: 1. n 4 .( i " - Issued Dally Except Monday by v : : 1 1 . !,.- THIB , STATESMAN PUBUSHmQ COMPANY' 1 1 v.. - 21S S. Commercial St Salem. Oregon : (Portland Of fir. 723 Board of Trade Building.' Phone Beacon 1183 ' " MKMUKIt OF TllK ASSOCIATED PKK8S v i The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ua for pnbll cation of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la this1 paper and also the local news published, herein. IU J. Hendricks : Stephen ..Stone' frank Jaakoskl . - f - - .i TELEPHONES: ' .. .... -. .... , . cirenlatlon Department T Job Department ....... Society Editor , . . . . , . . . Catered at the PostoffJce la Balsm, ' FR01I A SMALL SMALL-COLLEGE TO A LARGE ; ?i a ' SMALL-COLLEGE ; f It is a far cry from February 1, 1&2, to this day and date in 1923 ; over 81 years " JBut such has 1teen the span of the life of Willamette I University. The former date was the time of the election of ; the first board of trustees, and that was therefore the date of the founding of the institution, though the school did not open till August 7, 1844, with Mrs. Chloe Clark- Wilson as the first teacher. , Jason Lee was the first president of the board of trustees. j ; j1-' Classes met in the three-story wooden building, doubt less then the most pretentious building on the entire Pacific - Coast, which had been, built originally by Jason Lee and his co-workers for the, Indian mission school. . ; j. . jh-- "; That building stood on the present campus, and around it developed the town, Salem, destined to grow into the capital city of. Oregon rlUrUv r vi:M- s ;4: - A -And so the twain were born twins, and the town and the school have grown together through all the long intervening 'years. . vfkj - v.- h President Doney said, in his annual address to the board of trustees at their meeting yesterday: : U v i f "We are in a period of transition from j being a small small-college to a large srnall-college." f" J - 4 This calls for many things r , . .,;":'' .' ' A' larger teaching force; more teaching facilities; addi tional buildings." Of the pressing needs there is scarcely an end. v'. ,.- Through the generous subscriptions of 5000 friends, and the munificence of the General Education Board, there can be provided at least a beginning of things ' needful 1 for the "large smaH-coBege," including a fine new, gymnasium, some additional teachers and a few of the necessary items of equip ment that must follow as a matter of course. " The campaign for the funds with which' to make the burgeoning of the institution" into the "large smalt-college" stase was undertaken -for the subscribing of a million and a quarter dollars arid this was and there have been additions 1 .to: t , TO DO The Coryrlt, 1C3, Associated Editors. Summertime Jewelry Slaking; .":'-.-6 'I ..: X -: BE x t "Kings on my. lingers and' on, my toes" In these modern limes ' but there are; buckles that you- can make with sealing "wax to 'put on . your slippers which will be pretti er than, bells. , ' l , . , For a foundation for yonr ring get a little brass ring at the hard ware ' store to fit nrouf finger loosely. " Cover it ', with gold or saver wax. Draw a design for the top of the ring and cut two patterns -of It -from -thin card board PIA 2), leaving r tabs; at the ' sides the width of the ring. Cover Jbne pattern with vrak and while still soft press the; second one squarely on top, . bending them to sides well with wax and press Into place on the ring, f Hold over the flame until the ipar Is smooth at the Joining places. v - Tor decoration you can dot, the top here and there with melted wax of r contrasting colors and heat until blended. The ring In Fig. 7 is black, with sn Imitation diamond in the, corner. The buckles are made with! a founda tion of a cheap metal buckle cov THE SHORT STORY, JR. : - '.. . , VI X SELLS W IIDISELF:- ; Vin thoighC his luck couldn't be 'worse; He felt Just as gay as a hearse His luck was all wrong, ; And It lasted so long - ..Z , He thought he was under a curse. Vin Garrett and his little sister Thelma, were : vboth broke and a Very long waykfrom home. .They came from a little town in Illinois, but now they were on a several acre plot In Oklahoma, where Vin ( THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON ,,L: -. ( .......... Manager . . Managing Editor Manager, Job Dept. 1 " ' k ? . . 