THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13.: 1924 1 , laioed Daily Exttept Mooday by THB STATESMAN PUBLISHIHG COMPAQ 215 South Commercial St., Salem, Orefoa R. J. Randrick Joha L. Brady Jtnmk Jaakoakl MEMBEB Or THE. Th' Asaoeiated Praa la mcloaWely , itvi diapatckee credited to it or not otherwia credited ia thia paper aa alaa Ua local diwi pobliaoed Herein, t BUSINESS OFFICE: j Thomaa F. Clark Co New York. 14114.1 W-et 3th St.; CbWaso, Marquette Bolld- : in. W. B. Grothwahl. Mrr. . (Portland Office, S3S Woreeater Bldg.. Fhone 6037 BRn.dwayf O. P. Williaroa. Mgr.) TELEPHONES: 1 ... 23 Circulation Office - " . 23-106 Society Editor ; - j Job Department - - 6S; i Basinet Office News Department Entered at the Poatoffica in Salem. BIBLE THOUGHT ANI PRAYER i ' Prepared by Radio BIBLE SERVICE Bureau. Cincinnati, Ohio. If parents will have their children memoriae I he daily Bible selections, It will prove a priceless heritage to them In after year August 13, 1924 j ' SEEK TODAY: Seek ye the Lord while He may be found, call ye upon Him while He is near. Isaiah 55:6, i PRAYER: O God, Thou art full of; goodness, truth and love, and Thou hast assured us that If we seek Thee we sha!-. find Thee. OREGON (Portland Telegram, August 8. "Flax grown in Oregon produces fiber forlinen fabrics equal to the best grown anywhere else in the world. It has been tested at the great linen manufacturing center, Belfast, Ireland, and has been pronounced equal to the best. : j . "Flax for linen can be grown in Oregon atja cost of pro duction as low as that of any other flax-producing section in the world. Given plenty of moisture and Marion county, Ore gon, will produce more than three, tons of flax straw to the acre which sells at the Salem penitentiary flax mill at from $23.50 to $36.50 a ton, according to whether the flax was pulled for linen fiber or cut for upholstering tow. In an ordinary year two tons is a fair average crop. This is- a better return for the work than the best wheat crop that can be grown in the Wil lamette valley. f ! "The state prison plant will receive this year about 3500 tons of flax straw. Had the year been a normal one there would have been 7000 tons. Practically no rain has fallen in Marion county since May 4 last, and yet the farmers of that county will this year receive not less than $120,000 for their flaz straw. , "The cut flax is made into upholstering tow and sold in local markets. The pulled fiber is sent-east arid made up into linen on the Atlantic coast. The linen we use, on the Pacific coast comes either from Europe or from New Jersey. The fiber woven in New Jersey comes either from Oregon or Europe. All the fiber in the linen we use travels thousands of miles as fiber before it gets to mill. And all the linen from this fiber travels at least three thousand miles before we buy it.j "The United States, including Oregon, buys from abroad $45,000,000 worth of finished linen every yearj and this coun try, not including Oregon, buys flax fiber, raw or half fabri cated, to the amount of $60,000,000 a year. Oregon has no linen mills so does not buy raw fiber. ., A. j "Why should not Oregon make linen? If linen can be made in Paterson, N. J., out of fiber brought three thousand miles by water or three thousand miles by rail, why cannot Oregon make linen at a profit out of fiber grown in the fields within eyeshot . If the linen mill! The, making of linen does; not require the birth and breeding of a whole generation of linen weavers. We can get the trained weavers just as soon as we set up the . machinery. - ' j -Jt 'And let it-be .understood : that we, shall j never : fail in a iupply of the desired fiber. There has come into the flax field a machine puller that will do for the linen industry what the pea threshing machine has done for the pea canning industry, and more. By the old hand process of pulling it cost $25 an acre to harvest fiber flax. With the machine it costs but $5 an acre. Ask the farmers of Oregon, or even of Marion county, to pro duce twice the flax next year they produced this year, or ten times that amount, and they would come forward with the product, next fall. I -?We have the fiber, we have the money for the machinery, we need the linen, we have the market for it, and we can get the weavers. Oregon could be as great a linen manufacturing center as Belfast, which is now the world's greatest linen mill center. Indeed, this country today takes 75 per cent of the output of the Belfast mills. Why go so far for linen? Why trot the fiber arid fabrics all over the world before buying them over the counter?" 