1 SALEf.r MARKETS 1 1 cents Tras- th ottering: of a local meat market Monday, f The fish are beginning to be caught in quantities along the Cowlitz rirer, and are more 'plentiful that previ ously. The supply fixe the price. Eggs dropped oft 2 cents again yesterday, bringing the wholesale price to 3d cents a dozen or two dozen kf or 55 cents. The price was cut again last Saturday. . . OUIK JLSTD BAT K. 9 want Ko. I wheat, "ckad 90 Oata a 48r Cheat h&7 13 J. Sit Oa hay $13 S14 Clover hay, balae . Sit O $14 Pricaa anoiad. axa wholaiala and I and a Ko ratal prieaa Tacaivtd ay farm art. pricaa ara I1a Crwmrry fmtw .... ...50e 51e Bnttartat dallrertd .Jilt Milk, par cwt. .... $3.2J Kg , aclnta . 26 Rtandarda ; 4 24e Pullet . : .22e. rOVLTXT Haavy eana...... .., , He Xadinnr and lirht hana - ... 14e , roak, xuttox axo xxzt Hogs, top, 150-22 5 It- (U $7.50 Ifofa, top, 2I5-M3, cwt ST.00 Hoaa, top, 275-800, ew SS.SO I.isht aowa. ewt $5.00 Rough baavy 04e 05a Top Vaal, dremd.. . 09e Cows 02 Q 04H Top iam&a ivvit I GENERAL MARKETS WHEAT BUENOS AIRES, Feb. 11. to c Opening: Wheat steady lower. LIVERPOOL, Feb. 11. Close: Wheat 1 3-8d to ld higher. PORTLAND, Or., Feb, 11. Grain futures: Wheat, . bluestem, Baart, soft white,, western white, February, March1. fl.Ol; northern spring, February, March, 97c; hard winter, western red, Febru ary, March;. 96c. V , r y- f Corn, No. z eastern yeuow. shipment . February, . $32.50; March, $32.25; No. 3, ditto, Feb ruary, $32.25; -March, $32i Millrun;. February, $23.50; March, $2t;" ' Middle Grove Is Latest to Have Community Club The Parent-Teacher association met Friday night at Middle Grore schoolhousre. jSeyeral matters of Importance were dlseussed, among them being the proposed clearing of brush and stamps ' from the school 'grounds and the , building of a. play shed for the school chit dren. The name of the associa tion , was changed fjora Parent Teacher ' association id Middle Grove Community -club. A pro gram was given., Among' the num bers were: ' X dialogue entitled Dr. Cure All,' bfT several tnem- bers of the dnb from Hollywood; several songs' by the Intermediate grades under Mrs. Erstine; solos by Miss Ersklrift'and accompanied on the' piano by aj young woman from Willamette university; solos by the WoQdry boys accompanied by their motbar On tW piano; recitation by Mlsa) Flora Walker. A box ' social Jollowed the pro gram, the, boxes being auctioned off by F. N. Woodry of Salem. The social netted about $45. The proceeds go toward the building of a play shed. Nailing of American Flag to Embassy "Not Known,? WASHINGTON, Febl it-Fed eral agents investigating the nail ing of. the American flag over the German embassy's 'door after fail ure of the embassy officials to dis play their national colors at halt mast in honor of Woodrow Wilson have fixed responsibility upon a Washington taxicab driver.:.. His name has been reported to the' state department but officials there said no complaint had come from the embassy 'and. consequent ly j . the department . officially knows nothing" of the affair. x-::: .,.:; v DEMOCRATS I SATISFIED ST. LOms, Feb. 11 Missou ri managers for William G. Mo Adoo's campaign for the Demo cratic presidential nomination af ter reading his testimony before the senate Investigating commit tee i today .through formal ; state ments issued by the state execu tive committee that Mr. MeAdoo had vindicated hlmselMn his tes timony, and that the drive for Me Adoo delegates In Missouri would go forward with unabated zeal. Members stated that any change in their plans in,, regard to the conducting of the UeAdoo cam paign In Missouri was not contem plated. :' ,!?:,;. , If -3L . - :. ill USElpi FQRDS ; j f 90. DAYS FREE SERVICE SMALL DEPOSIT LIBERAL TERMS . . ..... VALLEY MOTOR COMPANY 260N, High AuthorizeFord Dealer Phone 1995 Oregon State News Round-Up Horses Captured LAKEVIEW, Feb. 11. The last of the missing Round-Up horses which got out of a pasture at Dog Lake last summer have been found and are now in possession of the association. A standing re ward of $40 for the return of the horses was given last week tp Jim Bishnp, who turned the horses over i to Ike Kent, association di rector. Directors this week were well pleased with the find as the ani mals included some of the best buckers in the Round-Up4 string, and were valued at $400. Their names and ability to buck will no