8 THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. ORBOON WEDNESDAY MORNING. MAY 31. 1922 DALLAS LOSS IS 1 FIXED IT WOO Owner of Property Unde-v t elded Whether He Will ; Rebuild or Sell Holding ; DALLAS, Or.. Slay 20. (Spe cial to The Statesman) The loss Xrom fir which destroyed practl f airy all of the O K. Williams business block, in tola city Satur day afternoon la estimated at nearly $30,000, with G. B. Uiclc Inaon, owner of the Gall hotel pro fcerty as the heaviest loser. "t All the business houses burned out with the exception of Stanton 6 Arnold, proprietors of the Good Eati" restaurant In whose lace the fire originated were ful ly covered by Insurance. ? - The buildings which were of frame construction were owned by Otho K. Williams, brother of Republi can National committeeman Ralph E. Williams. Mr. Williams car ried Insurance on part of the lulldlnta. Mr. Williams Is nnde elded whether he will build or sell the property as it la to other per sons who are anxious for the site as It la one of the most desirable business blocks In the city. 7 The business houses that were wiped out are the Arnold & fctan ton restaurant, Henry Smith real estate office, Glen O. Ifolman law office, Charles Lynn barber shop Service Shoe ahop and . K. C. Dunn's confectionery. All tteee business places with the exception of the restaurant, real estate ot- flce and Holman's law office have already secured new '.buildings and are open for business. Floyd McCann who was thoif nt to be seriously injured by a fall from the roof of the city na:i while attempting to extinguish a blaze on the roof caught from fall ing embers was only slightly hurt and was able again to be at the fire "before the flames were fully extinguished. ARMORY FILLED WHEN SOLDIERS ARE EULOGIZED (Continued from page 1) cate one day each year to the memory of those who died In the Civil war. It Is fine that through out our land today, men and wo men are stepping aside from the busy thoroughfares of modern life to pay a tribute and drop a flower upon an absent comrade's grave. The flowing of the sands of time serve only to enhance the memories of those chaotic days whose passing burned the heart of a nation, but brought a new, glorious and enduring under standing . There are few In Amer ica today, whose pulses do not leap at the mere sight of the fad ed hat cord of the Grand Army of the Republic. And it is these gallant soldiers we honor with our presence today and pay publicly the tribute we privately acknowledge every liv ing day and hour. His Is a diffi cult task who woutd speak an ap preciation of such service. Words are inadequate. Oh if we could but bee into the hearts of men andtdeeds upon which the welfare of read what is written there, our comrades, would never have occa sion to feel their sacrifices had been In vain. All we can do at this time is publicly confirm our love. Achievement lU-come Known Our comrades achievements In that great drama are written on the heart of every school boy. On a hundred battlefields, they gave all they had to give and when the war was over, and the armies of a million men melted away into the paths of peace, we know how many, maimed and wounded, wandered back to the scenes they used to love, to homes whose once bright and happy light had been changed into gloom and sorrow by the shot and shell of war. Who can tell of the crushed ambition, the ruined hopes, the blasting of the fondest dreams of life, but he. who when the Hunt was done, wearily took up th burden of life again and manfully struggled on. Follow him in his marches, and whether clambering the rocky slopes of the Cumberland or struggling through the pestilen tial regions of the great dismal swamp, whether under the tail pines of the north or the old pal mettoes of the south, whether Brawling through the jiinsles of Cuba or wading the rice swamps jof Luzon, whether flushed with victory or depressed with defeat, you find him, always the same brave, chivalrous, American soldier. History Marked by Deed George William Curtis In one of hi a peeches. said: "There are the world seems to be staked conflicts in which liberty is lost or won. victories by which the stan dard of human progress is ad vanced. Between sunrise and sun set on some chance field the deed is done, hut from that day it is a field enchanted- Imagineation vets it with the "light that never was on sea or land." The grateful hearts of mankind respect its name. Heroism feeds upon its story. Patriotism kindles upon its perennial fires." War is a terrible thing. It can not be defended, either by heart or brain. The very thought clouds the eye and blanches the cheek. Yet war has contributed to Amer ica a precious spirit, a gift of her ois memories. God help the country whose only victories are those of diplomacy. Whose his tory is a by-product of the brain rather than the outpouring of the heart. I pity the youth of any country that cannot feed upon and glory in. a heroic and war like ancestry. This great Rift is the contribution of war: "the hih flung spirit of America which we must catch and carry on: a spirit