I ' -- fgTTWnAy MORKINC- APRIL 19. 1025 1 i 8 THC0nEG0:i5TATE3MAJI, SAtm, OUEGON - 1 1 1 - " - - " ' - ' i -ii.-arrjiGn -jr. By DORIS , f.The Junior 'Citizenship league . ftefy ' a debate .In the gymnasium ISay after acHool. The question rwaV: "Resolved;. That we should ' klcineiop aeronautics rather than t?4,navv- asour, first line of de-"'iae.'-,;Mt.. L'oVa coached the af fltxaUve "lde ..Those on his side y&re .Isabel philds. Jack Routh, Gt?jT3s fieitiod: Edith Findley. ,-iRee ancflji Paulsen coach jbe :segatlrt side, Thope oa . 4p side were iJorls Godsey, La w arpfce Engitroai; Virginia Van-Et-,'rs and - Richard Sherwin. The ; rifsatiTe won,'tn decision of the fadies "by a vpte ipt two to one. ..'.j'Jhe mechanical drawing depart . jrint is the borne of promising ,Qng architect.: Some 'very :ex- , cH$nt work-taibelng done under ' woofl. An outline ", of his work wijibe given tOTnetlme later. . .t -ur' lawn .. received its weekly Friday; . 3A , KBgJish classes have :.; practically finished their niythol jri.work including the discussion 'anhoe:; r 'i(t:.l5BaIlnWcrnts i;J-ewriting Stories. , Each: teacher : jr-aelecl thetour best from each rf.-fcer claBse,';- The, best three wifKbe .printed,' is the pest issue ;titbe Par rfsS? Periscope which wiftcome out 3yrll Jg, The judg ; eeVtfe Miss LljjpoId,"Mrs..Keeney; attdMrB." Ppmejrpy, Tbe first baggball game of fhe j tjwsou watj-plAted against Inde-. I I'-) ) , " j.; in l 4 ' 1 'fe'. v? I If ::a ' TJjtio bst is not goo4 enough unless the car will do it every time and. all the time. . I I A;mo tor that vill show great power a car that will exhibit ?i great speedj i& ol right so far! as it goes, but what you v.want (and 'whatTyou are entitled to receive, ,-in a car '; today) is sustainied power-flong sustained speed. Vnd brakes it isn't sufficient that your brakes function! well for time, j ; M i" - hli. 'j'1! If they require Iv'-and a menaced Fori you never Drakes that you constant attention to keep them working; brakes that I'need adjusting fevery little while are just as good as ;!nor brakes. : .; Vj., r . In brakes you need abbye all things, dependability I i .certainty. Uickenbacker brakes lin average service have shown 20,000 miles without us so. 4 More amazing, i never once adjusted his brakes. " ..it- , f , - . j ill l ; . i j ' , I 'i i: ; lr 1 i-i"';'H ' " J AgkiitT-he drove 1,553 miles, Canada tp MexicpaT .crossed three tnouhtain ranges Cascades, SIskiyous and Teha- cnapi ai speeu so icrnnc as iu siiaiicr an jjicviuus -records! . ' r; j -:....':: ..'' ! Thousands of turns h'u nd r ed s of hair 7 mountain switch-backs! I 1 That's eauivalent to at least 20,000 miles of average driving so far ' even looked at There's uniform And this car performance Drive this JRlckcnbacker Six yourself it , lion to you. f. w. 210 N. Cortimcrcial - $1595 it. 4. h-'0trit, ptm tmm Ml) CAP- --C---" - thm African Mariwt "j " S LvC-f! r3 T-O foi ' ' .7)! PiJ ci1 1 1 aFagrapns GODSEY pendence a week ago Friday. The scpre rih. wag 13 to 6 In favpr of Par- The next game will be play- ed May 1 here,; against! St. Paul. Sl'.'ELlluG BOOSTS LtrtEf J ! inDUSTBY Proposed Mill is Just Begin- mm, members of Lions Club Are Told r 'Frpm every Indication the lin en! mill Js to be put across in &&r leiti, ajnd it is ju3t the beginning or a jarge inausiry ior ine vv lamette valley," t declared R. , O. Snelliijg, in an address before the Liens jclub at the 'Friday- meeting at ithe; Marion hotel. has been a demonstrated fact thjat flax can be grown in the WJllaiiiette valley j to - equal the product grown in the old; country. There its -B.ly4 one exception, but I thinjt by selective growth, thjis valley can be made to produce flak that will be pn a par with any product of the entire world." - y In explaining i the development of the flax industry, after the cot ton; mii la had invaded the old coun try and thrown thousands of peo ple; out of employment, the speak- er jstatjed Napoleon bad offered a revfardj of a million francs to the l -I i . . . . . - . , ; ,f t ; onstst0Tt,ioustained, Dependable Performance frequent adjustments they know when they are going have to Worry "about; brakes that need i : 1 adjustment.! Hundreds h! . :."-M- ' - Cannon Ball Baker in his as I brakes are concerned them. ; j i performance for you! this! motor these brakes "every time and all the i Pettyjohn company nrVjOHN COMPANY k :-.- ; r, id Phone 1260 "AFTER VK iHZlXi VE h 1 V 44 WQR-T h ! QF r - mi i ..... i i i I man who. would Invent a machine to handle flax fiber spinning. ; With the entry of the cotton In dustry, flax - weaving and growing took a back step and has only came forward 1 during the recent years. .i ,J j ;;:.ji!;J N IJ '"-" - Lelfast, the city of looms and fpindleswas brought to! ber pow erful place by the work or hun dreds of years. 