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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1924)
V 4 rfJG, MAY Zip 1924 THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON t WEDNESDAY MORNIK , ) Issued Daily Except Monday by , TSE BTATESMAX PVBXJSHZNa COMPACT1 j 215 Soath Commercial 8t, Salam. Oregon B. JJHandrieka JohafLh Brady r ran II Jaskoskl ' , Ssls3EX OT THE r ,Ths Associated Press is exclusively wt dispatches credited' to it or not otherwise credited in th.ia paper aad also the ocmi news pnonsaed herein, a. J.I HENDRICKS President CABLE ABRAMS Secretary . f I Tfcomaa F. Clark Co, New York, 141-145 I lac. W. S. Grotawahl. Mrr. . (Portland Office, 83ft Worcester Bide Phone 6637 BRoedway, 6. P. Williams, Mgr.) TELEPHONES: ' -vt . - - 23 Circnlatlon Of fie. ;Wl- i 23-106 Society Editor f ' . Job Department - . 583 ' f v .' Business Office , fcswa Department I - Entered at the Pestefficei ia Salem. . .. , BIBLE THOUGHT AND PRAYER J . j ' - ' : I Prese-Badlo Copy - " '- ' 1 '- r ; I Preoared r Kadlo BIBLE 8EBVICE Bnreao. Cincinnati. Ohio. If parents will bat their children memorize priceless aeniajre to um ia arter aeaxs. : May 21, THE RESURRECTION: Jesus recti on and the life: he that believeth in me. though he were dead. yet I shall he llTe; and whosoever never die. John 11: 25. i I PRAYER: Lord, we thank llvesC 1, DO WE CARE FOR OUR MOTHERS? 4 rAonU aan itAn1 w 1 am 1 ATI t iflA TITAr1iii.tf in WW O w-u 1 al 1 TA tioiis, we are twentieth down nations for which we have statistics . with regard to our large inaiernity death rate. This probably is due to two outstanding needs on this country : nation wide provision for good maternity care and, what is equally important, a nation-wide .recognition of the urgency-jf this care." ' - ; ' I The aboVe is. a serious indictment -against the Unitfcd Stajtes. Is it that we care less for the mothers of our race than' these nineteen other peoples ? We may answer that! question with an indignant. denial; but our vehemence will not abolish the fact that we stand twentieth, in the list X ' But who makes the indictment? - ' ; j li is inaue Dy aroiyn van uiareuu, wuu ni m: uuc oi iur American representatives to an international conference o English .speaking peoples to disctiss maternaraiid 'infant wel fare, to be held in London4u July ; The American Child Health association, of which Herbert Hoover is the head, is taking a leading part in preparing for that conference. j s ' Since women have taken a more active part in the industrial an d political life . of. peoples, governments have begun to turn their attention 'to the most sicred heritage of every race aud generation that of motherhood ! 2 ? And humanitarian legislation has brought an ennobling in fluence into modern legislative bodies. It is non partisan in its nature; it serves to unite all classes; it takes much of the venom of liate out' of politics - It kwakehsnhc best In human nature " r ! And it is perhaps the greatest single influence working for tGe ultimate federation of all peoples for a common purpose; ri iking the whole of the earth more habitable for the "women and ' children of all lands, irrespective of race, creed or social dis- ti iction '' ,: -' -.' .:? :-' .1.:, "Working out ultimately permanent 'world peace. 1 ' f Says an English. woman statistician, 'More women have died in childbirth than were ever lost in war. The number of children who have never seen the light of day because of ignor ance and lack of proper tcare is "greater than that of all the soldiers injured on the' firing line;'; Ulj - J And rich and proud and progressive America stands-twentieth down the list iu the maternity death rate. . , i We have made progress j are making progress. But we are still twentieth down the list, whereas we should be at the head of the list: ; ::r ; i'f v Do we care for bur mothers! Do we care for the rights of unborn generations! , -Yes we -do eare. But we d not eare though. 'As long as we fail to head the list, we will be in this respect a backward people. , And is there any other one thing a important as this! ' '.'''