Mr. and-Mrs. Erwin Borendrick of Portland are ' guests at the home of Rev. and Mrs. F. Keogy. Miss Francis Morley who 13 teaching at the Dufur high school is spending . her vacation at the home of her, parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Morley of Silverton. . STAYTON NEWS STATION'. Or., Dee. 31. Mr. and Mrs. William Crabtree went to Albany Friday where they will 3pcnd the New Year holiday with relatives. ' Miss Gnineth Davis and her brother, Alva, returned home Thursday from Albany where they spent Christmas with rela tives. 'l. Luther Stout who was a mem ber nf th firm of Ackerman-Stout Auto " company, left -Thursday with his family' and household goods for Albany where he will live. ,- . " Mrs. Mary Turnidge and daugh ter, MlS3 Cora Turnidge arrived in Stayton Friday and are guests at the C, C- Nott home. Mrs. Turnidge expects to spend the re mander of the .winter here. Alvin Burns of Salem was a business visitor la Stayton Wed nesday. : ' ." Miss Ethel Walker has return ed to. her home in Pendleton at ter a week's- visit at -the home or her mother, Mrs. J. T. Follis. Teachers and pupils are wan dering bacv from thair vacation Tisits ready to Uke up their school work Monday morning ; C. P. Burmester who imperson ated Santa Claus so successfully cn Christmas eve, to the delight of all th3 young?ters about town is spending New ; Years with his parents at Jordan, accompanied by his family. J E, W. Swailow,,manager of the Perfection Batt and Mattress com- pany returned Thursday from a, week's absence, spent in the in- terest of the company. Mr. Swal low visited many towns through out the valley . while away. . Norval Fisher in company with, his mother motored over to Sa.. lem Friday for a day's shopping. Henry Benson who owns and operates one of the best farms in. the Sublim!ty hills, was in Stay ton Friday looklngafter business interests. , ; Mrs. Daisy E. Brown who pass ed away in San- Diego, CaL, De cember 20. was a native of Mer lon county and a daughter of Mr. pnd Mrs. C. R. Briggs. She was btrn on a farm near Macleay 52 years apo and lived there through her early life, later moving with her parents to Stayton where she was married to W. C. Browne. To them one son. Nelson R. tlrown or Long Beach, Cal..' was born The remains were laid to rest in San Diego, beside those of her hnband THIS CONSTABLE A COBBLER, COOK ND MOTHER. EXTRA SPECIAL Our Utah Coal !s going at REDUCED PRICES: These prices are cash : Utah Lurnp CoaJ..$ 17.00 Utah Stove CoaL- 16.00 We guarantee all out coals . Goods packed, snipped or stored. Fireproof Storage. Prices to Please Yon . Phone 930, Larrher Transfer H REALTY EXCHANGES Reported by Union Absiraei Company ' s : -r ; Cyrua and Frances E. Butler to E. E. and Minnie M. RoberUon, lots 89. 9Q, 91, 1 Smith's Fruit Farms. S10. i - Fargo orchards Co. to vv m. . K. Grelck, south half lot 8, block 3, Fargo Orchard tracts, ?1L Wm. and Minnie A. Grelck, west half lot 8. block 5, Fargo Orchard tracts, 110 and other. .George C. and Mary E. Wooa- ter to John P. and Alice G. Guyer, lot T, block 7 add "C" to Wood- .burn'950. ; I Martha Sather. 29 acres In Peter Cox die 6-1 -w, $10. C. J. and W, E. Mathewson to LI S. - Roberts, tract of land north of lot 1, block 6, Frickey's R. K. add. to Salem. $10. ,1 " I . . . ! I- I 1 - i . - i in i I".1 , iV. .' . If I i ffifrfr&w&i V f Sh-rr?'- - " "vi j; Mill mMmam - -a-jl ;?n Hit v,mmm mmw t ;i r- v i :.J ttZ-- ill i 'tiW'1 ' .K. S i it &J i ;ir v r;?v . . , Hi. HI ...vv , i ml -- I li. , - Halt ot them axe. women.v Fre-f quently everything from diamond bracelets to potatoes is offered for sale on the sam$ stand. Nearly all dealers buy and sell all soil of commodities, i Mediaeval viialge methods of barter and sale transferred to the big cities. The fair of past cea turies has been;, revived in the streets while the great shops on the main streets stand empty. Their staple goods were all requi sitioned long agq T)y the govern meat and no new supplies are coming in. Shoemakers and watchmakers are again opening little shops and living on repair worfc. Barber shops are reopenlns: Beauty shops millinery shops and corset shops were never all closed. With the installation of a. tire less cooker in the home father has a hard time drying his .hands. He used to depend on the rag that hang on a strink behind the stove. ! - Bill Hart is a man after our own heart. He was married un known to anybody, and the only- guest in addition to tfie bride and groom, were his sister and attor ney. Bill is one of the movinc- nlcture folk who do not think it necessary to give a "partyf any time there is anything doing. t "Los Angeles Times. I hnSFOnBREAKFAST 4o long, iaA. ; -u-.- : v V .z. ... It was a nodd year, anjr way. Let's hone the even year may even up all thlngf for the better. Our ingress Into the world : ' Waa naked and bare; Our progress. throup the world : Is trouble' and care; Our. egress front tfee world.. W1U be nobody Knows where; But if we do well here, We ahal ido well there." Longfellow. !.-:vr -w ; , r :; ; 1 Senator Penrose went out, with the old year. He loomed large. In the jaatioa'a atfairt. "and his pass ing will make new political align ments. . . . .