8 THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON WEDNESDAY vnttvmr. FEBRUARY 15. 1922 CHURCHILL IS AGAIN IN RACE State School Superintendent w dent Announces Candi dacy for Reelection PAST RECORD PLATFORM Educational System Improv ed and Program is Out " lined for Future J. A. Chnfchlll, superintendent of public Instruction, today an nounces hit Candidacy (or renom lnation in the coming Republicau primaries for the position which he now holds. . Mr., Churchill will go before the people on the record of his work as - state superinten dent and It Is th3 belief of bis friends, who are the rank-and file of' the teaching profession throughout the state, that he will bare no opposition. ' ' During Mr. Churchill's adminis tration, the length of the school term " has been " lengthened to eight months; the standards of teachers have been raised, the en rollment In the high schools of the state has been doubled, and the whoto public school system has been .brought tp a high state of efficiency. 'j la Recognized Leader In no other (State in the west, do the teachers of the state follow thei leadership of the state super intendent as they do In Oregon, and it Is their wish that Mr. Churchill continue In this office until he can carry on to comple tion the program which he has outlined for the schools of tha state. In establishing in the grade schools a system of teaching that will turn out pupils thoroughly trained In the fundamentals of the common school subjects, a higher training for teachers, consolida tion of rural schools, " wherever practicable, and a modern busi ness method of administering the finances of the school in each county. Two Features Cited Two features of Mr. Churchill' administration place the schools of this state in a class by itself, and his work is attracting the at tention of many other states. First,, under the state course of study for the high schools and the rulings of the state education de partment, every student in the high schools of the state must complete one year of work In Am erican history, and one year in a study of the civil government of the United States. At the National Education association last summer it was brought out that Oregon was the only state in the union having such a requirement. Second, Mr. Churchill has estab lished the ruling that students after passing a satisfactory exam ination, shall receive one credit toward high school graduation for Bible study done in the home in the church, or in Bible study clubs. Ho has bo encouraged this work that the number who are taking advantage of this course is increasing each year. For the grammar grades he has wrltten- into the course of study for each grad'3 a list of references of the choicest selections from the Bible which all pupils may commit as memory gems. Good Citizenship, Goal "Those now in our schools, says Superintendent Churchill, "are soon to be charged with the responsibility of managing the most powerful nation in the world in the most critical period of it history. In fact, it is not too much to say that the destiny of the world depends upon the lessons : our young people are now learning in the nublic schools. It is essen-! tial, therefore, that they should be well grounded in those princi-, pies of government upon which i this nation was built, and that their interest should be aroused in j those precepts of right living j which our forefathers believed es sential for good citizenship. This j is the aim of these two unique , features of our public school sys-j tem. "If I am re-elected I will strive to give the children of every rural school in the state privileges for education equal to those of the best system. Further, I will s?e to it that the keynote of our educa tion will be a correct conception of the duties of citizenship, and a thorough knowledge of thj stan dard of morals which the Ameri can people hold sacred." I innr niir fir l indian horseman in Chicago. 1-flHLt- H I h III- . ' u 1 1 .Ills I mmmm i 1 i 11 i i , WniMMIII I M I I W IVI W .'- t t , if X . . 71 flUUllll-B I llllllll.l I A - I lull l llll l l l ll mill l c - - -- . - Jw -t m -.-r. - I Ul I W W I V Willi W ,(v - rfM - - - - , . r. nt mirdi had board' -a . shin which happened to ie i i. vir, fa three-mile limit and. I mtu . "J1v3 owing to the dangerous coast, the l.hln bill in DUl OUl It lag IkV ontuioa O Rubbish Ablaze at Stayton.p Promises to Keep Going Some Time to Come In,--'-' tVJ, am mm A wed-up n Instantly Opens Every Air Pa.s sagt Clears Throat If your nostrils are clogged and your head is stuffed because of nasty catarrh or a cold, apply a little pure, antiseptic cream into your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage, sooth ing and healing swollen, inflamed membranes and you get instant relief. Try this. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm at any drug store. Your clogged nostrils open right up; your head is clear; no more hawking or snuffling. Count fifty. All the stuffiness, dryness, truggling for breath is gone. You feel fine. Adv. CLEAN SWEEP SALE! TODAY IS AT OUR STORE Here are a few necessities that will help fill your list of wants at surpris- ' ingly low figures Boys' School Suits ,T6ize' 6 to 16 : Nicey made up In Btyl- teh1 belted models big valuea.to $.60. Wed nesday special, Clean Sweep Sale ' $3.98 Boys' and Men's Silk ftl. r; , Ties SOc and' 65c values 19' Boys' Ribbed 'Stockings Extra' - heavy quality duable ' cotton, stockings. sizes 6 to 10. Regular values 39e. Wednesday Special Clean Sweep Bale 19c - Heavy " grade Standard Quality Oil Cloth yard 29' New Twill Skirtings A new shipment of pret ty stripes in twill skirt ing of extra quality. Re gular values to 12.75. Wednesday Special, Clean Sweep Sale, yard $1.49 5c and 10c Tablets Sold to school children who have passed their grade, at , DIAMOND "W" GOOD COFFEE - - , - Try a Cup Free in Our Economy Basement D. W. Coffee, lb 35c j 3 lbs". D. W. Coffee 99c 5 lbs. D. W. Coffee $1.55 Blue Ribbon Stayton Flour, per sack $1.60 Northern Ravalli Oats, large pkg J2S Cream of Wheat, per pkg......: 24 Kellogg Corn Flakes, per pkg. ... .10 Alber's Flapjack, per pkg. l 26 Vogan's Cream Mix Candy, per lb. 20 Snow Ball Fancy Cookies, per lb .23 Ginger Snaps, per lb 20 Cheese, Oregon Cream, per lb. 27 iGhirardelli's Chocolate, lb..: .28 Milk, tall can, per can .10 Tomatoes, per can.... .09 Pineapple, sliced, No. 2 can 20 Spring Chinook Salmon, per flat can 15 Crisco, per lb .17 White Beans, 10 lbs. .40 Van Hoeter's Bleaching Soap, Easy Day Naphtha, White Wonder Soap, per bar 04 Bacon Strips, per lb 22 Picnic Shoulders, per lb 20 3C Bring your report card Children's Muslin Pants Nicely made with trim med and embroidered lac es limit two to a custo mer.. Big assortment of sizes. Regular SOc value Wednesday special. Clean Sweep Sale ' SAVE MONEY ON ALL PURCHASES Shop Where the Crowds Bay llc Get another added sav ing on your purchases Premium Coupons In all departments huge pile of sawdust at the ! lC: 1 S.i Jj. ii-lJetzei lumber plant at'HjW .J i ;-rZr!?- ' v 200 feet in diameter and La1t!1 f 1 & f - v, ; u i I T r i I . , r A Browi Stayton, about 70 feet mill has been depositing sawdust for 10 years, has caught fire from spontaneouse combustion and so far it has bean impossible to ex tinguish it, according to a report made to the state fire marshal by Horace Sykes, an investigator. Vapor has arisen from the pile for several months, showing that generation of heat was in prog ress. Fire was firt noticed Janu ary 1. The ire apparently began far in the interior of the pile and gradually has eaten its way out ward until a crater has been formed and the pile has caved in to some extent. The facts show that without a doubt it was caused by heat gen erated spontaneously by the fer mentation and oxidation of the sawdust. This heat could not es cape from the pile due to its non conducting property and continu ed to increase until eventually it reached a point of combustion. It was for this reason that the fire first started deep in the pile and worked its way to tha surface, and because of the chemical na ture of the fire the moisture in the sawdust contributed to rather than extinguishes it and for this same reason water poured on the pile would have but little effect in extinguishing the fire. It would be practically impossible to apply water to the base of the fire which is burrowing deep in the pile in many places. In all probability the fire will continue until the fuel is mostly or all con sumed, which will be for a long period of time. to in Sweden and in Finland many of the coast population get their liring by smuggling and refuse to ro fishing and carry on meir w gitimate traaes in rmiuu, !rhr total Drohibition prevails, CrVCT If conditions are even worse than Vi$ in Sweden. Fishing there has en- I Ii-a1v roasM. 11 IS satu, ueciuw rj i . . ... rum-running isa lar more prov able business. !j i tlil Is; f '"-tyX"- A te;l 1 i I B. 