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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1923)
' ; . - . . ' ' .'..:!.:.' '., . -. . - , n. - - . s . THE OREGON STATESSIAN; SALEM OREGON ' ' ( ; . i ; ; " ' ;? ' WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 6, 1923 0 . Issued Daily.xcept Monday cyf TX12 STATESMAN rtI SmXG COMPANY f - 215 S. Commercial St, SAlem, Oregon ', , 4 (Portland Officei 72J Uoard of Trade kulldinr. Phone Beacon 1193 v I WKMnKlt OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS , , . The Associated Press is excluslTely entltleTto the uae for publt catlon otjali ncwd. dispatches credited to It or 3pt otherwise credited .13 this paper aad also the local newa published herein. u R. J. Hendricks . . . . . . J. Stephen A. Stone Frank, JaskosU . ; ; ; . , V. . f . . . 1 TELEPHONES: .Easiness Office .... I ..... Circulation Department ....'.... Ml . .. r r ' Job Department .......... ... . . . . . .-.-.. S83 t ' , Society Editor 10( ; .tered at the PostotfJce in Salem, V- WANTED, THE CALIFORNIA SPIRIT If the'people of Salepi and the Salem district had the California spirit, good strawberry land that may be had here at around $100 n acre -and some of it for less wxuld.be selling at $2000 an acre, and above, as it; is selling in Cali fornia. They have to irrigate down there. We can irrigate here, in most places. , t": ' 1 If we had the California spirit, prune land that is selling here at about the same prices a3 the strawberry land, would 1 2 trinsng iaround $2500 an. acre, as it is going in the Cali fornia prune districts where they produce no greater ton nage to. the acre of prunes than jwe do; and where they get ri smaller price than our growers dor because our prunes run to larger and higher priced sizes. , ' If we had the California spirit, every strawberry grow er would sign up ban association; they would demand a livir.j price, nd-get fpr all the growers would speak as en 3 man.; .'- lj"'-rhy: f ',ly. " ;.ii:A'r-r.;':' The list might be very much extended. For many rea sens, told over and over in The Statesman, our walnuts are better than tha. California product (two cents a pound better in the markets), and they, are produced at a lower cost here than there, and on $100 an acre land here,' against $1000 an cre and upward land there. . ; -; ; ; We can produce filberts commercially here. California canrct, except in the northern coast counties, and does not. Does any one fcnagine that, if we had the California cpirit, our great flax industry would have been so long netting started into enormous development bringing mil ler, j and millions annually. -' ; ' .y ; 't .x:i-r: 4'ii If w&vall had the California spirit Salem would .have vg? i TeEoys'andGirlsNewspaper I - The Bluest little Paper tn thci World Ccryrf-!it 1C23, Associated Editors. Cu..l:a3 and Scier.ca : I! tia sun is shining -today go your rooia and watch, the i!st pa3 through one of the sun. leans. , Cttet people .have watch cl sunbeaias for years, and then 3e day a eclentlst, Tyndall. taw them and put them to work. Tyndall was a great scentlst who worked Incessantly with ml croccpes..' lie did much, tojfn crease their S effectiveness in de tecting particles of water. Pin slly lie got to a point In his work - . -ra the nlcroscopes would no lanssr show the tiny particles. This was in ! connection with ' his v. crk upon what chemists know 3 colloidal solutions. Gelatin is cis of these solutions." - - 'r 1r TrEwill worked to get a high pa-rer microscope .which would l.e'p him observe what, was htfp ienins ia these -; solutions, but with no success.! One day he no ticed tha sunbeams In his room and he found that he could see the tlay dast particles with hia r a Iced eye when they were in the sunlean's - 1'zht, , althoueh he could not ' see ' them " when, : they were not in this beam. ;l I , He applied this principle to. col loidal solutions and. sending a team of light through them, look cl at then with his microscope &nd was alia to study the won-, dars which tad been jtidden to him for so long. Randy RhiJle