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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1922)
TIIE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON FRIDAY MORNING. JULY 21. 1922 5 1 4 :;J( ; i r. a. : ' " " i - 4 'A' i v ( i I I i v.- , - if 1 ft ;v t - TC 4 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF " fipwUl Meeting Salem Lodge No. 4, A. K. and A.4M., will hold ' ' ' a SDeci&l DIMtlnv In th lodge room' Friday; July 21," at 1:30 for the puropse of conduct ing the fjuneral of Brother John Stun. 'i .,.;.;" -y; ;-' !-'.' Byrder bt W. If. 1 , AlM)y Meetings. ; ; . The women of the First Con gregational church will hold an all-day meeting for work at the church parlors today, i An urgent appeal la made that' all who can possibly do so attend this meet ing. :);;; :, A Enter - Parade A.n yway ' The committee in charge of the Marion County Sunday- school pic nic announced yesterday that Sun day -schools should arrange to par ticipate in the picnic and parade whether they can arrange to enter a float or not. The chairman of the committee said that many communities were so : busy that they could not enter a float. While desiring all to enter floats who can' do so. the committee wants "MARION DA VIES -In , ''Beauty V Worth" ? "Toonerville Blues" Scenic Showing Views of Oregoh Penitentiary Successful Graduates , Are the Best Recommendation of r ; o Di : This instttuilon offers a thorough, practical, and stan- dard education at a cost within reach of the high school graduate It offers training for collegiate degrees in: Agriculture,... Mines i. . Commerce -r:-'''l'h Pharmacy ' t ' ' -: " Engineering and Mechanic Vocational Education Arts , I, V i Chemical; Engineering Forestry .v ' " : ; - Military Science and Home Economics ; s ' " i Tactics It off era training also in: The School of Music, Physical ; Education, Industrial Journalism. I vrr. Pall Term Onena Sentember 18 " For circulars of information and illustrated booklet The Registrar, Oregon j Corvallis, nnn ; (Both Pipe I T El ' v h . -fi ' ' - - . - " i 1 v. j ' " J li f wnti?i.v T It ji . $ 4.- ' t (: ' I r. , "f 'i; -f . 5 -V i . .... .-:v '. . ; . S K ii in i - hi i ; I CS.m.MILTON 340 Court Street all to know that they can enter the parade anyway.,5 For Quality and Quantity Meats, go to Capital Cash Mar ket, 456 State SU Phone 1799. Adr. , '' ! -iA..! Salem Demanded It "( Danny Wallace's Golden Rod Melody Men held 'over for the Dance Dreamland Rink Friday nigh:. July 21. This is the prize winning jazz band from the Uni versity of Nebraska!. The dancing event of the season a riot every where. Don't mis this. No raise in prices. This band is booked solid over Pantages cir cuit Adv. f Chronicle Publisher Visits Ben R. LItfin. publisher of The Chronicle, dally and weekly pa per of The Dalles, was a Salem yator Thdrsdajr night, on hj's way to attend the State Editorial association at CorVallis today. The Chronicle is one of the in fluential, worth-while newspapers I of the state, and ,Ben is one of the real princes ofthe realm. He drove in, alone,' after leaving The mrf Rex Peach's "North Wind's Malice" 25c Agricultural College, Oregon n - and Pipclcis) Give The Best - of Satisfaction mm MM& sl w bLj- Installed The WESTERN PIPELESS will save one-third of the fuel liora iwiaeos ::r;J usually consumed in a Jiic iiuuavct - The WESTERN FURNACE is all cast iron and is easy' on fuel easy to regu late and carries, a five-year guarantee. 'Price $175 Installed the middle of the after noon. - Dr. Utter Will Ret To his office July 24th. from attending the National Dental convention at Los Angeles. Adv. Brunswick Record For August now on sale . . . H. L. Stiff Furnitures Co. Adv. Rarer Come Back- Lee Eeriy has his reconstruct ed Ross special racer out on the streets and able to run a four- foot Jack rabbit with a hornet's j nest on its tail. The machine is none the worse for what he did to it at the June races at the state fair grounds; if anything. It is probably better than It ever was I in its life and It has made 941 miles an hour on the Tacoma