doubt be- remembered by many Round-Up fans. The names of the returned horses are Wine Glass, M. C, Old Crow, and Taft Miller. All of the Round-Up stock are in fine condition, according to Ike Kent, and will be in fine shape for the big show next September. Two Big Hatcheries MARSHFIELD. Feb. 11. Fol lowing an. Inspection of the Ban don and Smith Basin hatcheries, M. L. Ryckman, hatchery superin tendent, returned today to lhs headquarters at Portland. Con struction of the new hatchery at Bandon la progressing rapidly, ac cording to Mr. Ryckman, and will be ready to start hatching of eggs within 30 day3. No estimate of the cost of the plant is available, for the bnilding is . the only, part which is definitely completed, and other construction Is added. from day to day by he man in charge. , Marking the first year's opera tion Smith Basin hatchery has prospects of a banner season. Ov er 200,000 steelhead eggs have been hatched already, and the ca pacity Is far in excess of that. Capacities of the two plants are practically unlimited now, accord ing to Mr. Ryckman, who says the old plan of hatching eggs In troughs has been abandoned, and that by raising in ponds the sup ply is greatly increased. Most of the eggs have to be shipped in, however, which sets the limitation of the plants' production. The new Bandon hatchery could han dle 5,000,000 eggs if it were not for this. Children Were Lost ROSEBURG, Feb. 11. Two small children of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Martin of this city, who are spending a few weeks on their RHEUMATISM t-;.r-(, I - Cannot Exist in the Human Body if You Will Use Trunk's Prescrip tion. I ! ; It is a shame to suffer with in flammatory, muscular, sciatic or any form of Rheumatism, neuri tis and lumbago. This Prescription does not ruin the stomach, it does not depress the heart. Eat all the meat and good food you wish while taking Trunk's Prescription. Contains no mercury, salicylate soda,', oil wintergreen or narcotics, hut. pos itively overcomes any kind - of rheumatism or gout on earth. What more do you want? There 14 nothing just ag good, and it is Impossible to get something bet ter. The greatest uric acid sol vent known and also a superior liver medicine. Trunk' Prescription sells for $1.75 or 3 for only $5.00 at Per ry's Drug Store, 115 S Commer cial St.. Salem. Ore. Adv. , homestead at Tyee, wandered away from home last night and were not found until this morn ing, when they were located by a posse headed by Deputy Sheriff Powell of Oakland. The tiny chil dren were playing in the woods near the homestead cabin yester day afternoon and wandered away for a short distance and became lost. The parents became anxious and a call was sent out for as sistance. Sheriff Starmer was notified and Deputy Sheriff Pow ell secured a searching party in Oakland and went to Tyee at once and this morning succeeded in lo cating the two children about five miles from their home. Aside from being chilled and drenched by their night in the woods, the children were not hatmed by their exposure. The homestead where they are living is several miles from any road and is reached only by trail. It is in a sparsely set tled district, and as many wild ani mals roam the woods and hills, there was considerable anxiety on the part of friends and relatives until the children were found. The children were about three and four years of age. The Dalles Growers Meet THE DALLES, Or.. Feb. 11. Local growers of fruit and vege tables interested in the proposal to separate from the Oregon Grow ers' association, meeting yesterday with Kenneth Miller of the cen tral office, agreed on a price of $25,000 for the local plant, pro vided the members and others here decide to make the purchase. To arrive at a conclusion in this respect, the local committee, com posed of Dr. G. E. Sanders, E. L. Curtiss, T. A. Sam mis Jr., F. S. Gunning and Fred Erickson, have called a meeting. AH growers of fruit and vegetables are to be ask ed to attend a meeting, whether members of the Oregon Growers' association, or not. The proposal to separate from the central or ganization was made some time ago at the instance of the state officers of the association. Under the plan a complete reor ganization of a fruit and vegetable growers' packing association with rules governing the pack and grade would be effected. The committee here has receiv ed some encouragement in this re spect, and the decision to call a meeting of the growers to find out what the general opinion is fol lowed a meeting between Dr. San ders, who is a director of the state organization from this dis trict, and the officials of the Ore; gon Growers' association at Sa lem. ' Mr. Miller was in the city yes terday to confer with the commit tee. The price agreed upon Is several thousand dollars less than was first suggested by the state officers, and represents the valu ation of the building and equip ment and the property on which it stands. 