Taj y "Why are trees always polite ?' (Answer tomorrow.l Answer to yesterday's word puzzle: The letters, arranged to form a .word square are: Main, anno, into, noon-'. .' ; . . , - . ,t Pi I - Answer to yesterday's riddle: There Is all the difference in the world between the' North" Pole and th South Poleu--V-? j 1TH5 SHORT STORY, JR. J The Sod Fate of Tommy Alarm- :l!'"ri !.;; . .clock..? -Jyy- Toramy-Aiarmclock was mad Because' of the hardship he had; The way he was treated, T :"-.' v II -Toildly repeated, ' -i.s J ' -Vould make" any angel feel 'bad. Tommy Alarmclock sat "on the kitchen - shelf and ticked mourn fully. . "I kee? as good time as any clock la this house,", he com plained. "Better, in fact; And .they-" stick" me out here where I hive to look at the stoves and r ots-and pans all day, while Har rison Wallclock lives in state -in be front room where he has such i lovely -riew. .And the jeering '.lags he yells at me on my way v-' -- f A " v ..-,.,.. , . . . . . , - ... .. , . Manager ............. Managing Editor .... . . .... . . . Manager Job Dept. . . . Oregon, aa second class matter. o- V Society Je ;s : A monkey named Jocko is one of the souvenirs which Miss Hazel Nut and her brother PhiI,wl!I bring back With them from their tour of the west. It was given to them by their uncle.. Mr. Wall Nat,: with whom they htave been visiting. ; . f: , : ; . , e Miss Nut had been to a big circus and had been taken with the clever tricks of a group of trained monkeys. ' Her uncle bought a young monkey as p.. surprise ' for his visitors. c - . - V; ' y 1 1 ; "Jacko has a cunning coat, Miss Nut writes, "made of red crepe paper trimmed with giltTpaper buttons, and gilt shoulder, trimmings'. His little red hbt is fastened around under his chin. He takes R off when he begs for pennies. (This is the ninth of . a aeries of IV nut dolls which you can make of. nuts,, millinery wire No. Ti and crepe paper; The f eatures are put i on the . nut : faces vTUb black and 'red crayon. r j, 1 To make the body' of the' doll, cut ". one ; piece of-! wire j 7 - inches long,- another 3 inches, and an other 6 inches. Bend one. endpf the 7-inch and' also of the S-inch wire : into' a .loop .about, an Inch long. . Bend each end of the. 6 inch wire into 1 a loop- 1-2 , inch long. y. - .-. v ' :d Cut a long 'strip of, crepe paper 2-4 inch : wide, y Cover the wires by moistening one loop end with paste.-covering IV and then wind- ing along the -wire. : - Leave about 1-2 inch unwound at the straight ,,",7 1 - : .".",?-. y;y, upEtalrs at night wfcen I f 1 pass throu gh there .; .--" Tommy ! f sighed deeply. "And even when ; I am carried upstairs what sort of treatment do I get? When I follow . instructions and call people in the morning,' they yell at me to keep still, and then they don't pay- any attention to me ' ti is. Indeed, a hard life. - yt'A like to heap coals of fire on ,thelr heads. I'd like "to do something j for them that' would show ' them how : really, valuable I am. -' But what chance "have :T, I'd like . ta know, stuck jout in the kitchen like this on a dinky shelf.' ; " Shadows began to -creep across the roonii y Totojmy W Alarmclock was worried.' ,'I.'ctually believe they've forgotteoTto take me up stairs,' he exclaimed in fright. "I was never left down here in this dreadful place , all atone be fore, i It'll serve them right if they all overEleep,.but I cah'$ "tay I like being left here." i i-y It erfew quite dark as he tick- 1; 50,000 people in five years, and 500,000 in twenty-five years, or perhaps a little longer. ! ; : , . We can have the California spirit, by merely filling our selves with the advantages and possibilities of our section. ' Why not get it? . y. - y -i :' ' ' ' - - : ' ' -y- - ;r T. -v r 4 !j y, The Statesman of tomorrow will tell yoir why the land in the Salem district is the cheapest land pn! earth, consider ing its potential production of money crops. . ' , .- ,- - - ' - y -'j-. L -; y - : ' "i, t-. f 1 " "v" ; . - .y '- y ----y - .; . The Statesman of tomorrow will tell of another great thing that has been accomplished by a Salem district poultry breeder a thing never done before, and for which the wide world has striven for; ages. ..