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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1923)
: i :- v"; r, -iprN-iit iiJ- . o These are the. five; children of Senator-el2t Magnus Johnson of Minnesota, whose election , threw such a Jolt Into' the political cam pa. These children boast that tneir work on the farm enabled ' tietrr father to devote' his' entire attention to oratory, thus helping him to win the senatoriarace SHIPPED PERFECT L ? 6 , j Oregon fruit on Sale in New cemg,. Picked ; jr. . An.. .Important .( facrf haa beea demonstrated VbyMbOregoii' Lo- oerrycan db snipijeu tresb in per fect condition clear- to New York. Land it's Wly a 'question' of getting .tn peopU to knov. and to buy tla ...beAutunl ? crimson, Oregon - fruit. -h;-: - Tour cars of fresh berries' were shipped 'by tie exch'a'nge this &uia mer.; tpne- weit to- Pittsborgh. two JtorChicagQ and vne to St. Louis, 'he. flnaji Report on the aaiea Kaas not; yex ieen : receiver. It isn't, -expectpd- tfiiA there will be any ttariting: goqd news in the Teport anl. nobody Who. Bent fruit .In, : these cdnsignrnents 'wants to q on a. 'spn.diQg orgx pver a 'false 94jcjnvtt.ttliA' solafCW. get Iricb. ? i But .uniformly ,vi iCls - reported that, the. , berries got to their dea tinatfon la perfect condition sare Inbitancijs whre .the car lyr .badly overcrowded., and som of tlm'Irtifi' .ittQitfed'.betanHe 'f lack of" circulation.. But from Pittsburg . I especfilry pwe.the jrd'that the "U benijea oejo. ja tjonaitipn. 4 Tht;wasjhe farthest east, but the : Jerrie;ere reported In conditioa t lo,ltravel-l ;ott Jlndefinlteiy.V- This ilirt ope ot, the' big problems that - ! tlie', associatioa bad toraolre in Its . J plannin tor .the. fuitre.;'"'H ' : r, j ! " The old 'bogey; Is exploded that. .-'''! the logans'.wUl not "ehipfo' thej 1 bIg5piarets:",tTheyi wlir. r tThey - i -geti ;to ?ew ? Tork 'if pre-ijooled, i J ajid 'then "property iced'aJmostaa: 'i well jaa. they eater the Salenx mar- Vet, zlt Ja Just nre days from here to New ;-,York The- berriea win tie on sale the sixth day from the fields. -' Another. Important fact has been learned that' the Jewish j and ifecandlnarian peoples ar5 the ! real loganberry buyers. They choose the tart, acid logan injiri j stant preference ; over' the j tame, j saccharine red raspberry which In i some , markets hasY been.' a for mi-J I dable 'Competitor. But with . the 1 ; fact ' demonstrated, through the j loganbeTry,.and,he Oregon prune ' and through ", 'te expedience, of j shrewd market inrestigator who ; hare ferreted out the tory; that these nationalities are the especial friends of the tart fruits, he Ex- , change knows wh'ereVto look for S buyers1 in the 1 futureV where to advertise, what to advertipe, and i the priceless fact just dempnatratf ed that the berries can "be.; shipped anywhere, fresh as It Just from their home garden. . f ; There are enough Jewish peo ple in New YoiTt hlone to" handle most of the Willamette vally fresh fruit overflow. 1 After" the canning and - Juice, plants Uke their normal quotaT Jewish New York alone, it la figured from the Exchange, could ' handle U the Oregon: urnlnsthDugh it Isn't really, a fwrplus,?.: bu,t ,the choic est? .'first product : that goes into the fresh fru ft shipments. a ; ' - Prom V all. . the selling; ( centers comes the same, story that the loganberry Is- a new, unknown fruit, and it will require advertia ina.', 'A.Btralgh;t newspaper cam n paign, ; and a! personal campaign directed to tb housekeepers. is suggisted. by. the eastern , buyers'. ' It 4s not exactly news In ! Oregon that, the loganberry la not gener ally known in the east, but it has not seemed of quite b much im -- portance in- the past, when the i wortd was buying everything the grower, had to sell. , This year, ' when even - the best known and best loved staples like canned , pears , are almost a drug on the market, the unknown loganberry has mighty hard sledding' over the counter, "..Ifothlng but ' some sort of a campaign that will make it 'a necessity to the wtrld house keeper will put the loganberry up i to the class of the older fruits t 1 .-everybody, knows. ... "I t Itchabge. believes that " l"3nberry which la a j Civored frnif, 'a tt -v-ITl THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON ' WA1TTILL THEY SEE WASHINGTON! 2.V 3 ler than any of the 'tame, color leas, sweetish products like the pear or the raspberry or the pe tite prune. This seems to be the concensus of the reports from .the eastern . buyexa - and agents, . who hope to see the freshjfxult market vastly extended.