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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1923)
Mown SHOE-;' . STORE' ! . Semi : -Annual j ,,' Sale Shoe .Store Real -Valiies Hundreds ' r--- 01 "People . Reirfark r6ncerful ; the Prices i ;:-;;-.:v:"'K: - ; 'Men's ,. Shoes' Tbinen's Shoes Children's L Shoes Snip l.;t. M " Seles j r Prices' ! . i ; -l ' : : . ' I ItUaLliU ULtt l.iiiur tllfiiyUUGIi) Only Squeal Remains After . Chemists Get Though With Animals" : : ! WASHINGTONf.fDec. l.rA use for everythlne but the squeal is still the motto ot the meat pack tag Industry, and truer than ever before, - but there U. mor than that to It, says - the Jnstftate ; of American Meat PacXers. ; Not only are many unique and; Inter esting; uses -Xound . for every part of the slaughtered animal but the by-products Industry, as a , finan cial proposition, rapidly is grow ing In Importance f'4i The hides and bones long have furnished important returns - In the shape of leathers and fertiliz ers, but the bones now have an important use also for medical trartftfwadMr'dSS Sf flfe first Important by-products, and seru m. for use in research ' work as a culture for growing bacteria. Is obtained by separating the cor puscles from the, blood. In dry forms the serum is also used to clear the composition used In coat ing photographic, papers. Blood albumen Is used In the manufacture of water-proof glue for veneer work aeroplane wings and other special iisea: Blood from which the fibrin has been removed is employed., to set colors in ging ham and other cotton goods. Leu cocytic. extract Is made from the white corpuscles and is injected In human veins, to stimulate produc tion," of - these corpuscles. , Blood cooked, pressed, dried and ground to powder Is a specific for "scours" to which 'calvess fed" on skimmed milk , are subject. Tanners use it as a surface filler for some' kinds ot leather, and It is used in plaster as an agent .to prevent setting or hardening too quickly. , J , Sheep skin finds, its waT Into the market , as "chamois skin, and, rT also uw!rfo, belts, hat JandJ, uptolstery and ther fancy uses." lie t hatr. is K eapially ought for -tmhiontuffing fcy au tomoille and 'furnitur ' maaufac turers.' The fine hairs J from the Interior of the ears of cattle are a satisfactory .high grade? substi tute for the camels' hair used in artists' brushes. t '"'7' f' Wool recovered Trom thd .wash ed pelts of slaughtered sheep 4i bought by manufacturers of shod dy to be worked in with wool re covered from old woolen rags to give it life." The grease, recovered in the washing, when purified and prepared.. is used jextensivey,AS . base for' ointments hd;cold creams because It does"not irritate the skin. t ;. ' ; The best horns ansi hoofs, -are softened In " steam, split .? and pressed Into sheets from which are cut combs, buttons, bexes. kindles and many - other articles; fThe sawdust from ' cutting , finally be comes a fertilizer known as hoof meal. The inner, portion of the hoof gives np the substance from which ore made glu4 ,nd , neat's foot oil. From shtnV 'and' other bones of tine texture J handles for cutlery, pipe stems, 4 4Ice, ' chess men, electrical bushidgs, artificial teeth, crotchet needles, bone rings for. nursing bottles,' and other : - - X that tllddSy goods, or ill- I. v ! inafJcgoodSjbrgoods sold in ; vfc7 any oa.tEydjJS&st . ' u r faith,arc the most expensive goods that the public can , But tiiis does not mean that . only high-pneed fvmos arc to befoundhere. - : :. "7 Thi range; dfpricesondie- piano3 vrccarryis yery laree. pneyinsfrunft . ; eil-H- Butlo Ait7 ' trcbiely moderately pricii': Horn cSteTnway, Du9-Ari, XTtUrt Scbmer, Stttnert. ' , and other good pianos ; r Sherman, ' it Mcore'c Muoic House . . . -, 3les . Representatives . ,.. .. , iCOlS.CourtjCtreetti . . SALEH sma-articlfaTe'prodacfd. Some are carved and. dyed to- reseiabto stag horn." ' ", ' W Red bone-marrow is-, a , prepara tion given . by physTctana,-or an emia; to make it palatable It Is combined with chocolate or held in solution In . alcoholic liquids. Bone charcoal is used in sugar re fining and I in manufacture of black