- ,. THE FIRE HAZARD " More than $300,000,000 worth of r. property ; is burned ; up 1 erery year in this country aa a result or the carelessness of man. In Chll when there Is a fire" the man who owns the property is promptly ar rested and it Is up to him to prore that he was innocent of responsi bility in connection with the blare. In this country such a regulation or practice would be1 highly em barrassing, especially ' when ' the property is heavily ; Insured. . CAPPER'S PET REPOR3I v One of Capper's Weekly's pet re forms still has a chance. A bill to require old bachelors! to support old maids has been introduced in the North Carolina legislature. As we look at it, the effect of this legislation will be to force each bachelor to have the - assistance and ' cooperation of some spinster in order to make his pay check do for two.. 'Like as not this is the idea the author of the law had in mind. Capper's Weekly. .-ty S DOLSHEVIS5I Hf CHINA Sir. Alfred Mond recently told an English audience that China once made "the greatest experi ment in Socialism ; erer tried, which lasted 150 years' ' i ; If this Is correct, the Encyclo pedia Brltannlca, and other arall able reference works hare oyer lookefk. it. ' ; ; ) ; Thjrewas, however, a certain Mih Teh who flourished In China in- the fourth century B. C. who advocated rather a virulent form LOAD3 I OF ;FUN I Edited by John L MUler. a- From Nuttown ; , k . " - end of the 7-inch piece. The end of this wire is to be force! into the end of the nut which forms the ' head. ; " 5. V 4 ' .; Fasten the 3-inch wire about two inches from the loop end of the 7-inch wire by twisting. fFlnd the middle of the 6-inch wire and wind around .'the 7-inch "', piece close to the hut to form arms. Bend the - bottom loops over so that ' they, form feet.- Fill out the -body by winding j a 1-inch strip of crepe paper around many times, pasting-in place, i, ' . .The monkey's head is a hazel nut, and the wires which form his body re wound with dark brown crepe paper.. ( Cut' out his long-tailed red suit exactly as it appears in, the "pattern.) e ? , kitchen mlndow right beside him and wis coming in. His heart beat like a hammer in his fright. 'A burglar!" he shivered. "He'll get ! alp the ; family eilver and everything. And there'a no one here to stop him but Ihe. No one but me!" With that Tommy Al arm clock hurled himself pluck lly to the floor, with a crash and began ringing with all his might, hearing the noise, came down to find the window open and the intruder-gone, r , , Tommy Alarmclock f waited proudly for the; praises due him. Some one stopped to pick him up, "Lucky for . us."- they ald. "that the burglar knocked this clock off the srelf and started it ring ing." 1 Tommy Alarmclock made a queer- nol? and -then stopped running forever. , Ills spring was broken. -.; - L'.! 'J' ; -;, i ' yiy ; of; It, which amounted to Com munism. Everyone, princes not excepted, were to grow their own corn andinake their own clothesl ; But. this seed of Socialism tap pears to have fallen upon stony ground excepting only in so far as that country has remained rather obstinately "pacifist - while other and mighty empires have perished by the sword.' . V . But China did once have a Bol shevik emporer, one Shih, who reigned shortly after the days of Mih Teh, of whom it is written: ' "Everything, including lit-' erature, was to begin' -with," 'his' reign.' and, acting on the ' advice of his prime minister, ' he Issued an order tor the i v burning of all books, with the exception only of works re-, . latlng to medicine, divination i and , agriculture . . . . To carry out the scheme effect-; ively the emporer '" made a ' point of examining every day ' about 120-pound weight of books. In order to get 'rid ot ' 'such as he considered to be . "useless; and he further ap--:4 .' pointed : a number of inspec-. tort to see that his orders were carried out, ' The result V was that about 460 scholars 