21 S8S SSS lOt ... jmy f . -. . . j Oregon, as second class matter. .exceeded by I over $100,000, , since, and there will continue OYSAND GlRLSNEWSPAPER Blgsest Little Pvper tn the World 7 ered with wax and decorated with small stones, ' ' (It yon have' never worked with sealing wax before, this Is the way It . Is - doae : ' First, : ' get - regular sticks of sealing wax of' the col ors you,like, and a small piece of glass for , the table to catch any wax that - might drip when -It is melted. 'Hold the tip of a stick of wax over the flame of, either a gas burner, alcohol lamp, or "canned . heat. and when It ; be gins to run daub it on! the foun dation I you ' are ,": , using. .1 When blending . colors; do not let the wax ret too hot. Dip the article In cold, water once or twice to cool but be sure to dry it thor oughly before returning to ; the flame, or the wax - will blister. The Illustrations suggest a num ber of designs that can be worked out In any color combination yon choose.).- .j . , , J Not a Gift,- f. Her: "Who gave yon that black eyert-l ' Him: "No one, I had to tight for It.". r had taken his little sister for her 'health. , ' :: : . I -.. :, i, r-'-1 ' : 'r v - Little Thelma had been success ful In her,, fight to get well and strong, bat it, tad taken all their money and the two had no way of getting back to their home town, where Vin j could get a t position selling automobiles. The only thing in all the world they owned was their several, acresi of good f or nothing land. ...... , ; i On day oneof their neighbors came by and said that he would give .Vin his old automobile and two hundred dollars for halt Inter est In his landii Vin snapped at the chance and made aU prepara tions to go back home. ' Several weeks later he was back in his home town at his Job,' sell ing automobiles.' He wasn't mak ing very mnch money because C, 3 farmers ' hadn't "sold their crops and didn't have enough .;tojt:7 new. cars.'-' In fact, : fc,sis,.iies, ;t to be additions. "To him that hath shall be given"; is ' prin ciple that applies in the life of a school, in greater measure than in the case of most undertakings. The givers of gifts of this kind like to give for permanency. : They like to think of their dollars living and laboring forever. Willamette University Js much greater than ever before in physical property and in endowment funds , r In facilities and friends, : -.. - But the spirit-is the same as it was when the first teacher began work; Her dreams have merely come true. I ..-j U i '.. v I t 1 ? "I .. ft r ) IMS'. Willamette University is fortunate in one respect. She does not have to looks for students. They crowd forward faster than facilities can be provided for them, and this will no doubt be true for some time 11 '-v : i " , Though there will be an effort to accommodate all comers; an effort along this line for the coming school year, and for the years of the future. 1 But one thing may be said in favor of the present situa tion, and that is that the pressing numbers of students ' al lows of a culling process which tends to eliminate! the less earnest ones. Jt results in a finer student body than would come from any sort of drumming of recruits. ' There is no finer student body than the one that has been at Willamette during the school year, now closing. There will not be. But there is a prospect of having student bodies equally as fine in the future, and they will be larger. - Salem ought to be very proud of Willamette University. She is. She showed it in the .great drive for funds. The twain, born twins, will grow great together Finally into the large large-college. ; : Some of the prohibition . en forcement officers must a wear bllndert1A2iJE-,;,,:::4.: There Is this to be said credit of De , Valera he when he had enough. ? I to the knew There se fourteen men running for the United States senate in Minnesota. The name lot the Swede to win the nomination will be announced later. : i A JOB LOT : This effort to exhume the bones of Pocahontas may "be all right, but spare us from the sacrlllgious wight who would dig up all the John Smiths. y r 5 ' Willamette students will hare