'r - 4 ; . h- . e ..:v.? ' v-;--. . w Many Books Added to Library at Silverton SILVERTON, Ore.. Feb. 14. (Special to The Statesman) Dur ing the past year the Silverton Library association has been add ing a number of very good books to its collection. The great re gret is that there are no public library rooms at Silverton other than the school library at which place the Silverton public library is also kept. Recently the following books have been added to the collection: Young Folks Encyclopedia of Et iquette, Brady; The Pied Piper of Hamlin, Browning; The Muti neers, Hawes; In the Great Apache Forest, Schultz; The Tale of Peter Rabbit, Potter; Mother Goose. Marshal; White Shadows in the South Seas, O'Brient The Brim mlng Cup. Canfield; The Porty- gee, Lincoln; The Young Trailers Altsheler; Alice Adams, Tarking- ton; High Benton, Heyliger; Mrs. WIggs of the Cabbage Patch, He gan; Dawn, E. II. Porter; The Golden Staircase, Chrisholm; The Dutch Twins, Perkins; The Sis ers-in-Law. Atherton; Gulliver's Travels, Swift; Bible Stories to Read and Tell, Olcott; Huckleber ry Finn, Twain; The Pride of Pal omar, Kyne; The Age of Inno cence, Wharton; The Light in the Clearing, Bacheller; The; Japa nese Twins, Perkins; Katrinka Haskell; Americanization of Ed ward Box. Box; The Boy's Life Of Edison, Meadowcroft; Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Wiggen; The Sad Shepherd, Van Dyke; The Jungle Book, Kippling; The r laming Forest, Curwood; The Boy Scouts Year Book, Mathiews; The Oregon Trail. Parkman: Kid napped, Stevenson; If Winter Comes; The Country Boy, Da venport; Alice Adventures in Wonderland, Carrol; Cappy Ricks. Kyne; Billy Topsail, Duncan. 9 V;f ,4 K EE 11 MK WB BY UD French Youngster Amazes Clerk by Interest in Enemy Currecy might better see the J head ledgfe. i ne cu ..PeT though seeKing U,V-K hape it would be better If Jpgl' H.rian money I read Ifc the A this morning tht marjj, z . vn Mnnearlan tnoaey. naa s" v v.. w. f hadn't, but Hungair r.V ?orn and I think her ooner T o up soon. Don't you? l The Clerk told the child Ucj bank did not transact business of snch a limited wale." l. his franc In eandV Ul til kV PARIS, Feb. S. Even the t.,'j,r(, - 1 gchoolboys of Paris now speculate "i.'' in money of foreign countries. The fever which ha prompiea ir-rAnrh teoDle of all classes to invest their francs in uerman ! marks recently led a 12-year-old boy to one of the large Paris banks where he ask?d for "a franc worth of German money." The cleik was amazed at the youthful request and stuck hla head out of the cage so that na TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY White Eagle, full blooded Sioux cowboy and poet, who recentlj rode his horse Red Bird from Sheridan, Wyo.. more than a thousant miles, to carry a letter. White Eagle is deaf ana aumo, dui is an a riient horseman and a writer of Indian stories and poetry. The pho tograph shows him on his horse in Michigan Boulevard. Chicago, ar the end of his twenty -nine day trip. LOST A BROWN FUR CHOK- er. between the deaf school and the Oregon Theatre. Reward. Mrs. E. W: Birch, Deaf school. -...... : . " '.' operative association, Freewater; incorporators. F. W. McElrath, Al ta Rogers, Charles Walchen, J. F. McKinney, L. A. Reineman, Fred Rauschkolb; members to pay i membership fee. Resolutions showing a decrease in capitalization from250,000 to 1100,000 were filed by the Joan Clark Saddlery company of Portland. SERINS ENGAGE IN fill UK Hun Bootleggers Smuggle Booze Into Dry Sweden, Guards are Foiled v NEW CORPORATIONS Articles of incorporatiin were filed yesterday by the Columbia Hotel company of Astoria, capi talized at $200,000. The incor porators are W. A. Tyler, W. P. O'Brien, Norris Staples, Morton Nelson, Henry R. Hoefler, C. A. Smith and S. Dauz. Other arti cles were filed as follows: Oregon City Woman's club, Ore gon City; incorporators. Eva Em ery Dye. president; Mrs. E. H. Mc Lean, vice president; Mrs. M. C Hunt, secretary; no capitaliza tion. Model Building company, Port land: Incorporators., Robert W. Bell. Ellis A. Ritchey. Imo De Lay. capitalization, $5000. - r Oreton Face Brick Coaipany. Willamina; incorporator, An7 drew Kershaw, Robert Shelly. Harry M. Kershaw; -capitalization, JliO.000. Clemens-Trombley, Inc., Pen dleton; incorporators. J. C. Clem ens, B. F. Trombley, Lotta J. Cle mens, Genevieve T'ombley; cap italization. $23,000 Freewater Toms to Grower? Co- STOCKHOLM, Feb, 1. Rum- running into Sweden from Ger many has developed4 into some thing like a public scandal, say Swedish newspapers. The broken nature of the coast line and the thousands of small islands dotting the sea approaches are all in fa vor of smuggling enterprise. The craft engaged in this trade are generally small, fast-sailing schooners, captained as a rule by ex-officer3 of the imperial German