- Another Band Concert In Willson Park Tonight The moon has passed Its fullest period, and it will not be a-shln ing for'the crowd to go, home liy after the Salem' band concert, at Willson park, tonight,., but' the program is good enough that no body need fear the dark , after hearing such a lightsome and airy &nd ' cheering ' program.! The numbers selected for this ! even ing's entertainment are: J : 'March, "Caesar's Triumphal", Mitchell. 1 ' - . :. Selection,1 "Shadow." ; .Waltz, TttTeddlng - of the Winds." HalL ' " ' Popular numbers. .tyocal solo, I "Toreador Sohg," (by. request) Oscar Gingrich, Fantasia, "Creme de la Creme" Serenade, ' Sabbath: Morn," Jewell.' . I '. ' , . li " . . ' . ' "Southern Melodies ; (request ed) Hayes. March , "Chicago ' Tribune, Chambers. ' ....... ."Star Spangled Banner. MAHY SILVERTOf FOLK ' ARE ENJOYING VACATION , : (Continued from page 1.) - conrer; JMr. and Jtfrs; Fred Albus who have been motoring In Call fomla' -vAs; yi' ' ; ' Those who l are away . now or are leaving within .the nxt: few days for a long-or a short vaca tion include Mr." and Mrs. L. II. Meyer, Mr. and Mrs.' !. M. Lar son.. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Ottoway, Dr. and Mrs. C Wi Wilson, Mrs. Bert Rue, Miss. Emma: Rue, Miss Sophia Brendon. ..Willie Rue, lira. O...Legaxd, Aivin Legard,. ..WaUer Toft, Mr. and Mrs. II. Haaland. Mrs, Otto JLegard, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Redfleld. Mr. and Mrs.! Ear nest Star, Miss Nellie Mtoser. n Hope to Announce Plans For Hospital to Kiwanis , Part of the! program - for . the Kiwanis luncheon at the Marion today noon. Is expected to be the announcement that the Salem hos pital campaign has been success fully ; terminated .and that the cheers are in order. ;The Kiwan is plan to make it one of the big gest cheers since Columbus crawl ed' over the . top of the' Cascades and, found the Oregon loganberry and a clothes-wringer handy there on a convenient glacier to 'wring out a ' few buckets t of juice and drink it to the everlasting- health Of .posterity. Roy Shield's Is the oratorical committee,: and he 'is pledged to. get a good orator or Cllfthe bill himself. This will be the last meeting of the club be fore the vacation : that lasts through the month of August. D. D. SocOlofsky la giving- the atten dance prize .for the day; I- I I BITS FQR BREAKFAST I Goodbye, July! ' : : I . .... m m m l Good old summer time passing. , ; : - . - - . Canadian puller " is ' here;- but the hand pulling of flax goes on apac.V-V-v-4 i. '.-;f . . Bully! The prettiest girls In the Salem district Are, not afraid to go np. against the whole coast in Petaluma Egg Day contest. The Bits for Breakfast man Is backing our girls for -winners; would back them against the -whole world. If the Smith family expects to take advantage' of the law of C7- erages, and get a president by that name- jtheyiwlll have o pick la different family from the one who.'ls -governor of the 1 outlaw state ot New York. '. -.':- i i '" The way they, balled np things in Seattle' over ther stay. 5tthriaW dent Harding, there .wold make most anybody sick. Humors are that Germany is I to trv " i "o -. I i m in" w 1 p rTir,r ' rww" Tr t XJRfFiP (Mill Its -nt -At i try is based on the worth of Am erican j dollars always- going at 100 cents. ? ' ' " v'V ' 1 : - . There is a wild rumor that the Russian Soviets have secured con trol of a flock of American news papers, A mean ' fellow at the writer's elbow says he had sus plcioned it for some' time, reading certain newspapers. - " v; s v A vieitor hearing about our immense prune crop coming on here in the Salem district, re marks that this would be a splen did place to start ' a boarding house. f . 7 ; jMrift. "i NEW CORPORATIONS j , Articles of! incorporation fwere filed yesterday by the T. T. Par ker Lumber company of Marcola. capitalized at 125,000. The In corporators are T. T. Parker. C. M.' Parker and A. Henderson. Articles also were filed by the Civic Music club of Portland. The Incorporators are Kate Bushong, Lai la D. Thomas and Petronella C. Peets. ' No assets are mention ed:: ., ' ''-' Supplementary articles were filed by the .Grand Rapids Show Case Building , company of Port land, changing the name to Port land Case Building company, and Increasing 'the capitalization from fso.ooo to $100,000. ; L. i ,M Notice ot dissolution was filed by The Hotel company of Port land. Linn County Report Is : In Hands of Churchill The average monthly, salaries paid to men - teachers in : Linn county during .. the - school year 1922-23, as compared with the