1 were put to death for having disobeyed the Imperial com-; mand, .while . many others' were banished for life. But,, like methods of modern Bolshevism, it did "not exactly prove "effective." , It is interesting to . see what political tribulations this mighty and strange country has survived. They seem to have been willing to try most anything once. HIS -AST DREAM The last dream of ex-Kaiser Wilhelm faded away when the possession of the once loudly her alded L Berlin-to-Bagdad railway passed definitely into the control of- a British : syndicate, -i Its east ern terminus will still be Bagdad, but its western terminus will . no longer be Berlin. So the exile; at Doom lives to see the imperial policy tor which, more than 'for any other single issue, he . risked war .with the civilized world, turn ed to commercial .profit , by. the' stnbbornest -and to 1 his , war ad visers the stupidest --of his-many opponents. .. ;- - l-t Great Britain has won this real victory -where the ? nation ot shopkeepers has won all Its last ing victories in the past not on the field of Mars, but in the tem pies -of finance.. Her statesmen have never been as bright as her financiers; the corner-stone of "the-far-flung empire' is not the sword .. and : the gunboat, but the pound sterling." , ' ; r ' Indeed, : the manner., in which British Interests gained -control ot this much .coveted rail route re sembles exactly the methods em ployed to acquire command of the Suez canalquietly, and - contin uously buying in the shares held by other European investors.' And In this Bagdad railway deal, aa In the Suez canal 'coup,' it , is ", the Trench who are, most furlojist over the- v ay British finance has again "put"lf over." ; ' " . : Th y French da not hesitate to dub the affair a frame-up between German and British groups ' , of capitalists. The original German stockholders in the Berlin-to-Bag-dad railway solemnly affirm that they sold out after the war - to a Swiss corporation .and how the Swiss disposed of the shares was noue of their - concern. Ismet Pasha shrugs, a shrug that implies Turkey doesn't care which of the great powers goes to work for' the prophet. John Bull looks over the "full house"- he: has drawn and risks a few more blue chips. , We can readily believe that this additional bone ot contention plac ed between the French poodle and the : English mastiff , is not . alto gether an unpleasant' sight to the war: dogs of Berlin. The , more bones flung out for them to wran gle over the sooner a chance for the dachshund to get some of the pickings... , .": -.tiyy. yi:'iy- But to the last! of the. emperors this consummation of twenty-five years of Intrigue and four years of bloody : fighting must be gall and wormwood. The gorgeous palac es he 1 had pictured for his royal race in the ancient kingdom - of I .FUTURE DATES. I Jn . Friday Daily BibU School Exhibition.. i-ra- ; 'ii - i "j : 1 un 10, Pnndty Company T leaves for r nationaT suard eBcampment. ": Juttlt, Mondjr Wpttern 'Walaat (irwer t rat ia Portlaad. ttm 18. sSatuMay Cnnty Kradnalioa ; .aixrrisea Aaditorium of 6lm kigh rfrool, Z flock. . ' i uii 13, Wednesday WillameUe Uai- verattf rnmnremrnt. -Je 4Tliardy ru day. tu IS Saturday, Marion eenaty enn Jane IS. MendayOpenlof, Daily Va cation Bible enrol. , ' day achool pifi. - - s I ,t l"i IS tn 24 Cnaatanqna el tlallaa.. Jne 51. Tarday Regional Bed Croti eonferese-in 91em. - (...: Jane St. Thursday Fifty firat ran5on ' of Orpn t0nrt fn T,""f"iJ i- . , 1 9 " . ',....