pigment for paints and shoe-blacking. Some bones are prepared into what . is known as case-hardening v": bone, used by manufacturers for hardening ball bearings and other steel products and for -blueing rifle and revolver barrels.' Head bones, ears, and the in terior of horns and hoofs become glue, but glue made from hides is the better, haying greater strength and adhesive qualities. Bone glue, too, is used in the. preparation of gummed paper and as a filler or size for glazed paper,, in making matches, calcimine, fly paper, etc ; Gelatine, in the better grades, is obtained from the cleaned pates of calves,, and. is used for fancy desert dishes, asr at stabilizer for ice cream, and in the manufacture of sensitized photographic plates. - The thyroid, parathyroid, ad renal, and other1 ductless glands furnish preparations widely used now In medicine,. Adrenalin, or opinephrin is a powerful astrin gent and heart stimulant and is highly valued, 'costing now about 9400 an ounce; but more than 136,000 sheep ire required to fur nish a pound of adrenalin.: s Pepsin, prepared as a dlgestant, is otalned from . the linings of hogs' stomachs "Catgut" comes not from cats but Is obtained, from the first 24 feet of the sheep's in testine, and is 'used for. surgical sutures, drum snares, tennis rack et strings, and musical instrument strings. " : '' - . Glycerine Is a by-product of the soap industry, and becomes nitro glycerine, dynamite and other ex plosives. It is used also as a ve hicle for medicines, and in the manufacture of parchment ; paper and printers' rollers. .'- All waste matter that cannot be bonverted into some other good purpose. Is finally cooked together and reduced to fertilizers rich in nitrogen, "iios; to grow food crops that will e used to fatten other cattle -thai'fwlll be slaugh tered for food Ahd other fertilizer and so on In an endless chain. : Events in Ruhr Affect Arizona Copper Industry TUCSON. Ariz.: Dec. l.(By Mail.)rGvents .ln the Ruhr are reTIected, more? profoundly in the cotnttterciaf 'situation inv'A.rl?ona than In that ot any other state, according to P. G. Spilsbury, pres ident of the Arizona Industrial Congress. He said this was be cause "copper Is the backbone of Arizona's, .prosperity Isi reeefst Address-. bury stated rr on an average, Germany toughr3Sy,000.000 potradsvct copper a year" before the war. , Her maximum purchases in onev yeagre&ched about .4 0 0,0 00,. 000 pounds, or almost as great as Arizona'ar annual output. Now France Is not permitting Germ any . to , export ; her manufactured products, with the result that Germany's purchases have ceased When a great European says he is coming , over Incognito, - he means that he isn't going to hire a halL ay&Coi .ir-BMltlSBE rnuoLLmo Adele Garrison's New Phase) of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Copyright 1921, by Newspaper F(Nature Service. Inc. . N ' I. if v THE VOICE THAT CAME OUT ; OFiTil&NIOHTt V V V ' For the firstfe 'seconds' fol lowing my u AdeV awakening : I was sure . thM nightmare znust: have me in its gris . The ghostly face In the moonlight topping the huddled figure. -wbick had, mater ialized f withfsv afewvfeet of ,,pm while I slejtk.on the brpad xoci by the : resetoif shore .. as' f ay more like jhe- ilgment bt,;a" disV eased imagination; than reality.-; "It must be;:a dream, a dream!" I r. .aemberl saying ,the.words over to myself is a, whispered chant, as if they had some powe.r-to, banish the sight, which .. grew, . steadily more frightful the-lcmger I looked at it,. For' -with: a closer scrutiny I saw blood running4 over" the ghostly face, 'hideously streaking its deathly whUenesa with i carmine and knew by the. con tor ted limbs that the man had been dealt' a terrible Injury. . .V I saw something else also, the unmistakable uniform ot the State troopers which the unconscious body wore. I The sight,'; recalling as it did the man who. according to Mr. Cosgrove, had trailed ?ns down the road, cleared' the "cob webs from'my brain and made ine realize that ft jwa, pot toJgktjmare, but. horpble reality that; faced me in the moonAeht. '"- ' Where were the' others 6f fouf fishing party? - I