Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1924)
VERYWHEJ :! STATESMAN -PAGE'. OF- LIVE S NEWS FROM E PORT. CERTIFIED PUBLIC MOTOR CAR MARKET 1923 Star Roadster, like new .......... J . . .$425 1923 Overland touring, driven 50(W ..miles ,. . i. .$J0O 1923 Ford touring, driven . 5000 miles $340 1922 Chevrolet touring, over hauled ....... 1...... $265 1923 Maxwell. 5 pass, closure . . 1 . . ........ $705 1322 Dodge Roadster, Hass ler'Shocks . .'. . . . .$575 M AJfT popla would not hare invest d Urea amount f oomjt in New Cr if they had inspected onr display of used model firat. Don't make tb same mistake. Say a Certified Cms 1. 1 ;v i ..... . i , us; i; U 1 s I . i i-4 I" ! fl' 1 ? ! t -; 'TTM4 Bat Hot Abased' 255 H. Cbokb St. V 'Fbob S5 , Traffic Violator Hit Hard f -For speeding. Earl Stevenson paid $25 in justice court Friday and upon an' additional charge of "Improper use of his license plates he-contributeariO TawItarJ: AVv . t is charged with' speeding',' ac cording to a eomplaint filed Fri day by Earl B. Houston, state traf fic officer, . , !K-:iJuillrRoMI J 0 ,'-i ;$ ? r.i r- 'J::"i' Why it's eaj f to Jcccp Barreled SwnZigfiC clean BARRELED Sunlight is a white paint which pro duces a surface so smooth that dust or dirt smudges or finger- marks cannot "sink in." It can be !:ept clean as easily as . wldtff tile. A clamp cloth wH always wash it sjo'lcsa. I4eal for bathroom and kitch . en 'wslls- and for vfxxfworic. I everywhere. Cccts ki then enamel, requires fewer coaia end ii guaranteed to remain -, white longer. - Barreled Sunlight is easy to epply. It flows freely without a trushmark. Ia readily tinted. Co'd in cans from half-pint to Ion size. Barreled Sunlight Icncdy's Paint Shop :i Court St. Phcne 1315 i I FACinC COAST 1XAGUE BASEBALL i, - j : w u rcr. Ran Franetaro .. 12 8 .667 Vernon lit- 7 .611 Salt Lake .... 10 7 .588 Loa Anselea .X- lO 8 .558 Oakland --J. ..4'lO .444 Portland - . 7 11 .S89 Seattle j. .. , 6 10 .375 Sacramento - - 6 11 .353 NATIONAL New York i..'... Cincinnati , Chicaro . Brooklyn ........ :i Pittsburg i Boitton , ...i.. Philadelphia St. Louia LEAOtTS W Ii 6 3 6 3 . .. 7-4 jv.-ii'4', 4 ' 2 4 ; J 4 TCT. .7 so .687 .636 .500 .333 133 .333 .273 AUXXICAN '. DetToit ; Chicaro i IXAGUE ..-lv.r s 6 3 PCT. .667 .667 .600 .500 ,50O .o .375 .200 Xew York 6 4 Philadelphia Cleveland Washington Boston : 8U irftuia , 4 4 f4 , 4 ..-4 6 3 5 2, 8 W EASILY BEATS BEARCATS Baseball Game Yesterday; Is ? Inundation With Score ' of 23 to 1 Whitman's heavy slugging nine took an easy 23 to 1 win over Willamette here yesterday in the initial game of the season for the locals. The victory of the visitors was fully expected because of. the short time that the locals have been practicing. Willamette scored their only run in the first inning when Robert son came in from third on what should have been a home run that Fasnacht knocked out into the outfield. , "Fosy got held up on third when he got the wrong word on the pivot corner and before he could get his chance to tally his run Willamette fanned fits third out. The visitors played a consistent game and scored stead ily j through the innings. Towner held down the home end of the battery with Ellis, ; Poling and Fasnacht alternating on the mound. 'The whole lineup for the Bearcats showed their lack of practice but put up a stiff fight to hold down the winning end of the tally.