1 ! The above from the Portland Telegram's editorial columns is very good; I especially the last three paragraphs. A better comparison to, the flax industry of the pulling machine would be the cotton gin to the .cotton industry. The pulling machine is chief among mechanical! devices and late discoveries that have come forward ; and j made possible the creation of a gigantic linen industry here. I f k The words of the last paragraph of the Telegram's article make up a trumpet call to immediate action m And that will mean an industry here that will employ, directly and indirectly, a million people;-and leading to an industry bringing $200,000,000 annually in cash returns to Oregon for a product taken from the land, and a; very small acreage of land as much money as is now realized for all the products of all our land in the whole state J j And this; is-all within the grasp of our people ; can all be accomplished quickly. The linen industry will be responsible for more Oregon millionaries than any other one industry; and this condition will persist throughout the generations to come. They and the industry will never run out. The raw material is ah annual crop on the land, and the land" by rotation may be made to produce larger and larger fiber tonnages indefinitely td say nothing of double cropping large acreages under irriga tion; for flax is only a 60 to 90 day crop, from the planting to the-pulling. . : ---:- PURE GALL 4 The Oregon Statesman Is in re ceipt of a letter signed by Allen P. Ames, 116 West Thirty-second street. New York. Mr. Ames de clares be is a reader of the Oregon and Washington papers and he Is Impressed by the campaign of the dairymen in favor of prohibiting oleomargarine. Of course he wants fas to understand that his interest fs entirely unselfish. His only fear fs that the farmers of Oregon and Washington have not acquired that ''breadth of view that one might expect from dwellers in the jgreat open spaces of these com monwealths." lie Is afraid that sour people will , hurt themselves. He threatens that. If they do con tinue to. persecute oleomargarine the southern states will boycott Oregon and Washington. J ; :r llr. Ames should submit his cre atktuser . I J SHvt. ASSOCIATED rKESS ) entitled to the use for vnlliHfi of i . - 588 106 Oregon, as tecoud class matter. LINEN' V i dentials. Who is he that he should carry the threat', from the solid south to the upstanding people of the northwest? What is his inter est that he should speak for those millions down there who have al ways been fable to speak for them selves? He insists that a boycott will be the. only means to get even with the short-sighted dairymen of the northwest and bring them to their senses. 1 We weep with Mr. Ames. His tears over the shortcomings of the Oregon and Washington farm era move us to similar tears; his anguish of soul causes us to tear our material garments and fill our mouths full of dust, but the question protrudes itself upon us, Who is this new Caesar and what does he feed upon ..that he pre sumes to threaten the northwest and, where does he get his author ity to use the big-stick? When did the south delegate him, a resident of New York, one of five million, to speak fpr the south? j We pause, we hold our breath until we hear from Mr. Ames, and then we will probably be properly squelched, obliterated, extinguish ed, annihilated, blown up, and -a few other et ceteras. - COMPULSORY VOTING There is an organization very much' alive today to Induce people to vote. It will get some results this year.