a new gymnasium when they; come back next fall, besides a (number of other Improvements. ! There are already feelers being put out for a new building. There should be at least one at the earliest date possible. The class rooms are too much crowded, . ; . Willamette university is chang ing from a small small-college to a large small-college. So said President Doney fn his annual re- nart tn the board of trustee ves- terdar. The exnression win stick. Pretty soon it win begin to be a V Edited by John IL Miller. Why a fBurning Glass" Burns ,'. a Piece of Paper, r When, yon see a magnifying glass, or ''burning glass, burning a piece of paper, can you tell how It does It or why? This is the way It happens. : . . v I- - i The sun, as yon know, gives off light and heat. Both of these travel In straight lines, as long as possible. However, when a light or 1 heat ray; falls on. the surface of a burning glass it Is bent. Just as yon might bend a wire. The place at which the ray touches the burning glass determines how much it will be bent. The rays which, pass through the center of the lens are not bent at all, ' but those 'which: touch upon the out side edges are bent a great deal." , All of these rays are bent- In such, a way that they all get to gether In one ; point, the focal point, and that partly explains why they can burn a piece of pa per. j None of these little rays. alone, can burn, but when many of them are concentrated in one small spot,' they can and do burn. - You can measure the "focal length" of your lens by allowing it to get the Image of a lighted electric light and cast i it on a piece of paper. .When the clear est image is cast.' measure from tbe Image on the paper to the center of the lens In a direct line and ; the length of that 1 line rep resents Itho local length of your burning glass and tells what' dis tance from m piece" of : paper the glass must be held to burn most effectively. r ; : u ; .j . , ! ; there wasn't; any more work to be found anywhere around ' ; The boy was discouraged. It was. Saturday and he was to be fired that day' A boy came' into sales room with a telegram for him. It was from the neighbor who had bought a halt interest In his place in Oklahoma.! The tele gram read, Tou are rich. Big oil strike on your place.' Am wir ing you $ 10,000, first payment.' The first thing Tin did with the money, which he received several hours later, was to buy one of the cars he had been trying so hard to sell. - LOADS OF PUN P.,... pi small large-college; and finally a. large large-college. Willamette university will : he both bigger and better next year. But it will still have to do some picking and choosing, thus keep ing the student body fine, i It can scarcely be finer. What's the matter with a cater pillar engine for the Southern. Pa cific to fight caterpillars up in Benton county? ANCIENT HISTORY The producers and , actors In "The God of Vengeance" were ar rested and fined and the ' play stopped In its Broadway run In New York. Now It seems that the play has been running off and on In the Yiddish theaters for ; ten years. When a moral wave gets Into Broadway there Is no stop ping It. ; i H V ; Cornelia Howard, the original Little Eva who played In the first stage performance of j ."TJmsle Tom's Cabin,' . is stm living I to Cambridge, Mass., at the age of 75 years. The novel o Harriet Beecher Stowe, although crudely written, stands out as one of the most powerful books ever pro duced. It stirred and aroused the passions'- of more millions ', than spy other three things ever penned by an American. It is an. uncut diamond, a roughly fashioned mas terpiece of dramatic art, v r t The Southern Pacific i has 1U hands untied. It is ready to go. This will. .mean, improvements all along the lineespecially the lines in Oregon; and the construction .of the Natron cut-off. :,The people of the Salem district have all bat unanimously stood by the South ern ' Pacific people In their long and tedious fight for their, right ful place in the sun-fin the rail road world. The Southern Pacific managers have highly appreciated this stand, and they will not be slow In giving our, people all the advantages to which they are en titled. , .... - ' i ; - j 1 POOR DEMAND FOR SUGAR "Raw sugar futures easier,! re ports the New York sugar market, "due to renewed liquidation, the decline in the 'spot market t and continued poor consuming - de mand." Posters of 22 by 27 inch es advise the people of Spokane in letters printed in red i and black Ink, to "Use ; Less Sugar' i Car toons showing the sugar, profit eer deceiving the consumer and the plea by the commissioner of health to cut down sugar con sumption until the price becomes lower; are being posted by Spo kane's board of health. The far ther west you go the less popular is the profiteer.