CUBi OOTlllil ; ; noi mm Good Record Made B y . Branch Federal Bureau ' at Salem YMCA, Although the United States em ployment service was opened ; In Salem May- 1 ,ot last "year, yet during the; first month there were applications by , those needing laborers amounting to 1 164, Y , ,turing the same month of May, at Portland where the office has been establi<ed for a number of years, those needing- labor , called foy 4060. These figures show that with Its population of 300, 000, and an old established em ' ployment. service, there were only four times the; number applying tor workers as there was in Sa lem with, the office" just' opened. . In Oklahoma City With Its 100? 000 and old established employ ment service, during the., month of - May there was calls j by those applying for workers amounting to 2207, only about twiee that of Salem. - , -Although the Salem United States ; employment ; office-; was opened May 1, yet daring the month It placed 233 who had ap plied for work; During the same month Bellinsham placed 153, Everett 374, and MarshfWd 180. CLAY AWAY THE YEARS Apply Concilia Beautifier casmic clay to tfour face, and rest while it dries, then remov and see and Iel the wonderful d. Serer.ee in the color and texture of the .kin-" : S Guaranteed to do these definite things for the fjee or mvney refunded. Clear the complexion and give it color. Uft out the I nes., Remove blackheads and .pimples. Close enlarged pores. Rebuild facial tis sues and muscles. Make the skin soft and smooth. S ' . t Vou can obtain regular sizes from y6ur favorite toilet counter.' If not, send this rd v Yh 1Q cants to Boncilla Laboratories, lniirpolis, Indiana, for a trial tube. hUa : Vmmbtm I . 4 I I 9f Cadi tntm fm Survey of Cmrrtnt Busmen, Fttman 1923. CtfMM ptica from U. S. Oratorical Surety. Vara, from Nowmfc (1922) Mimthi) Utter Kmitm. Bunm of Lt bit Statistic. -1 , ' y Swapping things as when our grandmothers traded eggs for calico at the cross-roads store gives a better understanding of values. By measuring ;ohe diing cainst another we too can often judge values more clearly, ," 'Coal and wages make up more than half the manufacturing cost of cement. ; ' - The chart above shows price fluctuations for portland cement, coal and wages during the past ten years. In each case 100 is used to1 represent 1913 figures, by the Government departments which compiled these statistics.' Translated into "eggs and calico -hr-gusge, this chart shows that a ton of coal would buy nearly twice as much cement in 1922 as in 1913. A day's wages ' also would buy-'more ' cement in 1922 than in 1913. - This means that even though coal and wages make up more than half its manu-" facturing cost, cement is now relatively. jwer in price than either coal or wages. So, considering these increased costs . it is plain that in buying cernent you get mors for your money than bclonv PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION mX7estY7ashin-on direct ' CHICAtiO ' ' - cf National Organization to Irrprore and Extend toe Uses of Concrete AtUat I XX Aim I ntam I rn , Hraphu MJmuIM Mi .noli limjinjirm rmw K.n i THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON YOICOHOMA ; , As the Salem .' office becamo known and the fact that it was a United States employment service, bureau... basiue33 increased until the Salem office became ! one of the most active in the; northwest.' , During the , . fonr months be tween May 1 and September I the ; Salem., offlce was busy ; about 16 hours a day. j Those In search of laborers called for 4696 workers. That is, the service was asked to Eupply that many workers, show " Ing the great field of service, the Salem office was covering. And .' during the same - four months 2862 workers applied for work. Of this number 2403 were men and 439 women. The great est call for work was from those who wanted work as farm hands . I 1919 . m 9 Pirttntwri - Slti . ,H ic-iru. t. Louii ,Pmi tjwrgh V iiunmr, B. C. ,P in, f"-T(ri V P C ,3i wi -.jr i -i 1 1 i - .. . linn . - ' - . : . . r 1 ' If ...s . - ... ... .... , . . Nmwhm , I, i, I T 1 " tor at AND ITS Pnr?T . ' ,, ,, . I r , 1 ,i, .IrinM-.HTm -Vi i mmmmm I W WtWln Mil II 11 n i . . I If .r-" . ill I , ..... w , !V J if-.'