could hear no sound : of 'voices or of laughter such as I had heard before' I went to sleep. Was I alone in this des olate place? Did aid for this desperately "wounded man. depend wholly upon met? I drew myself tavsitting, position,, and was al most petrified with horror'to hear a 19W sibilint rojee with?! a sus picion of foeigik accent in it, ut er arbruaaoe command.', V " TLI down again. Quick, if you dB'trwant a bullet in you. I've got. you covered." . - . f I obeved instantly. V There was sbmetiing in that menarfngyole'tf which would . hate commanaea obedience, I believe, front far braver folk than I. There was silence for a second or two, while I heard the rustle of grass, and then the voice spoke again, merci fully farther away this time. k. Menacing Command ,, t ' . , MsSfJJsCWJiatoU- dloXnsuhere , A-ha ! I Know: Tnat iooi nsning pariy Lueky for the rest they're a good half-mile away.-Now iisten. You lie I there and ahutj yonif eyes! an counts up co owuu--siow, ine way, your heart" beats."? There's more than one of us around here n$ we'll know: whether yoh inovrf or not. And If you move- or neak before that time, th-:clflrvil heljf yao When,,, you've finished you eaa do what you please- tot- that earrioa yonder, but It woh'f . help any. Now1 remember we've got you covered." . The voice ceased.ind again the rustle of grass came ' to my" ears as , though.someoDet.were,T creep-. ing through it. Even in my ter ror. however, c I gave a mental tribute to the, person : thus mov ing, for the rustling was the slight est of sounds, and It, I had not been listening for it I would have attributed It to the breeze. For a minute or two, terrorized by the suggestion of the menadlng voice, I did exactly as he bade tna. lay still 'with, eye clbseJ'Jnien tally counting as if xny very life depended upon it. ..Then gradual ly a glimmer of .common 'sense 11- luininated' niy befogged Vend be? numbed brain, " and , I", stopped counting and began to reason out this bewildering thing which had happened to me. ' .. V- ,' Had the trooper traced our In-. nocent fishing party, or had he been on the track of the stealthy prowler who had dealt him;, this awful blow? These questions I put aside and turned my attention to the things I could reason out. . What Madge Decided The trooper was grievously wounded. His "assailant was tra veling away from the vicinity as fast; as. possible. I? would t not have Id "ait unl X counted 5000 before. I: ;Wnt vto the ', wounded man's., aid. , That "'number..: bad. ! been;1 given, to ; frighten me." as had j th- suggestion that there? -were ; others - watching ane; '.There were no others," I swarf sure.4 The uni known assassin with the foreign aecent had, simply ; "judged, an American woman's credulity and fright' by those'-of ''the women to whom.- h -ras laccust'omed. : 'jr$ i I stealthily lifted the wrist 4ipon which gleamed - the illuminated dial of my watch,' noted the time. and composed myself to wait un til five .minutes had passed, for ' I Judged that by . then it . would be safe to make an attempt to help the wounded man. And as I lay there I tried to reconstruct . the thing which had happened while I Slept. - Si1: V-' Ted' Cosgrove had - gonaawayi that I remembered, and I had fal len asleep, secure In the . know ledge that Mr. Cosgrove and. Fred in- the shore. Their voices call-' ing to each other were the last eoiMHis hf heard befI drifted off into' slumber. -Bat njff 'there -fwws no slightest sonnd of theisv .voices, nor of the far-af t laughter ot Dicky and Bess Dean which. had troubled me. ; In all this moonlit fairy world of mountain and forest and ripp- Jing' water there seemed to be no one save me and the wounded perhaps " dying man upon whose blood-stained face my eyes rest ed. ' (To be' continued.) DI'SFiraES: l( V t Secretary 'of State Reports j ron Motor Vehicle urowlh j: ffor This-Year ?:-: .Durlag the montn of November 2660 - passenger, automobiles j and 182 trucks .were- licensed in Ore gon,.' according ; to a statement by Sanr. A. Koaer,' secretary of state, a , total of 2S42 cars .as against 18is during NoTember'1922. or a', gain of mora than. 51 per .cent. "During the "yearu-i823,; tip , to November 30," says; JUr; Kjozer, "151,659 passenger, carsjand' 13. 