- Spokane Spokes man Review. - ' BY WIRE OR WIRELESS The telautograph Is already be ing introduced in '' the postal and telegraph service in France and is already Installed In many of the offices under the gorernment. The device transmits messages in the writing of the sender Signature's may thus be sent by wire and ab solutely Identified. .'.The sender of the telegram writes his message on a sheet of paper attached to a slowly revolving - cylinder. ; Hhe movements of the jen or needle break and restore the electric cur rent. A special Ink is nsed which onngs tne letters into slight re lief. An Inverse process repro duces this with exactness at the receiving end of the line. Now that thumb prints can be broad cast by radio problems of Identifi cation are being simplified. WHERE OUR TAXES GO 1 After all, in spite of the extrav agance in civil administration and the logrolling In appropriations, It is war that is the greatest of all national luxuries, the most expen sive of governmental contributions to the cost of living. Out of ev ery $100 that we pay over In taxes to the federal government $73.23 goes to pay for wars, past or ap prehended.; The Veterans , Bur eau takes. almost $10, the pension llrt mere tv "", t -.r.nt it- NOW SHOWING III & y, Collan J'ioore and James 'Jtorrison in Out paramount QiOuu : i fie Mi Ctrnimandrnent ' CL Cbsmcpolitcm, production debt almost the entire legacy of the war eats . up some , $34. That leaves only $21 for every oth er Imaginable expense of govern ment. It Is true, however, that the money paid as ' state, county and ' municipal taxation which is nearly as great as the federal rev enue goes almost wholly for the things of peace, so the situation is not quite so dreadful as it first ap pears.. -Youth's Companion. SEEING IS LEARNING Edison predicts that the films will replace text-books and black boards in the education of the American youngsters. ' That is not a surprising predic tion. In -fact the beginning al ready has been made. The films appear to "'have utterly replaced those text-books so many children used, to study; at home at night. : The ; children have been even quicker than the great inventor, to say nothing of their parents, in seeing the! value of pictures In preparing them for the world of action. i 4 . " ; It looks as It the cinema had be gun laying the foundations for the new world.! The use of the films for education is too logical to be questioned. A child or his eld ers may read or hear of things for' years and have ideas Just as fnaccurate as those of the six fam ous blind ' men who went to see the; elephant. a But seeing is knowing. Seeing is authentic edu cation.. txi .Ui: iv"K-.;.; ' ' :, ; . Films in the schools: are cer tain, therefore. And f: breathes there's kid with' Soul so dead that he will want to playr hookey In those halcyon days to come, es pecially I when he thinks of the darkness In whlch he, as, a pupil, necessarily must sit and move and have his mischief, safe-shrouded from the teacher's eyes? When every school is ;a cinema place we wont need; any truant officers. And then, suggests a neighbor, shall we see -a return of the beau tiful home life we hare lost In re cent decades. The human' tem perament must . have variety z ;or dullness, and the youngsters who have been to the show all day -will certainly want to spend their eve nings at home. ' SUMMER SCHOOL J State Normal. School to Co , operate in Maintaining Work in Salem Salem Is to havA a.'1rree sum mer school for .the children of the first to the ninth grades1 Inclusive starting on June 19 and closing July Z7i-r-p ': ! ' :n'-,v.:il The school is carried on by ar rangement with the State Norma st Monmouth. : : President