..' i t i r ir THE GENERAL BUSINESS OUTLOOK i The big and observing and shrewd men in the business v orld believe times will be better from now on in the United States as a whole, as witness the following brief excerpts from t'ie current weekly ' financial x bulletin of Henry Clews & Co., tiie Wall street authorities of good and high' repute : .' ) ' i "Altogether, the situation is. one of reasonable promise in tlio majority of business lines, notwithstanding a narrow mar gla of profit. p ' "''7 -'. '- J "Gold continues to flow into the United States, the amount fur last mohth being $45,000,000. v! . n "Growing favor for the plans of the American committee o experts is to be noted both in France and Germany, while it. is generally admitted that the definite acceptance of the saheme and the making -of the necessary financial arrangements consequent thereon will lead to"decided improvement of trade. "With money abundant and cheap, and with the federal reser'e system showing a ratio for the past, week of 83 per cent, and decided decline in bills discounted, financial conditions con tinue as unimpeachable as ever. ' ; J I t "It has become more than ever manifest during the past week that the market is working on a 'sold out basis; that weak atcounts have been well liquidated, and that t lie great bulk of stocks are now held by investors who arc looking confidently to a better condition of things in the early future. I - "Labor conditions throughout the country are apparently in a reasonably satisfactory condition.' - V : "Early returns from both the cotton and grain areas show a yery satisfactory crop outlook and the president of the United States Chamber of Commerce reports that 'conditions are im proving.' He finds confidence and energy on the farm and a disposition to shift intelligently to better paying crops.?' ! t AX UXLSfAlj SPIRIT We have heard a good deal about boosters 0one kind and an other, bat here is a new kind. A task tailed in Seattle a few years go and the failure was due to the town pride of the , president. $Ie could not Btand to see other ites booming more than his own. lie had an attack of ''excessive patriotism" and it Increased with the years. ' - ' '; iThe kind of patriotism referred ; t Js the civic kind.' it Is more Virulent and more likely to become rpldemic than the national variety A. loyal citizen can retain his poise ."when some other nation seems to be growing faster than his own. Irt . when there is danger of his I c ie town being beaten In popu ! a or bank clearings or mean rainfall he becomes ex- - , ' - Ifanager - - Editor Manager Jsb Dept. .ASSOCIATES PEXSS ' j ' entitled to the use for Publication of all i .. .. J. ti. BRADY Tke-Preaideat West th St; Chicago Marquette Build 583 1M Oregon, as second -etaae, matter. the dally Bible ealectioons, it wlU psora 192 , . ' ; . said: unto her. I am the resur- llveth and belleveth In me shall . .. thee that we live, because thou .. .-,-:-:.;.-:.. the list of . twenty-two civilized ti i : 1 i i t. about it. The bitterest wars ia history, no less bitter because small In their scopejihave been the county Beat feuds between Jonet ville and Smithburg. Most men can bear to hear their country be ing roasted, but when their city is attacked they want to fight. - Bank presidents are, perhaps lesg susceptible than men of less shrewdness and sagacity, but even they. It seems, are not Immune. And if a banker can make a doubt ful loan to help his city grow fast er than the city next door, who of us is safe? - . i ' ! XOTIIIXa XEVV To hear some of these enemies of the primary system talk you would think there never had been a slate pat up- in politics until the primary came into vogue. The rule of bosses. In the old days caucuses were packed and rough necks taken from place to place to help pack them. Money was used freely in politics. Men were hired openly to help pack caucuses and to continue the boss of the elec torate. That is all gone now, Men put out their slates, of course, but there is not one dollar spent in1 elections now where ten was spent. ' Twenty years ago the ma jority of the nominations were bought, either directly or indirect ly; now they are secured on an Issue of organization. ' Today we have purity In the primary. In our last primary there was not a hint of any candidate using undue processes to secure his nomination True, organizations put out slates, but they were only recom mendations and men are not read out of the parties as they used to be for disregarding them. THE TROURIE WITH CON GRESS Jay House, who is famous in the mid-west as a writer, also oc casionally makes a comprehensive diagnosis. Here is his judgment pronounced upon congress. "One trouble with congress is that ft has -been blackmailed - so often in the 10 years last past that it is scared stiff. The proceduro of