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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1924)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 22, 1024 4 ' iio:,u:-co:.iixg ricxic Ilehama will hold a "Home Coming' picnic on Julf 4th. Jt Is expected that there will be a large crowd present as there are a number of former Mehamajtes now.llTins away, who have signi fied their Intention of attending the picnic. ; : . 3. EL . .- VIALVIN-- General Auto Top : , and Uphclstcrin j V7crli Ch: j Enclosures a SieclaUy 513 r.-Church St., Salem, Ore. Certified Public w w laMaw4 or sali:ji ' Presents these - 1CD CTiAT3 - 1920 Dort Tourlas, seat cut for bed; 5 good cord tires. 1918 Studebaker Six, nearly new; cord tires: car me- -chanically OJ K. t- - f t- 1919 Oakland Touring ; "a. well preserved machine in erery V'- respect. ; CXi.3 ' " - 1922 Ford Touring; if you like a Ford, this Is the best buy In town. ,r . 1921 Overland 4 Touring re built; looks like new. 1919 Elgin Sedan; good car to make a tour with. , : rT "t 1923 Star Touring. 5 cord tires, driven only 5000 miles. 1923 Ford Touring, used 6 mos. 1920 Dodge Roadster, shines like new; extras too. -: 1323 Overland Touring with Red Elrd motor. .-- t- - - - -'.. 1923 Ford 4-door Sedan. Well equipped with extras. 1922 Dodge Roadster with Hassler shock absorbers. 1920 Studebaker: Special over hauled and painted battle ship grey. w - C::d claz3 1324 Chevrolet Coupe, only slightly used. 1924 Overland Touring. C7CD CLAT3 1922 Hupmotila Sport 1921 Studstaker Big C "l ff M : 1923 Oaklaci Business Coupe 1923 Dodsa Coupe. n The used car busl- ! nes3, as we adminis ter it, has developed to such a degree ttat very few people ; have the right to say they cannot af ford an automobile. . i ' . X. C tircli " : 14. -J&ar EgM-H Jo; To w-- r .:;y. , See New CMdraz'c C7zzcd ' To Holy Landd u ;; .- : ..: - . i :y . - - - - j Center apread) Callfonla Scoots fill itetr first food car as Xos Ansetak (Zjower left Insert) Blby, of Kansas, father of the Modern Crusade Movement. . (Lower rignt insert) Waifs of a Near East Relief Orphanage at Ancient SI Jon. . American Youngsters Z-Icbilizs to Aid "J&dda" . Coojzn's Mercy Mijsicn 4 ' FTER a. lapse of almost eight " hundred" years 'the -world toon la to witness another Children's Crusade. -: The first waa inaugurated In the thirteenth century when armies of children began to "mobUlxe in Ftance and Germany. Instead of awords they, carried psalm . c rolls and prayer beads. They planned to... convert - the Moslems and re store to Christianity the.holy places Of the Church in Palestine. The movement ended in disaster and the only members of this first crusade-to reach the Holy Lands, ar rived aalava-orthe ',aracea: v Th Second Crusade has ? Just been organized. It started In Kan raa, backed; west to the, Pacific Coast, and soon will- .start from ; th-sre across country ta New York and thence , to the Levant. Its leader , will be' America's best .IcnowV, and imost typical boy 'Jackie Coogan. - Juvenile - screen star of international fame. Its personnel will, be limited to not more than a dosen, , including Jackie's parents, r ' ' ' ": " ' ' . But the movement will repre sent many times the nnmebr act ually moblized for the first crusade. It will represent .the children of America, whose envoy Jackie will be on an ' errand of mercy rather than one of war; one directed not against Moslems hut against might ier forces those of . Hunger and Disease which are now threaten ing the youngsters of the Bible Lands. More than a million child-, rea throughout the country are now assembling the 'ammunition for the small party that actually will embark. , Before their task Is finished they will have gathered more than a million dollars worth of food. Ap proximately 600.000 cans of milk have been collected already.. All over the country - youngsters are busy piling, up Supplies'- at the railroad stations to be loaded on special . trains that will carry them to the Atlantic -Seaboard. . . Then they will - be loaded oa 'a special etemer the : gift., ship , of the Children of - America- td 1 the or phan waifs of the Near East. KecenUy William A. CBU1) Bfby from Kansas , and wanting the world to- know- It went overseas to study . conditions , among- the children in the Near : East, whom the people of the United States were caring for at a cost of several million -dollars annually. He , be came so impressed with their need that, as an official of the Near East Relief the organization ,, through which the money -waa being, invest ed in child-welfare and life-saving work he toured the country in their behalf. The harder he worked the more impressed he became with the ad visability of giving the children