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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1924)
McCollough Will Head Kiwanis Club for Year C. B. McColIough, bridge en gineer for the state highway de 'partment, has been nominated for president of the Kiwanis club for the coming year by the special nominating committee. Ralph Cooley is recommended for rice president; Roy Melson, for treas urer and Ed Schunke for district trustee. Directors will be O. J. : WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR AND TOOLS 1 Capital Hardware & ; 1 Furniture Co. j l Best Price raid 285 X. Com'l St. l'bone 847 akery S t i ' - , Pastries and rolls for the Thanksgiving dinner. Spe- cial orders taken care of. Home of Iletter-Vet" Bread MISTLAND BAKERY Glenn Gregg, .Earl Gregg 1007 Chemcketa rhone 344 S3 1 E.V B1 For Your Engraved - ft Christmas Greeting Cards 1.1 i Insure Early Deliv ery, v Y BOOK STORE Kf, 3 Order Now and rw fflTlTflEATfO pa U9 mm- 'FHYSIOAN Trtl3 HOTV mON-CONTAlSINQ VEGETABLES "St.XH A3 lENTCi. SPI21A.CH. APPLES. ETC "WHEN RZICJLLARLY TAKCW 7TTH ORGANIC " SWX4 BU9LO GSEAT STRENGTH AKD E.NPURANCS "At their ' own doors- in the very gardens of those who -are weak, nervous and ailing air the while is one of the most valuable tcnics and atrength-builders known to medical, science," said a well known New; England physician, when consulted recently, v The doctor further said: "If your dally diet contains an abund ant amountTof iron you are giving your body the red blood food it craves. But if your blood lacks iron and is thin, pale and watery you cannot expect to be strong ' and well. On the contrary, your nerves become weakened aniyou become Irritable, fussy and easily -upset. In uch cases, what you need is iron organic iron to re move the cause of your trouble, and the moment organic iron is supplied it is often wonderful how quickly your multitude of symp toms will disappear and how strong and vigorous you will be come." But be careful to dis tinguish between ordinary metal lic Iron" which people usually take -and true organic iron. Metallic -iron isiiron Just aa it comes from . r- r ; - 7- . " V ; ;, . , Myers, K3:K. AIbin,rA.. Nelson? K. P. Slade, Frank Ketlogg, G. E. Terwilliger and Fred Broer. , . Officers at present are Henry E. Morris, president; Carl D. Gabriel son, Tice president; Tero M. Hicks, treasurer: N. D. Elliott, secretary; Fred Erixon. district trustee; directors, Dan J. Fry.Jr., Ed Schunke, W. W. Long, J. H. Nicholson. Cooke Patton, Bert Ford and Oliver J. Myers. The election of officers v,-i!l be held at a special meeting next month. I . Artilleryman Taken From Train Under Arrest; Re leased Upon Bail Sergeant G. Vf'. Newman, 82nd field artillery, battery A, of Van couver Barracks In charge of re cruits for Fort Bliss, Texas dep osited $5 bail and was allowed to go on hW way Saturday after he was removed from a train by a policeman here following an af fray among the recruits on the train.' 1 The party left Vancouver and laid in Portland several hours, where some of the rookies became Intoxicated. The sergeant put them on the train and to bed. They did not remain In bed, how ever, and Newman was called by the conductor to quiet the drunk en . gang,- who were conducting themselves in a disorderly manner In the smoking compartment. He grappled with two recruits and put them in bed. The conductor had wired ahead to Salem for a police officer to ; arrest Newman, who was in charge. The two recruits Involved In the traces are O. H. Livsey and Frank W. iVinecare. "Girls will be girls" in spite of the fact that some of them on Coos bay are trying to be boys. OLD SETTLER DIES FOLIOIII ILLNESS Sanford j Watson, Well Known Farmer, Crossed Plants Back in 1849 Sanford Watson died here Sat urday morning "after a lingering illness. He was well known in Salem where he has resided for many years. . Mr. watson was Dora in spring field, .Illinois, on December 31, 1845. Crossed the Dlaina to Ore gon with his parents, Sanford and Maria Elder Watson in. l4.. nis boyhood and young mannood was tnpiit nn the old Watson honie- sted In Spring Valley, Polk county. He was a prominent farmer ana stock raiser, having exhibited fine horses at Oregon's state fair, tor years. In California he engaged in growing oranges ana uuwem. , H wn married in 1885 to Miss Mary Bridges, at. that time dean of tne art department or Wil lamette .university, , tne aiea tai their noma in ; los Angeies " 1916. Since that time Mr. Wat son has divided his time between the cities of Los Angeles, Salem and Portland. f Ho served with the national guard for eight years, during the 80's, the latter part of that period he was captain of company B of Salem. He leaves one sister, miss nooiiia v. k Watson. . four nieces and four nephew Misses Lillian' and Pearl Applegate,. Mrs. cyrus