speedway. Home Made Brick Ice Cream - Quart brick, service for eight, COc. The Spa. Adv. Sewing'bjr the Day- Satisfaction guaranteed. Phone 1186. Adv. 1 Salem Tooks Good- State Senator -Charles Thomas of Med Tor d was a Salem visitor Thursday. He is planning ijb leave the legislative halls of the state this fall and go upon the bench and stay nearer home; having received the Republican nomination for district judge in the district of Josephine and InrVann mil n Mod 'Riit It'a a a tn in Ko, I " r- .. . to Salem," he said, as he drew I a long whiff of the paper mill and rose-scented and park-cooled air of the Capital city. Home Made Brick Ice Cream- Quart brick, service for eight, 60c. , The Spa. Adv. Brunswick Records Fo. August now on sale. H. L. Stiff Furniture Co. Adr. Cherries WanteO- We will be in the market for cherries, until Monday night, July 24; we need -a few more to fill our demands, and will be glad to buy. Bring them, even If they are green. We thank, the grow ers for their fine business this year, and we shall come again. Lyons California Glace Fruit Co. Adv. Films Developed Free Leave your films today at Fat- ton's Book Store. Adv. Legal Blanks- Get them at The Statesman of fice. Catalog on application. Adr. Brunswick Record For August now on sale. H. L. Stiff Furniture Co. Adv. Smith to Leave C. L. Smith, who for the past 15 months has been traffic man ager and rate expert for the Ore gon Growers, is to leave Satur day for The Dalles to take up similar work with the Apple Pro ducers' association, the pioneer fruit co-operative company of the northwest. They handle about ?.O00 ears of anples a year, be- TBY OUR - Individual Meat Pies : On Toes, and Wed. TUB IdTTLE LADVS STORE 1000 Center Btn corner 12th Hartnun's Glasses Wear them and tee Easier and Better HARTI.1AN BROS. Phone 1255. Salem, Oregon SAVE $ $ $ by buying your hardware and fur- iture at The Capital Haraware A Furniture Co.. 285 No. Com merclal street. Phone 147: CI! MIKE'S AUTO WRECKING y HOUSE Parts for One-Third to One-Half Off I buy old cars 1 424 N. Com'L Phone 523 n CAPITAL! COMPANY is in the market for all kind3 of J ' 7 UUNK We pay market price. Quick service I Before you sell your junk or second hand goods, ' see us 215 Center SL Phone 393 Dalles fides large quantities of other In cidental fruits and vegetables. Trnaka, Bag and Leather C Before yon take a trip call and look at those Bettertllt trunks at F. E. Sharers, 170 3 Commercial. Adr. Salem Iiemanded It Danny Wallace's Golden Melo dy Men held over for the Dance Dreamiand Rink Friday night. July 21. This is the prize win ning jazz band from the univer sity of Nebraska. The dancing event of the season. A riot every- wnere Don't eras this. No raise in prices. This band is booked solid over Pantages circuit. Adv. Honevmoouera Re R. E. Shannahan and bride re turned Wednesday from a honey moon trip by flivver to practi cally all the coast resorts of Or egon. They were at Tillamook. Seaside. Astoria and wherever there were good clams to dig or good fish to catch or enough wa ter to swim in." Taey are to live at 553 North Twenty-fourth street. Mr. Shannahan has again taken up his work of publicity manager for the Oregon Growers. Jack's Caf 163 S. Com. St. A good place to eat. Tables and counter. Adv. A Classified Ad Will bring you a buyer. Adv. j No More Cherries Handled No more cherries are to be canned by the Oregon Growers' Plant t.ere in baiem; ana tne iw . . . r.tttir- will le handlei in other ways. The logans are still coming in quantities, for both cannery and dryers. "Did you make this stuff your self?" "Your Honor," replied the dis couraged home brewer, "just taste it and you won't need any fur ther proof that I did." Birming ham Age-Herald. DfED HERREN At the residence, two miles north of Turner, Wednes day evening, July 19th, Thom as E. Herren, age 60 years, a native of Marion county. Sur vived by his wife, two children. Maud and .Rex Herren, his mother.Mrs. Levi M. Herron, two sisters, Mrs. Ida Morris of Portland and Mrs. J. H. Bailey of Sherwood, Ore. The funeral will be