- However, the time is coming when we will have com pulsory voting. We have com pulsory road work now, and a lot o other things compulsory, but we neglect to make compulsory the one thing needed to make this a representative government." In all deliberative bodies the negative can claim those who do not vote. ; It is the same in gov ernment. Those who do not vote can be counted in representation and in many other things where population is considered. We have a minority i government in America. Australia has passed a compuls ory voting law. and the outcome will be watched with a good deal of Interest. The antipodean do minions have long been famous in Anglo-Saxon lands as the great laboratory of political experimen tation. The United States has not hesitated to adopt and adapt some of the proven features, our ballot being the Australian form. Amer ica, many believe, could," safely follow the Australian leadership In coercing the slacker voter by some law that imposes a penalty for ab sence, from the polls on election day. ; .i . v . . .? Australia holds to the theory that voting Is the good citizen's duty Just as much as taxnaylne. Jury service and military service in time of national emergency. The state does not permit the citi zen to decide for himself In these latter functions of citizenship. His personal whim has nothing to do with it. Why should It with voting? ; ABOUT AS EXPECTED Candidate Davis Is not a great orator but he is a great lawyer. He presented his case to the Amer ican people at Charleston, where he formerly resided In a very adroit manner. It was the special plea of the lawyer all the way through. Mr. Davis Indicted the republf- can party for corruption and fail ure to respond to the demand for better things. He was eminently correct in saying that the supreme need Of the hour in to hrln? hnct to the people confidencein their government. Then he kicked over this splendid bucket of milk by attempting to prove that our en tire government was honeycombed with graft, greed and corruption. He stood for the enforcement of all laws, including prohibition. and all: the 'statutes enacted un der It. His Idea of helping the farmers was through a revision of the! tariff. Incidentally? the democratic party has tried this panaeca several times and It al ways led to disaster. He nro- nounced in favor of the protection of women and children, the sup pression of child labor, against illicit traffic in drugs, conserva tion of all the natural resources of the country. -r Mr. Davis made a great case from the standpoint of "a lawyer. It was one-sided, but it was high ground, and has received respect ful attention. It Is not the work of a statesman. . It is the work of an adroit politician. , ' j PROSPERITY HERB ; ;T . . f We are not only face to face with prosperity but we are gradu ally entering into it. The busi ness of the country is picking up, the farmers are coming into their own, and general good times are coming. There Is a Jubilant spirit all over the country, not a wild. ungovernable one. but one of ex ultant anticipation of the future. In a recent address in Chicago Paul Davis, a great merchant, de livered himself as follows 1 "We are facing an era of great prosperity, one of the greatest the country has ever experienced. We are feeling very good over cfons and prices In Iowa: Thn rrnni promise fine since the recent rains and the advance in prices of farm products has certainly put new life into everything. The increases were a long time coming, but they nave arrived. Discontent is ranM ly disappearing, and we are enter ing upon a period of peace as wen as prosperity." ; r ; ' The return was indeed a long "Bie coming, nut Is all the more appreciated now that it has arriv ed. At bottom the American far. mer is an optimist. If he were not an optimist he would not long remain a farmer. It Is an occu pation that calls jfor courage, hopefulness and stafnina to1 with stand disappointment. 