The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 24, 1923, Page 10, Image 10

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    r3mrrt)F terror in bulgar capital as civil war threatens
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. One hundred thousand Bm-
Parian and Macedonian Comit-
adjis, fierce hill tribesmen, are .
ready-to march on Sofia, and
"punish .the usurpers -.who are
A revolting against the newly es-
tablitJied Zankof Ministry, Civil'
" -war is reported to be in full
" ' swing. ' Serbian troops are re-
ported to have engaged in a bor
der clash with the Comitadjis in
. lbe Seeoninitza district. Stam
boulisky fled from Llavovitza,
j. finally, taking a swift antomo
' bile. The chauffeur was wound-
ed, the car ditched and the peas
ant leader escaped into a wood, '
which the new Government :"re
:' ported ' had been, surrounded. -Photos
show, upper, Sofia peas
ants studying bulletin for news
of the revolt. Lower, the new
" Sofia Cathedral to the eompie-
tioa of which ntoney spent in t
commemoration of- the world .
, war victories jras devoted. 1
1
OtlfJGEB WILL
proiiouuce a
Dentist Selected to Hand Out
Words for Chamber
Diners to Spell '
A.
(Continued from page 2)
Albany, brother of the bridegroom,
kcted aa best man.. - .
The youag 1 couple left for a
motor trip p the Mackenzie, river
and upon their return, will reside
Ja Salem. .
I . . BOORS , -
' By FAITH BALDWIN
J.. .' , -In July Scribner's. ,
J"rom )bese worn pages, ' thumb
;. . ' marked by the years '
The scent . of wisdom rises,' and
- ': , the scent ' ' '
qt tears that once were Helen's,
-: and At dust ;
Vhlch, drifting' lightly on Agean
v- Ir,. rememberi. Trpy. ,'p.
Cli books, in shabby cloth, t J
Lift singing? voices in old battle
cries, .
While ancient laughter gilds the
J . . faded print, i-.-JZ '- ri. .ti.
and all the verities of passion run
Like scarlet . threads; . through
, , ' words i. the "gods , first
. ' - used to listening men. r
Old books have taught me much,
IlaY.wQyen cords of lik to snare
myf 64,4 VV t-7 '
Enchanted me with magic. Yet 1
, s,-, : learn . " -M V- VL -tlore
from your- eyes, a ' sharper
I knowledge irom t ..
Tour hands' least gesture, more
. of r truth and "peace 1
I Jour . . courajKeoua , gaiety.
s more; deep, x.' i! r::-i."
Ccol wisdom from youf r shining
'v- silences , ' j.'-.:
.Than ever Homer 'd warned. But
h-was blind; A - i
And I have sight. Alone, I learn
, to read : r,.;
Tie book :of your jrave beauty
": ;X"".!'nd-lhe.s;.ag
Of high endeavor, v. Mch men call
. .' . " your life. . . A-t'
rrom
Scribner's short stories this month
are in quite an unusual vein. '
' There is a bit of Jolly comedy
id a newspaper office, "A Mould
er of Publlc Oplnlon," by ; Philip
Presco tt v lYost, ' : telling 4 how
Wordsworth. Apperson r won ;the
best girl in town; the romance In
the life of a little Southern school
teacher who makes a break for
freedom. In 'Vanilla Wafers, by
Myra Mason Lin dsey; a touch of
gruesome imagination In Iia Ur-
quhart Glenn's "Bats Macabre,"
story or soldiering In the Philip
lpnes; and floe character-drawing
with a strong human note of sac
rifice and ; courage, in, Louis
Dodge's The Breaking-Point.?
PUBLIC HEALTH
TO BE BETTER
Efficiency Methods to Be
Applied By John A. Kings-h
Dury ot New York ,
tells Just the things folks want to
know about the people of Russia.
how - they are living, what they
think and say about the govern
ment. their present reaction, to
ward the church more than all
how the residents evade the gov
ernment and its regulations;
Mrs. .Harrison tells the intricate
details Involved? Im the purchase
of - a small . stew . panyin Moscow
and of the time and work involv
ed in' exchanging-a i pair of shoes
when the purchase 'and the ex
change are" conducted :. legally-
when it is accomplished illegally
that is something else again. She
describes a wedding and a funeral!
under conditions now ; existing ' in 1
Russia 'and furnishes a detailed '
estlmateof the cost ot each event.!
