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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1923)
i THE OREGON STATESMAN att.c trv.r M yrpxTTer. a v MHPMTVr. ATTP.TTST 21). 1923 2 ,,L wu-r'ji - pj MARGUERITE 'gLEESON AISa. MARGARET WHITE will v become the bride of Arm la E Berger at. a pretty wedding la St. Pauj;., .Episcopal church this toornin At 10 o'clock. The bride will wear a tallenex ot Kray poiret twill with a smart aall hat to match, worn .with a JSf, v6- . Miss Valerie ' TMggs wiU,be maid o honor and ill wear a frock of crene in A shade of brown. .Her hat .wiii b of. a corresponding, hue. lioth - wcr corsage bouquets. Jetioy Gajrd Trin attend . Mr. Berger and the ushers will be Bert Hoffina and. Howard Kurt. Mrs. William H. prank will sin'g "At ' Danmltiir" - ' 4..-t ' . .... marriage service and Mrs. Horace wiu piay tne accompani mem, , ana , ja.ter the wedding marc a rrom Je ndelasohn. Tha church will be ; decorated with toaantiUes of greenery and large cornucopias filled with as ters, pink and whiteasters will be arranged along the side walls while the altar will be banked with palms, and large .baskets of asters in the plnk and white shades. i,-Av.. I :;i - r - I i I ne young couple will leave following H the. ceremony .for' a weddng..trip which .will be taken Dy automobile. They will return after (Io.Kmi Af.ik. n i. . t w. .uv UIVULU ftUU Jwill he at home to their friends at-their new home on Jforth High Btreet after September 15. I Tna orldo Is the daughter of Mrs Ralph White and is one (of the charming and talented mem wcra ni me younger.set. ur. Mer ger is a son of Mr. and Mrs. P. II, Berger and a graduate of the North Pacific Dental college. v; Mrs. Walter Spauldln- and the Spauldlng twins returned yester day from several' weeks spent at seaside. Airs. Nora G. Miller of CorraWa ' accompanied Mrs. Spauldlng on the trip. I y ., I Miss Cornelia Marvin, . state librarian, who has been granted a year's leave of absence, will leaver- Salem October 1 and" wijl afl from' New York . October 13. She will spend a year in Europe. ' ' V: ':- I Miss Mirpah tolair, an assistant librarian at the state library, Is enjoying her annual vacation Just I ?Ilss yiora.M. jCae, ,city librar ian, has returned from a trip to Alaska. Miss Case will leave September 8 for her new position as-city librarian In LaPorte, Ind. The Catholic Daughters ot Am rrica are giving a. card party this evening In McCornack hall for SALEM MAID TO BE MID-SUMMER BRIDE 1 . : - M - ' ...... A - ' V . -; i r .W -l - v " - - jf - & ) JEFF BALDWIN ' l(i Uf S IB Notorius Oregon Convict Captured in New York City sSays Message Miss .Margaret White to become bride of Dr. Armin E. (Photo by Gunnet Berger today.- Robb the benefit of the Salem hospi tal., , ,.; .tu:,- f :i. .Ubl:,i . I' ,. Rev. J. Rr Buck, pastor, of St. Joseph's church, who returned this, week from a trip of several months' duration In Europe, has consented to talk to the members and guests who I attend, - telling them of some of the interesting points of his. trip. i Mr. and Mrs. W. W.i Moore and daughters . Lucille an ST J Dorothy rave I recently i. returned from a trip to Seattle and British Colum bia. .While in Seattle i they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Gray of the Worth & Gray store in Sa- They were entertained at the country home of the. Grays on Lake Washington. One of the pleasurable Incidents of the visit Hiese live additional feahtffi . IJAcctdentt iSidnas:- Regular paymciiti- '-PF71 "W Coa Xifcv ? 3 f- every week, you and your family arc J. Adversity: gcnda j absolutely protected in any -4. Old Age: nassWediocotne cbhtingcncyvYou hould , know more about te ddiT tional features that make , this policy so far superior to ordinary life insurance. The coupon makes inyestitiori ' easy for you. "Send it now -forlic. 5. Death: AD benefits of rsg. "ivitH several splendid additional futures. .. . . ' . Mm ,pa S." 4 --5 mm 1. .'"l,ilf iWllJ aM TSn iNSURAf.-SS.. CCi:?Af4Y iOMS crrica-SAM raNasco District Uanaser Wanted; there were the trips on th Gray'a houseboat. Mrs. A.' A. Lee, who is in charge of children's work In the First Methodist church, will sponsor a porch party this evening for the Standard Bearers.' Mrs. ; C. E. Powell will assist, Mrs. Lee. Irene Breithaupt and Tsobel Houston will be In charge of refreshments. The girls . will , elect officers at this meeting. i j The Little Light Bearers will meet for a picnic party this after noon at 3 o'clock. A committee will assist Mrs. Lee during the af ternoon. : They are , Mrs. R. L. Farmer. . Miss . Margaret Fisher, Miss Jennelle Vandevort and Miss Florence-Young. -v ; One morning, when Billy woke up, he sat on the floor for some time gazing at his toes. "Huriy up, Billys you'll be late for breakfast," aid his .'mother. Why are you looking at your feet?"