- - . r- - C-"-" - - - - if, I '-; . , 1 ' ' ' ' ' - ; . ttP : 1 1 lM v : or in some agricultural work, the number being ,1583. f ii ; ! -The Salem United States em ployment service, having demon strated that Salem was a logical point and , comparing favorably with the larger centers of popu lation, efforts will be made to have the department of labor con, tinue the bureau. ; ; m 'The Salem Chamber of Com merce has written Senator Chas. Li. McNary. calling ; attention to the very- favorable record made by the Salem office during Its first five months and urging his cooperation. , and assistance In having the office continued. : Unless this is done,: there will be no means in Salem, after Oc tober 31, by which laborers may secure work at some central ag ency, nor where those In need of labor may find help. ; Copper county Is mining In ' Marion a fixed fact. Actual production is going on in the LoU-Larsen Mining company properties on the Little North Fork of the Santlam river near the point where Gold creek emp ties, Into that stream. ? Most old Salem residents will recall that there are a number of good min ing properties on Gold creek, as well as further north and -west from the Lotx-Larsen properties, and no doubt all of these mines will be producing In due courseof time.'-' ''j-' ' ; '"":",: But the Lotz-Larsen Mining company la now: actually Bhippiag to the Tacoma smelter, i The last car of ore from this mine ran at the smelter 10.16 per cent copper and 3.6 per cent silver. - That Is considered good; making a real shipping proposition. This mine is 42 miles in a direct line from Salem, but still in Marlon county being about 7 miles as the crow fliea from the summit of the Cas cades, which Is the line between Marion and Jefferson , counties. . H. II. Lots and A. C. Larsen, the men who have been giving every ..ounce of - thelr'energles to the development of this property, were in Salem yesterday, on their way to the mine; Mr. Lota having Just returned from a visit to the smeUerr..- 'z'tl-Ti.T: r.-.'f-; They report nine men steadyily at. work now; and regular ship ments pf ore by trnck to the rail road at Gates, some 17. miles away.; I They report the road in fair condition, and all the bridges strengthened, and one new bridge built at their own expense, with out a cent of help from " the county, or from any other source. And the new mill for treating the ores Is ready to run, and the water power is about ready to be switched on so- that mining on a larger scale will soon be under taken, and carried on the coming winter, v . - ;"- ' "' The profitable working of this mine will mean increased wealth for Marion : county. When' the production of this county , covers not only what we raise in the soil but what we can dig from under It, then this county can certainly be said to have arrived. SWEPT BY FIRE 1X11 "t '" Jl 'ill ' M ST ST. PAUL WELL Attempt to Remove . Drilling Machinery Leacfc to j Difficulties , When George E. Scott, well driller, and a crew of men at tempted to remove ! drilling ma chinery from the Willaraete Val ley Gas & Oil company's well, , two miles south of St. Paul, Or., on the Salem hfghway,Sunday, they ran into a peck of trouble., r After gazing down the muzzles of a shotgun and a rifle in the hands of two other drillers who hold Hens against the equipment in lieu of wages, the party de cided that discretion made up the greater part of valor and retreat ed. ' ' " . The trouble, which reached a climax Sunday at sunrise, started July 26, when drilling operations were stopped at the well, with 97 days' . wages owing 4he driller and his assistant. When the money was not forthcoming, . th. workmen -had . E. L. McKenzie, their atorney, file laborers' liens against ; the equipment.! Then they waited developments. ' . " Mr. Scott, 'who holds the equip ment was . purchased from him, and 'tiat. he never has received payment, visited the property Sat urday, and dismantled some of the machines. , The drtllerr feared that he would remove them from the property, and rushed word to McKenzie, who. with , Edgar 1 Pay -ton, motored out to the well .Sat urday night prepared .for eventu alities. . !,.. , ; ' .. : . , Early Sunday Scott and a man who says he Is buying the ma chinery, took' three motor cars, three ; motor, trucks - and three trailers" and went to the " scene, only to find the road to the der rick blocked and - the property guarded. . -Scott, after being refused ad mittance, declared he would swear out warrants against the men and when that didn't deter them, he left in one of the motor cars. It was apparent, McKenzie said yes terday on his return to Portland, that Scott- didn't receive much en couragement from lawyers . . or sheriff, for when he got. back to the scene he orcered his, fleet of trucks and workmen to leave the property. ' . Lebanon Man Found Dead - Near Home Thot Suicide LEBANON, . Ore., Sept. 1 11. B. P. Burnett, a pioneer farmer, was found, dead in a pasture at his home today - with a ; gunshot wound In his temple and a rifle lying near. He has "recently been suffering greatly from, an injury, hia family told the officers who Investigated, and was despondent. nniCHESTER SPILLS W1 IIKBUUOXDIUUXIl. i rmMBcM,Snt.Ahrav.l..iiiiLI. BUWS PLAY PART WHEAT DECK AFTER QUAKE. -i V v - 1. A" 1 .v ! HOT EXPECTED Follows Tradition Sliding Down on Regular Calen dar Date as Usual CHICAGO, Sept. 