The great wealth of the peas-;
ants in many cases is -described.
She relates an account of ceasanta
who literally had so much' money
they could not couat it. -
"Two leaaing papers in jaos-ror the next ; ? v nnnny
cowvare; the; 'isvestra w nxen fork stat . iNew
. ii.iiwiii1 1 a cooperation j
health authorities in an effort to
reduce the death rate for all such
SANTA BARBARA,, Cah. June
. Application a of scientific
management to public health work
was. advocated by John A KIngs-
today before foe National Tuber
culosis association, now In session
In this city. Mr. Kingsbury an
nounced also .; that the , MUbank
wjueiiar niitn t i . i i
Sinn r'. eina e
Secretary Wilson of the Cham
ber of Commerce has dug up an
old Watson's 'Complete Speller,
published in 1878, and sold here
in Salem by MF. S. Dearborn; book
seller, stationer and music dealer"
long enough ago that the paper
is yellowed and Jhe hook looks
like a patriarch, minus only, the
whiskers ,
Out of this ancient tome. Doc
'asey'V dinger is going, to pror
nounce words to the chamber of
commerce diners at their dinner
Monday noon. ; it will, be a gor
geous dinnjer, - with creamed
chicken on toast, trottered aspara
gus, spring salad,; bread and apple
jam, .brick ice cream and wafers,
and all the usual trimmins.
f The spelling book has many In
teresting words. 1 .They , may seem
strange, but a man's got to believe
them when Casey-at-the-Bat read's
them off. Some ot the brave bus
iness .men of the city, have at
tempted to welch out of this spel
ling match dinner, .but the' sport
ing chance of only 50 per cent of
the guests, toeing called np to spell
is holding, them; in line. It is -believed,
that- the 'dinner! will break
all records. jf or. attendance espe
cially io see hoir those other dubs
and ign'runt fellows. who never
had any;.JringinY P mishandle
the mother tongue when they try
to. spn; v ir t ' : : ... ,
lix at12; out at 1.
Morwena Bird Said Yes
To Egypt's Royal Prince
. 'CAIRO, June 21. Cairo is gos
siping again. The Inhabitants had
barely recovered from the Tutank
hamen affair when a scion of the
Egyptian royal house secretly
married an English girl.
The bride was Miss Morwena
'Bird, and the royal bridegroom Ik
Prince Said Halim, second cousin
of King Fuad. The minute the
regal relatives of the prince neaiu
about his love for an English maid
of another faith they began mak
ing 'objections, but got nowhere
with them- The prince simply
took - his sweetheart Into a Mos
leum ' religious court, went
through . the ceremony and ran
away to see Europe in the fash
Ion of -honeymoonersi . ' -
)Mlss Bird since the war ' has
been one of the bright figures of
Cairo's ballrooms. Her, father was
a Colonel stationed In Egypt be
fore the -war, . The prince, who is
25, already has the reputation of
being a good prophet and a reck
less' man with his purse. f
His talent for getting rid of
money came to public notice when
he was sent to England before the
' ' ARENA FOR DEMPSEY-GIBBONS BOUT? AT SH ELBY.
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: First photo of the arena, 'almo'st completed, showing Tommy Gibbons's outdoor training Quar
ters, square enclosure to the right of he picture. ' Portion of Shelby, Mont, can be seen in the back
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war, to study under army, tutors.
Hat was; so .extravagant .that he
had to be sent away to Switzer
land, where, in those days, there
were fewer opportunities for get
ting poor quickly. : .
i His penchant 1 for ; prophecie
was recognised during "the " war
when he persistently wrote to the
newspapers tlit Turkey and Ger
many Jr were , going to f alL A
everyorie knows, this forecs:
came about, in a manner, so tL
prince 1s now a prophet wl:
somt glory m his own land.
Great Possibility Seen
In Tide Utilization
f KOBE. Japan. - June 21. Dr.