8. P. Boosts For. Country .COTTAGE GROVE, Feb. 9. Sentiment in favor of boosting for patronage of the Southern Pacific, both for' passenger and freight business, was expressed at the re cent meeting of the commercial club. It was pointed out that a large number of the mills in this section are dependent almost en tirely upon the railroad's tie busi ness for their operations, that the Southern Pacific Is a heavy tax payer, that It provides its own MUST GO ----- right of way andpays its own way, while the stage lines contribute nothing in city taxes and damage the highways to an extent proba bly not covered by the license fee paid to the state. Concerted ac tion on the part of the business in terests of the city having for its purpose the discouraging of pat ronage of stage lines which paral lel railroad lines was suggested. C'utsforth Author of Good Article Thomas Cutsforth, of Riddle, the blind student, whose achieve ments at the University of Oregon, have on several occasions attract ed considerable attention, has written a paper on psychology. which is attracting much attention and a bulletin from the university speaks of this article as follows: Thomas Cutsforth, fellow in the department of psychology, who last spring received his master's degree in the university contrib uted "Synaesthesia in the Process of Reasoning" to the Amreican Journal of Psychology for Janu ary, 1924. Cutsforth's publication of the article is noteworthy when it is recalled that h.e is young in he field of psychology and because of the fact that he is blind. Cutsforth, in spite of his phy sical handicap, is able to teach regular classes and to do labora tory work In the department. He has written during the last year a number of other articles in con junction with Dr. R. H. Wheeler, also of the department of psychol ogy, but this is his first attempt alone. In the course of his article Cuts forth presents specific rases work ed out by him in the laboratory where by the process of reasoning synaesthesia occurs. Detailed in trospections of descriptions of the mental process of the author in at tempting to solve problems of varying degrees of complexity are presented and with them are the introspections of Dr. Wheeler, his partner in the experiments, which illustrate the appearance of ordin ary imagery in the reasoning pro cess. It is pointed out in the paper how eye strain and movement, kin aesthetic features of the act of at tending, appear to the author in spirals, whirlings and lines of var ious degrees of blackness, all pro jected into the visual field. The conclusion reached in the experiment is that synaesthesia, or this complex mixture of percep tions, is an essential mechanism in the normal development and use of meaning, a tool necessary to the cognitive activities of the sub ject who possess it, varying from the ordinary process of perception only in type of imagery which dominates, and that synaesthesia is not alone a peceptual phenom ena, but has to do with the devel opment of meaning" as well, per vading the subject's entire mental life. Holstein Breeders to Meet Holstein breders of Oregon will meet Saturday, February 9, at 11 a. m., in the green room of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, according to announceent made by Frank Connell, president of the state association. The meeting is called for the pur pose of electing officers for the coming year to outline a program of work for the year and to con duct regular business of the asso ciation. H. C. Seymour, state club leader for the Oregon Agricultural col lege extension service, has been Invited to present a plan for more effective Holstein Cair club work, and Neal C. Jamison, state dairy specialist, will discuss the county wide pure bred sire campaign. The agricultural committee of the