1 i Followins the address, : Mr. Shelling threw j the meeting open for general discussion. 1 ' - - " m'TV ,;'.w- ( RICKEY 1 . t ;, i, . i ; ij'j . A large group of friends of Mr. and MrsJ Allen A'an Cleave (Hazel Harris,) j of Portland gathered at tbe home of.'JJr.- and Mrs. Magee, Friday' evening,, and gave them fashioned charivari, i lifri: j Van Cleave Is the youngest! daughter of, D. A- Harris and for several years , has; been . an instructor in the 'Portland schools. ! : - - . - . -Mi '!' t : : ' Four members have been added o- our": community recently.- A little daughter at the Jay Strong. K.. Maxfleld. and F. Straw homed, and a son at the Chester Homer home. ;.;;.. '. ff-p. j! r : Mrs. T. Wopvert and son of Corvallis. were recent; guests' of Mr." and Mrs. L., Dickman. i Mr. and 'Mrs. Loyd Prosbotigh and family, .of Salem, spent Sun day at the D. Fryslie home. V V Mr.; and Mrs- d!. Ia. Ha r ris, M r. and -Mrs.Vli. ! W. Ma gee and son ofShaw.and , Mr, and Alrsi.iE. Myer and 'son j of Portland, were dinner guests i of. Mr. and ' Mrs. M. M. Magee, Sunday. ;;;;:i; . :;'Mrs.'iB. ;Ma'xweiV.;! pf jilj Eugene. spent the Easter vacation with her parents, Mr. and I lager. 1 . ; 4: ; Mrs. A J. i! i are a nuisance to fail you. of owners tell ! :i: Hi!! great drive from f.!l;!; - pin bends i on and; he never will repeat that time' in your will be a revela nee 1TT3 -;N-AJfcvlE 5 ; in !; i !:!: i ! i' i 1 nil Gass Curtains Insure Privacy i But Should Not Exclude Light Q F ; coarse, everybody t knows what a- glass curtain is that jrciling .. of -tlun . net or - lace which hangs next tle class to insure privacy r for those- indoors, p The, present popularity -of the i English type of-hoase with .swing-' ing casement windows, has brought .to oar -country another British, win dow mode that of using; wide draw : 4ttaina at gay chinU or iuuad - blocked, linen, which can be pushed . back to the aides in the daytime, and drawn' together at the i center at night, taking the place of a roller shade. - , j - - i The - Enrligh window may no doubt feel flattered to hare so many American ; windows copy in g ; it, bu t , it -must know that snburboa. con ditions here mr not always . the same as in England. The Ensiish country, and. suburban house likes -to hide behind its garden " wall, or . tall shrubbery,- so that a fair degree .of privacy prevails at all its win dows. .Not so the average Ameri can, snbvrban . hooMv -which stands close to the street, displaying mil its window surfaces to the -public. gase. " -The glass enrtain, therefore, is; needed to secure privacy.! And even ; if the home owner has no wfch for that, there is another potent reason why thie glass curtain of something ! light, - transparent - and thin ! should ; be hung against the pane, regard less of the type ot orerdrapery nsed"1 . within. A window with nothing : hong inside it looks drpre&singiy Bishop Berry Deplores ugly Church Bui ding's ri 1 PHILADELPHIA; April 18. Bishop Joseph F, Berry of the Methodist Episcopal church, in a crltlclspi published in an ecclesias tic paper, fairly castigates Ichurch bnildiogs. for the. sin of ugliness. "Grotesque,", "unsightly," "at rocious" and "misfits" are a few Of ; Bishop Berry's descriptive phrases, which he heaps on pre sent day church architecture. He defends - his accusation on the ground of many years' Careful ob servation - of ecclesiastic building, and his dedication of more than 300 Methodist Episcopal churches his tenure of office. I "Xo other class of public or priva:e buildings has. been'; bung led ko generally," the bishop says of churches. He further adds the sin of erecting what " he I terms "square, . over-grown dry-goods boxes" has not been confined to any. : section, but extends j from Maine to California, j although being worst, in the middle and ar west, because those territories are newer and less conservative. - i f ("Everything has been sacrificed to obtain the maximum seating capacity at the minimum j cost. The. architectural misfits are by no : means confined to ( the west and south, -we have them In the east. Now to my simple mind the Ideal school ' of church '. architec- ture is the Gothic. Its lines are always ; simple, chaste and satis fying.- ;. The suggestion is one of worship." , '.' ; f. :. -: . The senior bishop stresses this point. It Is the purpose Jof a church;; he says, to express religi ous impulse outside as well as afford a jIac for their expression Inside, j i "The character, j of a church building is so closely rela ted: to the possibilities of spiritual work which should be done within its sacred walls, that to make .a failure out of a church building is an act that comes very near to being a crime. J?ecause, a build ing is of low cost is no reason why it should be ugly, . The blunders made by building: com mittees ; within my knowledge make me almost shudder." Bishop Berry especially j .urges Commencement at .. Kimball School of Theology will be .mark ed I by several1 unusual features. The largest class since '1910 will be graduated; four students will receive, degree and three diplo mas. ; The first woman to be gra duated from the school,! Miss Car rie! M. Bamford of Forest Grove, will receive the diploma. , , . The baccalaureate sermon will be preached .on Sunday -morning. May 24; at First Methodist church by Bishop Lester Smith of Helena. The commencement address will be given by Rev. Royal : Bisbee of India on the afternoon of j June 2. Rev. Bisbee received! two years of his theological training at Kim ball. .. : ; - r . i,' . ' ' A remarkable oil painting of "The ! Man of Sorrows'! , was un veiled In the library, of. Kimball School of Theology on Ithe; afteiv noon of April 14, in connection with the anniversary service com memorating the Tyndale transla tion of the New Testament 400 years ago. Mrs. Fransetta 1 Drake of Portland, ! is the artist and donor. The picture was' presented bearing the following Inscription: -"This picture, painted by Fran setta Drake, and presented by her to the Ktznball School of j Theology, is affectionately dedicated to- Rev erend ana Mrs. G. Willlani Hick man pioneer preachers and home missionaries r ot the crpss. who through their devotion) to home and ' church furnished! . to : this school a worthy president and leader. Dr. Eugene C. jHlckmani It Is given with the earnest grayer that all who chall come In Contact wit the school inajr p Inspired IGmball College Items ! ( WTfXV xB. ?- ! I ii'i ! I II I -i.-i KVv t IW lS i I II ( H i bare from withont and gives the- dwelling . the: hlark-windowed loot of an empty; house. j t ' f - For a typically Xngiish ; hous, developed in brick or stucco, nnd." hung indoors with the lovely chintzes and linens that Create so well the' English home, atmosphere, ithe re iis nothing prettier for both the indoor and outdoor effect than glass cur-' tains of Colonial or Oxford Cross! net used throughout ! the ; house. ? These .come , in a splendid sunshine; tone, warmer than cream but quieter than yellow. '.They are so transpar-J - cut that those indoors find neither! ir, light, nor the view of the pass- ing show shut out . Yet with glass.' curtains of this type the outside of' the. house presents an appearance of harmonious decoration .and I a nicelv; "flnished' lorJc, which the house. with bare panes never can 'achieve.' . '.'! ' i- hope to th employment of the best archi tect in drawing the plans. "Good plans may seem expensive," he says, but poor plans are more so." Havana Takes Steps t To Limit Fire Danger HAVANA, I April lS-Uparryihg out an established policy of -the1 city of Havana, orders have been issued by the mayor for demoli tion of many wooden j buildings within the city - limits.' ! Door3. -window frames and furniture are generally the only wood ! to be seen in the majority of Havana's homes : and. office I buildings, floors are tile. ; " j Visiting American firement have said that Havana is the best constructed city they have ever seen,. when fire risk is considered. Tho Spanish style of architecture ia generally pleasing j to jthe .eye and residences with ceilings 15 or more feet from tho -floorj are the rule.- This provides greater cool ness during the heat xf the sum mer days. An even temperature, falling below 75 only on rare Oc casions and generally never reach ing above .88, makes heating ar rangements unnecessary, j j MTSIC AWARDS TO BE MADE FOREST GROVE, Ore., April 17 The annual interstate high school music tournament began today at Taciflc university and will conti nue until tomorrow when the Lvarda will be made for, the vari ous choruses, quartets aijd soloists that entered the contest. jThe stu dents came from a radius of 2C0 miles and 45 organizations. I i Men Declared Dead Ask Court For Ruling NEW. ORLEANS, La, April 18. A mandate of the state Bupreme court will be necessary tq restore legal life to two residents of this city. Both have been entered on the official lists of the board of heaUh as dead, and although they are living, have lost' the right to vote and other advantages! because of their legal status. - j . . Tbe body of a man found in;a by this picture to a new devotion and loyalty to the "Man of Sor rows." Presented Easter 1923." Dr. Donald W." Riddlo will spend the week of April 19, at Modesto, California, as one of the instructors in .a standard I train ing school put on by the board of Sunday schools. Dr. Riddle will also le a member of the faculty of the great international school of religious education to be held at Geneva Glen, Colorado,! from July 13 to 23. j ., : : ... - i ; The faculty committee of the trustees announce important addi tions to .the curriculum and the faculty. The department of reli gious .education Is to be expanded with courses offered leading to the degree of master of arts In. religious education. 1 Reverend C. I. Andrews, who, during the past four years, has been the vjery efficient extension secretary' ofJ .the board of Sunday schools In the state of Montana, will be added to the faculty next September to- become the head of the depart ment of religious education. Pro fessor' Andrews is spending the spring' and summer quarters at Northwestern1 University and Garret-Biblical institute in special research work. Miss Mary E. Findley, director of religious edu cation of First Church Salem, will also "be a member of the faculty in this department. 1 ; j A shorter course leading to the: certificate of the school has born designated especiaUy. ,r, for j lay workers' and jouns women desir ing special training. "This will be offered for the first time besia- I I I II k f . :rr S II. - fi II I. i mm II r I . I I & Bll gas filled room or a boarding house was identified by a son as Frank Muiler. A body found in the Mississippi river was identi fied by relatives as Charles W. Burdette. OUR AIM: TO SKRVK YOU WKLL AMI FAITHFULLY ALWAYS Style Try Our Arch- Support Shoes We specialize in shoes for women with our j built-in arch-supporting feature, giv ing foot and leg support. These are shown in both strap pumps and ; oxfords and are priced extremely low. " , . I Full Fashioned Hose lor Women Made of four strand silk thread with an extra heavy thread of fibre to assure wear. This hose has been knit to fit! ' It fits the ankle trirnly. The price is remark able! $1.19 ' Lookingr forward to Your Fall Needs The Manager of this Store is away selecting good for the coming Fall and Holiday s-a-sons. He is attending one of our regular semi-annual j buying conventions. There are eight Atlanta, Cleveland, Los An geles, Oklahoma City, Portland, Salt Lake City, St Louis and St FauL The combined orders of the Stores in this National Insti tution, to be placed at these conventions, will total well over $30,000,000. I Far-reaching activity in the mills, factories and shops of the country is neiessary to pro vide our requirements. Protect Your Adjusted Compensation Certificate All war veterans of Salem land Marion County, whether they are patrons here at the United States National or notf are free to bring in their Adjusted Compensation Certificates and have them placed in our Safety Deposit Vaults. - - - I il . ' " There is no charge for this protection as we are indeed clad to do this for the ex4service man. But we do urge upon you the necessity of bringing your certificate in before it is misplaced or; other loss results. United States National Bank Solcm.Orcgon While preparations were being made for their interment; under these names the two men made their appearances alive, j They im mediately, called on the health A NATION-WIDE m -1 Q 57 mmmimT 160 North Libjerty . St., Salem, Value Low To the woman seeking good style, combinco with comfort, this one-strap cut-out will appeal. 1 is well-made of all-leather patent with cut-out vam. and quarter ; low, walking " heel with rubber tap Only J?y designing and buying ebocs f cr several hundred stores, can we saves in costs and offer; such aa excel lent shoe as 4his," for arch an economy price. Priced extremely low, even for a J. C Penney Co. Store, pair For .Young Groving Feet A New Cut-Out for Children Let the kiddies run, romp and play. This new cut-out sandal fits well "childhood's happy hour." Plenty of room for growing feet. All-leather patent or tan calf. j . Our Foot Culture last which assures cemf crt and correct support, and spring heels. It has We specialize in the proper fitting of shoes, especially shoes for jittle folks, believing that no matter how well a shoe is made, it must fit perfectly, to be satisfactory. Sizes 12 to 2... Sizes BYz to lV2 .Sizes Slz-o8 authorities to remove them from the list of dead. This was refused on the ground that "once entered on this list they must remain there until ordered erased by the supreme court. ; yrl WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATEST 7ncoiwUwt THROUGHOUT 5tores THE YKAIt . Ore. Price ret cut - out wamp and quarter .. ... .l.,..$2.29 .:..,......5 1 n1 ---V A C 1 r I) !- : ' .- JV.L -' l K K