11. Wheat followed, tradition today and de clined in prices According to a popular belief this was a regular calendar , date for the beginning of ' a bear campaign. ' Besides Canadian hedging sales were said to be enlarging. The market closed unsettled 1-4 3-8 3-4 net low. December $ 1.0 5 3-8 to $1,051 1-2 ind May $1.10 3-4 to $.10; 7-8. Corn finished at a range' varying from 5-8 .decline o 1-8 1-4 advance. Oats 1-8 down and provision at 10 cents lower to 5 cents gain. - Predisposed to be bearish to day because backed by experience in, former years; wheat graders showed . from the outset a ten dency to lean to the bear side of the market. The , fact , that the government crop ' report showed a larger yield of domestic spring wheat than had , recently "- been looked for, counted, as an addi tional depressing . influence ' on values. Gossip was current that considerable , Canadian wheat would be imported into this coun try at a profit and be delivered on i Minneapolis, December con tracts duty paid. ' r Shorts found offerings surpris ingly light, toward the end of the day and rallies jwere encouraged by reports that about 1,000,000 bushels had been bought to go to Europe, mostly Canadian wheat deferred shipment, v i Corn and , oats averaged ; lower in sympathy with wheat. Bearish aspect of the government repoVt as to corn was also given atten tion. ' '"' ."'V' : Provisions . lacked support de spite higher quotations on hogs. He I fell off my bicycle last week and was- knocked senseless. She :When do you expect to get better? . " , SULPHUR IS BEST TO CLEAR UP UGLY. BROKEN OUT SKI Any breaking out or skin Irrita tion on face, neck or body Is over come quickest by applying Mentho Sulphur, says a noted skin spe cialist. 'Because of its germ de stroying properties, nothing -has ever been found to take the place of this" sulphur preparation that instantly blngs ease from the itch ing, burning and irritation.; aientno-Buipnur ;; heals eczema right up leaving the skin clear and, smooth. It seldom falls to relieve the torment xr disfigure meet. A little jar . of Rowles Mentho-Sulphur. may be obtained at any drug store. It is used like cold cream. Adv. - WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 12, 1023 3S JT liy .BKTTI KSl. Phone 10 Gj PORTItAITS, landscapesindoor studies, and commercial prints are Included among the 30 pic tures' on exhibit at the. Gunnell & Robb studio this week. ' A letter from the secretary. of the organi sation of northwest photographers explains that this exhibit contains the very choicest work done by the western photographers. A fine discrimination In the play of lights . on the weather beaten and seamed face of the old fisherman, and the absence of re touch in the study of the long haired, sullen-eyed beggar, results in the haunting effect of a Rem brandt. Of unusual composition is the girl silhouette on the ex treme lower left - of a-print, bal anced by two overhanging vines in the upper right background. The mood . of a sun-patterned floor space is caught in one in terior. , Had "not an artist intro duced an ' open " window In the background, one might at .first glance' think his study of a mo ther was Whistler's own the fiame pose, the 'same work-worn hands. . . The landscapes . are re markable -for their balance of composition , and1 the . absence of harsh lights. There is a commer cial print of an interior suggestive, of a Wallace Nutting In Its min uteness of detail. This Is the? first of the yearly 'traveling exhibits"" Instituted at tbe recent convention of north west photographers at Victoria, B. C. By- this plan choicest speci mens "of western photographic art of the northwest are divided into small units and. distributed to western studios for display during national photographic week of each . year. . .fc . ... Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Pindley of Grants Pass are receiving con gratulations upon the arrival of a young son, . born yesterday morning. Miss Mary FIndley went to 'Grants Pass yesterday .: Mr. and Mrs. J. C. McLeod will leave today for Sacramento to make ; their home. Mr. McLeod will be connected with the high way department at the state capi, tpl .there, v l . After a three weeks of visiting at the home of Mr. and1 Mrs. George Matten, In San Francisco. Miss Carrie Edge has returned to her home in Salem. - Mrs. Matten will be remembered as MIsb Bes sie Edge. ' The new bungalow home at 540 North Capitol street is in readiness for the wedding celebra tion of this afternoon when Miss Faye Bolin will become the bride of Mr. Henry J. Millie, After a short wedding trio through the northwest the young couple will come back to live in the new homer--'-." ' The bride-elect' has1 been the inspiration for a lumber pf de lightful affairs, - one of the most recent being t the party of last Friday afternoon - at .which Mrs. Carey Martin and Mrs. Ivan Mar tin were hostesses to friends of Miss Bolin.. - , . - ' " Mrs! H. H. Vandevort, with her sister, Mrs. Archie Caspell of Stayton, will leave Friday night for Des Moines. In Spokane they will be joined by their sister, Mrs. Fred Harrild, and the trio will continue the journey together. .In Des Moines they will visit at the home of the. fourth sister, Mrs. How--' . Does He Take? Have you seen the little walking Walk-Over man in the '.'show window of John J. Rottle Shoe Store. : u.