held today (Thursday) from the Rlgdon parlors, at 2:30, conducted. by the Rev. R. L. Putnam. Interment will be in the Herren Cemetery, near Turner. J STDLL John Stull died in San Diego, Cal., July 15, at the age of 72 years. He is sur vived by his wife, Mrs. John (SK.ull, and one brother, M. Stull. Funeral services by Masonic lodge No. 4, A. V. & A. M. degree at 2 p. m., July 21. Interment will be in City View cemetery, with arrange ments in charge of Webb & Clough. FUNERALS Funeral services for the late . j ? Mrs. Patrick ibbons, wno aieu Sunday, July 17th, will be held this morning. July 21, at 10:30 o'clock from the Rigdon mortuary Interment I. O. O. F. cemetery. Webb & Clough Leadbf Funeral Directors Expert Embalxnerf SHORTHAND Guaranteed in 30 days We guarantee to teach you Karam Shorthand in 30 days or it costs you noth ing. All that we ask of you is to attend our class from one to two hours daily. National School of Shorthand ' 212-13 Oregon Bldg. Phone 1890J . SALEM :V OREGON STEINBOCK JUNKC0.1 Pays Best Cash Prices for JUNK 1 '4. and ' OLD FURNITURE The House of Half a 1 Million arid One Bargains t 402 N. ComX Phone 1 EAGLE MI INCREASES PLil Medford Company Expects to Mine Quicksilver in Large Quantities Oregon Is soon going to be able to supply almost one-half as much quicksilver as is now mined in America, and enough arsenic to poison all the weeds of the west, when th War Eagle Min ing company near Medford gets its big new plant into operation. The company is installing a new 160,000 Scott furnace, the latest thing in' the quicksilver world; it will have a capacity of 40 tuns a day. The old furnace was distressingly snjall. for the quality and quantity or tie ore in sight; it handled only about four tons a day. Running on the company ore that has been show, ing an average of 1.07 per cent quicksilver, the new outfit should produce 10 "flasks" of quicksil ver, each of 75 pounds, per day; or more than 3000 flasks a year and the total production of the United States last year was 6339. while the nation used 26.000 flasks: the other 20,000 be'ng imported. The market Is clam orous enough. The War Eagle mine is rated by the geologists from the nation al geological survey as one of the most remarkable deposits of cin nabar ore known in the United States. It is represented as a true fissure vein, with a width of from 4 to 12 feet between walls, and carrying an exceptionally rich ore. The great new Idrea m;nes of California, where the ore is seoooed up by steam shovels, is worked with a profit on ore car rying only .17 Of one per cent of quicksilver; or less than one fifth the value of the War Eagle average. The War Eagle has an other vast mineralized dyke. 1000 feet wide that assays better than the California multi-millionaire New Idrea property. President C. M. -Kill. Secretary A- L. Hill, and State Senator Charles Thomas, attorney for the corporation, were in Salem Thurs day on business, and gave out the facts above. They say that the property has been developed en tirely by local capital, and that it has cost a total of more than $150,000 to bring it to the pres ent development. They have 520 acres of claims, part of them pat ented, the others still held, but patentable under the national for- "est "laws. They report that their Vein extends 4500 feet, and that they have definitely tested it for 900 feet. They have, blocked out $990,000, worth of ore, with more values in sight than they dare to figure, they say. Two interesting byproducts of the mine, besides quicksilver at $55 a flask of 75 pounds, are gold anu ersenic. The gold is worth whatever one can get for it which is almost everything in the world; it runs about $3 a ton for all the ore they have in sight. The arsenic that can be saved from the luvnaces, srill pay all costs of operation; arsenic has an insat iable, non-fillable market, for duct spray for killing weeds and for other purposes. The mercury market is growing steadily, with the seneral revival of gold mining since the war; mercury is the great gold-saver for low-grade gold ores. The company plans to employ about 22 men in mine and mill, with the present equipment com plete. A water power right on a stream nearby is to be developed, eventually for power. More fur nace units can be added, and the mine and mill capacity can be in creased as the developments war rant. REALTY EXCHANGES ! I Reported by Union Abstract Company , . E. Knutson to M. Kittelson, land in claim 58-5-1, $10. C. B., Durbin and wife to M. D. Koltes. land in claim 77-7-2-. $1. A. W. Cornish and wife to F. A. Darby, lot 5, block 8. Hollis ter's annex to Salem. $900.