-' m- -..f-o'" vj- sen WEED I DKL1TIC COilTEST t ' ' Two Girls Tie for First Place in Humorous Entries at High School Bern tee Muivey, senior, won first prlace in the dramatic contest last ijight at Salem high school. Second place in the dramatic con test went to- lack Spong. sopho more while Ruth Draper, junior was placed third, i , Mary Kightlinger and Margaret Barquist tied for first place in the humorous contest while second place was given to Leslie Cook. It was decided to addthe points for third place to that allowed for first place and divide the total be tween the two tied for first place. This resulted in three points for each of the three classes. ; . Judges were Carol Dibble, Mina Harding and Perry Reigelman. Mable Boughy is coach for the students in dramatics and Ada Ross faculty ad visorT Thomas Al len was chairman of the evening which was one Of the best attend ed of student affairs in some time. The program was as follows: Vocal solo "Serenade. .. . r.Tostl Mary McCrone Humorous Contest - ? 1. "Polly's Surprise Party" ..... . . . Belle M. Locke Mary FJ. Kightlinger 2. "Dey Ain't N6 Ghosts" . (cutting) E. P.Butler Leslie Cook " 3. "Not at Home" . .K. J.Rath Margaret Barquist Dranuitic Content,- 1. 'Aa a Dog Should" (Cut ting) . .Chas. Alexander , Jack Spong 2. "Flower; of Gold" (Cut ting) . ... , Emma 1 Squicr BernlceMulvoy 3. "Benefits Forgot" .'...'. ...i.. Honore Willsie Ruth Draper , Piano solo J ,"j ' "Les Joyeux Papillons". . . . . , t Louis Cregh Carolyn Lambirth Large Mountain Trout Is : Caught By Stayton Man STAYTON, April 23. (Special to the Statesman) Clement' C. Crane has the honor' of being classed as the champion sports man of the rod and creel in this vicinity thus far. having succeeded in landing a large mountain trout Monday which measured 19 1-2 inches and weighed 2 pounds and 2 ounces. ' JAPANESE TEAM BEATS SENATORS Costly Salem Errors Result in Defeat at Hands of Meiji University The baseball team of Meiji uni versity, champions of Japan, won from the Salem Senators yester day by a score of 10 to 7 in an exceedingly Interesting : game at Oxford park. The fifth inning was particularly disastrous for Sa lem; when the Japanese : landed hard on Ashby and Salem made a. number of costly errors, result ing in six scores. Then Bishop relieved Ashby, who in turn re lieved Gibson, in right field' and Irvine went to third base in Bish op's place. The Japanese failed to score in the first inning. Okada, first up. was out Bishop to Baird. Tokoz awa hit a double, and Kumagai was safe on Gibson's error. Both died on the bases when Daimon filed to Baird and , Hayashl was out Proctor to Baird. In Salem's half Faliin filed out to Kure. Bishop was safe on Kure's error. Gibson singled, ad vancing Bishop to second. Baird was out Hayashl to Okada and Bishop scored on the play.. Wilt kerson was out by Okada unas sisted. . ,; The second and : third innings were scoreless. In the fourth the Japanese scored two. After Dai mon had filed to Faliin Hayashi singled and took second on a pass ed ball. Yuasa singled against the fence, and Gibson , fumbled the ball in trying to pick it tip after it had bounded off : the boards, Hayashl scoring and Yua sa going second. Yuasa took third then Gill got a low one from Ash by and let it go by, Yuasa scor ing. Nakagawa popped up a fly to Ashby and Kure struck out. In the disastrous fifth Nidegawa singled.' Okada sacrificed, and Baird overthrew third In trying to get Nidegawa, and the latter scored. Yokozawa was safe on Fallin's error and took third on an error by Gibson who let one from Kumagai's bat go by. Dai moa 3slngl?d, .? scoring Tokozawa and: Kumagai. - - ... . : j .Hayashi -was safe on an error by Faliin which allowed Daimon to tally. Yuasa doubled. scoring Hayashi. Bishop took ' the ' box and fanned Nakagawa, but Kure singled, scoring Yuasa. Nidegawa filed to Faliin. .' - I In Salem's half Proctor opened up with a three-bagger.. Gill filed tp Yuasa and Proctor scored on the throw-in. Ashby was out Ha yashi to Okada and Faliin filed to Nidegawa. . Salem also scored in its half of the sixth. Bishop had filed out to Kumagai and Irvine was walked. Baird was out by Okada unassist ed, but Wilkerson singled, scor ing Irvine. Wilkerson in trying to make his hit a double was thrown out at second by Nidega wa, who made a great play, r In the seventh Daimon walked. Hayashl singled