legislation has resolved itself, not into a consideration of the merits of a given case, but into a matter of holding a gun on con gress. ; Congress is In such a state of funk that any belligerent min ority can bulldoze It into enacting any sort of measure into law. The situation is complicated by the fact that there is no longer party organization or party discipline. Conversely, there is no longer par ty protection for the congressman who does his duty ; as he sees it. Every member of congress is on his own and in direct competition before the voters of his state or district with the political snake doctors who write their bwn diplo mas. In the circumstances, a con gressman Is much like a rabbit; i is hi business to- be cautious. Mr. House adds that while con gress has come to be an unimpres sive body It is fully as impressive as ' its constituency. Therein is some food- lor thought; .It..W not necessary to go into neighboring states to witness the spectacle of aiminority trying to bulldoze a congressman. What may reason ably be expected as the result onj the public welfare if that proced-3 are becomes the accepted thing Is a fair qaestio'n. ' Secretary Wallace points out that cooperative associations de pend for; their success more upon management thaa upon organiza tion. Congress exempted the farmers' organizations from the operations of- the. anti-trust laws and trade conspiracy statutes, but in doing so assumed no responsi bility for the organization or con ventions. The secretary announc es that there are' 10,000 coopera tive organizations among'the farm ers and 1150 disbanded last year. They ; disbanded "because of bad management. Management has more to do with cooperatives than anything: else. It Is th rook which- successful'' 'coooerailwes stand, and also the rock upon which they fall.i ' i : 5 . We are Inclined to agree with the prune growers' association that cooperative organization should embrace just one commodity and not try to take In the whole valley production. In this way there can be ennter ahots fired constantly. The . organization must be big enough to pay a fair management, but not. undertake. fancy salaries. GOOD ENOUGH v" The . decision that , the fire ap paratus had carried is mighty good news for Salem. There Is a great need for ; that apparatus and a great risk " being run every day. It was impossible to buy it out of the revenues, and the bond Issue was resorted to. not because it was desirable, but because it 'was necessary. The voters, by a large majority, decided in favor of the apparatus and it would have been shame to have a technicality of the law interfere with the protec tion of . propetrty. I1EAVV TRUCKS .The. Oregon ; Journal protests against the heavy trucks. The Oregon 'Statesman joins most heartily in the protest. in anoth er column appears the article from the Journal. Read it carefully and begin thinking of some plan to stop this crushing of the roads. The truck drivers are violating the laws and we are practically wink ing at them. , :. ., .4.. ... PATROXS ARK CRIMINALS There, will never be proper en forcement of the prohibition law untlt the patron is held Just as guilty as the bootlegrer. And why not? Doth are concpiring to vlo- 1""f V t'' ti"-. f-n,f.,T..r.rnf!( n-4 the other for personal satisfaction. There can be no difference in the degree of their guilt. One of these days we will get a conspiracy law, Under that law the dragnet of the law will operate equally' against the seller and the purchaser." They are both equal criminals' no w, but the public has not : yet accepted that fact. T ! ' . . , . , One of - the: fights that should enlist not only the fruit growers but all of the citizens today, is against the earwig. There is no telling how formidable It will be come this year, but we know it will be bad.' I Oscar Underwood does not seem to be making much progress as the "favorite son'j of the south. He nas only been able to carry his own state, and did not get that by a very encouraging majority. A COMING SCANDAL Within '20 minutes about mid night,' four big trucks with trailers passed a given point, on the Jef ferson-Salem highway last week. Another night a Portland bound automobile passed 15 such trucks and trailers between Portland 'and Salem. . .:: ' :.; ;, . There are attaches, of the.. Ore gon state highway department.