- G. F. Vick and wife to F. A. Legge, lots 1Q, 11, in block 8. and lots S. 9. 10 and 11, In blk. 10, Oaks addition, $10. Z. Stockton to C. B. Browne, lot 6, block 1, Reed's addition to Salem, $2500. J. A. Pooler to H. W. Leonard and, wife, lot 45 of Hampden's Park addition. $2400. O'.E. Gardner and wife to E. Montgomery, lot 4, block 1, Whit neyV.a'dditlon to Stayton; $850. ; G. Tbomason and 'wife to N. Grossman and wife, land in claim 48-7-3, $10. G. Thomason and wife to N. Grossman and wife, land in claim 46-7-3.' $10. G. Thomason and wife to N. Grossman and wife, land in sec. 17-8, $10. O. R. Clearwater and wife to V. La Duke, lot 2. block 1, Dish Op's addition to Salem, $350. R. J. Hendricks and wife to A. L. Titus,, part of lot 5, High School addition to Salem. $10. i X.' . Grossman and wife to G. Thomason and wife, lots f , 7. 10 and 11, ia Waldo Hills Fruit Farms, $10,.- . , ' TRYING TO REGAIN WEALTH. !' y ': V i'l V!" ' Vi I i - III " M v ! ' ' ' "-V- ill ' Nearly blind and In poor health, former Senator William Lorimer is In Colombia, South America, as the representative of a wealthy American syndicate which plans to build a railroad there. He hopes to recoup his fortune to pay back losses of depositors who suffered by the failure of the trust and savings bank of which he was pres ident, in Chicago. BITS FOR BREAKFAST j : The Yeomen home . . "b Salem has a chance at it. But she must brief her advan tages, and offer a site as will ap peal to the committee of the Yeo men. They have the say. S Taey are wrong in one thing, however. They want a site for their city of cottages which they proposs tq build that is covered with trees. - They could do bet ter by taking one without tree, and planting Franquette and May ette walnut trees on it. They could thus make it more beauti ful than any site with a natural forest and the walnut trees would in the course of time pay for the home Interest on at least $3000 for every tree, with the walnut crop. Still more; In still more time. For a walnut tree will pet larger every year for 1000 rears, or 2000 or more year, and bear a larger crop ev ery jear as it grows in age. Talk, ing of being 50 or 75 or 1000 years young a walnut tree may verily become 1000 years or more young; for it renews its youth ev ery single year. S Somo one remarks that the two pillars of every wholesale nation must be the heart and hearth. Spf aking of the radio, the back fence is still a prominent broad casting station. A friend Is one who knows how worthless you are and doesn't give a darn. Prune Dryers to Be Standardized A radical new departure in the prune business is being planned by the Oregon Growers Cooper ative association in the standard ization of prunes. L.aM. -Miller of Eugene, an ex tensive prune grower and dryer, has been' out in full general charge of a number of the corpor ation's dryers. He will rebuild several of the present plants, to conform to a single standard of operation Then be wilf see that all are operated according to one formula. which ' from his long years of careful experimentation and success is to be the very best there is. . Mr. Miller has several patents on prune drying machinery and processes; one of which, the san itary washer and trayer, is par ticularly successful in its cleanli ness and efficiency. His associ ation with the Oregon Growers is expected to be most beneficial in helping to standardize the pro duct, ready for the final sorting and packing. MAKES Die mi Refuses to Make Marrying Sisters Use Word "Obey" When Taking