It THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON REAL ESTATE Continued For Sale - room houM, corner lot, trood Iocs- tiom; needs oma repun. 91OO0; easy terms. 40 acres with buildings, some stuck and implements. 13 miles out: close to tows $3,000. Have a buyer (or from 15 to SO aorea with (oed buildings. Want loan ' on good property flOOO. Also one for $800. r: U. WOOD. 841 State ,8t TOB EXCHANGE AT CORVAliU8.: NINE ROOM MODERN boose with full basement, east front and located one block1 from College. Will exchange for1 Salem I residence property. If interested write K. A. Kchwicning, 204 Kings Hoad. Corral li, Oregon." , I PUBLIC NOTICES XOTlC F IMI'KOYKMKXT OF j HIGHLAND AVEM'B IlK- TW'KEN FIFTH KTREKT AX1 FAIIIGKOITNIIS ROAD, Notice la hereby given that the (Common Council of the City of :: " - -- wv.wo fc I1C1 declares its purpose and Intention k to Improve Highland avenu from the west line of Fifth street to the west line of the Fairgrounds LJ road at the expense of the abut f tins and adjacent property, ex . ' cent the street and . allnv inf... sections the expense of which will be assumed by the City of Sa lem, by bringing said avenue to the established grade, construct ing cement concrete curbs; and paving said portion of said avenue with a redress macadam base and a two and' one-half inch asphaltic concrete wearing surface pave ment in accordance with the plans and specifications therefor which were adopted by the j Common Council July 2nd, 1923, and which are hereby referred to and made a part hereof. j - . The Common Council hereby declares Its purpose and intention to make the above, described Im provement by, and through the street Improvement department or the City of Salem, r , By order of the Common Coun ell this 2nd day of July, 1923. M. POULSEN, City Recorder, i Date of first publication hereol Is July 7. 1923.. i , SUNDAY M0RN1KG, JULY 15, 152,1 Standards pullets Heary hens Medium ... FOU1.TXT .23 .20 ...18 -.13 FOBS. IfUTTOH AND BEET Hogs, top 150 225 lbs, rw ..$n.B Hogs, top. 225-275. cwt.j .. 7.5t Hogs, top, 275 30O Ibsfcwt S7.0 Light aowa. cwt -4-.; ....f.0 Rough, hesry, rwt , L.4..04 CP .04 Top real, dressed . 4107 .01 14 Top steera .05 ' .Of Cow. 4 , 4H Top lam be ; : .o Heavy lambs 4i 0- I SALEU MARKETS No. OBAXV AJTD BAT 3 wheat ' .01 .91 No- 8 red wheat, sacked l-heat bay ..H..12 $1 Oat hay. ......4; .....$12 $13 CloTer hay, baled L: 813 $13 : Iriee qttnUMl air wholesale , ar reeeleed by farnsra. No rota i wirr gieem. aaeepf aa anted: COO a, BUTTE B, BUTTE BTAT i-esraory butter : , 43 a. Bntterfat. 'delivered XMk. Per ewt. Errs W . ..i .44 .4t .2 : BANAKAS ' ' Sod Cord. - the distinqniphlng nark et uuality fruit. Quoting rratad, per lb. JIM ORANGES is - I "Bonded" Brand bankist Valencia Offering; "! I f TlS'a and larger i .5.5 150' and smaller . $4 51 CALIFORNIA QKAPE-TtUIT i "Sunkifct" JS4'. 80' ...4.5 All Oitrus fruits ia half case Iota. 10 additional, 1 ' -; 1 : ; APPLES ; Astrachans " l..$2.50 Or.ivenaleins. 4 tierj...4..i ,...$3.50 LEMONS 'i . , LefnnKwelL"EEE" all siiea. case $10.00 NEW BUNCHED VEGETABLES Ail priced by the doses bunch. Beets, Turnips. Carrot J.50 Radishes, long r. round i i ,4 BACKED VEGETABLES y New Yakima rarrots, per aack ...J$3.75 New Takima Turnips per ack J$3.50 All Sack Vegetable lc Jer lb. highef rhe desired ia less than sack lou. New beets, per sack 2.75 Yakima rutabagas, per tack ..2.50 :.:.; Hew Vegetables j Asparagus, Oregon grown, eery fsney pet dosen bunchei i . J$3.50 Cauliflower, flat crate I .. $2.50 New celery, per bunch i . .$1.75 Green beans, per lb J..4.12 Spinach, per bo L. .$1.00 Tomatoes': - - " . ; . (; Th Dalles, per 2 layer box .;$3.15 Cabbage, local, crate.!, per lb I i03 Head lettuce local, cratea ,$2.25 Egg plant per lb. ..4.;.. 4; 25 New potatoes, new Oregon per lbi....0a Onions, new yellow, per cwa.4$3.SO Bell peppe s per lb .4 .. 30 Green Peas, bom grown, per lb.....l2 ENGINEERS SEEK TODAY NEW ALPHABET New Code in Radio Is Need ed, Decision of Scientific Organization; $1.40 -r : li1.75 Cucumbers: Hothouse choice -i-; i. ; Hothouse fnpy 44 Th Dalle outdoor i Potatoes Vew California whites, i aacka. per lb. . 4 cent - , f i ; 1 Yakima netted gems. j: per-cwt -L$1.50 Oregon, Whites, per ewt... ; f$1.26 . Hew mtta u 'l 1 Apricots. 4-hasket crat 4-i..$1.75 Ciauloupes-Imperial : valley, standard eratsa . i ;.$3.50 rony crates .