'i- 4 j The farmer is coming Into his own again and,: by the same token, a number I of pessimistic, gloom spreading, happiness-chasing poli ticians are about due for the po litical skids. XO, NO! Our good friend George Henry Payne of New York, city has been walking wobbly it politically for Borae time. lies' has gone clear off on one thing. He wants the republicans of Montana not to put anyone up against Walsh. There is Just one man in Mon tana or the nation who needs a licking worsa than Walsh and that is Wheeler. Walsh was unfair in his investigations,: partisan to an obnoxious degree,: and deserves nothing of the country. He sought to undermine the respect of the people for their government. He was ruthless in hunting derelict republicans only. His investiga tion was the most monumental failure ever seen in' America. It was a mountain laboring hard and only brought forth a mouse. Mr. Payne is a great American, a man with vision and courage; generally; upstanding, but this time he is wobbling so that his vision is " zig-zag, and he sees dimly as; through glasses, darkly. TAX EQUALIZERS MEETING It is not unusual; for a tax equalizer board to meet. They do this . every year. But over at Boise, Idaho, a commission is meeting ! for the purpose of iron ing out all the inequalities of tax ation in the state of Idaho.. It can not' be done. With all our effort through a period of more than 2,000 years we have not been able to ; evolve a taxing system that has been equalized or fair. Every tax law we have is a make shift, and smart men have been able to evade Just taxation. It may be possible to evolve a system of equal taxation and we hope the Idaho commission will do it, but we have no evidence that any member of that commission is a super-man, and 'it will take a super-man to bring order out of the taxation chaos- that exists all over the world. WHERE IS HE? We have been curious to find the political whereabouts of our inena, i jfeie Zimmerman. Ike Patterson heard him make a fine republican speech at the Yamhill county! gathering and then later he was being accused of consort ing with the La ' Follette forces We hope this is not true. While a man does not take a real obli gation to suoDort a 1 ticker, wtien he enters the primaries in Oreeon he certainly does take a moral obligation, and that obligation should be respected, at least to the point of keeping quiet in the campaign. We are anxious to hear from our friend Pete. We are afraid he is being misrepre sented. . . CANNOT COME IN The Clarke county. Washington Prune! Growers' association will not be able to Join the Northwest rrune exchange this year because It will be nesessary for them to get a majority of their members to sign.! This can not be dorm In time to bevof any use in the or-. ganization and to market the crops.; However, the Clarke coun ty exchange is in entire sympathy wnn me movement and next Jan uary it will Join; The Northwest Prune is the most satisfactory coopera tive organization that has ever been - put into effect, and unless unexpected obstacles am confront ed it will solve the problem of co operative effort. V A PITY T ; ' The Oregon Statesman Is mighty sorry that the Albany Democrat has fallen from grace to the ex tent j of taking a , straw vote for president. Notoriously straw votes are unreliable. They never were known to ring true. You can't get 100 men to vote their convictions On a itnv t . 11 Tnere is somethin? ahnnt t . arouses mischief in a man or re- 1. dui true it is that men do not vote their convictions in si raw ballot r v -v We were in hopes this president tial campaign would get by with out! any straw votes, but the Al bany Democrat has started It and win yrooaoiy grow. BIG FUNERALS v Dr. B. L. Steevea I of a philosopher. Recently he was standing on the street corner with a friend when a long funeral procession passed. The subject naturally turned to that, and the doctor said: - ' - . - "There are three elements in big f"neraj8- One j is you must be a Jlner" and . be a member of all the recret societies. Another is you must die not later than mid dle life. People win not turn out for .funeral for old people. - Atf- other thing about a big funeral is that . the recipient is In . no pc-. sition o enjoy it." j i ' v , DANGER FROM FIRES The Oregon Statesman confesses to impatience with those who are minimizing