Portland Chamber of Com merce has Invited the Holstein breeders of the state to be their guests at luncheon on the day of this meeting. Business of the meeting will be conducted to allow ample time to return home the same day. Lane Gets First Conference CORVALLIS, Feb. 6. County agricultural conferences will be held as rapidly as possible to work out programs adapted to local con ditions and In harmony with the agricultural program developed by the agricultural economic confer ence at the college January 23 to 35. Plans for these county con ferences were made at a meeting 61 the representatives fMate farm organizations, commercial clubs and state bankers' assocla i tiori 0n the last day of the econo mic conference. The first of these conferences will be held in Lane county at Eugene February 13, 14 and 15. Box Factory Doubles Business MARSHFIELD, Feb. 6. At the fourth annual meeting of the Coos Veneer and Box company, held to day noon, it was declared the bus iness for the year 1923 was prac tically double that of 1922 and the outlook for the year 1924 is most promising. ; Practically all stockholders were represented at the meeting at which directors for the year 1924 were 'elected as follows: Benjamin 'Oslind, president; Claude Nasburg, vice president; C. V. Danlelson, secretary; George Olook, treasurer; L, C. Gilley, di rector and superintendent. W. J. Conrad and R. M. Singer are directors of the organization. E FOR SERVICE GOOD Wholesale Transfers Among Lakehurst Naval Officers "Had io be Done" WASH INGTON, Feb. 1 1 . All orders to officers involved in the wholesale transfer of commission ed personnel at the Lakehurst na val aid station and among. the di rigible .Shenandoah's command had been issued tonight by the navy department. Commander F It. McCrary was relieved from the joint command of the big airship and the Lakehurst station, and Lieutenant Commander Zachery Lansdowne and Commander Jacob L. Klein were assigned to these commands, respectively. Commander McCrary was ord ered to line duty as commanding officer of the submarine tender Canopus. now at Mare Island, Cal., undergoing repairs. It also was announced that the assign ment of Commander Klein to the command of the Lakehurst sta tion would be of a temporary character, as it was intended later to transfer him to duty with the Atlantic squadron for which he re cently applied. The orders further instructed Commander H. D. Weyerbacher, engineer oincer or cne Shenan doah, to proceed to the aircraft factory at Philadelphia for duty as engineer officer there, and di rected Lieutenant E. H. Kincaid. to report to the receiving ship at the Brooklyn navy yard for as signment to duty with the Atlan tic fleet. Rear Admiral William A. Mof- fett, chief of the bureau of naval aeronautics, on whose recommen dation Secretary Denby acted in approving the orders for the shakeup at Lakehurst, expressed the opinion that thechange would result in increased efficiency at the station and aboard the Shen andoah, making for better con ditions during the period of prep aration for the big ship's polar flight next summer and during the trip itself. Other officials at the navy de partment made no attempt to con ceal the fact that friction among Astounding Prevalence TT IS appalling to realize that probably 707c of the adult pop ulation suffers with' Piles or some other form of Colon trouble. Yet. I GUARANTEE to cure any case of Piles by my nonsurgical method or refund the patient's fee. OBarafcoat Muck fint -T tkiOed oranima taa af racial iimialiHi wiU be ho 4 ia bit mwn mw twikuna at Sth 4k Mailt directlr aapaaita tha CoatHon,ParUaa.Oraia Swl today tar my FREE Ulaatratad book. U.DEAN.M7D r 1 EH HEfiRIH'S SHERIFF Man Who Killed Constable Says He Will Resign Post and Go to Cuba HERRIN, Feb. 11. (By the As sociated Press) County Coroner McCown, acting sheriff of William son county, left here late tonight with eigni armed soldiers for Champaign, 111., to get Sheriff Herfin jail. Galligan and the other the . officers at Lakehurst and those of the Shenandoah's com mand had developed from time to time and led finally to a situation where action such as that'taken today no longer could be postpon ed if the interests of the service were considered. While Admiral Moffett will command the polar expedition it self, it was said that Commander Lansdowne would have entire charge of the