navy. Many of the skippers bear names well known in the records of submarine activity. Their dar ing and experience makes it very difficult for Swedish coastguards to stop them. ; From Refval, Rostock, Stettin, Lubeck and other German ports these vessels put to sea, their cars;o always consigned, according to the ship's papers, to some Fin- TAYLOR AS A SOLDIER nish port. Once among the rocky archipelago of eastern Sweden the cargo Is landed piecemeal after nightfall on the Tocks, from which it is later removed by ac complices ashore who have a widely ramified organization for the island distribution of the goods. This illicit tratfic is said by the Swedish papers to be enor mous. The papers are full of stirring stories about smugglers and their doings. They remain outside the territorial waters, cruising about until their friends seize their chance to' rush out In fast motor boats, often in a heavy gale, tranship the liquor and dis appear in the dangerous labyrinth I of the archipelago. C Lately the nolice has started a scheme to beat the rum-runners at their own game. The other day a police boat, camouflaged as a smuggling craft, boarded a Ger mans chooner and loaded up to the gunwale from the schooner's hold, unconscious of the fact that the schooner was just outside the territorial limit. When the police men tried to leave the schooner without paying, the smugglers threatened to throw them over board, and there "was nothing for them but to pay for the liquor. In another case the correspon dent was told, a gale blew up soon rx TL MM Mb SOLD BT DRUGGISTS EV tt MRAN riLUk far M KTKStXl Thursday, Friday, Saturday i inrn-ny I LlDCiil I 1 1 "Son Of Wallingf onT Read the Classified ' Ads, LADD & BUSH. BANKERS Establfeked 1868 General Banting Boslneai Office Houn from 10 a. m, to f , m. 1 tlx- ,''. RHEUMATISM CANrHOT EXIST In th hamai body if yon will ni Tmiik' Yrrnrrxf ion for Rhomtira n tout. H is tT rntou, abenrd and pre pnnterous. In j, art. it it pity and i sham to talk about Rhnmatism an tut. much U gaffer with it, cither inflammatoir. mnarular. ariatie or an: ether form Rheumati im. Tmnk"a rvsrription for RhcnmatiiMX and Uout selt. for 11.73. This prenrnp lion DOfcH OT ram the atemach, it DOES SOT hpi-i the heart. Kat all th mat anl rood food jam wih while takinc Trunk a rreurription. It DOES NOT contain any Merrurr. Salirvlate of Boda. Oil of Winterrreea. or narcotic f any traC, bat it abaolately and po iiely OTercomoa any kind ef Rheumatism r Goot earth. WHAT WORK DO YOU WAST! There is netkinr last a rood, and It is inrsoaaibte ta nt aome- thi better. It is also an esreUent liver tisdieine,- f or aalo at 1'errr Drsj Store, 'J if r :- ,j mm w 'V ' I v t f 'l 1. c SPRING DEBILITY Loss of Appetite. That Tired Feel , ing and Sometimes Eruptions. Thousands take Hood's Parsapa rilla as a Fpringr medicine for that tired feelinjr. nervous weakness, impure blood and say it makes them foel better, eat and sleep bet ter, and "makes food taste Rood. Spring debility is a condition in which it is especially hard to com bat disease irerms. which invade the system here, there and every where The white blood corpuscles. , rolled "the little soldiers in the blood." because it Is their duty to fiKht disease perms, are too wf-ak to do frood service. Hood's KarsapariUa strengthens fv -lit tit soldiers" and enables them to repel germs of grip. Influ enza, fevers and other ailments; relieves catarrh and rheumatism. It has given satisfaction to three generations. Get it today, and for a. laxative take Hood's Pills. Here's Your Spring Suit $25 TO $49 t Extra Pants . . . , Free - - For a few days more. This is an opportunity to have your new spring suit made to your order with an extra pair of pants which means the serv ice of two suits for the price of one and your choice of hun dreds of new up-to-the-minute spring patterns. - Make your selections today. Scotch Woolen Mills 426 State Street Ladies' Hats New models just received. These hats confirm all traditions of how clever and ingenious the French are in designing hats. The collection we are show ing include hats of every type. Noticeable are fine straws, metal edged ribbons and exquisite flowers carrying a distinct air of Parisian smartness. Ladies9 Hats. . . . Girls9 Hats...... $2.75 to $7 JO . . . . .$1J0 to $2.75 This photograph of William Desmond Taylor,: morle director slain In Hollywood, shows him in the Traiform of a British army captain. Our Prices Always the Lowest GALE & CO: Commercial and Court Street .''. !'-"""-.-" 4 ; i -1 'f il mm ai . vcsunsrcwt ot, Mitra. Ur.. A". i ,