the effect of fires this time ojt the year under the present dry conditions. According to re ports jfiled here the fire loss in Oregon last month was $810,410. We j can not understand how anyone should want to follow pleasure to the danger and detri ment jof the property Interests of the state. i M V MARRIAGE PROBLEMS Adder Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Copyright by Newspaper j Feature Service CHAPTER 24 0. j -. IS MADGE NOT DESIRED AT THE CONFERENCE? Lillian saved the day for me, as always.: ' - ' Wth her quick perceptions, she had seen how my enthusiastic response to Allen Drake's request that I help him in his code work had been chilled by the sudden thought of Dicky's certain reac tion to such a proposition. And she knew, of course, that I did not wish Allen Drake to see my dismay. If I wished later to re scind my promise, I could have a plausible excuse ready. All these things, I was sure, were back ol her drawling comment, f "Just a moment, Allen, dear. I'm (this prima donna's manager, if anybody should happen to ask you J and she haint goin' in no new profesh unless I say so. And you'll have to come across hand some with my bit first. So we'll sign no contract today. . Besides, we haven't any time for dating up new1' stars'. . Do you realize that we've got a stiffish bit of work cut out for ; us in the next few dayls getting a line on some of the names Madge has decoded for us? This chap. Warden, for instance. Isn't he the one " A knock on the door startled us all. It was a majestic knock, a knock that plainly meant busi ness - with not the slightest non sense about it, a knock which we all j knew could come only from my august mother-in-law. , You're right," Mr. Drake said in a low tone, with a deft move ment gathering up the papers on the table and depositing them in his breast pocket. "When can we confer? Tomorrow morning, Chief?" "Have You Forgotten?" My father had moved toward the door and had his hand on the knob. . . j Yes,'; he said laconically. Then he threw open the door, and my mother-in-law majestic, ' but for a wonder, good-natured confronted us. Have you all forgotten it's dinner-time?" she demanded. "Dinner's been ready a quarter of an hour. I told that ape of a Katie to call you, and supposed she had. But when I went Into the kitchen just now she was sit ting with her apron over her head and 'said she was afraid to come up here for fear someone's say she was listening at doors. I'm gjad somebody's put the proper fear into her. But you'd better hurry down. Nothing will be fit to eat." i She turned, swept majestically away, and Lillian called after her reassuringly: "Call the roll in three minutes, and we'll all an swer present." I "Very well," came the dignified answer, and Lillian turned to us. j "That gives us two minutes for Prinking," she estimated. "Come along, Madge." j Spurred by the thought of Mo ther Graham being kept waiting fjr her dinner, with the awful congealing of her mood which such a catastrophe inevitably en tails, we were downstairs In a second or two less than the ap pointed time, and met my father and Allen Drake at the dining room door. Madge la Disappointed. "Pipe Katie," Lillian whispered. and the sight of my temperamen tal little maid -was one calculated to bring a smile to the most seri ous face. She evidently had de cided that our tardiness was a deliberate insult to her dinner. jand Katie's offended dignity is something marvellous to behold. Statuesque and forbidding she stood in the door leading to the kitchen : with the manner of 1 j M.inl,lnM .t. tWt - piuuu warucr waicuiug iub : 111- mates file in to supper. And when we were seated she moved around . the table with : stately mien, passing the dishes as if they 'were warrants for our execu tion. vft3 I felt an almost irresistible de sire to giggle, and in subduing it was forced to adopt an unusually sombre expression. That , the others shared my dilemma, I knew from their own solemn be havior,1 and the result was an al most silent meal, from which we escaped with a universal slghf relief to the' living-room, '"where the Indispensable