and then Yuas singled, scoring Daimon. .Haya shi scored on a passed ball. Bish-1 op turned the box over to Barham and went behind the bat. sending Gill to right field in Ashby's place. Barham held Meiji without scores the rest of the game. In Salem's half of the seventh Schaekmann opened up by sending the ball over the fence. Proctor filed to Kumagai. : Gill walked, took sec ond on fielder's choice when Bar ham was thrown out Nakagawa to Daimon. Faliin singled, scoring Gill. - - .Salem scored two in the eighth. Irvine again walked. Baird filed to Yuasa. Wilkerson singled, ad vancing Irvine to second. Schaek mann walked, forcing Irvine to third and Wilkerson to second. Proctor walked, forcing in Irvine. Gill fanned. Barham walked, forcing In Wilkerson. Yuasa came in from left field and exchanged places with Nakagawa. Faliin fan ed. Neither team scored in the ninth. Sunday the Senators will play the Oswego team of the Interstate league. ; " ' ' BOX SCORE Meiit AH. it II. PO. Ai E. Okada lb . 3 0 O Yokoiawa 2b 5 I 3 Knmagal ef. . 5 1 Daimon e.... 4 11 ; 1 Hayaohi aa . 5 , 3 2 Ynaaa If and p 2 3 Nakagawa p- and If 4 U Kara 3b 4 O 1 Nidegawa rf 4 : 1 1 3 3 O 5 1 1 O o 4 i O ;io io io 27 0, 1 Pit. A. K. 3 2 2 22 O , O O 3 U O O 15 O Ral AB. 11.11. faliin as Bishop 8b-p-e Gibson rf Irrino 8b...... Baird lb . Wilkerson rf.. Brharkmana H.. Proctor 2b- tiilh e and rf. Ashby p and rf Barham p t 0 U t 1 o o 0 1 O 0 33 7 8 37 13 .6 Summary - -? Earned runs; Meiji 2; Salem 3. Left on bases; Meiji 5; Salem 7. Double plays; Proctor to Fallltvto Baird; Nidegawa to ; Yokozawa. Home runs: Schaekmann. Three base hits: Proctor. Two base hits Yokozawa, Yuasa; Wilkerson. Bases on balls: By Ashby -1,. by Bishop 1; by Nakazawa 3, by Yu asa 4. Struck out: By Yuasa 3; by Ashby 2; by Bishop 1; by Bar ham 1. Wild pitch Ashby. Pass ed ball. Gill 2. s Umpire Kennedy. 5 . GOOD RECORD MADE BY DEMAREST PARTY (Continued from page 1) most unexpected places; and that they may sometimes do the most effective work in places where there seems the least chance for them to serve. In society, in bus iness, in prison, in rnearmy, every where that men or women go. the sincere Christian, may find a field for fruitful endeavor, if only the heart is right and there is no com promise with the sins around, j : The Friday afternoon lecture to women only at the armory wag a record attendance for services of any kind in Salem during the De marest meetings. The hall was crowded to its . utmost capacity, and hundreds were turned away. The lecture was along fine spirit ual lines, a fine, uplifting, beauti ful story of motherhood and the privileges it brings of influencing the live3 under the mother's care. A second lecture of this series will be given next Friday on the theme "Love and Marriage," and later a third address. "The Bringing Up of Children." Mrs. Demarest has traveled widely and intensely and with the heritage of her wonderful parents and grandparents to take her to the heart of these vital.hu man problems, she has a powerful and unerring judgment and an un faltering courage to present, her findings to her hearers. H - Mrs. Demarest's sermon Friday night was a continuation of the "Samson and Lelilah" address of the night before. "The Things That Blind the Eyea" was thelen eral theme. , Starting with the picture of the false Delilah wheedling from Sam son the secret of his strength, and then selling it to her own people, the Philistines, the speaker went on to show what happened to the giant when he was fully under her power. "I will arise and shake myself and slay them," Samson said; but he found that when the Lord left him he was only as other men. and th jeering, inso lent enemy bound him, burned out hig eyes, thrust him into prison and made him work Jike a beast. He had been a giant;now be .was only: a mockery, and a hissing. In the estimation of his foes, and he' bad