? i -r' "ri - "Well," said the boy, "isn't It funny that one of my to?s is so much larger than the others; I had 'them all af the - same time, didn't I?" , ; Well," announced Mr. Perk asie to his wife,"John and Mary have taken the first step toward divorce.' ' ; 1 "Ton don't mean to tell me! What on earth is the matter?" ? "They have got inftrried.,w-- Toledo Blad . v - t imnn-T ii- ir i- i nimif.n m q Orehf State News Splinting the -Trees EUGENE, Aug. 2. Splints are now being put on the grove of black walnut trees in College Crest wMch were recently grafted to English walnuts for ;ir. F." E. Adams-of this city, in making ex tensive improvements to the place to which he" is moving his resi dence this -week from 728 - Thir teenth avenue east. ' He has about 75 trees grafted there and ex pects to get nuts from' them next year. He also has a grove of fil berts planted there, along with iruu ot several varieties. , :. iPne tree in the acreage has been grafted to produce two kinds of prunes and a variety of plums. The doctort has recently had the building remodeled at considerable cost. - " . - . r cnarge or tne i program, ,pro-l nounced It perfect, especially the talk by Tom Graham, the live wire Corvallis fire chief. ' , Good Oops Assured i5AKt.it,! - Aug. J 28. Baker county farmers are favored with good weather.Jjust warm enough to give "pep" to the farm hand and from all accounts the abund ant crops of hay and grain will be harvested without a hindrance from shortage of labor. Now, if only fair prices prevail the coming fall for hay and grain the grower wilt be content for a half loaf is, better than no loaf at all. . - ; ; An Inconvenient" Custom The post office department has officially frowned upon the prac tice of printing return address up on the backs of .envelopes. Their earnest request ' to' local . postmas ters, printers and those who use envelopes Is to discourage the use of the' return address in any other than the upper left hand corner of th address side, where postal employes are "accustomed to .look for it. The common practice of using the proper place for- the re turn address will, prevent many thousands of letters 'irom going to the dead letter office, and will save, thousands of dollars rto-" the government and the users of first class V mail privileges. Oregon City Enterprise. A Community Affair ' CORVALLIS. -Aug. 28. The Community Affairs commitfpn of the Corvallis"" Chamber of Com merce put On a splendid get-together- at Ihe Plymouth hail Sat urday night. It is the custom ot the Plymouth community to hold regular - monthly meetl h"g s throughout the year, and conse quently a large crowd, attended notwithstanding the extremely Providing' for Farmers Pay ALBANY, Aug. 28. A fund of more than $1000 has been, sub scribed by the members of the Chamber ot Commerce to defray the expenses ot 'Farmers: Day" at the Linn countyfair. Monday has been set asidey and the people of Linn county have been notified of a general invitation to attend .The finance committee of the chamber for- this fund -consisted ot I. A McDowell. F. E. Llvengood. Don Preston, Roscoq Ames, J. J. Bar rett, and Waldo Anderson. " Jeff Baldwin, one of the most notorious and Incorrigible con victs who ever was held in the Oregon state penitentiary, , and whom Oregon authorities for. sev eral years have i believed i dead. has. bene captured , in - New : York City, and will be returned here to finish out sen fences that were cut short when he -escaped. J. N. , Lilly, deputy warden of the stat prison, will leave tonight for New York to return the prisoner. Baldwin was arrested there for burglary. ' j i .1 Baldwin Is not' the ordinary type of convict who escaped by strolling away from some trusty work crew, but was of the kind that takes more daring measures Baldwin was convicted in Clatsop county for larceny in a dwelling and was received 1 at the peniten tiary June 24,; 1915, to do seven yars. He was 'made a trusty and escaped September 19, 1917, but was caught seven days later. One day during the week that he was out lie tried to kill the sheriff of Linn county and was given a new sentence) of ten years for assault with intent to kilt. " At 9 o'clock on e, Sunday morn ing. May 12, 191$, Baldwin, who was employed In jfhe prison yard on the east side j of the main prison, went, through the base ment bars into the building. The bars were1 sawed, Whether. Bald win or eome other convict sawed them has never been! ascertained Gaining a basement corridor, Baldwin broke a lock on a inter vening door and entered the base ment in the west; wing. He ex changed his clotheaor a white suit commonly worn by trusties in the prison bakery, spread the bars in. a basement