Husband . LONDON, July 2 (By mall) English women are equalling their American sisters in the scope of their occupations. Wo- men legislators, lawyers, pnysi cians and sculptors are fairly com. mon in both countries. But now London comes along with a woman- "marrying parson. She Is Rev. Constance Coltman. a grad uate of Oxford university, and joint paator of one of the West End'a fashionable churches. Some women like to be married by Mlrs Coltman: she does not ask them to use the word "obey in fact tells them to avoid it. She requests the bride and the groom to present each other with a ring repeating the words: - "As thia ring now encircles thy finger, so let my love surround mm PARSON thee all the days of thy life." T TO T Threshing in Marion and Poik Counties Will Be Un-' i der Way Next Week Threshing throughout Marion and Polk, counties will be going full blast within the next week to ten days, accord 'ng to promi nent wheat growers of th3 dis trict. In some parts of Folk county it is reported that thj crop is exceedingly light this year and a me threshers are even said to be refusing to take their machines out of the sheds and go to lh9 expense of hiring crews. Fred Heckener. whose farm lies south of Liberty was to have starttd threshing yesterday after, noon, while W. O. Zlelinski. liv ing on the Silverton road Is to start bis machine next Monday. Tha grain harvest Is now go ing, almost at full blast; where ever there is early fall grain, wheat or oats or rye. Some splen. did fields are reported over the county. One field of wheat near Kickreail in Pclk county, has been variously estimated at from 40 to 60 bushels to the acre, tut tnis stand is an exception. It looks like the stories that filtered aown tne W illamette river, v .to Oregon City, Trom 1835 to 1840 about the marvelous grabi doss! bilitias of this section of Oregon, and brought Jason Lee and other pioneer settlers up her on the Jump. In general, the fall grain is gooo; at least, it looks rood up to thresh'ng time, wnen the machines will test out the yield ana tne quality of the grain. Spring grain Is almost univer sally mediocre to poor. There was a good enough acreage of the tall grain, to save the situation for the vattey; but the farmer who put in spring grain, according to the grain buyers and the imnle- nient dealers, has played out of luck. . Stock fed is about the best that cart come of much of the later sown grain, both wheat and oats. Assessment Measure Passes at Silverton SILVERTON. Ore., July 20.-1 ( Special to The Statesman.) At the special election held at Sil verton yesterday the measure vot ed on carried 93 to 71. The Ques tion was of amending the charter to provide that the cost of laying drams, sewers.: waterpip and water mains bo assessed to the property benefited thereby. The way to get nothing don it to appoint committees. A Real Hot Weather Necessity We Can Supply You AT Fleenefs Electric Store 414 Court Street ' United Army Stores For Tents, Paulina Folding Chairs Blankets Folding CoU Shoes, Breeches and all kinds of Camping Equipment See ns before buying i United Army Stores 230 South Commercial St. s V" Salem, Oregon "".T " HARVES ' ic 2k A shipment of four thou sand six hundred and eight pieces of number cne American White Chinaware received hy us a few days ago will be put on sale Sat urday and Monday, July 22nd and 24th at practi cally . - r, . - "one-half price ' . Cupi and Sauccn.....::;15c Dinner Plates.....,....;. 15c . Pie Platei.; ;15c Bread and Putter, Plates, 2 for.;....;..............15c Frmb,.2 lor. ..4...15c Nappies, Bakers and Salad Bowls in the same ware at 20 cents numbers c( these sell at 40 to 45 cents, all at 20c Saturday and Monday, t , -l ' This is an ODDortunitv for every housewife a$ well as apartment : houses, ho tels and restaurants-Mo buy white dishes less than you wiirdo again forxlcng time to ccme. vfl 'V? See them in our windows, none sold before Saturday, nor none after Monday at these prices ' , We want every one in this section to know we keep dishes. :!'H: VI j CHATilBERS 5: CHATtlBERS 4 V 4ilL