-.. Flat crate Watermelons, crated., per lb Honey dew melon per lb Cherrie, Lamberts J. j, Raspberries, selling .4 Currants, selling . 4 i Casabaa - .per : lb. j, 051Z Peachce. scarce at preeo, per bos $1.75 Plum per . 4-Basket Crat Kornios ,. , t-.$2.O0 Vaceill8... LL. - 82 "0 Santa Bos l I i ' L.31.75 Logauberries. selling today ..s...$1.25 Black cap, aelling today 4 92.25 - ..$3.00 L.81.50 04 482.00 ii..$2.00 That 40,000 pound shark killed off the Florida coast would have been just the thing to chase the rum-runners that operate between Miami and the Bahamas. J NEW YORK, July 14. The es tablishment of a universal tele graphic alphabet Is urged in a statement Issued today by the En gineering Foundation. Radio En gineering is leading the peoples of the earth toward a common language, the foundation asserts. v Methods to simplify and exped ite the electrical transmission of messages should be evolved thru national legislation and; interna tional conferences, i Science and commerce- wfU not hesitate: is statecraft ! ready to perform Its function? the foundation asks. "There are ship lanes in-the northern Atlantic," the statement continues." Crowding r automo biles in city streets have necessi tated traffic lanes; Aviation is establishing lanes in the air. - Al lotting of "lanes in the ether has become urgent." . General Squier in 1913 com menced investigations for improv ing transmission of the telegraph alphabet, according to the foun dation, as the old , Morse system failed to meet the needs of pres ent day transmission. : In the Morse code the current i la inter rupted between signals; with the redesigned system the current flows uninteruptedly. "The new continuous wave sys tem designed by General Squier,' the foundation states, "can be ap plied to radio telegraphy. Varla tions for dots, dasnes and spaces are reduced to the minimum on the theory that the least practlc able change of the fundamental wave should be made. For easier readings the waves have been made square-topped. 'The modulating frequencies employed in the new method be ing of low order, it should be sim- ! llr- V.T57 V--- a-x :--.r: -if A Scene From "YOUR FRIEND AND MINE" 4- ' , ; ! PORTLAND MARKETS GBAIV PORTLAND. Or.. July 14-- Grain fu tures: Wheat, soft whit July 8103; August $1.02; western white July $1.02, August . $1; hard winter, northern spring, western red July .98: August .94. COBH Xo. 2 eastern yellow shipment July $37.50; August $35.75. - HAT Hay unchanged. V The Star Gar One Has But Competitor And that competitor is "PREJUDICE" There is an old saying "None is so blind as he who will not see" and no saying was ever more truly uttered' I . , There was never a car built, since the inception of the Automobile, selling under $1000.00 that had the, tried and proven units built into the STAR, and the only reason why the Star is not sold, exclusively, in the light car field is because of "PREJIDICE." PREJUDICE never gets us any where and never will. There was never an article manufactured, and never will be, but what some other manufacturer equals or excells it. When W. C. Durant brought out ,the STAR he said "In the STAR I will build the greatest value in he world, for the money," and he did it. ( . - ' . s In the short time the STAR has been built it has surpassed, in sales and popularity, double that of any; other ear in the world, and the men that have bought them were not "PREJUDICED" and were will ing to be shown. . - I ; "We have delivered NINETY STAR cars since May Fifth in spite of "PREJUDICE." v , I I .. 1 I . . ! Get away from "PREJUDICE." ; Come to our store with an open mind and be shown how the STAR is built, and what it will do. Salem Automobile Co. VF. G. Delano J. W. Berkley, Woodburn Service Garage.' Mt. Angel Allen Ilros., Silverton A. I. Eoff Associate Dealers: Peter Deidrich, Rtajrton Dallas Garage, Dalla C II. Ernst, St. Paul Grand Itohrie Garage, New Grand Konde 51. J. O'Donnell, IndcjHnlenre I Graham & Calbreath.Monniontlt j i j iS., i , 31. J. O'Donnell, IndcjHnlenre I , '' 1 1.1 !i pie to devise instrumentalities to 'college athlete or an actor, should differentiate between them, and . refrain from indoor dancing and the higher frequencies of j 'static never drink likuors," Mr. John- . . . 