383 trucks have been licensed, making a total of 165,042 licenses granted during , that period as against 13 3,8 16" r licenses during the corresponding' period of 1922. from which the total license fees aggregate ever $4,056,000. V-. VThlS-'showa a gain, of 31,226 in,l,te.- licenses granted for the year -ld22. If the." same, ratio of increase is maintained -during the month 1 ;of Deceniherthe , total number of' cars licensed in Oregon by. the endof the' year 19.23, .will reach, 166,000 - The. present fig ures are far beyond "the .most lib eral estimates. ' !So : far during the year 1923, 28,661 transfers of motor vehicles and 429 transfers of motorcycles have been filed with the secre tary, of state. Jn addition to these transfers.' 1636 duplicate Sets of motor .vehicle and "77;. duplicate seta, of motorcycle license plates have been provided ift cases whete the; plates -have been lost," muti lated or ..stolen. Transfers v aver- 010 BV Must the Thing Tjpy y , J ' - . .. Chriotmao J jr:fpr;the ' p0'- ' Shopper! fv i ... t ..... . i i b ' .,, - '.:' . t : ' ' J-J OME and -Christmas are so closely allied that one's thoughts I , , iiuiue w nen -it comes 10 seiecung giiiSr we nave sucn a iremenaous 101 or I things, truly wonderful things, useful, beautiful and necessary furnishings for home that I one never would indulge in at any other time of the year. For instance, a comfy, deep- I I cushioned chair, a handsome rug, a reading lamp, candlesticks, lovely book-ends, a sew j mg cabinet that mother has always wanted, sucha- smbldng stand. for hubby, as a n spinet desk for wifie, a doll buggy,for littleMary,coasters or a: bricycle for dear little f John, possibly a toy . - I DO NOT FAIL TO VISIT -1 TOYLAND j age more than ldally'and' ttreV as the applications for new Ucen-j seb.uia addition? t tn motpr ye hicle . and motorcycle J licenses Is sued, 562 motor vehicle dealers; 14,175 chauffeurs and 201,246 motor vehicle operators' licenses have been issued to date. All of these figures tena co indicate the extent of - the use of the motor vehicle in Oregon in the pursuit of both business and pleasure." OBEY AND You will be surprised at how cheaply ypu can build a cozy little home from ; , . that most satisfactory of all materials, wood ; - ' '0 , We handle the best Rrade of lumber and bull Jers" supplies, and I . deliver them where you. want them delivered and '".when you want I ' J.:t . them.. . .. - : " - :- -. : . K -: f. -"'; v " Come in and talk it dxei: ?witl ,us, whether yon are ready to build i I ot not. Perhaps we can --give-' you adyice that "will help you and will cost you nothing. ' . ' :; ' ' ; ' t t. ... J. W. auto, the thing any boy or girl would be proud to own. f , r . . . . , ' ..... .... w i . , - . .. Your desire is, of course, to remember those near to you and your friends with the most serviceable and suitable gifts gifts that will leave a lifelong impression. You also want to usb your money to the best advantage. In other words, you desire to ful- fill the obligations popriety and good Furniture - ; Mail.) -The first - regular . direct passenger "'traffic "betweenf Scan dinavian countries and ; Canada will be established by Sweden ar ly in 1924. "The first: vessel in the new service will be .the S. S. Stockholm, which ; will carry pas sengers direct froni Gothenburg to ' Halifax, thence proceeding to New York. There has been an unusually large exodua of Swedish emigrants THAT OWNYOUR COPELANDi PHONE, 576... "-. ti "it (Formerly Ve3t Side dumber Co.) of the holiday season 9- will. OfferSr Ydii; to the United States since July U of about 20.000 allowed tor the fiscal , year will be P"1 filled-by next January. A great number of Swedes who would be Ihut out from the United States until the latter part of; the next calendar year are now evidently going to seek ".their fortunes in Canada. , ; . .. R e a d the Classified- Ads. HOME I YARDiS 3 naturally turn toward with ease, cUspatch, l of the SEE OUR WINDOWS FOR GIFTS l"""WftjWlpjaw,www,Wxw. V! I Tin O T I: cni7 , .1 ' 1 r r 5 i i ( V . t - 5 . I ":U