J, S. Landers was In Salem this week to make the final arrangements. The normal Js offering similar ser vices to a number of schools, to give training and observation ex perience to Its own teacher pu pils. -The teaching porps Is furn ished at no cost: to (the local dis tricts. ".' l" : ; .vj - '' i-1-- f - In Salem, Miss 'Margaret ICos per Is to have general charge of the work, with Emily DeV ore, crit ic teacher in the normal, as sec ond in charge, and teaching also the fifth and sixth grades.! . Miss Clsyron Burroughs of Independ ence will have the first and second grades r, Esther Halvorsen of Eu gene will have the third and fourth grades; and Lois Reed of Salem, the seventh and eighth grades. .-1 :V t ' j ;;; Primarily, the summer school Is fo rthe purpose of giving a chance to all who fell short of, their reg ular year's work, by reason of re moval, illness, or any other , rea son.. In many such eases, a few weeks will save the pupil a whole year In the grade schedule, and it FUTURE DATES I - i r Jaa . IS, . Stnrdy Coabty gTadaattea xareise. : Anditoriaa f fialaa high j aeboel, 3 o'clock. ' -. - ; 3nm IS. Wdady WIHamatU TJat- Vanity commeacaoiaDt. aaa 14, Taarday nr day. V 7bd 18 Satarday, Marioa mraitty 6a a- Jbb IS. MondyOpaInt, Dally Vs eattoa Bible ebcol. . ,-, : ' day ftcaaol plr. -"i"-- - '' Snnm ! to S4 Chantawm at TJanW 1' iun 20, ; wdaaday Pamaa Grange Meeting, at Taraar.. r.-'t Joaa 21, Tannday Rreaal Bad CWat oonfrenra in Salem, i JB 1, Tanradir rifiy flmf Venules FO CHUB ''1 : Wednesday; morning; june is; 1923 I --y -y. . X, is believed - that the . opportunity will be eagerly accepted by many pupils. It is not intended to help crowd children through school at race horse speed, but is mostly re medial in its nature and aims. The sessions wjll be held at the Wash ington school, as the best place in the city , for serving the .largest number of children. I BITS FOR BREAKFAST Salem Chautauqua next " ; ; s .s - is - -'y:-y,'r 'It will begin next Tuesday." v w rv The . work to be . done in ' con nection with preparing for Chau tauqua must be done quickly. - Chautauqua brings ' attractions to Salem that could not otherwise come educational features espec ially and places them within the reach vof all. It deserves unan imous support. Salem is a better and brighter city by reason of hav ing an annual Chautauqua. v . ;-: S i ' ' The annual alumni banquet of Willamette university last night was the largest of all the long list of such banquets, and one of the happiest and perhaps the most brilliant. - o.: Old Willamette has outgrown any banqueting place - In Salem. Next year, there will jbe available the large room of 'the : new univer sity gymnasium for this and simi lar occasions. .. That will last ; till it. also, becomes outgrown in the fast Increasing, army of men and women out In the world, but look Ing back to the happy days at the old school,; and returning at least once a year when it Is found con venient or possible. .. .' - I 1 : Men used .to sign : the '. pledge when they quit drinking. Now when they Wit drinking the phy sician who is called in. signs the death : certificate. f - !. Lr : The matrimonial bark Is wrecxea ny tne matrimonial bark ing;, :i i . "And wlll you treat me nice af ter we are married?" she sighed, her cheek, tenderly pressed to hls'n. "Oh, certainly; but not so often as I do now," he responded cautiously.;'" :- DV DIJKINE IE WATER Take Salts t0 Flush Kidneys and Help Neutralize Irrltat- ' lag Adds. Kidney and bladder irritations often result from acidity, says noted authority. .. The . kidneys help "filter this acid from the blood and pass It on to the,, blad der, where it may remain to irri tate and inflame,- causing a burn ing,; scalding sensation, or setting up an Irritation at , the neck vof the bladder, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. The sufferer Is In con stant dread; the water passes sometimes with a scalding sensa tion and Is very Profuse;1 again, there: Is difficulty In voiding t. ' Bladder weakness, most folks call , it. .because, they ant control urination.. While it Is extremelv annoying,.