of America a part in the salvation of war-wrecked childhood in those far lands over the seas. The children of 'medieval Europe had accepted a -responsibility that their elders had been unable to assume. Why not let the children-.' of America share some of the responsibility that, vhe. felt; a . fertunate nation Children of America, one of Ametvl lea's best known v youngster. "Jackie Cooean's picture on Topeka theatre billboard gave him. the rest of his idea. So "BUT rushed West. His task was to coiw vlnce Mr. and Mrs. John H. Cooiran. Jackie's parents. - With the plain eloquence Of thef middle i western . prairie, he per suaded them that the sight Of Other children. less fortunate than hew would make a profound and lasting impression on their boy a practic al lesson in he Golden Rule, t So Jackie 'sails this summer on hi mission of mercy and good-will. 1 They've been trying ; to'-'settle' things with guns and bloodshed out in the East since the world began. says Bill. "And all the settlement there has been was one war after another.1 Now ; we'll see what s little good-will and human kind ness can accomplish. , Near East Relief workers have been out there like America owed to the less for-! since the Armistice -preaching' this tunate. Oat of this thought the gospel and they seem to be getting oecoia Crusade developed wheat fields of Kansas. The sending out of an Army of Children would have accomplished little and would have coat t rem end - in the : somewhere.' This new crusade la going to help -them get further, It's going to helpt them keep alive an army of orphan waifs and train ther.i to become an' influence for ous sums. Bo Mr. Blby thougnt of irooti m a part or me worm mat r-r.ATg someone to represent the Heaven knows ucedJ lots of IL TEO awm FORD ASSEMBLED This Car, Is .to .Be Driven to San f rancisco on " Lincoln: Highway r " DETROIT, Mich- June 21. A new and outstanding achievement - -. -- - . in the -automobile industry of America was attained here today when the ten-millionth.model "T" Ford car left the final assembly in the Highland park plant of the Ford Motor company, , j The motor, bearing the number 10,000,060," was completed, this morning, and reached the car as sembly line early this afternoon, and was assembled Jntoa touring car, tbs most popular of all Ford body types. ' ' In celebration of ' having . at tained a- 10,000.060 production record, the company announced that Ford car No.JlO.000,000 will make a coast-to-coast trip as sig nifying the nation-wide popularity of the Ford car-and It& appeal to every class of driver. . The car will be shipped to New York within a day or two and leaving there will be driven across the country to San Francisco. The Lincoln highway has been select ed as the ofllcial route of travel and stops "will be made at most all the towns along the line. Frank Ku"''1'. w o years ago at tained famj .. broke many rec ords as the pilot of Ford racing V 3 4 . . - - ... 1 Al Kr. J !-' ri :ASHAMEIP:; cur car. Let us clean equipped to do it. nclinini - Grcacinjj - Motor .Ik-. . . T 1 . ir I , - s - rrtA::s station cars, will be at the wheel of the ten-millionth during the transcon tinental trip. ' Model -"T"-Ford cars are today inmse in every country on earth and the unusual success which has attended -the -Ford Motor. -company dates principally from 1908, when the model T was developed and first Introduced on the - market, f rThe; company - was among . the first to adapt the unit power, plant and the left hand drive control, and it was the originator of such fundamental ltrinciples as the re movable cylinder head, three-point suspension- and torque, tube, drive, all incorporated in the model "T" and which have since been gener ally adopted in the automotive in dustry. ; The correctness -of - these basic features has been 'strikingly proven by , the fact 'that in the en tire ten-million production, while improvement has constantly been made, there never has been ; any deviation from the original prin ciples of the model T." Previous to the tme that the model T" was introduced the company -had built .and sold ap proximately 25,000 Ford cars of other models. - The first model T". was completed October 1. 