Jerry Ticer had built a blazing wood fire'. "What have you planned to do tomorrow, Margaret?" my mother-in-law asked. My heart descended rapidly In the general direction of my walk ing shoes. The next morning would see the conference of my father, Lillian and Allen Drake over -the names which I had de coded. I guessed that there would be set in motion a system of es pionage upon the persons whose names I had learned, and every thing inquistlve and adventurous within me longed to be present to see the setting in motion of the machine. But I did not know that I was expected to be present, There had been many other con ferences of these three to which I had not been invited, I cast a furtive look around the circle , to eee If my mother-in-law's question had aroused any mental protest. But each of the three was looking in some direc tion other than mine, whether in tentionally or not, 1 could not, of course, say, but the conviction nevertheless was borne in upon me that my presence at the next morning's conference, was for some reason, not desired. (To be continued) EDITORIALS OF THE PEOPLE Cost Plus and Other Subjects Editor Statesman: (I have. read in recent numbers of The Statesman articles on the subject of " "cost plus" which Is a condensed form of the old ax iom, "The buyer; pays the freight," and is the reason newly discovered fields of enterprise do not develop as rapidly as their natural advantages of soil, cli mate, water power, etc., would seem to warrant. ; The Pacific coast is far more favored by nature than the At lantic and will in time be as den sely populated as that section now is. Cost plus against us is a great detriment, and to even partially overcome it we must present facts unusually attractive to the capital ists whom we seek to interest in Oregon industries, and even when we believe we have done this we are sometimes met with more ex act information regarding our in dustries than we are able to im part and it is shown that a pre mature -accession to our wishes would be a permanent injury to all concerned. We have a climate and soil adapted to the growth of the sugar beet, and at one time a factory was established at La Grande and a considerable area cultivated. There was no fault found with the quality of the product yet the en terprise was unremunerative and brought nothing but loss to all concerned and postponed the day when the beet sugar industry will be a success in Oregon. ; For many years it has iaeen known that there are practically inexhaustible deposits of iron within an hour's drive from tide water in Columbia county, and it is possible that the day of its de velopment is near at hand. Many years ago a graduate of the Wis consin College of Mining pro nounced the ore to.be equal in quality to that of the famous Mes aba range and men who were com petent to present the subject from every , angle except one visited the east with the object of interesting capital in developing this basic in dustry. , They told the story as well as it could be told and then to their astonishment they found that their listeners were just a little better posted on every par ticular than their ; would-be infor mants. Everything they said was admitted to be the truth and they were shown samples of the same ore they had brought from Oregon and maps of the iron bearing dis trict; but they were told that when the time came for development and manufacture of iron in Ore gon there would he no need to urge it upon them as they would be glad to take the initiative. The great inducement for the starting of new industries is 'of course a reasonable demonstra tion that there will be a prof U. '"Cost plus" is a deterrent and Is taken into consideration. In the linen industry however it would not be important as compared with iron and sometime, no doubt, there will be a linen mill in Salem and a vast acreage of flax. Cer tainly it has been demonstrated that the agricultural phase of the program is a success and the pion eer woman to whose initiative we owe this great resource should be honored as fully as she undoubt edly will be in the years to come Very