Okada, of the Kobe Marine Obser
vatory, believes there are great
possibilities in the utilization of
the rushing tides of the Inland
Sea.for commercial purposes, and
has asked the government to. es
tablish a tide station here. t,
The complicated conformations
of the land cause strange irregu
larities in the tides about the
coast of Japan, and these Dr. Oka
da says never have been; thorough
ly investigated - , 'v '
tween
means 'news, and the I'Pravda'
which means truth. ; It " Is a
common saying that ''there is no
truth lnthe news and no news' In
the trnth." i V?-X rytr
The children : are being taught
eommunism en maase.V Mrs Har
rison tells : of .visiting e children's
home where she addressed a tiny
miss' of five, "Whar a pretty dol-j
ly, is she yours?,".-";' '-l Q
Oh, no," was ' the quick reply
"she is not my dolly, she is our
dolly. - v . " : vt
The. children are well cared for
and if parents do not care to keep
their children' the govenrmenl
takes them into orphanages. 8pe
clal provisions are made for moth
ers with ' small children and the
author brings out the fact that the
citizens have found a way to (raft
In this matter, too.-i ' L:. tj. 1
"Every one in Moscow has sat,
is sitting or will sit .in prison, is
a common saying in Moscow." I
Mrs. Harrison tells In detail of
her life ; in prison, her? companh
ions, the charges brought against
them, and their stories. , Christ
mas, New Tears and Easter in the
Moscow prison are described in
detail with the efforts made by
thfe prisoners , themselves to make
it a time ot more cheer than or-
oiaary. . s ...
The food, the prisoners who
come and go, the hardships of
prisoners, themselves is - fascinat
ingly told br the author, " for
whom a great admiration is born
in the reader's mind as these pic
tures of her t life under adverse
conditions are told. M. G.
In his final chapter of his great
human story, "From Immigrant to
Inventor," Scribner's Michael Pup
in American science, but he also
in writes of the rise of idealism
sings the praise of Idealism as i
national trait. He says it per
vades all we do and our relations
toward the-world. '
; K-t-m;.-- i-j ,r
"Adventures In a- Pictlon" Fac
tory." by j Rebecca N.-Porter, July
Scribners. is about a class in story-
writing ; that she conducted at a
Western college.. Evidently all
sorts of men and . women want to
express themselves In ; print;', and
some of them have, something, to
say,. One , of ther pupils was
man whose occupations was "dray-
Exnert Skiboer Declares X
, Marine Officers Overeat
LONDON, June 2l Capt. Sel
wyn pay is one ot the best known
t '.UAItOOXKD IX MOSCOW
Ey MARGARET, D., HARRISON
Doran Cook Co. . . v
A picture of Russia, -- its offi
cial, social,1 religious and -prison
V,l:, t3 seen by an Afcerican
-r-sr woman." Urs. Harrison
of the mercantile marine officers
and an ADC to the king. He has
been! all through the mill at sea
and he says that the trouble with
the -ef fleers : on the big Atlantic
steamers nowadays, from captains
down, is that they eat more 4han
Is good for them. ;j .. C W Jv'
; "Apprentices and Junior officers
in the passenger ships ot today,'
he asserts, "all eat too rich: food
too often, and In too large quan
titles. : Consequently, as they have
no real physical labor to perform
at least 40 per cent of them , are
physically, unfit.: ", The, great need
of the service is for physical train
ing and an adequate ; course; in
practical Seamanships -" There
much -more need of these things
than for . insistence Oh X higher
educational ' standard.' f,
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Re a d the1 Classifie'd" Adsi
causes.
Cattaraugus county has been se-
ected as a typical rural and ur
ban area, and Syracuse as a'tvoi-
cal f city area In i which intensive
demonstration will be carred, on.
aisinct or z oo.o 00 Donulation
will also soon be selertn in K
York city. In these three areas
of - 50 0,0 00 population' thei Mil-
bank fund will carry on the larg
est and 'broadest health demon
stration! ever attempted in the
United States. Commenting upon
the plans for the . demonstration,
Mr. Kingsbury said: v ; . h
In the courge of the next five
or ten years, in these typical -Ain-
erican communities; we shall en-
deavor to determine the extent to
which the general death 'rate can
be further reduced, and which dis
eases most readily yield to inten
sive effort. We shall trr to de
termine whether it ls possible
practically to eliminate certain of
these diseases, such as diphtheria
and typhiod, and further, substan
tially to reduce. : the extent of
tuberculosis; we shall utilize jail
known methods iof 'proven ; value
and shall attempt to devise better
ones and to measure and test the
effect of each, and. most Import
ant of all, we shall endeavor! to
determine what It will cost these
typical communities to do 100 per
cent health lob. .We shall attempt
to" apply scientifcr management to
public health work; to. determine
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in cost oi eacn specme project,
and to keep the. cost down to .the
minimum per capita rate consist
ent with fffHnmr . P- i W
i , " " Her Health Recipe !