Ii. Woodworth. Warren U. Appie- gate, Glen Applegate, Mac Apple gate, Ralph A. Watson and Mrs. Hortense Watson Millsap. He was a member of tne congrega tional church of Los Angeles and the Elks lodge of Salem. Yon have! a righttto do a lot of things that you have no business doing. . ' . . . ': ; You may be glad you're alive -but who else is. , . ; YOU fit the action of strong acids on Iron filings, while organic iron is a true red blood food, like the iron In i-our blood itself and like the iron in spinach, lentils and apples. In fact if you will eat a pint or two bf pinach,; half a pint of lentils and three or four baked apples each day you will probably not need to take any other form of or ganic iron; but most people pre fer to eat a smaller quantity of iron-containing vegetables and take organic iron, like Nuxated Iron, with them. It is like taking extract of beef instead of eating pounds of meat. To prove to yourself what Nuxated. Iron can do for you,' get your doctor, to take a specimen of your blood and make a "blood count""of your red blood corpuscles; then take .Nux ated Iron for a month and have a new "blood count" made and see how f; your, red blood corpuscles have increased and how much stronger and better you feel; see how the color has come back to your cheeks, . how steady . and strong 'your cervea have become. At all druggists. SERGEANT IfJ BAD OVEn HIS ROOKIES HOWARD HILL IS WIIERFORlElt Rescue of An Imprisoned Youth Brings Award to Local Boy Scout The hest good turn for this week In the Boy Scout" prpgram goes to Howard Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. T. B. Hill, 16C0 Fir, who rescued little Donald i Stock well from a very dangerous, posi tion and possibly saved him from serious injury. - i :. .' The little fellow had1 crawled on the top of the Shipley building 011 Washington street and was trying to get from the outside of the building to the inside. He pushed his head through a small aperture but ; was unable to get the rest ot his body through the opening, neither was he able to extract his head from ; the open ing and consequently was held a prisoner. I Donald had been there for some time before his cries and screams attracted the attention of How ard Hill. The prisoner was re leased after Hill had held him up while the heatl was extracted from the. opening.; There were no injuries sustained; by the prison er, who, however,! was thorough ly frightened by the ordeal. How ard Hill is a member of Troop 2, and of the Panther Patrol. He is also a student at the Salem -high school. ; i - : Flax Will Be Discussed At Forum Lunch Monday Two flax experts will speak upon this crop and the future of the linen industry at the Cham ber of Commerce , luncheon Mon day noon. " i "What I Saw in England" is the topic aspigned to B. C. Miles and "What I Expect to See in the Willamette Valley" the subject of T. B. Kay. Mr. Miles recently made a trip to the flax center iof the world In Europe. He will discuss the flax machinery and what he learned first hand. Some of the results of his investigation of the industry will be related by Mr. Kay. FOOTBALL RESULTS J At Seattle: University of Wash ington 14; WSC O.i At Berkeley: California 20; Stanford 20. At Corvallis: Oregon 7; OAC 3. At New Haveni ; Yale 19; Har vard 6. ' . i At Champaign, III.: Illinois 7; Ohio 0. : - ' ; At Ann Harbor: Michigan 2; Iowa 9. At Chicago: , Northwestern 6: Notre Dame 13. ' ! At Los. Angeles: USC 13; Idaho 0. -.-! At Boulder, Colo.: University of Colorado 36; Colorado Aggies 0 -At Colorado Springs: Colorado College 28; University of Wyom ing 3. ; At Manhattan: Nebraska 2 4 ; Montana 20; Kansas Aggies 0. At Walla Walla: Whitman 0. - ; At Forest Grove;! Pacific Uni versity, 26; Willamette 0. At Salem: Salem High 25; Grant High, Portland, 0. I BITS FOR BREAKFAST It was great '.V . 1 The corn show and industrial exhibit. I I ... ! : V About 10,000 people attended; doubled number of year also. Make It 20.000 next year. A:' i Man at the writer's elbow says Salem Is getting to be a real city, Judged by the automobiles on the down town streets around noon and 6 o'clock. While the people of Salem are more nearly 100 per cent ladies and gentlemen than can be found in a like population elsewhere on earth, therefore con siderate of the rights of- others, this friend makes these sugges tion: --. :t v m, i With her largely increased police force, an officer ought to be spared at the noon hour, say for 30. minutes, ; and at the 6 o'clock rush, say for 45 minutes, for the corners of State and Com mercial, State and Liberty and State and High, to direct the traf fic, for even gentlemen and lady drivers cannot always manage their .cars In a crowd, so as to avoid possible accidents, j I i m i This same man suggests that at the back of the postoffice the automobile traffic ought to I be obliged to all go one way. Two way traffic there may at any time cause a serious accident. One way traffic would incovenience no one seriously. Talking over the telephone (everybody's doing it.) there is now one telephone for every seven people in the United States. - In 1900 there was one for every 57. : . "k . Corvallis was true to her name yesterday. Corvallis means heart of the valley.