previous year from' 1127.89 to $138, according to the annual re port of County School Superinten dent Geer to the state department of education. The monthly salar ies of women were $104, or about the same as for the previous year. The number of women teach ers ' has increased from 213 to 288, and the number of men teachers has decreased -from 52 to 44. The average daily at tendance was 4422, or 93.S per cent of the number of persons of school age in the county. . The total .enrollment was 5797. The report shows that there are 130 'school districts and'141 schoolhouses in the county. One- room school buildings number 105. . : , , ' ' Mrs. Mary Epley Dies At Home Near Jefferson Mrs. Mary E. Epley, 75, a pion eer resident of the Jefferson dis trict, died at her farm home a mile east of that place last Friday night from heart trouble. She was a native of Pennsylvania, but moved to Illinois where-she. was married. . They moved to Nebras ka in 1872 and to Oregon in 1890. Since the latter date she hadlived at Jefferson. . ' 7 ' i Mrs. Epley is survived by eight children. They are: George 'W. Epley of Sheridan; O. O. Epley of Sweet Home; C. E. Epley Of Hood River; A. C. Epley of Salem; Mrs. M. E. Richardson of "Jefferson; Mrs. Laura Palmer of Santa Clara,' Cal.! Mrs. Llnnle Hampton of Ta coma; and Mrs. Maud Birtchet of Salem. 4 ; i-, The funeral will be held today at the Evangelical church in Jef ferson with interment in the Jef ferson cemetery. ? i YOUR .-SUMMER-. '.1 VACATION t r Keep in touch withjyour home town news when.'.on your vaca tion. Your friends will write you some ot the news, but not mnchf Your home town newnaner will bring yon all the home news when you. want lCand when you have time to read it. . The' Dailv ' Oreron ' StatfKmA mailed td any address -on request. Phone 5S3. - or . drnn i a tA tn 1 V.i "i j I -ill- ; Oregon Stalesman, J2 1 5 South omra-rcia i street. Ellen, a- J "The Greateet Menace." A dramatic expose of the drug eirtl. .- . " ' : X- L1BEIITV 'Scandalous Tongues.' ' OltEGOS Shock." The Oregon theater will have as its big attraction Friday. -Marshall Nellan'a latest production; "Minnie," which has just been re leased by Associated First Na tional, j Neilan seems to have the gen ius of Dickens for placing before the public real human incidents and without any attempt at exag geration make hia characters per form entertainingly and through fine contracts iu thought aud ac tions bring out delightful comedy and drama. His characters here are selected from a small-town hotel, with the slavey Minnie as tht focal point, Leatrice Joy and Matt Moore are featured , in "Minnie." Their work will please every picture-goer. In the cast will be Been also George Barn u in, Josephine .Cro well, Helen Lynch, Raymond Grif fith, as a chewing gum salesman; Richard Wayne, . Tom Wilson and George Dromgold. Frank Urson was associated with Neilan in the direction. . - Wilse Dilling, twisted of body and soul. . hobbled on crutches from the Mandarin Cafe Into the path of light that the windows of the Barbary Coast blazed. through the fog of San Francisco. u .. "Queen Anne,"- beautiful ' and damned, had sent. for him.He re ported to the reigning beauty of the underworld in the magnifi cent palace where she held court for the flotsam and jetsam of the world, "Go to Fallbrook," she com manded, "and watch Hadley." "My plaster saint of a country banker has been , falling down on hia payments." Dilling went to a job as tele graph operator in the little station at Fallbrook. ' It was a job that "Queen Anne", had provided for her sentry on the Outpost of De cency. . , ' ' The rattling click of the wire told Dilling that Hadley was pay ing dearly for a youthful sin to which "Queen Anne" attributed her all from society, ' In Y the hushed hours of the night he learned in dots and dashes that Hadley bad robbed his own bank and that the examiners were com ing to disgrace him. . '. ." What did Wilse Dilling of the twisted soul and the crippled body care for Hadley?.. . . '" Nothing except that - Hadley's lovely daughter had' been the only one who seemed to forget thatlhe was hideously deformed and the only one who saw a reflection 'df Divine Love in his sin-seared soul, Dilling blew up the vault to de stroy records when the bank ex aminer cams to Fallbrook.": The explosion trapped the girl he lov ed and twisted her body into the agony of deformity. Dilling used the money that he had saved for his own operation, to restore her. Then he went back to ' "Queen Anne." " ' - r;:"' '''-' : "If Hadley. has no more mon ey," she said, "lie will