the foundation of all national ideals. Discord is Sounded A verse keeps coming to my mind: "Who laid the cornerstone thereof when the morning stars sang together." A world known Treacher has made this the text of a far reaching sermon. When 1 time began there was laid the cornerstone of this great temple of a world. The entire universe was one grand harmony, a cont ending to meet requirements of a progressive civilization, cling ing to majority rule, properly re pine cadence, a musical port folia; i strained, which is the only true all nature was in perfect mce and ; sovereign of a free people, nd the heavens sang and the earth working to the fulfillment of the joined in. Then one day a string j destiny of the world s greatest snapped in the universal harp: a ; Republic. "" discord sounded in the universal ' Tuft Reviews History of Idea orchestra, chaos obtained and j In transferring the memorial ruin threatened. The discord was j from tne commission to the head sin and the endeavor of Chris-j or the government. Chief Justice tianity ever since has been to Taft told how its first suggestion eradicate the discord and restore had come 20 vears aeo to lie fal- Harding had left amidst another calling of bugle, the people out beyond the restraining .'rope, surged upward in a mass to make Lincoln memorial their own for all time. the harmony that was when the morning stars sang together. Veterans l.ail Cornerstone Our present day America is low a decade before it was seiz ed upon and wrought with close adherence to the broad vision of what this second great American founded upon the cornerstone deserved of his countrymen. Into laid by the veterans of 't,. Our : the stately structure of today. It present day discords are but the ; was. perhaps well, the former expression of ligons. creeds, factions, politics and what not. resulting not from mingled races, re- j president said, that half a cen- vital differences but from trivial misunderstandings. imagined grievances and -fancied slights and jealousies. It only needs a national emergency, a nation iin peperilled. to melt them away as the sun dispels the mist, and tury should have passed before the emblem of Lincoln's greatness should have been erected, for in that time America had time to grow in the arts and appreciation that went back to the simple, mas sive lines of Greek architecture to find fitting precedent for such a work. ! t J A 1 1 1 . snouiuer to snouiuer a unueu -i. jo a mirnifi..i.nt n. ir people go forward for a United j Taft said of the memorial, - set in We need today more of a iovelv vallev between the hiiu Teachers Are Elected for Silverton Schools on Thousands of pair of high grade shoes to be doted out at ridiculously low prices. We are going to keep things going and are. catting the prices down to bed rock. Conie in and see Ugh grade shoes at low prices -. ? j : ' "- . ' i. "" I xN&THEPR!CEir WW w taut Suet SefcvSkM PixBnOd Serous Boats VdJEhNeto BtltadSoatf IbotAfphHU Men's Florsheim Shoes, just arrived in all the newest lasts and styles. They are the highest grade $10 shoe in the world, and will fit and look better than some dQ AC higher priced shoe. Now on sale at $jt3 Men's Brown Shoes and Oxfords, all $6 and $7 grades to he closed out; a larger assortment to pick from. They all go at the same price. QC While they last at - PtnJJD Graduation Shoes. White kid, low heel and high heel, regular . $9 grades; low heels with buckles and one strap, high heels strap and button. A While they last go at - New Pattern Pump White kid Pumps in regular $12 grades. In other stores these are the best white kid that can be made and we are going to make the d7 QC ridiculously low price of V New Pat. Sandal Pumps. Regular $8 grades in the new cut, out sandal pattern. The newest low heel .style on the market, direct from our dC QC Boston representative .. f Another Patent Sandal Pump. Just sent us by express. A regular $9 grade, in celuloid covered heel. Fully kid lined turn. All sizes and width. A wonderful new style to go at the ridiculously dY QC low price of - yWitJ Ladies' Shoes, all styles and all sizes, in grey, brown and black cloth top, and all kid. $8, $10, $12, some QC $15. To close out Pl 'O Ladies' Comfqrt Shoes and Oxfords, in all sizes and styles, including two strappump and lace Oxfords, d0 QC up to $6. To close out - Ladies' Dress Oxfords, brown and black kid, and patent leather; all the new lasts; every size and width. Marked very low at $8. d QC On sale at - PUFJ Girls' New Flapper Pumps, the very newest thing on the market in all sizes, from the lest factories on the eastern coast. Regular $7 values. dP Reduced to Girls' new Flat Heel Patent Oxford. An extra good value at $7. In every size. tfC QC While they last $DmVD Boys' Dress Shoes Just received, a large shipment of high grade boys' dress shoes in a good wide toed last. A fine shoe for $6. Sizes 1 to 6. d0 QC While they last Boys' Scout Shoes, in the highest quality shoe, made espec ially for the Boy Scouts, for heavy wear and long hikes. Were made to sell at $6. d0 QC We will close them out at - $DVD