-. ; ;. .V:V , ... They ar saying things gluteal In Oregon state affairs are being shaken up violently. : The man who can fortell what la going c come of It, If there be each a man, is not saying. ; - ; ; , Two more v Sundays como to. petherj then, alter -the ahurt rest,' the long putt, t j v If Salem does not do m6re witt 1522 than she did with 1921. she ' wilt not do as well as she should And 1121 was not a bad year fo: Salem either : - , : - AUCTION SAII Tuesday January 3 1 p. m 1904 North 5h S. A Jot of good furnitur. G. Saiterlee Phone 1177 Auctioneer i , .MrsMary Todd; first woman eve to be made a constable In the city, of Newark, N. J- In addition' to being a business woman, typist, cook and cobbler she la the mother of two sturdy children, one 10 years of age and the other U. , : SOiT RUSSIA IN ODD STATE Falling Values of Germany and "Austr(art Money May Lead to Crisis ' GERMANS DEMAND MARK Teutons Hole) y Delivery ,of Contracted Goods at Current Appraisal MOSCOW Dec.! 27, Russia gives a. foreigner the impression of belnga great", nation which is twying to live o a peanut stand basis. 1 ! There 13 magnitude to nothing but the population; 120,000,000 persons are dependent upon the" supplies afforded ' by pushcart dealers. f ' ,, In Moscow, Petrograd, Samara and other cities, trade conditions are the same. Basket peddlers, street corner- stands and. small woe-begohe shops with empty car tons 'and fruit scattered over their X, . ,.; i - ' ..v.. shelves to make them seem full. provide all the food that is avail able. Bread is Scarce i Bread, , potatoes onions, meat, sugar, sunflower seed, red pop are offered by these dealers who have come into existence since -the em barsro was raised on trade in foods. One sees few full loaves of bread in these shops. The! bread is sold by the pound and most cus tomers cannot afford an entire loaf. F Occasionally, a tin of American salmon or American condensed milk is seen in a. shop window or on a market wagon. Bus such luxuries are speedily gobbled up by customers who happen to be ruble millionaires. Comb honey also appears .spasmodically in the larger shops. It is 35,000. rubles for less than a pound, and vissap- pears rapidly. t i ! Rusty tins of Argentine and Australian corned beef also come to light in unexpected places and a few tins of American hardtack find their way into the markets No dealer ever seems to have more than one tin of these and the- source of the supply is mys teriotls. ! ! ' i i A member of the Foreign trade council who was asked where sup plies of this sort came from re plied that they were probably supplies which v the Bolshevist government had bought abroad and which had slipped into pri vate hands. ' Trading Is Common. Most of the merchants are per sons who have been fdrced to open w 3 i . . , i . . . . ouiuua as a means ot. iiveiiuoou. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY STRAWBERRY PLANTS FOR sale. Gold Dollars, Ettersbergs, Improved Oregons. G. H. Col gan, Marion, Ore. 1' FOR RENT MODERN FURN- ished) apartment. Phone 1853-J. i ! FOR SALE OR TRADE REO truck, 1921 model, perfect con dition. Will trade for real es tate, produce or will sell on easy terms. This is an excep tionally good buy. If you want a real good' bargain apply im mediately. . Phone or call. The Peoples' Cash Store. - WANTED YOUNG WOMAN FOR general housework. . Call at 374 N. Summer between l 10 and 2 today, , : FOR SALE TWO YOUNG COWS Will freshen soon. 771) North Commercial. , t FOR RENT OFFICE ROOM, reasonable; ideal for 1 tailor shop. Phone 1205-M. I 0 ur Best Wishe for a oon- GMM Cz. CO 4 PLUMBING':;S:1U1?I?HIB: ; .; Ami 0iymlpita0z;i: .V. We sell Plumbing Supplies, whplesafe arid retail;" alsq dqtthV aetnal plnmbins work on contract. ' Estimates cheerfully given i ' . . ' . . . For Sale rOne Carbide Feed Generator. Model "I?t S0. , Tha Is a used gen erator in good condition, cost when new: $240. northwestern; PIPE COMPANY 219 North Commercial Street " ' ; - Salem, Oregon ' :' l ;K-. " ''' ; '.-V' 187 Front Street Portland, Orea fXnrz, MM, mm 3 PEOPLE'S CASH STO RET and a iond goodbye tos the achievements of yesteryear. A store, like an individual, cannot live upon acmevqments Of the past. They must be forgotten in the hustle and bustle of accomplish es goal ing better work. During every minute of every business day, this store strives on to of doing greater things, and with the beginning of the new year. it pledges itself to "c always with the aim to further endear itself into the hearts of its patrons. carry on ikliiUliiainmjiy.iL am,.l,i,. ii4,iyj'lilllLi,M.;,ilil!iliu1..lfi,1ii.iMI .. . - i r.. VM arc i - i i m - Y, . WATCH NEWSPAPERS FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS POSITIVELY EVERY ARTICLE AT REDUCED PRICES WATCH-WAIT, AND SEE -s ; : ' 3sr 7M - j m.,..,. JSTj 'M-m.. 'r Mr 'M: . i u;Cp " n uj.' u: IT WILL f3E 'PONE - GREATER - THAN ' EVER BEFORE WATCH-WAIT AND. SEE ' The tinicas come again when every remabing article of winter goods must go. Therefore you l can exnect to receive value whnuiiinnsiialnAe a AmU n( , n .n . - ! A, j. .'.i JrTrT T" " w w W1MIUI?- unr Pncei wiu guarantee v wtwi 'cuauuvr uiy cycuis OI Uie paSK. v Sale Begins Friday, January 6th mmmm i .1 . t, I - f i I: V