no strength to fight. , "Oh. Church, arise! For the. Philistines be upon thee! Just like Samson, the church that has given up the. secret cf its virtue and its strength may try to do battle at the calf for service." Like Samson, the church that has yielded tov; the Delilahs of worldlfliess , does not know that it is impottant; then the Philistines take ' it, but out its eyes, imprison it, and make it gr'nd the corn for tha devil mill." : :'.' ' Certain world pleasures are "Philistines" : hereditary endmtes of godliness." said the speaker. Cards were designated as one of the most insidious of these DelilaV like enUcers. They.hve been as sociated with vice since they werck: fi... t-- . rtaotherly in nt iuf icu, a uc j 3 hi ft? "CI J- place of immorality, - of ; vice, of evil; they are stamped with the image of the evil one. marked with the blood of the lost and the blackness of despair, , and defied with the sins of all time. They are associated -with an evil insti tution, gambling;, they stand for gambling. ' "Ye shall know a tree by its fruits; and the fruit of the cards Is an unclean fruit self'sh neas, gambling, cheating, murder. ad oh. the wicked, wicked, wick ed, awful waste of precious time!" "Cards put out the eyes of the Christian conscience. I defy ,you to find any woman card enthusiast who has a clear, burning spiritual vision or enthusiasm for the church. A card playing, worldly woman in the church can do more harm than a godly preacher can do good in a year of the hardest service.; Cards are a deadly, un dermining influence; they Bap the strength and life of the church. Oh, yes. I have known clean, good women who .play cards; -but even the best of them h'tfrt the church. "John ? Qu inn, the converged gambler who traveled all over the country trying to counteract the evils of gambling, said, 'the church rard-pKaying home is the kindergarten or tho gambler.' If the young people had to take their' Bargain Dance TUESDAY, APRIL 29 DREAMLAND RINK . Featuring Bob Christenswn (Saxophonist) And Vincent Kcryfe (Bass Artist) Gentlemen 75c, hie. tax. Ladle Free " first- steps in sin In the dive"or brothel, most of f them never would take the step. ' The dens are not the cause, but the result; the evil that begins in the card playing home ends in the den."' "I do not understand the selfish, heartlessdess ; of the parents who say, Oh, cards never hurt me! An old man came to a meeting; a wrecked, -wretched old man, ready to die from h'.s sins; he said that' he was one of three brothers who had learned to play card3 and gamble at the home of their Sun day school teacher. - One brother died a" drunkard; another was shot in a dive, and the last one was dying repentant, but utterly lost and wretched. An older wo man rose in the : audience and screamed, 'God forgive me; I was that Sunday school teacher who taught them the road to hell! In. a southern town, during an evangelistic series, a number of negroes were brdught before the judge for crap-shooting the speaker being French-born, missed the word and called it scrap- shooting and the judge turned them loose. "I should feel guilty of a moral wrong to. sentence these men, while the women of the city are gambling at their card tab'es and doing so much worse than. they. "All these things are poison from the same bottle!" The theater and the ranee were pointed out as other things that put' out the eyes and destroy the strength of Chrisians. "It is the theaters business to minister to the lusts of the eye. Theater men say that their places will go bank rupt if they do not present enough of the suggestive, evil plays; the houses that really do stick to cleanliness do go " broke. T h e dance was presented as one of the most dangerous evils of the age. r "Some say that they danced in Biblical times," said the speaker. "They did, 'like Miriam and her maidens after the nation las de livered at the Red Sea and the Lord in his majesty brought them to safety; and David danced for victory over his enemies.. But to compare these with the modern dance Is like comparing the Lord s Supper sacrament with a midnight carousal. . What would the saintly prophetess Miriam who danced' with her maidens in re joising over the saving- of their people, say if she were to see the modern dacne? There was no mix ed dancing in the Bible, except in sin, until the children or Isreal buil'their golden calf and danced around it while Moses was away. 