Shenandoah during that period. Admiral Moffett characterized reports that the Unlisted person nel of the Shenandoah had ex pressed an unwillingness to make the polar flight as "absolutely without any truth whatever." Watch TU T Hi EDITION (35 th" Annual). An edition larger and Better than ever, and one that you will be pleased to send to your friends. It's the largest and most unselfish bundle of optimism on Willamette Valley ever published. To The Advertiser The Diversity Edition offers Advertisers increased circu lation, and opportunity to bring to your immediate field, new customers and new industries." Make applications now for rates and space agreements. Watch Why not send a copy 7 Think it over. If you were to receive Trom som e of your friends a great hi edition of that friend's home town paper and It was filled with facts from com' to cover, wouldn't it mke an impression on you? It certainly would, and If van were intending to make a change in the location of 3ur home or business that m editioH wonld probably sell you the Idea that there was the place to go Exactl-r o ' and last year's edition of the Statesman brought several families to the Willamott valley Some are in business and all are good, clean, prosperous folks, and we're glad they came. We need new people all the while, to keep us old timer fro setting into the proverbial "rat" and slumping. jron. - USE THIS COUPON Order your extra cop ies early. Price 10 cents. Do it today be fore you forget it. men and bring them back to th3 Herrin jail. Gallign nd the other four persons are under arrest in connection with the killing of Constable Caesar Cagle on Friday. They were taken from Herrin or orders from S. Glenn Young, de posed acting chfef of police. URBANA. III.. Feb. 11. George Galligan, sheriff of Williamson county, Illinois, who was brought Iq the Champaign county jail here today from Herrin, where . he is charged with the murder of Con stable Caesar Cagle, said tonight that be had reconsidered his de cision to resign his post immed iately and go to Cuba as soon as he is cleared of the: murder charge. ' Galligan is disposed to fight the case to' a finish, according to Sheriff Jphn Grey. Williamson county deputies who brought Galligan here said he was under the impression that he was being taken from his jail to the basement of the Herrin Elks'' club to be lynched and repeatedly beg ged them to save his life. South of Centralia he opened a door and leaped from the automobile which was traveling more than 20 miles an hoar. He was unconscious when picked up. nut suffered no permanent injuries. Galligan said tonight that he was subject to fainting spells and that it was. one of these and not a desire to escape which caused him to either fall or leap from the car. HERRIN, Feb. 11. (By the for the Statesman's DIVERSITY for Announcement of Release Date of this big paper to your friends? OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon. Gentlemen: Enclosed please find cents in postage stamps, for which mall copies of Statesman Annual Edition to Name , t Address . " " i NOTE: Any additional names write on another sheet of paper. Associated Press)- Williamson county is not going to be put under martial law Major General Milton J. Foreman, in command of the two regiments of national guard troops in the county, told newspa permen tonight. . ' Although Williamson county, will not be placed under martial law the military, will he practical ly in complete control, and al though they are supposed to work under the orders of and report to " Acting Sheriff McCown they, may' enforce law and order and. disci-,' pline in any manner "they" see" lit, it was announced. Chief of Police John; Ford , who j k was kidnaped after the trouble last Friday night and who return- ? ed to Herrin yesterday again took over me comrui oi uie iiernu. jmj liee force. - . ' Men's spring straw lid brims are so wide a few fill a street cay , and only nine make a dozen. Stops LaGifppe Influenza Rneuxnotiia Keep strong. Be ,X healthy nd free from winter complaints. , HUTa Cmacara Bromide Quinine is the quickest acting most dependable cold ; remedy. Wha?HiU's does foe tnilliom it will do for you. Cetrtd box bearing Mr., HUl'ipoctrait. -ivPnc 30 cent., CASCAOA. nrtinitic r WU1HIHI. W.E.HILLCO. 3fC avnmT.Mtca. o 1 ii V 1 4 -t - v -SI ... t i- Ma- r-'( ... ''' - I .... ' ; ' i ! ' ;. -,t; " V