ply ; in blood; not his own, but his daugh ter's." . ; Helpless to save her because of his crippledJ)ody, Dilling lifted the voice of a sinner to the con sciousness of Heaven and prayed alone, in. a efxele of jeering men and women. Then came a miracle. The answer will be ' found In "The Shock,'' the Universal-Jewel drama which is to be shown at the Oregon theater, 3 days, starting today. That, the whole country Is fac ing the greatest menace in its ne farious - drug systems, - Is told thrilllngly in the big film, "The Greatest Menace," which was shown for the first time in this city at the Bllgh last night. The picture serves a. two -In one pur pose." It not only hands the nar cotic evil a wallop amidships but it fells an exciting story in which a young woman emerges as the biggest , figure in the narrative. J. G. Mayer produced the pic ture which exposes the drug traf fic In a manner that is clearly" worked out by Angela C. Kauf man's original story that Albert Rogell has so cleverly, and deftly directed i Into animated form on the screen. . The story does not mince words nor action in getting down to the rock-bottom reasons - why- organ ized narcotic operators spare no one: In their efforts to keep their great money making trif f ic a) lye. The district , attorney is going" to wipe out ttoe drug-bajttd that "is, flourishing in . his district , it be has io sink with the. good ship oV state. He closes in with a relent less hand. Then comes an attack that he knows nothing ot until the very end of the story. A brilliant offspring of his who has started out with literary aspirations but wound up on the rocks of tli drug vice is made the victim it a pretty trup by the drug leaders. Ping Pong'Tournament Is Held at YMCA on Saturday One o the most furious and evenly contested battles ever fought on a ping pong field was staged at the YMCA courts. Sat urday night. During the week just past, the boys, under the direction of Boys' Secretary . Meade Elliott, field a ping pong tournament, with IS boys participating ' Scottv Mart was the winner, and received the tournament prize, a. fine leather pocket case. Saturday night, he was entered against Ivan White, champion of the winner tourna ment, and the two started to fight it out to a finish. White won the first series. C-3; then.Marr came back .with a bang, winning the second by the same score. IT'S ALL THAT I'VE SAID FOR IT, AND MORE TOO 'TODAY TOMORROW No Raise in Prices i: BLIGH THEATRE jJlfuuu ?; I OUOooouOUUliU TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1923 6-2. On the last set. they bat tled until the score-was 6-alI, when the game was called a draw and the boys and the leaders saw the Y Movie pictures and talked LIBERTY 'Scandalous mm .juc vai w if r r m m m m m i t m w m : . 1 ft w Drama of a Barroom Slavey and Village Outcast ' who blossoms into the town's pride and joy. HUMOR :: ROMANCE :: PATHOS LAST TIMES TODAY "SURE FIRE FLINT" En n ion's Idea T WENTY centuries ago a Sidonian craftsman inscribed on a drinking glass he had made, these words: "Made by Ennion, , let the buyer remember." This is said to be the first advertisement '. -' r . ' , - - - ' .-.-'..- ' Today, every manufacturer who is really' proud of his product, r marks it, that all may know and identify his work. Then, by adver- tising, he throws on both product and mark the search-light of pub lie attention. y . Only good goods, fairly priced, can flourish in the light of ad- ' vertising. The goods must be as advertised. Otherwise, they lose caste in the buyer's mind.. And no business can thrive under the weight of public condemnation. That is why a merchant or manufacturer places the reputation of his business at stake every time he advertises. He spends his money to invite your consideration of his wares, and then, perforce, must leave the final decision to you. That is why it pays to buy advertised goods. Read the advertisements over their camp plans for the Trask River. camp beginning Wed nesday. . They expect to have Tat least ,40 . boys from Saleihj and Marion county, and there may be STARTS TODAY You'H seo the mysleries' of OiInat4vu ,unfqltld " . .A whole city .i-runible bVfoi e your eye -A Homlerful rerod action uf the -lt0 San Fran .' cluco fire.:':." .'"-"' -r , : -' . A V '.' " '' ' ' ,'. Again as AND : VIRGINIA VALU STARTING, TOMORROW ) Tongues Hf .IIMI I XTK. 20 or 'more' plcketl'np1 by Inter slate Secretary Yount, from other valley points. Other ' "separate camps are being held from Pprt land, Astoria and Eugene 1 . .- 1 t t - ?v . ''A the Crook 7 v yusP.VM i ' ; i r i f ., . I 1 1