-who say one of these huge- machines with trailer does more damage to the paved highway than a41 itae automobiles that Pass over it,iThe further statement Is that the trucks are frequently overloaded a truck and trailer sometimes car rying 14 or 15 tons at a load. ' Did you ever notice how a sub stantlal house shakes and Its. win dows rattle and a distinct move ment of the whole building., takes place when a heavily-laden frock passes on a nearby street?-Is there any doubt In anybody's mind -who hag noted these heavy vibrations and concussions that the trucks are smashing the paved highway to pieces? f V: -...;. Can' a heavy object -move swift ly over a pavement, jarring - and shaking and moving every atom in that pavement. In the streets and .1 J 1 - a. BiuewaiRs, alongside ana even shaking the foundations and super airuuiure oi nearoy ouiidings. as well as -the ground on which they stand, without doing material damage every time It passes? If these huge trucks are allowed to go on pounding the pavements to pieces, what will come of it a little later but scandal and wails and howls? As the paving disinte grates, as iti is swiftly doing In many spots, who win put up ttfe millions of dollars req uired -to -re build the broken stretches? ; In the matter of their hiehwav. Oregon people are living In a tooT paradise. They are lolling', alone in complete unconcern while highw ways that cost them $60,000,000 a .... are Deinaa. meraily battered i to pieces by arew. trucks. wnat is going on is a crima against the automobile ownm wno nave mainly paid all that has been paid for the highways and who will have to pay for rebuild ing many of them long before th original construction is paid for. Oregon Journal. - v W MARRIAGE MS Adola Garrlaoa'ai Kew Pbaaa of REVELATIONS OP A WIFE Copyright ltJL. tar Newraaoer : Taatnre Service, Xae. ; CHAPTER 171 WARNING MOTHER GRA HAM GAVE MADGE THE I waved my hand gayly to Dickv as I drove away from the station, but there was no heart in the ges ture or the smile that accompan ied it. I drove home feelinsr that all the little imps of gloom resi dent In that end of Lnn had come to make their .abode with me as well as some of their relatives from other points, of the compass, i ; x , . For 1 could not keep from my eyes the vision of Edith Fairfax, returned from a long-absence. rested, restored to the exquisite dainty prettiness which i 1st hersj and which just escapes b in g ab solute beauty. Beside the .old ap peal of f friendly comradeship which she always has for my husband,-she would have the charm of - comparative novelty to .him, and I tortured myself, with, the idea' of the joyous welcome, which volatile, ' s beauty-loving Dicky, slightly bored . with' ..domesticity. would give her. ! .- Lillian's Suggestion. . .- - So abworbed was I that' I-did not realize until a car had whirled past me going in lh?e oppos! to 'di rection, that the waving handker chief in the bafid of 'a "woman driver must have been a. good-bye signal from Katherine, and that under Df. Pettifs secort she was already on her way to the hospital to begin her delicate and import ant espionage over the man who had so persecuted and terrified Katie. :t - f ;v The little ' encounter, wasj silur, tary for; me. It Jolted me out of tbe absurd 'jealousy which wsa PROBLE possessing me, and turned my thoughts to the terrific problem which Lillian was facing, especial ly to that particular fragment of the tangled skein, the threads of which lay in Katie's fingers. I wondered if there were not some way of getting around Katie's old- I world fear of "the awful swear," which the man who had so strange ly dominated her, had compelled her to take.: I resolved to talk, to my little maid concerning her oath as soon as I found an oppor tunity.' ; ";, - - - i I made another resolution, also as I found myself nearing the old farmhouse we had bought. ! Thi was to put all sentimental worry concerning my husband out of my mind. He was not - worrying about me not perceptibly " any way I said to myself with a little feeling of pique which I tried con scientiously to smother, but which I think, persisted In my sub-con sclousaess long after I had ban ished it from my conscious thoughts, and I meant to take leaf from his book. j Lillian met me at the door, her eyes worried, but mirthful, nev ertheless. I "Better go to your mother-in law in the dining room," she said "She's on the rampage, and I don' know, how long Katie is going to stand the strain without snapping in two." - . ..