- i , 'i I : There was general rejoicing yesterday over the fact that Salem is to have a $200,000 Y, M. C. A. building, properly equipped. ; Pour of the scutchers at the state "flax were put to work yes terday. Six will be working to morrow, and the whole 22 by the end of the eek the largest flax scutching -plant in the world and to be doubled for next year. Every! eiectnc ngnt and every machine at "the penitentiary Is now being run by the new water power plant. OREGON WINS FROM AGGIES; SCORE 73 (Continued from page 1) yards, and Anderson threw Tebb on Oregon's six-yard line. The Aggies tried three line bucks and a -pass and failed to make the ne cessary yardage, Oregon getting the hall on downs. The Webfooters held the Ag gies several times for downs in the 'last quarter.' the ball bein?: in Oregon's territory most of the time. That the game was slow was the statement made by a number of Salem people who witnessed the contest and was remarked also by Portland newspapermen who were present. - Display of spirit and features between the halves were highly appreciated by the spectators, who packed the large stadium to capac ity. Three airplanes, flaunting OAC colors, the orange and the black, maneuvered above the field, dipping as close to the ground as safety permitted. i Traffic on the highways prior to the game and immediately after the contest was almost one solid line of cars. This moved at the rate of 2.1 miles an hour end every one was forced to keep in line. No serious accidents were reported. Immediately after the game the OAC football team with Kenneth Zell of Salem, football manager, boarded a train for Nebraska where they will meet the Univers ity of Nebraska Thursday. Lineup and summary j Oregon (7) OAC (3) Smith LE . Ward Reed . . . . . . . LT . . . . Micklewaite Shields LG , Richert Wilfion i . .. . .C Balcom Dailey .. RG . ... Lyman Kerns RT . . Dickerson Mautz ..... .RE Tebb Anderson QB ........ . .Price Vitus.,. .. .LIT. ... Schulmerich Terjesen . . . .RH Bell Jones FB Snyder Periods Oregon ....... . 0 0 0 7 7 OAC ..... .... 3 0 0 03 OAC scoring: Field goal, Schul merich. Oregon scoring: Touchdown. Mautz. Point from try after touch down. Reed. i Referee: Ted Faulk, Tacoma; umpire, Harry Dorman. Portland; Time of periods, 15 minutes. Radio Fans are Wanted By German Government BERLIN. Nov. 3. (AP) To get distrustful German villagers ac quainted with the novelty of radio entertainment, and to induce them to buy sets of their own, the postal authorities contemplate the tem porary installation of loudspeaker, sets in the social halls or inns of every German village, free, of charge. Besides entertainment, news of the day and market re ports of special interest for farm ers will be broadcast. I TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT APARTMENTS ! 5 Furnished apartments, 292 No. Summer. Rent reasonable. 5n25 These amazing reductions upon Overcoats like ours offer you the biggest opportunity you have had for a loner time. We are making this sale one of the biggest events in our history. Yesterday's selling has broken all previous records. Tomorrow will do the same. 1: Lot 1 Regular $25 Values ! COME IN EARLY Big R STUDENTS TO S Chicago University Will Study Old English Doc- uments in Classes CHICAGO, Nov. 21 (AP) New light on social, economic and industrial conditions in England, during a period of over five cen turies, is expected to be obtained when careful study is made of nearly 2't00 documents," once the property of the famous Bacon family. This collection, which has been in England, , has. been purchased for the University of Chicago by Martin A. Ryercon of this city. ; ' ' In 'the middle of the sixteenth century Sir Nicholas Bacon, after wards Lord Keeper of the Great Seal under Queen Elizabeth, ac quired a large estate 'surrennding the hunting lodge of the Abbot of Bury; St. Edmunds, which had been in the possession of the mon astery since before I he conquest. lie received the deeds, charters, manor rolls, and other documents connected with the property. His ekiesti son, Nicholas, who was a half brother of Lord Francis Ba con, acquired by marriage . addi tional landed property and the documents relating to it. The col lection was further increased un til the end of the seventeenth century, when ' the properties passed into the hands of Sir Thomas Holt, father of Lord Chief Justice Holt. i . Few of the libraries of England possess a collection of equal ex tent and continuity, it is. said.. at the university. J. There are more than 1050 deeds bf which 400 are on; vellum. There also are 741 court ; andf computus rolls of 19 manors in Norfolk . and Suffolk, from the thirteenth to the six teenth centuries, and also 143 family letters of the Bacon fam ily. Among historical ' personages who either signed or both wrote and signed somej of these letters are Sir Edward "Coke, the great lawyer; Lord Chief Justice Holt, Francis Russell, Thomas Sack vilfe, ' and Sir Francis Walsing ha'm, sepretary of state- to Queen Elizabeth. There: is a letter of the privy council dated at Windsor, Sept. "17. 1604. and signed by Lords Lennox. Suffolk, Northum berland, Cranborne, Balmerino, Stanhope and Sir William Knolles: It is addressed to Sir Nicholas Bacon as high sheriff, of Suffolk. Salmon From Many Seas Gather at Lake Ontario OTTAWA, No. 21. (AP) Sal mon from the seaboards of Ameri ca live and grow fat in the waters of Lake Ontario and the streams of British Columbia, according to a bulletin issued by the Canadian Department of Marine and Fish eries announcing' success of a six year experiment.; Fully matured sockeyes, native tp he Pacific This Store was crowded all day yesterday with Overcoat Buyers. ' 1 Tomorrow will be a still greater day. Come early. Lot 2 Regular 35 to 40 Values COME IN EARLY eductions CLOTHING - Coast, have been taken from Lake Ontarfo this year and two-year-old Atlantic salmon have been caught in the Pacific coming down the Cawichan river of Vancouver Is land. . An average of 200.000 young Bockeye have- been ; released in Lake Ontario each year since 1918, and 500,00 Atlantic salmon have been planted in the rivers of Brit ish Columbia in the same period. Last year's Canadian fisheries production was estimated at $42, 565,545, with British Columbia, having the most extensive. salmon' resources on the continent, ac counting for 50 ner cent of thef business. Salmon, halibut, lob ster and codfish constitute C9 per cent of the Dominion production. Unemployed Workers in England Show Increase ". ii , , LONDON, Nov. 5. (AP Near ly 11 of workers in Great Brit ain and Ireland were unemplqyed on Sept. 2 8,, according to figures published by the Ministry of Labor Gazette., The number of appli cants for employment registered MVEKIDIYS ' EXAMINED By Take SaU.r to Wapl KiWjs if liacK I'aniH ion or lllau der Bothers. , Flush your kidneys by drinking a quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted authority, who tells us that too much rich food forms acids which almost paralyze the. kidneys in their efforts to expel It from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken; then you may suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritatd, obliging you j to seek re lief two or three times during the night. To help neutralize, these irri tating acids, to help cleanse thei kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste, get four' ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of . water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes -and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys; also to neutral ize the acids in the system so they no longer irritate, thus often re lieving, bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; can not injure and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. By all means have your physician ex amine your kidneys at least twice a year. Adv. " i 0 DOCTOR 3 Lot 3 Regular 45 -50 Hart 1 Schaf f ner & Marx O'Coats COME IN on all ?Boys? O vercociiiG 'WOOIiBN hAZLULS ir mdmm at the employment exchanges had grown from 1,152,000 at the end Of August to 1,205,000 on Septem ber 29. .. I. The Gazette also records anoth er advance of four points in the 'a 'Vt We announce the opening of our lien nison depart ment with Mrs. T. L. Davidson In charge. j FREE LESSONS IN WAX WORK . Crepe Paper and many other ideas that are new and can be made at home in an f evening. (IIave you made a lLst of all those who should re ceive Holiday Greetings. Make your selection early We're proud of our line of Xmas Greet ings ' - Note rWhile it lasts $3.00 Sationery for $1.25 Freedom From Cleaning Odor , Those who have' suffered the embarrassment and inconvenience occasioned by wearing a suit cleaned by the usual process, and which retains an aroma" of the cleaning shop for many days, will appreciate the excellence of our odorless cleaning service: ,i ; 1 Cherry City Cleaners 231 N. High. EARLY STORE xc cost of living on Oct. 1. the in.: c figures, being 76 against 7 2 i i Sept. 1, and 68 on June 1. Th figures indicate a percentage a 1 vance In prices over the pre-war" level.. i V t AErorv EFAVOIRS 6 r f! Telephone 934. i Lot 4 Reg. 55, 60, 65, 70 Hart Schafner z Mars O'Coats COME IN EARLY I f I f