- and - sometimes,- very painful, this . Is often one of the most simple ailments to overcome.' Begin drinking, lots of soft wa ter; also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from your pharma esit and take a.tablespoonf nl In a glass of water, before breakfast. Continue this for two or three days. This will help neutralise the acids in the system so ' they no longer are a source of Irrita tion to the bladder and urinary organs, which' then act normal again. -K;.':: v" Ml ;f; J4 Salts is Inexpensive, and i made from the add of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with- lithla and Is used by thousands of folks who i are subject to urinary dis orders caused by ) add Irritation Jad Salts causes no bad effects whatever. ' Here you have a pleasant, ef fervescent , lithia-water drink which' may qnickly"-relieve "your bladder Irritation By all means have- yonr rbysf clan examine yenr if i v I HELP DBS MO Two Salem Boys Aboard t Battleship New York Cruising about the Pacific and visiting the various ports along the west coast, Raymond G. and George Henry Hurd, sons of Mrs. Myrtle Kurd of Salem, are now members of the Un ited ' ; States marine . guard on the U. 8, S. ew York, one' of the battleships of the Pacific fleets Their names appear on' a list of marines at tached to that vessel. The Hurd brothers joined , the marines at . their - recruiting sta tion In Portland July 11, 192?, and for several months were sta tioned at Mare island, Cal. Later they were assigned to duty on the New York, where the marines are trained . to man; certain types of guns and ' to perform guard du ties. ' The New, York recently return ed from maneuvers in the vicin ity of the Panama canal, and Is now cruising along the west coast, frequently dropping anchor near Los Angeles or San Francisco, af ONE OF THE STRONGEST Jfie Happiness ofjsrir rvA Af1 "V-, t . may depend at any moment oa the pro' visions you have made for protection against the unforseen. A Perfed Prctec tionPolicy in West Coast life offers you the surest and most complete protection that can be devised. You should in vczti' gate this remarkable policy. Send the, . coupon below and learn more about . these five features: ; ; 1 Accidentl' A weekly income while you are dis- , 2 SicknefSt Regular payments every week. . - , ; . 3'Adversityi Emergency funds in time of need. , 4 OU Agtl An assured income for Lfei , 5. DeotKt - ; All the benefits of regular life insur- , , . ance, with several splendid additional - -:'.'J ",featureav , : --j ; - -est -(Sags .3Lirr?H :- ! r ' INSURANCE COMPANY - . moms omcc-aaN raANasco M . r District Managers '-' ' :' '' - 7 TleplMne Nnmber fJ34. JUG Oregon Building. , . "'. Salem, Orccn. V-r..3. -ir ',- -- 3 t - : - -.: - .- - . ..... ! 415 State St. HEAT The Test of Foot Black Kid Oxfords Brov,M T'?'1 Of'--- fording the marines an oppc. ity to go ashore. The vessel recently i reported st San r the harbor of Los Angelea. Seven Are. Succcccful Passing Law Examine'': ; In special law exam!.. held by the state bar as. : March 15 and ,16 In which t were 15f applicants, seven successful, the supreme court i nounced reBterday. They v, Edward B. Ashurst, Salem; 11. Co bell, Nell Malarkey, Char. , Marino, L. Lloyd McKenz!,?, j Mowry, all of Portland, slt.I rey S. Tusslng of Brownsvi:: . Ilarlan S: Kenyon of Pen was 'permanently admitted 1 c der of the' supreme court. Edward B. , Ashum cf ( : who passed the state tar c ation, is a brother of u States Senator Ashurst cf : sona. Neil Malarkey It t n Dan 'J. Malarkey of Portia u !. COMPANIES IN AMI 1 1 Item's 114 N. Liberty St. Comfort Incorrectly, built shoes and hot weather cause the feet to 'swell and perspire. "Few shoes can stand this test of comfort. Natural freedom of foot move ment and healthy exercise tf the arch will gire relief fro. i hot weather foot discomfort. " The" Cantilever Shoe is pat terned from the outline of.ths foot.'5 - There Is room for tt J toes and freedom, for the mt cles to exercise. "The flexible shank be W with the foot in walking. Mus cles and tords grow ,. stror z ' from exercise. Fallen archc i are corrected and free clrcu! -Hon keeps the feet comfc it s' able. J. . ' , ." Cantilevers . are restful s- ' haye a most attractire appea--' ance. Treat your feet to a of Cantilevers, for natural fc freedom and comfort. j, or iTf-dt ponr in rortland. t -