-) ' i: I -hurried to the dining room to find Mother Graham extending piece of bacon upon the end of fork, and glaring from it to Katie condemningly. "Katie's Out-of-Sorts." ,".Do;you call this bacon proper ly cooked?" she was demanding. 'It's positively raw." t "I can't tell vot you Tant,"4re turned Katie sullenly. ".You Isay yoM. no like it all , crispy, - like pdera,.und now ven I feex eet dees vay you.no like eet." v "If you had any brains in that head of yours, you'd know that there's a medium. between burned bacon and greasy , raw stuff like this..-.Take it away, I don't want any jot.it and see if you can make me a piece of decent toast.'' My mother-in-law was seated so that she could not see the door in which I was standing. I looked anxiously at Katie's sullen face for. I knew upon .what a hair-trig ;er her temper always hung. But my surprise she answered no impertinent word but meekly pciked up the offending plate of bacon and vanished with it into the kitchen. , I advanced i into the i-oom to find my mother-in-law looking wonderingly at . the kitchen floor. "Snmthln!', the matter with ihai'girl,", she said. "Usually, she has. a string of excuses as long as the .moral law. I hope she isn't sickening for, something.! You don't suppose , she brought back anything contagious from that hole she was in. dp you?" ; She stared at me in sudden fright, evidently working her imagination up to all sorts. of horrors. i t - "What nonsense, Mother!" answered lightjy, although at her words my apprehensive thoughts flew to Junior. "Katie's simply out-of-sorts about Jim. ' But as want to ask her about that man In the hospital, I'd like : her to set calmed down a bit, so you won't mind it I make your i toast and bring it in, will you?" . ! "I don't care if you do all her work," Mother Graham answered tartly, "but for your own sake I'd advise you not to spoil her again as you used to do." , (To be continued) Onr Own Liot and Found Department James Low There is a poem written by a sailor about "Break, wild waves" or something like that Do you know what 'I mean? Dear Jim: The only poem we know was written not by a gob, but by a guy who had just paid his income tax. It breaks as follows Break, oh, break, thou angry sea! From Alaska's shore to Slam; But however hard you break, , Ah me! . . , : ) .. , You won't be as broke as I am. ' T.' SImms Can you : give me that selection containing: "When the aands of the desert grow cold " Dear. Brother v Simms": Some Sheik has come across with this told, comfort for you: When the sands of : the desert grow cold, and when sailor's always sober, shall then have hopes of getting 1 that ten You borrowed last October. Sayings of. Little. Socrates Papa never lies to mamma; h' thinks he does. The Eleventh Coninuimlnitiit ' An aspiring young flapper wtoie to a physician: "Doctor, will bob bing, my hair make me stronget?" 'Yes. miss," replied the doctor, 'stronger with the boys it it'e bobbed otherwise not." j - .Roy- A Brenner a i -ci T.i. Tit InglerJanKlew -i Apjrf unnyy aonseaslcal j rhyme The Thins To Do Coprrlht, J02S. Associated Editors. How To Make Some mexpensive Summer Hats A GlMQHAM L,'6"--' TO OJX W BUCifiPMBRlrl BACK TC) A POKE 'SiAPE" BLANKET KiHfDCCT THf CROWN THE" THE SIDECPOWH IS BIAS A HAT AND SCARF SET IS THE NEW STYLE There is nothing a girl can have that Is more stylish than a hat to match her dress -unless it is a scarf that matches too. -- The pic ture shows you how to construct a simple hat with harmonizing scarf. Every single thing about a girl may make herself. Including-the buckram shape. f Here are the hat materials and their cost: 1 yd. gingham or beach cloth $.50 1 yd lace or net. .......... . .20 1 yd. ribbon .... 1 ; . . .15 yd. buckram .15 $1.00 that will make Pun Shop readers laugh is a Jingle-Jangle. It must be in- two lines. For example: After winter comes the spring; Tonsils hurt like everything. 2 Cows - have, horns and sheep ha 'e wool; ' - Dentists -have a lot of pull. You : will undoubtedly contrib ute funifier Jingle-Jangles .han these. Address them separately to Jingle-Jangle Department.. The Fun Shop, The Statesman, Salem, Oregon. The Value of S? College Education , A Harvard chap was on his way home to spend his vacation with his folks in the middle wst. The oncoming train was but a hundred feet away! What did the Harvard lad do? THA h. nli.fK MM In . . " .x "' V" r -1 t-rtui arms ana carry it to said; No! He was from Harvard! He tackled the train and threw It for a loss! Bernard Einstein Make It SnJppy Barber: "How do you want your hair cut?" Customer: "In silence." ' Natural Symptoms "Mother." said little Elsie. don't feei-very. well." "That's too bad, dear," said mo ther very svmnathetlrniiv 'Where do you, feel the worst?" "In school, mother.' . ' Marlon F. Judd Far be it from us to encourage elopements but is is much bst-er to run away, with the "rieht one man to waiK awar with tho wrong one. .