'All dancing as it is today is cen tered around the golden calf. - It put3 out your spiritual eyes: it makes you captive and the bond slave of the Philistine world. I have seen mothers bring their in rnocent, " beautiful daughters to dances, and hand them over to all kinds of men; and I wonder how ilwlll fit fherafto be good wives and mothers; "The modern dance is a degradation of womanhood.! I am a mother; I would rather put ray-own darling1 little Dorothy ;in her grave, than see her go ' into h dapcing . road to wrong.". . The speaker reaa a letter from a girl who was preparing to take her own life, after a career iof shame in which the dance and ignorance were the damning . factors; and . another from a girl who had gone from a Demarest neeting to serve as-a missionary, to Africa. . The con trast iif the two kinds of life, the nn DRIVE IN FEDERAL STANDARD FOUR . AND OTHERS tOO Service. 30x3i. 32x3 ,.. 31x4 32x4 ... 33x4 ..!.. 34x4 32x4 Vi 34x4 Vi 35x4 2. 36x4,. 33x5 .. 34x5 35x5 36x6 ........ Cord 30x3 Fabric 30x3 54, FISK SOLIDS FOR TRUCKS - '-X v-: ; ' Get Our Prices. - - - ' - ' ' Garden Hose Lawn Sprinklers . 50 Feet, Cord Type $5.95 a MALCOW1 TIRE CO. Commercial and Court Sts. Established 1917 Salem, Ore. difference In the spiritual condi tion of the two, was the difference between the blackest hell and the brightest heaven, "and the" picture made a powerful impression on the' audience. K-. There are no services today, this being the rest day. Mrs. De marest had a strenuous day on Friday, and the rest comes most gratefully. Only a superb strength and a consecrated courage could stand the strain of such a series of engagements as the four that came to her on Friday. Disabled Veterans Meet Salem chapter No. . 3, Disabled Veterans of the World War were visited last night: by representa tives of the Corvallis chapter, in cluding James S. Sharp, .comman der ; Ray C. Rehberg, treasurer, and Emery Johnston, adjutant. All offered suggestions1 for the good of the Salem chapter. Plans for the state convention May 9 and 10 were discussed and a committee appointed by Commander Frank W. Durbin of the Salem chapter. A program for the two days was outlined. , State Commander Kd ward L. Clark of Corvallis also at tended. The next meeting ill be next Friday night. May 2. and all disabled veterans are urged to at tend. The meeting, place is the veterans' room in the armory, and the time is 8 o'clock. Hear Wlcsendanger Thousands of school children in Oregon know Albert ' Wiesendan ger. United States forest ranger, stationed at Eagle Creek . ramp grounds on the Columbia highway, Tall, athletic and rugged in .ap pearance, always wearing, the uni form of a forest ranger. Wiesen- danger appeals to the heroic in stinct in the kiddies and every thing he tells them about forests, forest trails, pack-horses, fire fighting 'and animal life in the wilds carries deep conviction and a hungering for greater intimacy with , the big, wonderful out-of-doors. He can get more music out of a harmonica or mouth-organ than any other man or boy in Ore gon. Wiesendanger always carries his harmonica with him and it's almost a sure bet that he will t'em onstrate his championship for the kiddies when he talks to them Sat urday afternoon , at 2:30 o'clock at the First Congregational church. Part of the entertainment, given in the interests