- . David, the rainbow; castles he had built of oriental majesty, the vis ion ' glorious of the ;trong ) arm reaching out Irom 4Berlln to seize the argosies of the Persian gulf and the golden fleeces of Ihdla he sees dissolve into j thin aftr "and like an insubstantial pageant fad ed leave ot a wreck behind." Ills last dream jended not like that of an Alexander or a Napol eon amid fed glare of a burning countryside surrounded! by pomp and circumstance of war, a broken sword still clutched in desperate defeat, f But through a series of prosalo "confabs between drab fig ures In frock coats and silk "top pers' meeting in the private office of a Zurich banking establish ment. , it ' , So, too late for his own better ment, the ex-kaiser at last begins to 'understand bow he ten years ago might have secured for. Ger many the prizes taat are now id ing to other" nations, ' . IIU3IAN NATURE : As "ailrlile, a; man's' a' tool, .' . When. its hot he wants it cool, And when it's Cool he wants it hot, j - ii yz t-yyyy Always wanting; what, is not. r Sa runs the old I ditty; ;. Haven't you noticed that It's true? v ' 1 Human nature ia a funny thing. We are always wanting what we haven't got. The; fat' man wJuld be slim -the. slim man would be fat. Boys would be men and men wonld be boys again. ' Isn't it so? ' We arei always', chasing ? after something and then, when we get it, we don't want it. We reach out for something; that we -feel a e simply must have, then, throw it away when we get iW x,"l' j The baby, ahows this quality most so j it 'must be , Instinctive The baby cries tor one thing; then when if gets it, decides It, had bet ter cry! for something else. ; . j .We never lose original inclina tion: We want the moon just be cause we know we can't have it. If we got it we should want the sun nexL'y;;t:'--::''i y :' 'h V; v v-7' : I The other side of the' road al ways looks better, and a man would keep running ; back and forth if he always obeyed his Im pulses. ; y tf iy-; v ' ' , , ':- v Yet that is what makes progress i never ; being satisfied. It is this trait of the American people that keeps . them always - busy working toward, something. . I Examine yonrself. Be candid. Right now you're wishing you had somebody else's' position or pos sessions.;;; Yet If j. you had it you wouldn't want it. . -. It Is the things that somebody else has that look best to us. And it is well that this Is so. V For this Instinct it ; Is" that keeps us busy trying to satisfy our every, ambi tion and wanC . And through' striv ing w develop. Herman j j. Stich in Los 'Angeles Times. "A-" , NEGLECTED HEROES On account of a system ham pered -by rules,! regulations" and red 'tape Lieutenants Kelly and Macready,' heroes of "the transcon tinental air flight, 'will get no di rect; recognition ; or reward 'from the government 'In whose service they performed ri their record breaking feat. They will appar ently' suffer ' hot"." similati "neglect from'; the: American pffple . who have thrilled at the story. carried by every newspaper la the land, have cheered .the two aviators as they j have .been flashed on .the screen' in a thousand motion-picture theaters and have y written them into : the long record of America's-national heroes. i!: i Possibly public sentiment may be aroused to the point where leg- uiation may nave 1 to step in to remedy this lack of rewards' for conspicuous service in the army and-navy since, under the pres ent hard and fast regulations, the war department can do -nothing but return perfunctory thanks to Tllaviuis Ez I'wo Rousing, Soul-Iaspiringr r ( l. i. : :': ; : . : X : J t : i-.' W ill i ; 111 mm iFntw'ASjS Sf-Ua f11! asn; r musical event, which ia certain to bV hailed with enthusiasm is the appearance of Thav In two errand concerts on the last day. Many, will remember that arDarance f Th.i tn 1010 ., . , 7uranLe c Ana orthe EUIson-Whlte Chautauquas.- Thavlu u bringing toaut. l to be the best traveling bund trganLatlotf la the Sxr" ,nlI?aT?f the Pr nce fetors. He has attained this world-renow ned . position through merit a!oneT lIe"r an'- l3 V - ? tf a,d tosptrtog his men to such an extent that the results approach a de-re of perfection wldoM h l !5f ?C" ,Z dUrCt.rf renmvn- h 13 'cost. of great ability and his playing has been -JralSd In tie i l 1 In the-country. Thaviu's rr-rnos finn n -t!i .!.. . .A. . " . . rBl-ej iy 8 r'-it 1 ; j 1 . -c concert, selcrtiocs Including 1 itriotlc tlr-toma-f the -hest desdes, fram v;?Xi nr-::;r! ty V - f tl'c? .frari rrn - the two lieutenants who have set a new pace for American army fly ers. . "',"-. , No promotion, no increase in pay, no bonus or compensation