- - ; . - . Readers ara requested to contribute. AM bumor. epigrams (or humorous mot toes), jokes, aaerdotes. poetry, bur lesque, satires aad bright sayinCs of ebiidren, most bo ortginal and unpub lished. Accepted material -will ba paid for at regular rates. AH manuscripts must be written on one side of the paper only, ahould bear name of this newspaper and should be addreased to the Fan Shop Editor, The Oregon Statesman. EST T OE RED PEPPEBS Ease your tight. aching chest. Stop the pain. .Break up the con gestion.- Feel a bad cold loosen up in just a short, time. Red Pepper Rub" is the cold remedy that brings quickest re lief, . It cannot hurt you and it certainly seems to end the tight ness and drive the congestion and soreness right out. Nothing. has such; concentrated. penetrating heat as red peppers, and when heat penetrates right down into colds, congestion, ach ing muscles and sore, stiff joints relief comes at once. The moment you apply Red Pep per Rub you feel the tingling heat. n three minutes the congested spot is warmed through and through. . When you are suffer ing from a cold, rheumatism, backache, stiff neck 'or sore mus cles. Just get a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red pep pers, at anydrug stereo "Tou will haVe theT-qulckest .reHet known. BREAK Jl CD W WITH IB A1vy say "RowlesV-r Adv. -, , Boys arid Xm ls Statesman The Blszeaft IittU Paper nl th Worl SP0CT5 HAT MUST HAVE A SCARF TO MATCH YftfiHO SIDE OF MATERIAL Right siwr OFCENTFC BACK APPUaUE nowEB5 pjT on with Black STITCH SUPPLY ' TRIMMING' - A STRAIGHT PIECE OP NET OR. LACE TURKS OWM. The scarf is 18 inches wide and 1 Vt, yards long. If It is pieced at the center back, only yard ad ditional gingham need be bought for it. A fifteen inch sqnare of bulk ram is marked off in. a circle for the hat brim. Pie-shaped pieces cut from the sides will make a droop when they are sewed to-; gether. Follow the diagram for cutting the headsize. . It is 6H inches in diameter with another circle marked an inch inside of it Cut out' the part inside the Inner circle, then cut slashes back to the- second line for the pieces to WHY I. "HIGH WROTE ; FIRES By Marjorle Rarkley McCIure 1 There are five reasons why I wrote "High Fires" but they could all be boiled down Into a five-word statement of the fact that it had to be written.It was in me and would out even though I didn't suppose It would find a publisher. But of the five reasons the desire to put a group of conscientious people, who were striving for their Ideals without talking fatu ously about them. Into a novel was among the'mbsturgeht.' The modern novel is scant on such characters yet life brims with them and they are the real intelli gentsia of this country'. Tnev are simnle and t1ni,n- it... M-.vi.:i 1 thinking with ri..Sr..Ili " . " me worus - ennsctpnr-o" "dutv" and 'moralfty", am. Htm n hi- vocabularies. Because they are so completely la harmony with their environment they are inconspicu ous; they seldom adventure into divorce because they are too thor ougniy sportsmanlike to admit failure in the great came. mar. riage. which they play to win. For years they have read novp.hr that deal with every sort or people but their, own sort, and because vhey re worm writing about I wanted to put them into a book. J 1 I WHY I WROTE "TVSSCF KAHX," By Frank Helen I I Once upon a time a roans Swed ish student turned his back on th university that had made him an . A., and left for Monte Carlo where he Intended to break the bank. He didn't. He lost every cent he had, but Instead he learn ed some usefur things. One was mat you can live on next to noth WM J . us a uay. yvnotner that this is ratner pleasant once you get used to It (in a sunny climate:) Another still, that you need not g-o east or buez to find the best rather like the worst. ; . This young Swedish student saw and by and by be understood It. Having lest his money but not his appeiue, no looked -around for something to do. One day he got a bright : idea. Tlnk wasn't ' dear, nor was paper.. What if he should' try to put the things ho saw down on papei and