window of the west wing and went into ths yard. He then calmly .walked through the front igate which was opened for him at his signal. ; , The northwest 'was combed by officers in Bearch jof Baldwin. It was generally believed ' he' went south, and for a time It was be lieved he had killed ' a youth in the mountains of Linn county and taken a small rifle ; that' the boy carried. This apparently was not true. ' Oregon officers later heard J stories' that led them' to believe i Baldwin had been killed in an underworld f end In some south ern,, California city or In Tia Juana, and' he was no longer an object of search, j ' Baldwin was soj incorrigible In the' prison that he and one Curtis, alias Herbert Merrithew, were placed in a cell and "hosed" by former Warden John MInto. This was one thing that led to the dis missal of Minto by the late Got ernor Withyoombe. Baldwin has hanging oyer him in "Oregon four years of his first Clatsop county sen fence and the entire ten - years; of his Linn county- sentence. ; u i It is understood that he was arrested in New; York recently for a minor offence and from circu lars - was. recognised as the man wanted in Oregon.! . . !' ; i ; Baldwin Is said to have served two terms in the Monroe, Wash., reformatory before ihe 1 was re ceived here. Deputy Warden Lilly ki taking along an Oregon boot and other irons to ' keep Baldwin in submission. -' '. Medford Kiwanis Organized MEDFORD, Aug. 28. The of ficial presentation of the charter to the 5 newly organized Kiwanis club of Medford win take place next month and, expectations are that a Eugene delegation of KI wanians will take part In the cere mony, according to A. E. Roberts, secretary 6 of the local club, who with W, Kr Newell, member of the board of trustees, attended the organization session at Med ford this week. The Medford club is the 11th to be formed in Ore gon. - ' 5 Tf . . - -' . . . ; ; : Tarirr Plight Grave C x LAKE VIEW, Aug. 28. Power ful commercial Interests are mak ing an organized effort to prevail on the tariff commission and con gress to remove the tariff on all agricultural products including livestock, . wool, dairy and other western products, , according ; to a lengthy": telegram received ; ilasf hight by the Bank of Lakeyiew, from -T. J. Hagenbarth, president of the National Woolgrowers asso ciation. So serious is the situa tion that a message was sent ask ing permission to' use the hank's name together with "the names o'f other influential western, produc ers, merchants and .bankers In counteracting the effect - of the eastern commercial ' interests.? Re-J moval of the protective tariff at this time would be ruinous to -the entire western United, States, it is thought, 'i. PR INGLE Clark are Frank andErhest threshing this week. - Mr. Baled and William Sanders Were. Portland-visitors Sunday. companied by Mr. Clements and Miss Minnie Page drove to Ocean side' last week. Mif. Page and his sister of Kingston!, 'Wash., who have been visiting at the Crystal Springs farm for j several days started on their homeward drive Monday. '' ; '" :'Y, :' ';; V--, The Pringle Sunday school had a larger attendance last Sunday and a new class Is about to be or ganized. ;-"'' J : - j , Some of the big prune growers are feeling somewhat discouraged concerning the unfavorable out look of prunes. j ' These "warmer . days are ripen ing prunes and pears and the corn too is' hardening. ,: S : ; ' !,;..' nowadays. " ' ; ; r : " ''' , " Rain ' Is seldom seen on the shores at the southern end of Cedros Island.1 Why Have Gray Hair or Dandruff? 1 - NooriaaiiM win restore 'your fclr to orir- inl color whether' black, fcrown or. blond. Bamovet " dandrvf f . PrTmt falling bhr and ' pronotea it growth. Cleanses th.,aealpv,H arm leas . and pleasaat to ..." ,K longer is tt. acces sary for you ' to Tha. sray hair which handicaps yon woeiaity aad in bnsisess. - Positively Hot a Dycl Koorishiao is real tonis which feeds and nourishes the -ha irn thus re toxin r t to. iU erixinal TiUUty.; It is used and endorsed by thousands of men. As dandruff r it is worth many, tunes' the pries eked. One' bottle usually la effective. ' Sold by all dealers, includias " 3- 6. BROW,IE IS DEAD; DOG : , IN DISCOVERY OE DRUG CURE IS VICTIM OF POISON GHOUL By WILD CARVER ; "Brownie" is dead. - '. A dog.poisoner has added her to his list of victims. Very few Salem residents had knowledge of Brownie's existence but there is every reason to be lieve that some day the world will concede that Brownie's life was utilized for the cause of humanity. Brownie, a large, Intelligent hound of the beagle type, was. a medium of the discovery of the Poore narcotic cure, recently test ed and pronounced efficient after the complete recovery of five opium "fiends" following a 10 day