- - . Guess how many steps he takes and win a pair of any Wal!: Over shoes in the store. ; '"'':v . '" How many steps does the walking Walk-Over man I take in ) the '.'course:' of a week' of " seven days of 24 hours . each? ." y ; :..".. '".':'.-. ? In Case of a Tie Winners Draw for First Place Contest closes Saturday evening at 8 p. m., September 22nd. Answers Should be Left at the Walk-Over Store ' Alice"" Wclteeyer,"as well - as" with other relatives and childhood friends. Mrs. Vandevort was sent by the Oregon conference as a delegate to - the national Woman's- Home Missionary ' society " convention which meets in Sioux City, Octo ber 10 to 17. The women expect to be gone about two months. : - .- - ; - . .;. : ", ' A group of young people of the Leslie Methodist Episcopal church met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Bobrnstedt on Fairmount street, Tuesday night for a fare well surprise, party given for' the pleasure of Mr. . Francis KInch Who is leaving for the Methodist conference In Portland which con venes September 12 to 19. 1 After the ' conference lie expects to ge to South "America to preach. '; V-Y.'- "YY . .... ,': - ' Y Y-Y. Miss El fried a Noble of Boulder, Colo., arrived in Salem Saturday for a brief, visit with her mother, Mrs. A. E. Noble and her aunt Mrs. Marion Ilellyer. She will be in Salem for only a short time be fore returning to her work in Boulder. . Y - Y;-.-.Y - v : -K- ' - Y Miss Helen Ilendriekson, -formerly of Salem, now of Portland, Is visiting Miss Florence Pope. -:: v 7 . ' : , . Mr. Ronald Glover- will go to Portland tomorrow to represent the First Methodist church at the layman's conference On. Friday and Saturday. , Miss Lena Belle Tartar was in Salem Monday night to preside at the first meeting of AB chapter of PEO, which met. at the home of Miss Grace Elizabeth Smith. She returned yesterday to Corvallis to continue her . visit with her par ents, and. will return to Salem the latter part of the week , to open her studio and resume work for the winter. . v ; . - v."'-.y ; '"V , Miss Gayle Acton of Portland is visiting with friends and rela tives in Salem. - , Professor and ' Mrs. Penoyer NEW. Just Arrived Hais are developed on "flatterins: lines,' and trimmings . are kn&wingly placed. You may choose from a wide assortment of Felts, Velours and -Velvets. Priced from 2.75toC9.5 GALE & COMPANY ' Commercial and Court "Streets Maoy join i ?snm Walk-Over Store " '' YY . - '-.'' ' 167 N. COMMERCIAL ST. Salem Orcnon English left for - their homa t College Station, Tex., the flirt of the week after visiting several weeks with the parents of Mrs-. English la this city. Mr. English will resume his. work ; as 'prors- 1 Bor in 4he mechanical and agri cultural college at College Station. j . , . V : IL Pohle, with Miss Edna Pohle and Miss Betty Utter motored to Seaside Monday where thej will 1 spend the week. Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Utter will spend the week end at Seaside and. motor home Sunday' evening with the young peoplo.. 1 -.-'. . . . Announccr.icnt3 vTomorrowa afternoon the iLo; ,l Woman's -class of 4he First Ciu . j tian chorcli will meet' at :. .. tractive-troni'e ofTrs. Jol... II j. phreys' 1283 South High Lk.t. Alarge'riumber of women are ex pected as thi Is the beginning t.f tho fall actlvltiusl .i Y ..av-.r Y TaeWFMS bt the First Jfethod 1st Episcopal church will s.-.ttt at the church parsonage this after noon at 2:30. Mrs. A. L. Becken dorf, a. missionary recently re turned from the Philippines, will speak, and her mother. -Mrs. J. N. Scharff, will lead the devotionals. Business for the new year will be outlined. An invitation Is given to all the , women of the church to be present. - The Daughters of Veterans will , meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the , armory for their first business meeting of the new club year. Y-Y . . The WIIMS of the Leslie Meth odist Episcopal church will meet today at the home of Mrs. Jlason Bishop, 1350 South Commercial street. Mrs. F. W Selee will bo in charge of the program; and plans' for the work of the coming year will be outlined. ' HATS by Express A friend indeed is a hat that brings out ones best- points. Our new i StQZC .. .... y.... : ... i t r i