make a book out of it? ' ... - He did, and while he was doing it, hi3 collar-number went down by several centimetres. T The result was a series of . stories grouped around , an imaginary character, Mr. Philip Collin who is more clever than scrupulous. ' Collin appears, in otrveY ' stories undoc many aliases, and-here as the in ternational criminal'. Mini, who is concerned with, a plot to seize the crown jewels of an East-Indian I FUTURE DATES I Uav 24. Saturdar Teamen to meet Oregon realm of Rhadamanthii. Jano to. Tuesday Kepnbliraa aatloai al eoarention meets im Clevelaad. - iJana 14. Saturday Aanual Mario( Connty Bnaday Rebnol ir.nic .Jane. IS and 17. Monday and Tuesday State convention of Order of le Molar, ia Halem. . ' June 22, Sunday Idaho County pieai at fair ground. - . Jaao 24, Tuesday Demorratle aatioa al maventioa meota to New York, i ty 16 to23 CBaraUaqa- aessoa b Salem. . -i j fane 21. Satardar llarioa county Etinday srhool-.. picnljw-.;, . , i 37-2S a EdaeaMnnaf tmtmt Edited by Jobs. IX. turn up. Since the poke shape is the popular one, trim off the' back of your brim to a bare inch at the center.; --. 5 . You should cut your cloth cover ing for the brim by laying the buckram shape on the goods. Sew the frame together and coyer It as the diagrams show you. The crown 'Is made from two pieces, the circle cut 6 Vx inches across and a bias strip 21 Inches long. SeW them together and finish the edge of the brim with lace or net..' If your hat is made of a solid color, you should use figured scraps for the applique flowers. ' Here is a suggested color scheme: Green gingham for hat and scarf; pink and rose flowers put on with black blanket stitch black net on brim. ' ' ' " A PICTURE PUZZLB Try to solve the puzzle as ex plained in the top figure of the, picture, before you look at the an- . swer, which is shown just below it." : -- , T . : . Wig rOr3 039D 3Q NVO XVKl S3Kin aX)U20WnN xcamwis 9HXSI J.VMM prince. These adventures, how ever, do not answer the why of writing a book of this character. It is simply to express a phase of adventurous life. ' ' I BITS FOR BREAKFAST I i -' Wanted, rain -S V .But it is needed still more-in eastern Oregon. s - I It is a good time to talk about irrigation, and tcj Slogan pages will talk about it tomorrow ' If you can do so, help the Slogan editor. It is an important matter.' - - The Salem Y. M. C. A. ls tt have a full time boys secretary; ! beginning October 1st.' Also, it lr hoped, a new building next year The second annual tennis tourn-- . anient for the championship, of the city of Salem Is to be held -beginning on Saturday next, an A lasting several days; at the state ' hospital grounds. If you want t . compete, sign up at either sportini goods store. It Is going to be J hotly .contested tournament. -. ' . '. "Half the world doesn't know how the other half lives', but it's Investigating." remarks a Salem barber, . . - " V s - - .v ,'The day of tho flapper -is ' over' says Lady Terrington. This -same -tonsorial. artist . aaya . he feaed" it; there's too 'much ma-': ternal competition." v . " i - V -"V - ' ' He also tries to "be funny by remarking that some women are so modest that they will not wear calico because they hate to. see " themselves in print.' '' ' ; v v V. ' . Democrats in Michigan virtual ly read Henry Ford out of their party, but it ls believed that Henry will plug along at making Lizzies and voting for Calvin Coolidge. He seems to think that Coolldge makes a fair party all by himself.- Mrs. Lemmon and Mrs. Bentson are Delegates I SILVERTO.V. Or.. May 20: (Special to The Statesman,) At a meeting" of the Silverton auxili ary held Monday night Mrs. Leroy Lemmon and Mrs. Harry Bentson were chosen as delegates to repre sent the Silverton Auxiliary 'at Portland 'during the convention there In June. Mrs. Charles John son and Mrs. Wilfred Loomls wer chosen as alternates. . . , , It was also decided that the : next meeting would be held in the form of a covered dish stfpper at the city park" the evening of June 2. . s WomaH Missionary Will Address Dorcas Society SJLVERTOX. Or.. May 20. (Special to The Statesman) Trin ity Dorcas -society has secured a woman missionary to speak at Trinity chureh Sunday evening. She will speak on her experiences in China. The Dorcas society will be entertained at the home of Mr.' and Mrs. ; Helge Rue on Nortli Water street. Tuesdav ven in;.: Assisting with the servine will t Mrs. Clara 'naUfme'rtr Mrs. Jc m i : it ' t j Cnt