Martha was a pale little wife
and often very tired. Her white
face showed it Her husband was
worried, "but knew not how to
bring the bloom of health to i the
pale cheeks.
Then Cousin Helen from the east
came to visit. f
when Cousin i Helen had been
visiting for a week or so the hus
band remarked , to her. Helen,
you can't Imagine how much good
your visit has done Martha. Since
yon have been here, she' looks 10
years younger,, and has taken on
such a heautlfnl complexion."
"Well, I'm glad. Cousin George,
If I have been any help to Martha.
and If she uses that rouge X leave
her she'll always have that healthy
complexion like mine.? i '
Jugo-Slavia Twill make arrange
ments immediately . to pay 4 the
money she owes the United States,
bbort settlements r , make ; 1 long
Heidelberg to Receive
Help From Other Nations
HEIDELBERG, ' June 21. Fac-1
ulty and students of - Heidleberg
University -are 'rejoicing over th, e J
announcement mat me insuinuon
will . r ecei r e 60,000 , English
pounds from the estate of the late
Dr. Mond, who founded one of the
leading chemical houses in Eng-r
land and is te father of Sir Al
fred Mond. who was a member 01
the Lloyd George 'cabinet... Dr.
Mond was born in Germany. I but
became a British subject.
Heidelberg Is one of the most
international of the German insti
tutions of higher education. -It
had 2,500 students during the
term which recently closed, about
ten per cent of whom were for
eigners. ' 1: :-
Of these, Switzerland led with
47 students, a majority, of whom
were taking law courses... North
and South America sent six stu
dents. England had 12 Greece 11;
Bulgaria 13 and Japan IS, 13 -of
whom were. studying philosophy..
I.
n Ohio college girl has broken
th record for the 440-yard dash.
Wender if she Is that quick get
ting : from the dinner table to the
kitchen where the . dirty , dlshet
at?. . .ilr-r..
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Millions ' asi!dl; Movies
i
THROUGH the medium of slender strips of celluloid an acta up-
I pears simultaneously on thousands of screens in as many dif
ferent towns. On the same evening, he entertains jfreat armies of
film fans who eagerly pay their money to see his performance. '
So the movie star commands a king's ransom for a salary, and a
fortune is spent profitably, to provide a proper background for his
art The movie multiplies, personality and earning power.
i Advertising does the same thing for a merchant or manufacturer.
In a single day it takes his message into thousands of hcnies to
tell folks why they should have his goods and how to get them. Ad
vertising endows him with a thousand voices with; which to tell his
story. . y'ii'V . ;' " ". "
But the value of advertising is by no means confined to the adver-
User. It has a. very, definite value to you. i
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, , A glance tlircugh this paper enables yon to sift out the things that
interest you.' Sitting in., your easy ; chair you. can compare values
and prices. : In a moment you can telexactly where to go for ivhat
you want and how much to pay.
Figure how much useless wallcing and talking and how much
actual money you can save by spending a few moments daOywith
the advertisements. . ;
Every day this paper contains information for you. - i:
Read the advertisements
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Ka-jiBvaWjjaa- jWa. .k. aa. Ak. .b. b. Ak. a. fcw .j a.
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$500
IN PRIZE
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GIVEN
$200
GASH
FIRST PRIZE
And 39 Other Prizes Totaling $300 in Value
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CAN YOU COUNT THE DOTS?
LOTS OFFUIK TRY IT!
' jfl Send us your answer,
yiv and if it is , correct we
will' at once send you
particulars of one simple condition that we ask you to ful
fil. This condition is very simple and as soon as it is ful
filled you are entitled to a cash prize at the close
competition. 7 ; " ;7' v r ;
How to Send Your
Answer'
Use one side ot . the paper only.
Write down the: number of dots
counted, using the following words,
l bare counted a grand total of
(insert nnmher here) dots In the cut
as shown in the adrertisement and
sign your name and address.
Neatness and ' appearance will be
carefully considered in awarding the
I grand' prizes, so write as neatly as
you can. . This splendid ozrer will
only he good tor a limited time, so
send In your solution right away
NOW to The Pacific ' Homestead,
Dot Competition Editor, Salem, Ore.
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friends.
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