treatment at an emergency hospital in! Portland. Brownie, the property of Dr. E. W. Poore, was only one of nearly a hundred dogs of .her breed to survive Dr. Podrets experiment which com bined a period of over 11 year's time. ' ' ' "I would not sell Brownie for any sum," declared Dr. Poore re cently. "I resorted to all known measures for humane treatment during my years of research. I introduced ' the drug habit to Brownie and she .became an ad dict. Then my specific was g:yea her and she survived the toxi? re action of the treatment. A "tor that she was the subject of minor experiments and at times it seem ed to me that she had some can ine knowledge that she was aiding my work. She shall have the best of care as long as she lives." ; Dr. Poore does not know that Brownie ts dead. She died Sun day morning after the poisoner had done his work. Brownie has for several months been kept In Salem by Mr. and -Mrs. Basil Branson, friends "of Dr. Poore. Just . why anyone should take Brownie's life will join the mys teries of the dog poisoner. At least, Brownie has saved a, life of far greater usefulness than 'that of many a distributor of pQison. i.'ThQs.e who grieve i;or Brownie have one consolation. Scores of cures and hundreds of applications for the Poore treatment are daily proof that this humble animal was the medium of a message, of hope for thousands wh.o are Blares to the narcotic evil. . . Y. 1 SILVfERTON NEWS ? SILVERTONj Or.. Aug. . 28. (Special to The Statesman) The Silvertqn streets were crowd ed last night by citizens who were trying to. "listen jn" through the means pf the Ames Hard ware loud talker to the radio concert furn ished by the Oregonian, It was not that Silverton folks had never. S2en or heard a radio before as it might appear to the . uninitiated. The occasion was simply that the Silrerton juommnnuy - cino - was hroa.dcvatIri g JffiPl. . Orcsoc! i station. Mayor JL. C. Eastman spoke.' as .did aJsoJulius AJa, president of the Community club. Among others taking part' in the program were Mr. and Mrs.-Gordon McCall Mrs. Vida Bennett, Mrs. Gertrude Cameron, Mrs. S. C. Richardson and Tom Corhouse. U is said that there are around 100 privately owned radio, seta in and around Silverton. Fair Client This . picture is awful. It la. no Ukeneas. I, look like a woman ot sixty! Photographer Pardon me, madam, that Is pot your portrait! That is a mirror! : . .. , . Matty--I wonder If Professor,. Kidder meant aiiythlnjj by IU : Charlie-BylwhUtTi ' ' Matty -Ha advertised a lecture on "Fols,' and when I bought a ' ticket I was v marked "Admit. One." - ti quiqljy relieves ' - and .y '. ' 1 ... . ' !! Ir ,y ' ' - ' ;- '.'. . . ; :" " ' I' ' ; ' ' .......'' ' i '..?olL,.:"vv:',. do you use it in your car ? Gasolines explode in two ways. One kind explodes, instantaneously- detonates. It has the effect of a sledge hammer blow. , - . ' 5 It crashes against the piston- head, forcing the stroke by the single impulse. ' It limjts the compression because of its tendency to ex plode prematurely, and thus reduces power and efficiency. 1 Detonation causes "knocking." You notice it especially on the hills. It increases vibration thus increasing wear and tear. . , 1 ".C :y f ; . t , The Prolonged Impulse '. ; The other kind of explosion the more efficient kind you get from Union Gasoline. It is a prolonged explosion. Xhe impulse is progressive and sustained not crashing and instantaneous. - It thrusts the piston throughout the- entire strode. So Union Gasoline permits Jncxj in your motor.for compressiona 1 authorities 1 agree, is limited by the pendency of gasoline xto, detonate And on maxi mum compression is dependent maximurn efficiency and power. . .'. More Power on Hills - Thus Union Non-Detonating Gasoline makes your car a better hill climber. ;., Jrpu.nd a new 4Hft." Your car is, in fact, being pulled up by a steady, sustained impulse rather than by a series of jerks. ' - ' , -""!. ' Likewise you have new speed on the level and more snap in the getaway -both results of high compression. ' . 5 - : . . . You enjoy a smoother running car. It has less vibration, for the power impulses are smooth and constant. It aavea wear arid tear. ' And you obtain more miles per gallon because of increased efficiency.. v-':::L,v :'riO "dy 'iiV V'T' ,V"V ;- -V- ' : Union Gasoline is the product of progressive refining methods IU quality is governed by exhaustive tests. It is constantly being improved by the research of feble chemists who are aided by the vpry imcst equipment or studying reiining processes. Ask for touring road maps at any Union Service Station. UnionOUComnamr or Caliljorjoia - rTT--"T:- : o 4y "y T 5 - T o V i i !! U i of"amerTcas strongest-companies. H. E. , .Stewart a ad family ac Ftrry at fX.25 per bottle, '