1 J,'" .. I cr,n -tA 4TT..1.HH J. ml 1 djw eaiu. nupuauus, we ,11UU, live longer than' bachelors because of their more regular habit3. S'tage people are handicapped by long and hard hours. , Heart strain is too common in the ath lete, p -' . ... "Persons .earning between $2,000 and $6,000 a year live longer. ' This probably Is due to the fact that moderate incomes do not give a person enough for dissipation but are adequate for comfort and sensible living. "Be religious in a true way. Religious people are happier as a rule and going to church tends to make thetn regular in their ha bits. Do not drink liquor and do not smoke, if you must, until you are beyond 21 years of .age. One of the most emphatic results of our survey was the evidence that the practices cannot be in dulged ,in teinperately by enough people to give you much of a chance to win. "Stretch your neck up. Short nocked people are better subjects of apoplexy. Stretching your neck-gives the blood vessels there less chance to clog. ; Take mild exercise daily, regularly, and not inlermittenly or , savagely." or other natural disturbances, This new dan proposes to enter the unusual infra-audio range, not only adding a useful band of frequencies, but one below the lange of the human ear. If em ployed for telegraphy this band could not lYrfere th radio telephony receiving. -i "National legislation and Inter national conferences arefnow'in order," the foundation declares in conclusion, "to put Into use these methods of relief to estab lish this simple universal alpha-; bet. i Vadio engineering is leading the peoples of the earth toward a common language, a- mutual un derstanding. Camera 60 Feet Long Will Photograph Eclipse TUCSON. Ariz., July 14. Im mense telescopic cameras 40 and 60 'feet long, gigantic Reflectors and a number of smaller instru ments will be moved Into Mexir for the purpose of photographing t,he sun druing its total eclipse next; September. according to plans announced here by Dr. A. E. Douglas of the University of Arizona. ) i Dr. Douglas will head an ex pedition while a second will be conducted by Professor W. A. Cogshall of tha University of In diana. The Douglas expedition, will take with it a 40-foot focus camera which will reproduce the sun with a 5-lnch diameter. An even lar rer'camera with a 60-foot focua will be taken by the Cogshall ex pedition. These cameras will be held in position by means of specially constructed towers. San Felipe, 144 miles south of the international boundary, has been selected as the site of the Cogshall expedition's observa tions. Dr. Douglas has not def initely selected his location. Austrian Royal Plate M To Be Placed on Sale VIENNA. July 14. What Is probably the rarest and most val uable collection of silver plate in Europe, the famous silver treas ure oir the Cumberland family, is reported to be coming into the market. It was kept in the Cum berland royal villa at Penzig, just outside Vienna, until the death of the old King of Hanover in 1878. Afterwards it was removed to the Cumberland country s seat at Gmunden in Salzkammergut. i The collection includes price less specimens of the work of the first silversmith in England, France, Augsburg, Hanover and Osnabruck, during the three cen turies between 1560 and 1810. The only other collection which approaches it in extent and com pleteness Is that in Windsor cas tle. The total weight of the Gmun-. den treasures i3 about 130,000 ounces and its value In Austrian crowns must amount to several hundred milliards. But It is un derstood that, the purchaser, or purchasers, will have to pay In some foreign money of normal ex change, and not In depreciated Austrian crowns. IP, YOU I Bankers Will Study Many Big Problems i CLEVELAND, July 14. Whe ther or not branch banking In tha United States should be encour aged, u-J-n be the subject of debate between the chapters from Boston ajid Philadelphia of the American Institute of Banking at the 21st annual ,convention of that organi zation lere July 16 to 20. Agriculture and Its relation to all other interests, will be the sub ject of an address by E. T. Mere dith of Dcs Moines, at the general sessions of the Institute. . One of the features of the con vention; will be the reunion of the pioneer! members who were respon sible for its organization in 1903 In "this j city and who were active in its development through the first five years of its existence. There will be conferences on various banking, subjects. There i are 10; general subjects and there will be 28 of these' conferences in addition