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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1923)
THE OREGON STATESMAN", SAXEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY MORNING, ;MAHCII 28, 1923 I f t t k 4 v - Y k ' r t V. t i, t ,7 v ,4 f i t k i CITY NEWS IN BRIEF Interest Guarantee Extended The state irrigation and drain age secarltiejcammlsslon yester day agreed to pay Interest for six months additional on, $750,000 bonds and one year additional on 1800.000 bonds , of the Warm Springs irrigation district of Mal heur county. - This makes an. in terest guarantee tor four and one- half year on each amount. , The project - embraces 31,000 acres. For the Talent Irrigation district of Jackson county the commission agreed to pay Interest on $252, 000 bonds for an additional year, making three and one-half years In ali: The total - Issue of the district Is $770,000. The works are .' practically constructed and the ; district is In operation, It contains 1100 Irrigable ac Closed, afternoons of Tuesday and 1 Friday.- Adr. Pilot Commissioner Named--' v . W, C Gnnderson of Seaside was yesterday appointed by GoTernor Pierce as a member of the state board' oft pilot, commissioners to succeed Frank. M. Sweet of As toria,' whose term, expired. . ; ' ' Free . f: ."-, jV . I . Ku Klnx Klan lecture tonight, 8 p. m., Salem armory. Adv. Ballot Title Prepared : Attorney General Van Winkle has prepared the ballot title for the proposed . referendum of the acf, to" Increase the tax on gaso line from 2 to 3 cents a gallon, which ; is being invoked by the Oregon Automotive-Trade associ ation. M. ' P." Cady is ' president, G M.r McGlrr vice president and Mai, J. Stachlt secretary of the association. The ballot Wile reads 'Purpose: To Increase the tax on -gasoline. and other . motor ve hlcle'fuel 1 .cent per gallon, mak ing a total of 3 cents per gallon, and exempting sales of such mo tor Tehicle fuel' sold in . original packages in interstate commerce.," Legal Blank- W Get them at The Statetsman of fice. Catalog on application.' Adr. ' -- - f Sunday School Night . Tonight will be Sunday school night at the evangelist serrices at the First, Baptist church. Last night H. August Hunderup, the evangelist yho is conducting the serrices, spoke on "Why (Religi ous Folks Go to Hell- l and . large nnrober attended the ser vices. This is the beginning ot the fourth week of services which py buying your hardware ani Iornitare at The capital liard trm & Furniture Co 235 No Isiaercial St. , Phone 947 F02 GITT3 THAT LASI - HART7.IAII BROS. . ' ; ; ; Diamonds, "Watchet, -.J .' Jewelry and Sflrerirart. . Theme 1255, Salenv" Oregon Calsa Ambulance Carrie , Day " Nl2ht , -iX Phzii 66G " X79 S. laWty Bt. Calea t c Ore. ....... - '.- Capital Co. WANTS ;T' ' - AH Snia of jnck and keeend-hand cooda. We pay full ratae. , - 21S Center Street Phone 833 LADD & BUSH, BANKERS CxUbUshei 1868 j - ', -!-.-. General Banking Boalnesa ; . Office IIoTirs fresa 10 a. xau to 8 p. in. fu n m f i ,n f H nmimiTnM i ' UUUUillVH ,:. Hardware, Paints, Oils and Glass All garden tools necessary for planting a back lot or a market garden. ; f '. Bass Hecter Paint yCT.r 2S0 N. Commercial Phone 630 " y.t are proving popular with a large number here. Seats will be re served toniKht for Sunday school classes but all are being invited to attend.- ,;; i -1 Abrama Electronic Reactions v ' And occilloclastic treatments. "Dr. Abrama' machine a worth less contraption and sold as c ire all. Occllloelast Is merely a mass of wires, i" Inquiry.! Investigate before spending your dollars. .4' : ; Adr. Editor Seeks Location George R.i Barker, -formerly sec retary. of state for Idaho for two years during the first administra tion , of - Governor Alexander, and former publisher of the Pend d'Oreille Review at Sand Point, Idaho, stopped for a visit with Secretary of State Kozer yester day. He isi seeking a new news paper location and is on his way to California. He disposed of bis newspaper at Sand, Point two weeks ago. j i ' -j .' Benefit Dance . i For the Pythian Orphan borne. given by the Knights of Pythias at their castle hall in the Elk temple on Wednesday evenine. March. 