Ladies' Ilanan Pumps, odd lots, regular $14 quality, to close out, in brown and black with one and two straps; good lasts and fine quality shoes. dQ QC Most sizes. To go at - - J0JJ Ladies' White Cloth Pumps and Oxfords, for both sport and dress wear, in all sizes and a long range of styles to select from $5 quality. QC At the especially low price of . O Ladies' White High Shoes Our entire stock of about 100 pairs to be closed out; regularly priced up A A to $9. While they last, go at J1UU Men's Elk Bal Work Shoes, both in brown and black, in all sizes up to size 12; a good $3.50 work shoe. d1 QC To close out go at Men '8 Double Sole Work Shoe, Blucher lace, all sizes; a good last and a fine wearing work shoe. $5 d0 QC seller to close out at $VD Men's Florsheim Oxfords. The best known $10 Oxford on the market, and the only Oxford that really fits; in both wide and narrow toe, also the new square French toe. d0 QC All widths and sizes. To go at $0iJ America the spirit of '01. The spirit every genuine American posesses, wheth J er lie is such by the accident of birth or by way of Ellis Island, j Oh my comrades the slimy, crawl ing, slinking serpent of an idea that there may be such a thing as castes in American citizership, must bo throttled. It is a mag nificient privilege to be born an American citizen. It is a fine responsibility that foreign born come to our shores nnd ask that this be the country of their adoption, but it is a p'ti ful betrayal of our responsibilities that we of America, consider our full duty done when the formali ties of the law have been complied with, the papers signed, seaiea nnd delivered. Why our duties only just 'uegin when the law is satisfied, Ameri ca must be, and this requires more than the functioning of public of ficials. The duty is there and we must spread the glorious gospoi of '61 as far and high as touguo and pen can carry it. The inspir ation of native and foreign-born alike. This will restore the old harmony, obtaining at the laying of the cornerstone of America when the morning stars sang to gether during the portenttous days of reconstruction following the Civil war. Jubilee Recalled In 1869, a Peace Jubilee, cele brating the cessation of hostili ties waB held in the city of Boston. Men and women of all countries attended. Twelve thousand train ed voices. A thousand wind and stringed instruments. Hour aftfer hour and day after day, the glor ious orchestra rendered the mas terpieces dt all nations:, anvil clanged; bells in the city and cannon on the common, timed electrically, pealed and roared in awful harmony. When the great orchestra was in full volume, the voices in full sound, batons in full wave, atfvils clashing bellg ring ing: and-the cannon roaring with an impact that reeled the earth and billowed against the clouds cf heaven, Pareepa Rosa, with a voice like a bugle call, sang the Star "Spangled Banner. The im pression was tremendons. Ai all countries, all beliefs, all faiths, paid tribute to the anthem exemplifying the common ground, flrand Army First We pay tribute today, primar ily to the Grand Army and then to the soldiers and sailors of all wars.Not to the veterans of the e?.st, the west, the north, the routh, not to the wearer of the blue, the gray, the brown, the khaki, but to the American, a sol dier in time of war, a citizen in time of peace. Can you not see them passim? review before your eyes? No hu gle sounds to the charge. No mus ketry rattles; no cannons roar, and we see no gleam of flashing swords and glittering bayonets; the pomp and heraldry of war are absent. Yet the marching ranks come steadily on, and their weapon is a flower. As they pass each stoops and strews his trib utes upon the dead. First, the Grand Army of the Republic, than which no other army will be great er until time shall be no longr. l.Iere one walks with the aid of a ane and there one leans upon a comrade's arm; a mere fragment of the glorious band that sprang to the colors in '61 and yet requires little imagination to p'c ture the strength that once was theirs! Then the veterans of the Spanish-American war; the army of '98 the men of affairs of todav. And then, the veterans of the World war, whose sight opens wounds but partially healed; in here and there is a blank Hie once filled by a face we knew and' loved. A sad and a glorious pro cession! One of resurgent sor rows; and yet, withal, it brings a mighty feeling of joy that we knew, moved with and loved suci men. Thy laid the nation's corner stone. God bless them every one. commanding them by Its isola tion and its entrancing beauty the culmination of the highest art of which America is capable. ere on the banks of the Potomac, the boundary between the two sec tions whose conflict made . the burden, passion and triumph of his life, it is peculiarly appropri ate that it should stand." Colored leader Speaks The only other speaker was Dr. Robert R. Moton of Tuskegee In stitute, speaking for the Negro Americans, and he laid weight upon the declaration that it was Lincoln's name that stood first in the hearts of these twelve mil lion of his