to the two general bus iness meetings. Alexander Dunbar, of Pitts burgh ;j i' F. Freyerger, Cleve land; jAlfred T. Hunt. Scranton. Pa.; Q. Howard Wolf, Philadel phia, and C. B. Hazel wood,' Chica go, will make addresses at the J various conferences, while Carter E. Talrnan, President of the Amer- ! lean institute of Banking, and t John H. Puelieher. of the Ameri can Bankers Association, will ad dress lone of the general ses sions. " for Economical Tranportatlotr- '' "Mi . T" irt 1 - r j r. SERVICE AND REPAIRING 349 North Commercial Street , , -. , . .;- j v . Orchejstra Way Travel as Kesuii ot up BEtlLIN, Uuly 14. An Ameri- ican dining In a-i Berlin cafe the other ( night tipped the leader-of the ttireeman orchestra 20,000 marks for playing one of his fav orite airs. The amount was then J, equivalent to only. 30 cents, but it Hooked so stunningly large J to the musician that he scarcely heardjthe American add: "I'll send a waiter around, and you boys tell him what you want to drink." "Iff you don't mind, sir," the leader finally replied, "we'd ra- have the money, for that. John D. Rockefeller, who usual ly distributes dimes to all the boys' he meets on his birthday,' cut the allotment, down to nickels on his 84th ' anniversary. ' With gasoline down and a report' out that Hen- fher' i too. Another 20,000 marks put the leader in ecstacies. for he ex plained it would belp the orches tra greatly in reaching' a summer resort where ;it was ( going for work because the cafe proprietor would not grant an increase- In wages. mJ There are a lot of mighty good mechanical features in a Durant automobile -the clutch, for iHr stance. ' . ' . : It can be entirely dissassembled in thirty minutes without dis' turbingthe transmission or any other unit. It is easily adjusted by lifting the floor boards. It is of a single plate dry disc type entirely enclosed and forming a part of the flywheel. Owners are expressing their satisfaction over this arrangement. Standard Touring $1065 Delivered Her ry Ford now has more money than he has the oil pioneer is prepar ing for a quiet trip to the poor- house. Exchange. Just a Rea I Good Car" Salem Automobile Co. FY G. Delano V ; . .. A. X Eoff CHICAGO, July 14. One; who desires to live 100 years should marry early, refrain from indoor dancing,. should not be a college athlete and be neither rich' nor poor, according to an address made here tonight by Albert M. Johnson, president of the National , Life Insurance company, before soveral hundred boy scouts. Mr. Johnson said these maxims were reached by his compauy follow ing, statistical computation of re sults from a survey onl ongevity under modern conditions. The long list of "don'ts" which , Mr. Johnson Bald the survey Tsug ' rri mi etrl In Aritia. Arm attain thitf a STA contained a ,few" "do's." chief among which was "religion in a true way." Mild exercise dally and a "'straight neck" in walking wereMtbers. , '"Our statistics show, when com piled and averaged, that to reach tire score years one should marry erly. be neither rich nor poor, iould not be a professional or 3C 10. r v A MuJtitude bf ind a IVi of Paint Beh Sins k When yon buy a Ford from us it is in first class condition throughout The late models carry a ninety day guarantee while the older models are put in good condition before being put on the sales floor. from people who need Do 1923 1923 1923 1923 1923 Late Late Late 1921 our price..... our price our price...:. Ford Sedan, cost $900J Ford Sedan, cost $850,! Ford Coupe, cost $7251 Ford Touring, Just likfc new Ford Touring, can't tell its been used 1922 Ford Touring, one-man top, a dandy. 1922 Ford Touring, one-man top, a real buy 1922 Ford Touring i. he money and are willing to sacrifice for cash; let their loss be your gain. HERE ARE A FEW WE HAVE LOTS OF OTHERS Ford Touring, in good condition ... $650 $625 $575 .$400 $425 $375 $350 $325 $240 1921 Ford Touring, overhauled ... . ,.::. .........$260 1918 Ford Roadster, in good running order.......... .1 $90 Early 1922 Ford Roadster, a real car . $265 1921 Ford Roadster, overhauled ... ;...$225 1918 Buick, a dandy car.:'.:...'.k....:.j.. 1921 Ford Coupe, wire wheels, in fine condition. Make us an offer. ; . 44 : V Several others from $50 up. USED CAR l r. -- . CORNER . ! . Ferry and Commercial Street v 1 - ' OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY- A 1923 License on Every Car