of forest fire pre vention, will be the showing of the ifilm,' "The Red Enemy," a story filled with thrills and action, de picting forest fires, vivid scenery t the northwest taken from an air plane. : T BITS FOR BREAKFAST T Not a slow town Salem is a swift town i Witness the erection of a taber nacle that will hold 6.000 people by crowding, in four days. v. ' The rush at the state flax plant, in; threshing the seed, continued yesterday, with the cleaners only RONCHITIS At bodtima rub tho throat and chest thoroughly with V VAPORUD Oawr lTMUlimm Jan UmmJ Ymarff , j moo . Mile Tiresi , ...$ 8.50 ...1... 11.75 14.90" ...i.... 14.90 ... 15.50 '. 16.50 20.40 .-20.0 ...: 21.00 27.00 28.00 25.00 31.00 .... .. 26.50 ........ 55.00 10,000 Mile Federal $10.45 14.65 16.55 17.95 18.50 19.30 23.60 24.10 24.70 30.85 30.85 29.55 31.00 30.75 59.90 ..$6.90 .. 6.95 one jump ahead of the farmers wanting the seed. . But they were all supplied. It will be the same kind of a rush till about Monday or Tuesday, when the "peak, load" will be over. There will be some seed furnished, after that for a number of days; but there will begin to be a surplus by the end of , next - week, for grinding ' for, poultices for the wholesale drug trade, &qd for. selling, to the drug trade for; other uses, and to the oil mills. : Perhaps $20,000 worth of it. after the farmers are all supplied. " j a W "U Perhaps 3,000 acres .have been planted to flax now, and a lot of it is up. The retting will go on within a 'few -days; 'and it will be rushed the whole summer, ; and fall, till the winter rains stop it. Then, about October 1st, will be gin the scutching. - Most of the people who see the acre and three-quarters of tulips of the bulb farm on the Pacific highway near Chemawa do not realize that there are . six acres more of them,' just as beautiful, a half mile east. That is a big bus iness. It will make a town there. .: ; -m S ; V' If you have any sort of notion that Salem is not growing, go out and try to count the new houses. -. V H ' . It will not be long now till the canneries are taking in gooseber ries. This crop will be the means BASEBALL Sunday, April 27, 3 p. m. Oswego Team of Interstate Leanus - ' 1 ."" .. . . vs .Salem Senators 4-Wheel Brakes fit n vi w ii ill tt 1 Wit "Aristocratic in Appearance but Democratic in Price" W. H. EVANS MOTOR COMPANY 147 North UigH Street. - Phc-- 42 j' 1 - a aariii Are You Hunting For a Smile? Keanli no further. - . Concentrate MrXUTK MOVIES" the novel new comic picture bnrlrMuo :nd?o Mfiid'r UMl ana j ou Mill find dozens of smiles. - Fuller I'hua am Archibald VluUU 111 unKHUe your dlnii, , m JzFtJZKl wonder what wonderful: ulgTaVZ ' over you. come Ami If you like thrills laughs, --luinh ,,,Uea T,,, villalnK, will ,; Vhw io ? ! . dollar" sure will .. 'MINX'TK MOVIES" are inovi and it takes J.t 2 uZnlUZ U?1" everyday. read tbeni "MINUTE MOVIES" Every Day 1 The Oregon Statesman Beginning Sunday. man ya3f1 of distriouuu - win 8tarr, thousand dollars. JTins Jn off the MirlJ. Do you canning operation know inai. -- . ac3 Usea about a third of " Je C for pUt Jn the Pacific fuuons of ting up fruit; tens them? Independence elected principal of the Ind d baa school for tbV0 nyen engaged accepted. He a8 15 years ln Oregon "J"' Jdtan. coming to the i sUte no " fe, at He has served rery nJJgJ cJool the head of principal for the past three year . v 1 "fheuniorbiSh seven. - f. years. school at Redmond for htb ye : Enterprise. ' , ' - j CXAST JJEAGUE San Francisco ; Vernon 9. Sa Angeles 2; 0 Sacramento 1; Seattle 9. Salt Lake 10; Portland 5. . - -- .. - - ' - " " : XATIOXAL LEAGUE New York 2; Brooklyn 3. Cincinnati 10: Pittsburg 4. St. Louis 5; Chicago 7, AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 5; Philadelphia 6. Boston 2; New York 5. Detroit 2: Cleveland 10. Chicago Yibrationless i lOf, iy L J -JT "DHiion .... . veral fl"" V.V--V i t