of any sort, no medals, no encour agement for ambitious - youth in the lower ranks ot the army or navy. "No law permits the pro motion of junior off leers for dis tinguished Bervice," declared , the secretary of war. But he also as sured his hearers that when, con gress convenes again he will urge that action be taken to provide for : su ch exceptional service as that performed. y by; Lieutenants Kelly and Macreadyl' .' ' . . In this determination -he will have the backing of popular opin ion, but, unless that opinion ex presses itself through a megaphone to compel1 the attention ' of con gress, it will be but as the ripple of a pond of still water stirred by a passing zephyr. i - J Temporary - enthusiasms pass new exploits blot oat the memory of the old. The names of yester day's heroes are forgotten tomor row.,; .Onlya fewiyears ago the first aviator in a paean of public ity flew across the English Chan nel. . Still more recently American airmen piloted a dirigible for the first: time over the Atlantic ocean. Who today recalls; the names of these' pioneers of the air? ' . j ARMY " UNIFORMS In a' sudden fit of economy suc ceedlngmpnthj of wild and reck less war -extravagance ' the late Democratic administration after the' armistice sold a large stock of American uniforms to the Italians, who in turn retailed them at a profit to different Balkan nations. Strange to say, when these 4 uni form were turned over r to their foreign? purchasers -"neither ' the army buttons nor other .insignia were removed. - -j'" ' Such a deal in the inception was not flattering to American pride and in the denouement," according to the evidence of globe-trotters, is damaging to American prestige. We in America have been In the habit of demanding proper re spect for the uniform of our army and navy. The Democrats ; hive sold. that respect' cheap to south eastern Europe.; : , ' ; i -; - This, at least, is the impression of Americans In Turkey, and the Balkan states who have witnessed the result of .this Democratic, deal with, the second-hand clothiers of the Mediterranean countries.: j : So, as , one writer . expresses ; it, "in this part of the world there are too many bums and .vagrants wearing United States army: uni form.". In' the interior of Ana tolia 'degraded specimens of hu manity 'in: American : army tunics with, collar , insignia and United States.' buttons in evidence beg alms from passers by. These point to their buttons with a grin and exclaim, "Americano !" ; ., ;;; ; -j -. At Brusa, near .Mount Olympus, a Eentrron his beat and an agent for a transport company . wire both J clad in regulation ; : United States" army khaki, Greek and Ar menian. cab drivers in Constantin ople were 'easily recognizable ;as American soldiers by their United States army "overcoats. ' Greek fruit peddlers In Salonika blossom into Yankee fop-sergeants 'and a Serb vine-trimmer may be a full fledged American'corporal ; ! S'ncc the deal was madb by the Democratic administration in na tional uniforms canaot now be un done, ,we can' only , hope and trust that,, should; the -Bourbons he ia control during' another war that Involves American soldiers, before they sell United States army uni forms to the junk shops of south ern,; Eur ope they will at least re move the buttons and oilier marks of. -insignia held in profound re gard by the majority of our people s;How would f: you like to be a candidate for a seat in the Egyp tian Assembly ? There are7 4000 candidates fighting for 400 seats. on Jt5and Concerts WIH Be Given at J Chautauqua on the Cloairj- Grand Opera SinfferaDbn't Miss Band Day. y t M-V-:ir w-i - v S.- .f T PITS FOR BREAKFAST tit This Is Important - . S Si! To know of 1 our -manifold ad vantages. m The Statesman of tomorrow will have a symposium showing that we have the cheapest land in the world, considering its potential value; what ; money crops it will produce.--- "."