sincerely, E. H. FLAGG. Governor General Wood Urges Filipinos to be Good MANILA, July 4. (AP) In a message of greeting to be read in all the schools of the Philippines at the opening of the new school year. Governor General Leonar 1 Wood says: " ;:;ri : I "Most of you have arrived upon tie scene In an epoch' when hu man knowledge Is advancing mors rapidly than - ever before in the history of the world. Th devel opments of science in the present generation are ! many and varied. They have added . much to our knowledge, given us new instru mentalities and means for develop ment and research, and opened new fields of activity. . .. "You j must all remember, how ever, that faith in God, honesty. morality, ; thrift, industry and steadfastness of purpose are just THE STATESMAN'S TRIP CONTEST Standing of Candidates the rlnatandlnf S rePresen the votes polled In the ballot' the candidates up to noon Tuesday, August 12, 1924: Allen .Bern ice. 290 South Twenty-first street a tf' TJ M" 3 9 North Tweity-flm .?... Alklre. Rita. 923 North SixU-enth street' Amort,; Rose -State hocpital . ......... .. . . . Amsler. Elva,1043 South High s'treVt' ".'.!"' ' " Anderson, Hazel, route 8 . . " ' " Aufrane, Yvonne. 1086 Center !" " " " " Bar ow. Miss Vernice. 1730 Falrmount" " Bocke, Mrs., 298 North Twenty-third " Backe,: Mrs. Velmar route 1 Beck. Lucy, 422 South High ' ........... Beckett. Genieve. 2525 Hazel Beckett r.gvmn .,'... i . . nfJIT6' ."5 North Capitol f . vi.i jst4 North Liberty ... Brock; Dorothy, 854 North Commercial ."--Bromway, Myrtle, 555 Marion . " Brown. Katherine, Oregon State libraVy". " ""' Brown. Berriice, Cottage street .""- nrTvn;, xsJ c-u' 1717 North Libert ;;:::; " Bud will, Zola M.. Hoyt and Commercial Brassfield. Helen, Fairgrounds road Breitenstein, ! Miss Cldra. Salem " Breithaupt, Miss Irene. 733 Ferry Buckels, Miss, 298 North Twenty-third Bossick. Mrs;,. 1944 North Capitol ... Buss. Miss Jl 892 South Twelfth Canby, Dorothy, 2780 Brooks avenue"! wi " M 1 ' Cannoy, Fetha. route 2 ........... . " " ' Casperson, Miss, Salem hospital Claxton, Alice. 1265 North Cottage Cleary. Mrs.: James; North Seventeenth '. " Connar, Anna,-State hospital .. . Crowder. Dakota. 116 Marlon street ! " " Currie, Mabel, South Commercial, corner Leslie " ? Dancer, Dorothy, route 7 . ... ..... ......... Drager, Ruby.- 1138 North TiMftw oiV Edwards. Mrs. C. A.. 298 North Fifteenth Erion, Bernice, Oregon theatre . Falk, Grace, 506 North Commercial Faugbt, Jessie, 1510 Bellevue " Farmer. Alma. 835 North Cfm m ayntn 1 Flndley, Edith. 225 North Twentieth . Findley. Pauline, 225 North Twentieth Freeman, Mrs. Grace, Feeble Minded Institution' Galloway, Blanche, Salem Auto Co. ... ... Gardner, Mrs. Hannah,' Hotel Argo .,"" " Geer, Leona, 475 North Commercial ". . " " uerimger, Madeline, Dallas, Ore. ... George. Hazel, 360 State street .. . Gore, Miss: Grace, 545 Court , ..... Griffith. Ruth, State hospital Gwynn, Maude, 1480 North Fifth . Hackett, Blanche, route 1. ... . . . ..... ... HalL Ruth, 565 North Cottage ";!! Halvorsenj Ruth, corner South Church and Cross nausea, itoDerta, 18U East Miller-....' Heinick, Evangeline. 823 North Commercial . 1 Heinick, Elois, 823 North Commercial j T t 1 am - . " iiaiwu, iua, 22a superior'....... Hewitt, Thelma, 2230 North Fourth Hirons. Mrs. G. W." 2417 Traifo Horner, Lucille, 245 Division . . . . '. . '. : ; " " " Hickman, Fleda, 1 block South Hoyt, mi.S, cVmrnVrciai Hockett, Lois. 1603 North Commercial ' Hummell, Mrs., 1818 North Capitol .... nunungton, la velie, Yoncalla, Oregon Jaquet, Alice, Silverton . . . . ..... A-.-, . . Jasper, Clara. North Sixteenth Johnson. Thelma, 144 West Miller ... . Jones, Miss Florence, 606 South Church Judson. Carol, 1244 Waller Kate, Mrs. j Andy, Bligh Theatre . .. Keebler, Laura, 553 Shipping , Kibble, Miss Margaret, 695 South Commercial Kilian. Catherine, 210 Center . . . . . Kirk, Uinta, Chema wa. Ore. ..... 7 ...... '. " Kunkle, Anna, Bligh theater ' Lainson, Mrs. Stanley, 1460 State street Larson, Irene, 542 North Liberty . . ... Leavenworth, Martha, South Thirteenth ... Lisle, Esther, 1041 South Thirteenth . . . . Lucas, Winnifred, 1042 Saginaw . . . , McCallum.j Mrs. Hazel .. . . . . ....... . . ........ McKelroy, Mary, Valley Motor company McElroy, Marn, Certified market. Church street Mclntyre, Miss Gladys, 527:, Center Macy, Miss Mabel, 810 South Fourteenth . Maden, Miss Grace . . .... ... ................ Marnach, Pauline, South High ........... Miller, Miss Hazel, Turner, Ore. ..: Miller, Mrs. H., Detroit, Ore. . . . ... Vneh T?ctVia C(o). rD. ..wln:- Needham, ;Mrs. C. N., 558 State ............... " ; ' '. Newcombe, Beatrice Crawford, route 2, box 179 ........ Newgent. Mrs. J. R., 265 South Eighteenth ........ " Page, Virginia, route 1 .1 ..!! Falmerton, Mizpah, office of Superintendent of Public In struction .v Papenfus, Alice, Thirteenth and Morrison Patterson- Pauline, 495 South Winter " Paumalo, Nellie, 818 North Commercial Payne, Violet M., 1795 Corth Capitol Pelley, Lottie, 340 Division street . .1. . .........! I Peetz, Hazel. Turner. Ore. 1 Phillips. Dorothy, 482 Jerris ............ . Pike. Pearl, 2000 South High Plank, Heloise, 23G5 South Commercial ......... i Pope, Florence, 1809 Market .... ; . ':v. . Ii""I Powell. Gladvs. 1980 North ComTnerfal ........ Power, Atiss Florence, 253 North Thirteenth Prime, Adaline, 1500 Ferry Pro. Margaret. 2240 North Liberty .. Reid, Rit;a, 72 2 State ... Rielev. May. State hosnital Ritchie, Alene, 2595 North Fourth ititchie, winnirred, 2595 North Fourth Roberts, Beulah, 1055 South Thirteenth . Rhodes. Katherine. State Deaf school . . . Rogersdale,. Mrs., Salem. hospital . , , . .. . Ross, Miss Leah, 498 North Liberty ..... Rossick. Mrs., 1944 North Capitol..... Sande, Helen, 1965 Trade ............. Savage, Katherine; 634 Ferry .......... Schlagelj May, 2289 North Liberty Schwab. iMiss Nellie, 533 North Sixteenth Seng, Miss Helen, 595 North Fourteenth Seymour; josepnme, i4Za iortn winter . Shaw, Marion. 1565 South Commercial .. Shipp, Jean, 406 Hoyt street . . . . ...... Smith, Nadeen, care Condit & Glover Snyder, Violet. 675 South Twelfth Spusser.j Miss-Emily, 116 Marion Starr, Rbby. route 9 .................. , Starr, Routh, route 9 . . ; Steingrube, Mrs. Nina, 2265 State street . . Summeryille, Mrs.. Bob, Bligh Theater Taylor. Mrs. Albert, 1245 Madison ..... . , Thompson, Esther, route 8 . . J . . . . . i Thompson. Mrs. W. G., 2640 Lee . . . . . Tit i ir. t,nnt.nt Vincent j Juanita, 960 Broadway , .... ... Waldespel, Luella, 1144 Ferry street ...........;. Walker.! Myrtle, 378 South Twenty-first .........."." Ward, Mrs..M. L., 1487 Broadway : ........."" Weiser, IFrances, 322 State ...;.. Wenger Tresta, 1125 North Summer ...........! Williams, Miss Dolores, 253 North Thirteenth ..v..... I" Williams. Gertrude, 201 North Twenty-fifth . ... ..." Winkelman, Helen, Salem ...j..'.,..................... Woods, j Mrs. Rose, Royal Cafeteria ............ .. 1 1 Young. Katherine, Fairgrounds road i . . . . . . .... . . . . . . Zamker; Lena, State hospital !. .............. A .... Zendle, : Cornelia. Water street , 'ZIV lacionXQttte , . . . . . . , , "1 1 as essential to success, today as in the 'past. You can best repay the sacrifices which; your people' have made by improving to the best of your ability the opportuni ty given you to prepare yourselves to be good and useful citizens." It might be worse; In a great author's collected works not over two-thirds were written' before he learned how. GREAT SEASHORE box for 100 100 100 160 100 160 180 125 , 220 100 100 100 100 195 120 100 100 100 100 300 100 160 100 220 100 100 100 160 100 360 140 100 160 145 100 100 110 400 130 100 100 140 100 110 100 100 130 120 100 110 100 140 100 .100 . 100 100 .100 110 100 100 120 645 100 100 190 100 120 205 100 100 100 105 10O 100 220 10O 110 140 100 100 101 101 100 100 110 100 1,410 100 100 220 - 100 ; 100 100 10a 110 100 145 100 510 100 160 100 130 100 100 100 185 100 100 100 123 105 100 185 100 790 100 100 100 180 120 100 140 100 100 100 100 100 100 9S0 120 100 t 100 100 100 105. 10O 140 100v 100 135 100 995 100 100 100 100 135 100 100 ion 1C0 ' e - i . 4 . " i 1 ... . ' ... 1 I i 1 t 4 r t 4 4 4. i A i i t 1 4 i "A. T 4 1 . t 4 i