28, at 8:30. You are cor dially invited. Adv. V Easter Food Sale- Easter eggs will be featured by the War Mothers at their food sale Saturday. War Mothers are contributing cooked food for the sale which is a benefit for the group's welfare program. Exclusive Line i , Of baby carriages, priced from $22.50 to $37.50. Giese Furni ture. Co. only. ' Adr) Passion Week Address One of the features of the Ro tary luncheon today wtfll be an address on gome phase of Passion week,: as it is observed by all Christendom, to commemorate the week covering the - condemnation, the crucifixion and the resurrec tion of the ! Master. All the din ner clubs are observing the week, and some wonderful addresses are being' delivered to commemorate the observance. Special music be fitting the occasion is to be nre- sented. -'-' Complete Line . : Of suDerior stoves and rinroi only at Giese Furniture Co., ! Adv. Will Address Realtor ; Frank Ober, returned . YMCA worker, who spent a Ion time in the Asia MinjMVeniin-v f tn SD'eak befora thn. . rmmt Healtqrs at thtefr weekly Jtuncheon at ine juanon Thursday noon.' He speaas tonignt at the Chamber ot Commerce, with a three-reel film depicting some of the living con ditions east of the Mediterranean that promise to be very much worth the seeing. Free ' . ' - V- Kn Klux Klan lecture tonight, 8 p. m., Salem armory- Adv. Drv LiC. MARSHALL Osteopathle ' Physician and m Sorseon ' 228 Oregon Building ' . ': Phone 258 "SeD Direct to You" : : Plumbing Material r Special Price on" ? THREK-PIECE BATH SET , SO-gaL Kitchen Boilers ' - at ,.U..... ,$9.50 2-part Cement Laundry trays, complete ... $15.00 Pipes, Fittings Valves, Any thing In the Plumbing Line COMPLETE STOCK Pcrtlacd Phmbing loa ist St. i Portland, Ore. i mm tin o pmnniic i iiii ii.i v jm i u IIUUIUUW Passion Week Serrices i -Passlon week services will be held in the First Congregational church on Wednesday, , Thursday and Friday evening of this week. On Easter Sunday there will be an early Easter prayer meeting at 7:15 a. m.. followed by Easter breakfast, which has been, an in stitution of this church for many years. Sunday evening there wiH be an Easter concert by the choir. . . r ..-! Mill' Wood i ! s i ' Best ' and cheapest. All good wood, not trash. Prompt delivery. Spanlding Logging Co. Adv. Fleener Divorce Allowed X f Mary Fleener was granted I a divorce from Sam M. Fleener , in the circuit court yesterday after noon by Judge Percy B, Kelly. The decree was issued after the defendant had been .adjudged to be in default. . Thirty dollars a montn lor me maintenance ot tne three children was granted. I Ac cording to the complaint the de fendant used abusive language to ward the plaintiff, beat her. wth his fists and upon one occasion brought a ; strange woman into their home. They were marrled in September, 1912. . For Easter Lilies- Flake's, 273 State. Phone 656. Adv. Sues to Collect The Commercial Credit . com pany' filed suit against O. C. Ku mer in the circuit court yesterday for $100 damages, alleged to have been suffered through the keeping of a .Ford car which the complaint states, belongs to' them. The car which Is a 1922 Ford model.' is said to be worth $300, according to the complaint. '" i ' .. Oswald's Great ; 10 Serenade r. At Dreamland -every Wednes day and Saturday. Adv. Kantner Speak Today Rev. W. C. Kantner i will be the speaker today noon at ' the services in . the. Oregon f theatre. He will speak on "Jesus Christ and th Man of Today." Ronald Cr Glover will be chairman -and H. II. Harris will be the solist. Rev. R. L. Putnam will i offer prayer. The meeting will begin at 1 2 : 1 5 and close promptly at 12:45. . :, Store for- Rent ; ' " i Wanted, a good reliable concern to rent , of store at 184 Si Com mercial St., city. Good location. Adv. -r J.' !". Clinic Today ' . t The health clinic for Salem and surrounding country will ;be held today In ; the Chamber , of Commerce rooms. Marriage Licenses f Marriage licenses were 'issued to . the following in the county clerk's office yesterday: Ernest J. Nestindorf and Frieda Scholer of I Mount Angel and Forrest 1 E. Hart and Frankie : Edwards I of Salem. . . . '-' ' Dreamland Rink - - I- I Dance, every Wednesday and Saturday.;; Floors resanded. Hall newly decorated. Adv. HealUt; Clinic Today ? ' I The health clinics will be held In Woodbnrn. Silverton," Stayton and - Jefferson during the week beginning t May 14, according: to plans made at . the meeting of the Marion County Health asso ciation yesterday.- Dr, Stella Ford Warner of Portland wi conduct tbe clinics and aj day will be devoted to each tonrn. ; The third clinic of the year will be held In Salem today In the Cham ber ; of Commerce rooms, i Mrs. John ' A, Carson : is president' of the County Health association. 4 Classified Ad .A , Will bring you a buyer. Adv. Speeder Arrested Mrs. Chrlstoffer of i Portland was arrested by Officer Edwards yesterday for ? speeding at the rate of 28 miles an hour qn South Commercial between Su perior and Meyers . streets. Bail to the extent of $5 was put up. George Breton of Portland was arrested by Officer Edwards yes terday on South Commercial be- DIED ASKWITH In this city March 26, Horace A. Askwith, age 87 years, husband of Mrs. Telitha Askwith. ; Funeral services will , be held Wednesday. March 28, at 9 a. m. from the St. Joseph Catholic church, under the di rection of Rlgdon Sc Son, after .which the body Willi be taken to Portland for vault inter ment.' .. ' U . s T .' 't Webb & Clough Leadis; Fcrtrsl J Directers ' : Expert Entailers Rigdon & Son's MORTUARY . Unequal ed Service tween Lincoln and "Rural avenue. Bail of $10 wis put up for his appearance March 29. Swift's Fertilisers. For easy terms, C. S. Bowne, phone S&s. Adv. :SpWler Arrested . Paul E. Sims was arrested yes terday afternoon for speeding the rate of 28. miles an bourdon South Commercial between Ferry and Bellve streets.- He is sche duled to appear before Judge Marten Poulsen in the police court today. v Ku Klux Klan lecture tonight, 8 p. m., Salem armory. Adv. Filed for Probate The estate of William Robert Robins of Turner was filed for probate in . the county clerk's of fice yesterday. Real property of $6,500 was claimed while person al property 'was valued at $100, Heirs of the estate are Anna Jane Robins, widow, Percy C. Robins of Beaverton, son and w. Robins Turner, eon. Rob ins' death occurred February '21, 1923. v : Caught for Speeding E. Fry of Silver ton was arrest ed on North Summer between tbe fairgrounds and Union street. His sneed was estimated at 28 miles n hour. He was released after furnishing $10 bull for his appearance at a later date. ; PERSONAL I . John Kent of Sublimity spent the day in the city .yesterday. John Zuber of Sublimity was in Salem on business yesterday., Sam Hall qf the Abaqua Heights school district was in the city on business Tuesday. G: F. Wadsworth, clerk of the Union high school,-was in the city on business yesterday. W. H. Egen and son of Gervais were in Salem on business yester day. . Engel Schott of Sublimity spent the day in the city yesterday. Eugene E. Smith of Portland was a caller yesterday at the of fice of Governor Pierce. State Senator Fred Fisk was here yesterday from Eugene. . President P: L. Campbell of the University of Oregon conferred yesterday with J. A. Churchill, state superintendent of schools, and with Governor Pierce. ' . John Farrar, Salem postmaster. is- back' at work following an attack of influenza. ' ..: Miss Agnes Payton returned to Portland last night following1 several days visit with Miss Laura Payton. . ' . . ; Sam Bnrkhart, deputy .sheriff,' went to Tillamook " yesterday ' to' bring back Henry wood, who s charged with obtaining money under, false pretenses, . ; ; W. J. Large of Eugene, was in Salem yesterday on "business connected with his work as Presl byterian Sunday school .mission E. C. Clement, , postoffice inU spector, was In town yesterday on official business. , Mr. and Mrs. . E. L, Crow of Mapleton, Iowa, who are touring tbe : Pacific " Coast states, visited with S. Phillips a former resl dent of Mapleton. " "i James S. Stewart is here from Corvallis. ' . I HOTEL ARRIVALS I MARION Mr. tand Mrs. R. J. Lorrey, Mr. and Mth.'W. C. Gault, Kennewlck, Wash.; L. R. Right more, Yakima; W. C. Lagert, T. Robinson, Oakland, Cal.; Allen Von Behren, Hermiston; -F. J. Sleeper, Goldendale; B. A. Mill- sop, Lebanon; W. B. Baker, ,Ea-i gene;. Led Hahn, J. G; Tate, E. Cannon, W C. Page, E. E. Pollock, W. L. Prentice, J. W. Sherwood, F. N. WUliams, J. A. Brown, Geo. Mclntrye, C. W. Thorn, C. E. Clod- fetter, Alonzo Morrison, G. E. Babe, Scott Kent, A. W. Parsons; Q. Tweedie, J. E. Barkus, Port and, . . ;. i '' " BLIGH -Mrs. Anna Owens, In iependence, A. Bromwell' Med tord; E. L. Lin son, Wahpeton, N. D.; Henry Hall, Mrs. F. A. Zell-, ran, Mrs. Ethel KIrkland, L. H. Todd. J. N. Noble, L. E. Spaulding, It.' M. Thomas, F. Dv Webb, Port 'and; J. R. Wihtler, Bakersfield, Cal.- - : ! : - . : .-. 1ERMINAL C. C. Starr. M. Tohnson. Theo Sharapas, Portlandi L. V. Keds.j Alsea; Dave O'Brien. ?an Francisco. . . ROBIN HOOD f Hawking and Spitting Is not only unsanitary but is very disagreeable to those who'must associate with you. ' A bottle of long balsam will stop this. . , ' ' Schaefer's Drug Store 135 N. Commercial St. - ' . - Phone:i97. ; . - LOWELL HID TO BEST All Nature in ' Tune With Spirit vof Lad Who Passed to Other Side A ' larere number of friends eathered at the Terwlllieer home Tuesday! afternoon to pay the last tribute to the late Lowen Unruh,', who died on Sunday and was buried Tuesday. It was a beautiful day; the birds outside were .sineine. the: little canary In the funeral parlor sang as it it were a : glad holiday, and tne soring sun ' shone . In like the dawn of delight there in the house of mourning. The deceased had been for two - years an ' employe of The Statesman. He was a good em- nlAv i inn' faithful, cheertut. progressive. sunsnme at onw Work Is rare enough. Lowell was one . of the sunshiny ones whose going ought to be symbolized d sunshine and bird-songs and gen ial outdoors; He did not livt a grouch, and there was nc gloom when he passed away. Me had nrofessed a firmi Christian belief before he died. He said it meant springtime, to step over into the other world and the day was beautifully fitting. He had been working nara on musie with the promise of developing an, extraordinary ten or voice, Such voices are rare; they hardly seem possible, (even when they do appear. He naa seemed to be extraordinarily strong, and h's illness and death came as a shock to all who naa known him, : " , " v tiev. Thomas Acheson of Jason Lee Methodist . church! preached the funeral sermon. A mixeu quartet sang two beautiful songs. "Abide With Me," and "Asieep in Jesus," and Floyd Mclntyre sang ''Face to Face." The house was crowded with friends of the deceased and of his family, who came to pay a sincere tribute to his memory. Stanford Has Government Experiment Station Now STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CaL March 27. Stanford's nearest ap proach 'to an agricultural school is a government experiment sta Uon recently established on a 20 acre plot on the university grounds by William F. Wight, Stanford graduate and a representative of the United States department of agriculture. Wight had planted about" 6 00 hybrid trees, for the Teddy Bear Blues ' v" A Real "Blue" Hit MOORE'S MUSIC ; HOUSE 415 Court v ' Phone 083 What Can You Expect? If the sound eye will make such .errors, what, must one expect from the defective eye, whose power of focussing or ir regular shape does i?not permit of a perfect Im age being pictured on the . retina at any time. MORRIS OPTICAL CO. ; - SOl-5 Oregon Bldg. - Oregon's Largest Optical '' t InstltutloB Phone 239 for appointment SALEM, OREGON i i most part almonds, pears, peaches, plums, prunes and apricots. In : his experiments -Wight ex pects: to perfect a variety pf al monds with hot only, a soft shell and a kernel of good quality, but onett jhich has the hardiness to resist ; extreme weather and the tendency to bloom tAo late. It is thought that Stanford will never more closely approach agri culture than i a this department, as the university founding grant provides for the furthering ot only the older sciences-. The experi ment station cbraes ; under - the head ot. research -and might there fore be classed as botany, biology or other natural sciences. For 1000 years little worth while has come out of tbe Ori ent ' the birthplace of the arts, of paganism and of religion. Civ ilization had lost the power of reproduction in Asia before the civilization of the New World was born. ... i As one , studies the Russian revoluticn closely no master mind appears; it was the work of many pigmies, not of a giant. BITS FOR BREAKFAST Friday or Saturday - v . "m The Statesman's annual Issue. m "U No use getting all excited be cause somebody tells you to go to neiu You don t have to go un less you want to. - Just Drug's And Service. ' These are the two things which we endeavor to furn ish our customers and our steadily Increasing trade at tests to the fact that we are succeeding. ' . Tyler's Drug Store 157 S. Com'l. Phone 35 V r ii j. m m -m "na. m w rw m satisfaction. rails Lie In bed as long as you can, urges Bill' Smith of West Salem. Expenses start as "soon as you get up. , , :. ' --V; m ';'-: If all the growers will irrigate this yeaf, Ihe packers of Salem will have a"; hull of a time get ting huiyrs for the strawberries: ; -m 1 1 people took as much pleas ure making pleasure as they lake pleasure making trouble every body, would be happy. Sarai Jones of Salem He'ghts asks: "Have you ever noticed how many limousines pass with poodle . dogs in them and bow many Fords pass filled with kid. dies?" " r ;- -".. ' Breeze G'bson says all roads lead to Jail if you drive fast enough;'"-. "'""';'-'-"'.'" Clarence BlakeJey says there is a home, out in East Salem In Easter Wecessfeie .... , . . . , That need no recommendation Wlie'-e it Pays to " r i ElfHatteir of pieaiaBa. There are highly ornate Shoes and there are rough brogans and everything in between!' Walk-Overs successfully occupy the mid-, die ground, not too ornamental but stylish and attractive, not to heavy but strong and stur dy; the name Walk-Over has come to mean Shoe Superiority, an honored name in shoe in dustry. Walk-Over trade-mark is the symbol of splendid merchandise, , Hooter Special Are here for you to choose from in styles that cannot be duplicated, as we are exclus ive Walk-Over dealers and fast becoming known as "leaders in footwear" because of our service, quality footwear and guaranteed Spuntex hose in all shades. J. J. E31ttlle Walk-Over Shoes 167 N. Commercial which the sixteen year old daush. ter has seven" beans " an f ' tho twenty-s4x ' year old da aibte? never "even had a caller. - Bill Sykes ot Highland askaf "Why do. they say a brld I Med' fo the altar? Did yoa eve? see a brid pulling back?". V . f, , In the language of "Sam's t3 Po?en," spring has eanie.- . All V , ugly cut ? MEOTH0LATUL1 A9 CMtViWpkfty UUU gwhcIjwUic, ncauni?. other than that they come from "Pay As 'You Go.' , Vx 1 ' Nto-s', lm ! (7f v r ' ' M. I M VI I M M M M KQli