1908, and it was seven years later, December -40, 1913, when motor Hb 1.000,000 . was produced. Since then,, under an ever increas ing demand, production has stead ily grown, until a new output rec ord Was established in turning out the' last million cars In 132 working days. Washington Cherries are - Picked Says Salem Citizen . ' " . . I Henry -J. Millie, local attorney, returned the last of the week from Grandview, Yakima County Wash where he has been for the last 10 days on business. - . Mr. Millie reports that the cher fies are all picked, picking having been, completed last week. There waa a good crop but not nearly what it was last year. "... ; The apple thinning is now well under way throughout the Yaki ma Valley. . A number of the larg er orchards having finished thin ning .the first , of the week. - , J'rospects. look quite- favorable for a good price -for the: fruit this year, and there is. a good crop in the valley; Mr. Milie made .the trip by automobile, going by the way of the,. Columbia Hirer highway to a point opposite the town, of Alder dale. Washington and crossing by ferry, Alderdale is Just 35 miles south of tbe best part of the Yaki ma country. . . ' 777TY - 9 Make uze of McClaren Guarantee r. . rilrii.i!l.tiiOT-ilf i)S-ISilW-iIHWIIIIIM l MSWI W Wl McClaren Cord Tires are guar anteed to cost less per mile rcjardlcc3 the other tire used or llie price paid. High Speed Motor Coming in Favor "The remarkable records estab lished In the recent Indianapolis speedway race are in reality, a tri umph for the high speed motor of small piston displacement," ex plains Benjamin Jerome, chief en gineer of the Oakland Motor Car company. ; '" ' "A great change In automobile engine design has come about since Ray- llarroun won the first 600 mile race at Indianapolis 13 years ago with a big 600 inch engine.;; '. - .-'. : ". 'Racing car motors have con stantly been reduced in size. and at tbe same, time have had speed and v endurance- increased. " Oak land1 has always advocated the small bore, long stroke -motor and until very recently we have" had the smallest cubic .displacement six cylinder motor used in stand ard construction. - I "Smaller motors mean ' smaller arid lighter reciprocating parts and these in' turn mean reduced motor strains and bearing trou bles and result in faster time. A stock model Oakland coupe still holds, the speed record on the Pa cific coast from L.03 Angeles to San Die'go. : .XX w : V, : "Smaller.; motors, in addition, make for economy. Oakland has demonstrated this economical fea ture In 'winning so many of the great annual economy runs on the Pacific coast. With high speed, light weight and perfect lubrica tion you likewise obtain smooth operation;' - "The . Oakland motor is also similar4 to - those used in racing cars in that both employ force feed lubrication through a .hollow crankshaft, insuring positive oil ing at all speeds and under all conditions. Centrifugal pump for water la also common to both Oakland and racing cars. , , ".. - .... ...-. I M li Men andwomenboth cntliuc 2 over its beauty arid fine ap pointments; tlio comfort of iw Fisher body; tlic rec crvc p ovcr , ; in its smooth, client A 0 liorc z power engine; the rcmarkabl d mileage it gives on fuel and oiL And the price is huiidrc C..z of dollars lower than , will buy its equal. Tk G. f. A: C txtcncUJ torment plan wtakaM bttylng caty. Prices f. . b. Lansing. Tax J .ar Ur nvirs. a: 5d ! F. V.iPEITYJQHt IJW .NORTHCOr.ir.IERCIAL ST. BEFORE THAT TRIP Let Us Inspect Your Car VALVES - BATTERY - STAR rrii HOMER TARPLEY'--R.:D Phone 1107 :171 South Commercial Sire: - W k. ts - U ti?HUtMiilIW h , , nun nirmiili um- .-r0i, : ' i ' : -.. ; ; V J When 77 room si .is me n The World's Larzest . Producer of . Quality Automobile Touring Car $2040 SALE3I THE Big-Six Touring is a seven-passenger car not merely a seven-passenger body mounted on a five-pas-; senger chassis. ' It was designed and built for seven-passenger service with a motor of ample power and stamina " for seven-pas- senger satisfaction. , ; , Then, too, with the auxili ary seats folded away, the Big-Six becomes the . most desirable five-passenger car in which you have ridden,' with room enough for all the luggage you will ever need. Big-Six appearance is at tractive, distinctive, and in good taste. Its performance, acceleration, flexibility and dependability arc Irr.cwn nnd respected the world over. No car, regardless of price, surpasses it in quality cr cc:t . pleteness of equipment. " If a' smaller manufacturer or assembler were to tuild the Big-Six of equal quality and workmanship Idz pzizo would be $3,500 perhsj . more, t - But Bifj-Six overhead iz distributed over d:: limzz zz ; many units as' arc Luilt by any Big-Si:: competitor, hence Big-Sbc cost and cell ing price are surprisingly low. - , - Don't buy blindfolded. Examine, ride in rnj drivs the Big-Six before ycu L;:y any other car. Marion Automobile :'. Co. . ..- j ... - OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Plicna 3G2 Opp. He lei Marion TEAR OFF THIS COUFC; I id nan to CTUDnBATir" f i Bend, Irt, far i.-lrrtr-!--t.-'; t it 5 you the import art r-:.' to cc - 1 selecting a autcmoLe. WATiCINS; VBILL" i " ' ' : Phcnc 44 7" Thcne 1C2 Everything fcr the Auto Address,