..: ---.' .' v There will be a list of all the li censed real estate brokers In Mar Ion and Polk-countiesr and those in Salem have been, asked to give reasons why land is cheap here. If -you ,. have been . overlooked, please get in touch with the Slp gan editor today. b U S Write an' article; make It abort and to the 'point. '. You do not have to be a real estate broker to write the article. Perhaps you have a point that is worth many dollars many thousands to this district If. so, it Is your duty to write it. .J .." b ' By the'-way-, The Statesman of tomorrow will -contain additional facts to show; that; this is ' the greatest poultry - country on" the wide earth. - ' ;";VM;VVX-v:.:i - Some cf the greatest breeders of dairy cattle in the United States are now looking towards 'Oregon, with a . view to removing their op erations to this state- to this val ley." They realize that If . they are to compete In .world records, this is the place they must be in order to excel. It just can't . be done elsewhere. We have the climate and the soli and the feed for high record -dairy ' cattle. - And the know how, too. .- - "b "W . . . It costs less for a man to go in-: to a grocery than it used to cost, him to enter a saloon. He doesn't buy a round of bread and butter for everybody in the place. ! fJEV CORPORATIONS I Articles of Incorporation iwere filed yesterday by the Shop Em ployes association of the Spokane Portland & Seattle Railroad com pany. - The incorporators are C, M Hansen, president; R. A. RI?e, vice president; and D. A. Phillips secretary. - Revenues will be from initiation fees. .. " Other articles "filed yesterday wtety.y'ry yv'y ''til ;-r 'Oregon-Washington Mining. Co., Portland,' incorporators,' Minnie M. Knapp, H. S. Royce, Guy B. Sampson; capitalization,' $100, O0A. . .lioj tbl ; -is ; .. ' .- - Henry. Serr Manufacturing ,Co.", Portland ; incorporators, Henry Serr, Bertha L.; Serr Edwin L. Serr; capitalization, $ 6 0,0 0 0 ; con fections. ,-:"-o;'. y -'.''" -s j : i ;-w-f': Wasted S! MR"'FRD!T' EE. : ,ffMr Church and .,.'" PHOKE 439 it lo 1 hrill Lhriiif !?;j(ri5 j! -.,:" l;..;-:." r ' v. as well ft 3 arood r-rl :V - , i, t,.r;..".lt y;y Notices of decrease in -.- ration, were' filed by the t ing: ' "' . ' Eureka Gas company, Po: from $400,000 to $200,000. Chinook Investment coz Portland; from I300.C: $5000. ." ' Deep River Logging cc Portland; from $300,000 ta 000. . Everdlng &' Farrell, For. from $200,000 to $50,000. . Notices of 'dissolution-wer: by King-Smith company c! land; and by the Brown-: gor Investment company ct i land. Permits to sell stock la C nnder. the blue ' sky act v sued to the following: Bradley Pies; Inc., Pc: $5000; Oregon-Idaho Loa pany, Portland, $250,000; tha Washliion Grocery st the Northwest, Delaware c. tlon, $250,000. , ( Emergency Beard Off, Says State. C, Secretary of State Sam A". : announced -, yesterday tt;t meeting of the -state en-, hoard called for next Sa'iurC . been postponed indefinite!;-, was done upon receipt cr from H. C. Atwell, actir entfof the state board t: culture, that'the city of I Is taking steps to raise r wage a campalga .of extcr: against the earwlj. T: gency oard meeting" Fa i primarily to coriSider5, sr. geney appropriation ty" for that purpose. ; It also was proposed t o ; state for further lands t ;, the alfalfa weevil which i ; ; destructive inroads Into t: fields of eastern Oregon. I, it,,! held necessary to ; state for ' this money it -necessary to call a(mect:r emergency board for the i Faith Is what makes s. write to her friends and t her new gown before her L gives her the money to i gown. . . " f CLAY AWAY THE V rmmmmm mmm mm mm mm hiiii ii i Apply Boncilla Cauiifkr cis : our face, and rest whi's it c! remove and see and latl the difference in Ue color and text. : skin. S Guaranteed to do these def.rnt a f the face. or mwr; refunded. complexion and sive it color. L.: lines. Remove bi2ckh?J t-, ir Close enlarged pores. I i i sues and muscles, f lake t,e i and smooth. $ . You can obtain regu!ar sizes fro favorite toet cour.ter. If not, t z ad. with 10 centsto Uoncilla Iiorc Indianapolis, Indiana, (or a tnil t 7T w J ... ' IYZffl Sir .j - miriiJp nr Day by fhaviu'a Exposif 1 I : ; ; ifrn m ; H!: ;i lit la's t t ' - y .