countrymen. Lincoln's death, he said, was "the last and costliest sacrifice upon the altar of freedom!.'' "I speak for the negro rce," he said. "Upon us perhaps more than upon any other group of the nation rests the immediate ob ligation to justify so dear a price for our emancipation. "A race that has produced a Frederick Douglass In the midst of slavery and a Booker T. Wash ington in the aftermath of re construction has gone far to just tify its emancipation. And the nation In which such achieve ment is possible Is full worthy of such heroic sacrifices. Markham Poem Read The only other feature of the dedication ceremony was Edwin Markham's declaration of his re vised poem to Lincoln: "A man to hold against the world; "A man to match the moun tains and the sea." In the concluding stanza, it read: "And when he fell in whirl wind; he went down, "As when a lordly cedar, green with bows, with boughs, "Goes down, with a great shout upon the hills, "And leaves a lonesome place against the sky " At the end of the ceremony, President Harding turned to in spect the great statue, brooding in the vast, pillared chamber of the temple, then greeted mem bers of the senate who had closed about him. It was then the president sought out the bent, feeble figure of Lincoln's son.. And when Mr. SILVERTON. Or.. May ( Special to The Statesman ) The Silverton teachers for the coming year have "been elected and the following have accepted positions: Superintendent, ll T- Youel; principal of high school. It. C. Tzchanz; Latiu-Engltsh. Miss Mer vil Hiscox; English.- Misa Ilaxel Knight; honve economics. Miss Marian Chase: commercial. Miss Violet Or foot; Spanish-English. Mrss Edna Gilbert: biology and general science. Miss Mary Lar gent; mathematics,. J. l. Fenen pa; history -civics, H. G. Uomig. Washington Irving building Miss Uosella Richardson, Miss Ila zcl Brewer, -Mis. Sophia Madson, Miss Margaret Huniburg. Miss RJanche Harmon. Mrs. Veda'lten nett. Euftene Field Building -Miss Inai Hubbs. Miss Hanna Olsen, Miss Ama Kendall. Miss Minnie Macher, Miss Blanche Hubb.. Miss Olga Johnson. Fred McGrew and Miss Ferguson Plan Recital A varied and Interesting recital will be given by J; Fred McGrew and Alhs Martha 5 Fergantl coming Thursday evening,", SUV; menu of' critics who hate viewed the rehearsals say that it will M one of the best recitals held this sear at Willamette university, lit, rlcGrew hsu taken Jhe tbree-et Ply. -What ke-y Woman Ruows " and cut It down lost ptint where it, can be given 14 about 20 mvnutcj Besides this there are ttf'be .vtrai other acts and readings or original manu scripts. ' - " ,i' M.'- Martha F-rjufcon it t. oo featured In a three character one act reading where h wil take the part of three distinct charac ters. This is something entirety new and which has never before Wen presented at Willamette. Bad Blood' Bad Health First, thp well-knowrt cauim. : Heoond. the sure renult. It Is equally sure that If rot purify your blood with Ilood'O r SarHupurUl.i. the standard blood lurirW and tonic medicine, good ' health, appetite and strength will follow .u night follows day. v Hood a tvir)urllla givea reUVC in such trouble as blood humor. .. scrofula, eczema, bolls, pimple, and other eruptions: acid blood which causes the pains and achi of rheumatism or lumbano; ner vous twlnttes and catarrh; wek Mood, that tired feeling. Iom of appetile and run-down conditions. HMd thene warnings befor you x decline to the -condition of chronic ' . illness. Oet Hood'" today. Som one In your family needs It now. War tax removed.. price reduced. ; For a mild laxative. Hood's Itll.' LADIES' HATS REDUCED 20 Take your choice of any ladies' hat in the hou3e at 20 per cent discount. Hats of the season. Ev ery favored shape from the small narrow brimmed sailor to" models which turn abruptly from the face are shown here. Regularly priced from $3.98 to $7.50. Gale & Company Commercial and Court Streets MEMORIAL TO LINCOLN DEDICATED TUESDAY (Continued from page 1) queathed reunion and nationality giving their sons and daughters and all their fortunes to halt the armed march of autocracy and ' preserve civilization, even asr he preserved the nnlon. "More, how his great American heart would be aglow to note how we are going on, always on, am- Travel Costs Are Down i" ' To Portland And Return May 26th to September 30th $2.05 Week-End and 15 Day Tickets $2.45 Summer Season Tickets Sale Dates and Transit Limits Week-End Tickets on Sale Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Good until Tuesday following sale date 15 Day Tickets on Sale Friday and Saturday Good until 15 Days after Sale Date Season tickets on Sale Daily Good for 3 months after sale date, not to exceed October 31st 25 Per Cent Reduction Round Trip Fares Salem to Various Points Tickets on Sale Daily Good for 8 Days Ship and Travel Southern Pacific Lines the "Pioneer" in' development of Western Oregon Southern Pacific Lines paid $110,870.37 or 6.58 per cent of all taxes in Marion County for year 1921 5 For further particulars ask agents SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent