- TrtiTmcniv MnVrnKfi; MAY 14s. 1925" THE OHEGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON ! i i r ! 1 1 i ' LACK GF FUfJDS HAMPER fi.be pnEmcTjpn wcbk Appropriation of 910,000 Sought, . ' touna? Actirities of Due to a shortage.-of funds it wui De impossible' to keep C. J. Dague, of tie United States weath er bureau, at '"Portland .to make "fire weather predictions iand con duct inrestiK&tions and research work relative to weather condi tions affecting forest fiTea, accord lug to F.' A. Elliott,-state forester. A mov ia on at present to secure a J 10,0 00 appropriation from con resto he turned over to the weher Ijureau for this purpose. The Importance of jthis work was thoroughly demonstrated last year by the accuracy of the forecasts. Every hazardous period was fore casted from 24 hours to two days In advance while "predictions for norraal fire weather were exceed ingly accurate. 1 ' Mr. Hague was a yisitor at the office f the state forester yester day j -while on a tour of the state, covering" all stations and instruct ing men in the caro and use of Instruments. His' work this year Is ia "continuation of that started last year and' is made possible through the " cooperation of the state,' private agencies and the fed eral forest 'service. Weather sta tions are located at 54 scattered points . through the forested dis tricts of the state. BEET DATA IS GIVEN Manager- of Jjarge .Couccro Ad vis ing ReceiTers of Seed Here The 15 , farmers'; who were .sup plied; sugar beet seed from the Sa lem Chamber of Commerce for planting in " tracts of from one quarter to one acre,' will receive suggestions from "time to time from J. W. Timp8on, manager of the Utah-Idaho Sugar company at JJellingham, Wash. Referring to the early growth , ct sugar beets, Mr. Timpson writes . "We consider It good practice to thin as early as possible, soon af ter the plants take their fourth Jeaf.l ' Our experience has demon strated that best results wilt be - obtained by. aiming to get from 25,000 to So, 000 plants to the f acre. The Europeans tell us that vthey aim "to get 50.Q00 plants in order to get the maxipum quan; ' tity of sugar per ' acre." Referring to the district around Bellingham, Jir, Timpson writes: . ''In this district we are planting out raws from 20 to 22 Inches . apart, and we shall undertake to havei them thinned out from .10 to 12 Inches apart." London's Lord Mayor Yearns for Exercise IXNDOT-rLike Gilbert and Sullivan's operatic policeman, the lord mayor of London finds his official life "not a happy one." Lord Mayor Sir Alfred Bower told, : a meeting recently' It is impossible for him to get fresh air and ex ercise except on Sunday. Other days In the week he works 15 hours a day, ; After expressing a wish that there were a halfholiday for lord mayors, Sir Alfred said: "I begin work at 8:30 when my letters are brought to me. After j I, have dealt with them I have to sit in court, but have also i ; other magisterial duties which are not public. Every afternoon I have to preside over some meeting or attend to official business and every ; evening 1, have to attend a dinner which I cannot eat. ; '" "I am not' the man 1 was four .months ago! before' I became lord mayor." - 1 ! V ': "' ; ''"" ' Argentina Studies' Ways -, to Construct Enduring Roads "v BUKNOS - AIRES The Argen tine touring club. which is en gaged in promoting the building of. roads in Argentina proposes to hold a Pan American roads, trans port and touring exhibition in con nection with the Pan American roads congress which will be held in this city in October. This exhibition would shoy the dfferent phases of road-making comprising dirt and paved roads, road masonry work, traffic signals, etc.. and everything relating to the building and upkeep of roads in general. . j - ' , 7-' Do Not Miss "The Midnight Express"' ( - j XsAi3lLLY" FOJl ' DLlfjD U AUDITS WHO COME WITHIN wT" ii.. Y-rr i mil : m III ill : .-if - ' I . t '- .wfc..t.,.1:, How tear . gas .may b uad, 1t bank messengers against hold-up men was demonstrated at the ?avy Base In Boston.; F. S. Secord'of PEOPLE AND EVENTS SILVERTON . ULLIE L. MADSEX gtatcsraan Correspondent ' SILVERTON, Ore.. ?day 13. Special.)- The j Silverton Wom an's club held its jlasV meeting for this season Monday afternoon at the home of the but-going presi dent, Mrs. Ernest Palmer. The day was the annual guest day and and each club member was per mitted to bring a j guest to the meeting.. About J forty members and guests were present.' The club has made It a practice to take up a subject for study each year. During the past season "Japan" has been) the subject. A subject for the comijng year, which opens this fall, J was , discussed. Many were suggested but "Legis lation" seemed, .to be the first choice, with "Oregon' second, and China third. The final decision was left to a committee of which Mrs. R. E. Klelnsorge Is chair man.': j j ' .i; , The program given Monday con sisted of a review! of "Japan. Mrs. R,j Russell and Mfs. J. Welch gave a musical duelogue with Mrs. Gor don McCall at ; the piano. Mrs. McCan gave a Diana solo and Mrs. GiBectson and Mrs. G. Raven each gave a vocal solojf - j At the business j meeting com mittee reports were read showing what the club haid been doing for the Silverton Library and the Sil verton hospital. These two in stitutions occupy the greatest amount of Interest of the club.. The library board, which is made tip of the club women, hope that by fall the library will be housed in Silver ton's new city hall instead of in the school as at present. The club has planned an extensive cam paign for the summre months bo that; it will be able to manage the library in its new home next win ter. 1 Among the ithings the club is planning are bridige parties, dances and!: cooked foodj sales. The pro ceeds of these will be used for the libiary fund, j - j A' rising vote pf thanks was ex tended to Mrs. Ernest Palmer, out going president j Refreshments were served witb Mrs. T. P. Ris- tlegn and Mrs. GL Raven in charge. Company I of the Oregon Na tional Guard j received Its pay checks Tuesday ight of this week. Eighty-four .chdeks were Issued, amounting to $1200. , Attending drill Tuesday njght were 64, and at no time since January ,1 has there been less; than; 50 at any drill. Sundayi ithe company will go ; out to its new range on the Hugh Small pltce to tryout the targets. Captain Henry Hutton also reports thai the men are very enthusiastic about their summer encampment which "will "be " in Southern Oregop this year. About 60 have expressed their intention of attending. Mrs. Helen Wrightman and Mrs. H. B. Latlam were guests of Miss Elizabeth Latham Sunday at the Kappa Alp ia Theta house at Eugene. ! Mr; and Mrs. George Cusiter were guests of Miss Ruth Gregg and Mrs. J. D. Standard was a guest of "her on, Marie Woods, all at Eugene. Mrs. George Hubbs was a guest of her daughter, Miss Dorothy Hubbs at the Delta Delta Delta house and Mrs. E. Cramer was a guest of Vivian Cramer, her daughter. Miss at the Delta Zeta house at Corvallis for Mother's Day. ,Tne My festival which the high school is arranging will be held Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock on the Eugene Field court. Follow ing this the Silverton high school ItobuitMcdier ofFlveHfaTthy, Happy Children Keeps Fit with Deecham's Pillj I I liedeA eotnkig OS, . I taka or oc two fieccfaam'c Pill. 1 n JJ KmUHt. rofeu mothe wkh , fcaptrr childmt. thanks to Beacfaam'a. Idoail Ttit nwii tiiwiM win It imiii ing "S, ' boning, aad csr ins Mn. Albeit Otmerod. Fall River, llua. Toe FRT2 SAVfTtE Wrfw - ' B F. AJlea Caw 419 Canal Street, New York Day front yea Jrus:t la SS aaJ f bases Far cauriparioM, twfZi . tick ktadaehtt, mmd PROTECTION OF BANK - ' ; ; . V 'V Plttabnrrt. Pa..-is ihown with one of his Mgas Billies" and John J. McPhee of the :U. S. Army is th bandif. 4 The" tear - gus la the baseball team will meet that , of Salem on the Silver Falls diamond. Mrs.. Helen Wrightman, Miss Rosella Richardson. Mrs. G.-Raven, and Mrs. John Hoblitt will motor j to Silver Cliff to attend the last! meeting of this season of the Sil ver Cliff, Parent-Teachers' asso ciation, j Miss s Richardson ; will speak on her tour through Eur ope.' , The Silver Cliff association was organized last November with Mrs. Wrightman, Miss Richardson, Mrs. Hoblitt, and Mrs. Raven as sisting. It is now one of the live organizations of its kind. -Miss Alice Jaquet, teacher at Silver Cliff, is also the president of the association. The - Parent-Teachers' associa tion of Trinity church is preparing a program to be given at the church Sunday evening and the committee in charge is urging all parents to attend and to " bring their children. The program is for the purpose of interesting par ents in the Sunday school work and to encourage the attendance of the children. The program will begin at 8 o'clock and will consist of musical numbers and short talks by ; Rev. George Henriksen, Rev. O. Sherwln, John Goplerud, and M. C. Jacobsen. Miss Delia -Lofgren will take charge of , the . Silverton hospital for the coming two weeks while Mrs. May Day, hospital superinten dent, Is off on her vacation. Miss Lofgren was formerly superinten dent of the Silverton hospital. For the past few years she has been In charge of the hospital at Cor vallis but resigned a short time ago to take a rest.? She has just returned from a trip into Cali fornia.: - ". . . .;;; y-. U- S. fiflethods for Teaching Blind Lauded by German BERLIN America Is leading the way in education methods Jor the blind, in the opinion of Miss Wanted Sealed bids for five hyndred feet, more or less of concrete curb ing. For "specifica tions, see ? W. T. RIGDON LEONERROL ' ... And Jl si - -m. m - OREGON lhi Oregon Piilp and Paper Co. Salem, Oreoa. lr MANUFACTUItERS ; Su!p!dte, and Manila" Wraprlrsa, cLo Eatcr.rra 7rrr pinss, Addir- r?achf.ne Vspcr, Greascprocf, GT-r:I--, MESSENGERS WILL r TrXi r EET. : i . : 1 . i- :'. V1 ' '11 ? 1 nj- (liir .irr Kniyatfe -billyr Is " released . by ; pressing - a button! and renders anyone within fifty feet of the gas cloud tempor arily blind, i - Betty Ilirsch, director, of the school for the blind founded dur ing the world war by Germany's famous oculist, Geheimrat ' Silex. "The city of Cleveland,"! she observes, "has found the ideal solution of the problem, in "that education for the blind children is not carried on in special schools for the blind, the blind pupils are interspersed amongvlhe.. sighted childjrfeti. !. Thiii f procedure is .,;of thf realest benefit 'li'ot only to the blind children, but to the others as well, in that it accustoms them to getting along with their less fortunate fellow pupils and shows them that a. blind student can do fully as well-as a sighted one. i "The feeling of human pride is quite f as pronounced: with, "Blind peopl as It ia with jthose 'enjoy ing eye sight. Selfconfidence can be encouraged among the blind only if they feel that they are being1 offered an opportunity ' to show that they can hold their own in competition with others. If the blind j are separated from the sighted, this confidence can never be Instilled in them.! America is absolutely: right, in i mixing the blind with the sighted. From Our Children's Garden of Curse! - A father, rising from the break fast table, stooped to kiss his 3-year-old daughter, goodbye. Carefully steering a spoonful of oatmeal toward her: mouth, she said: "Kiss me on top of my head daddy, I'm busy down here."' -1 4 : Mrs. C. ;G. Turner. i IT? HAVE A CARPENTER DO 1 YOUR PLUMBING TJIDICULOUSI you say. Yet that is what hundreds of people do every day when they engage the services of other than a trained RECTAL SPE CIALIST to cure their Piles. No wonder they receive no benefit and continue to Buffet, and condemn the! doctor for their time and money, wasted. " My years of training and experience treating RECTAL and COLON ail ments alone enables me to give a written hfe-long Ci UAKAN I be that I will cure your Piles or REFUND YOUR FEE. Write today for my FREE BOOK MfHfW T' par WW M.DJnc PORTIANO Of f!CtS: SEATTLE OFTICES: DrOtin Duiljina SOS-SIZ Sattv tHtHdifia 9 TH JM OMAI N 6TM AND PINl 03'fTt co"'T r'ff Ft. VI W p r'J,1 List to it The Lady" 'l oH5 and i pray nnl dream about beln a Ijjm))-. About wcarin clothes like ladles wear, rcadln nice books talkin' nice things but it ain't for the likee o me tt' yet I jast keeps on 'opin to be lady some day. TALMADGE pivrs the fire of drama to this part. 9 ID J J 1 ' ' 7 ' i 7 - REALISTIC PAINTINGS V0F WEIRD SEASCAPES WADE UNDER WAT . RIO DE JANEIRO, Brail4-Pew people here know that Zarh Prit chard, the American painter of submarine life, has been leading a hermit's life in Brazil for two montlis, painting for exhibiting at Paris and Brussels, I the former openin June 1. He hag been living on Paqueta Island, in the mid die of Rio's big harbor, an hour by ferry from the city. A bouse vas rented in an unfrequented par: of the island, and a cbain and pad lock placed on the garden; g&te. The isand Is quiet enough to sa tis fy his need for solitude. Altho igh it contains a small Tillage,; there are no street' cars, automobile!! or telephones. ? t . The submarine painter maKes his sketches- on specially ' oiled material while working under water in a diving suit, generplly at depths of about 23 feet. liere the luminosity of the water is equal to daylight above the pur face. The artist says he forgets about being under I water! a$ he sketches until he is warned ;.by a tug on his air hose, by the wajtch ers overhead, that there Is dagger in the neighborhood. Big fish do not bother him, as they are wary about the strange animal j wjhich is always emitting' a stream of bubles from, the top of itsJiead. ' Mr. Pritchard's painting are impressionistic studies, shoving fish which often have the appear ance of birds flying through the. air. Living, corals and sea p ants of various tints appear to be rees and forests; And dead coral forma tion often resemble canyons f and cathedrals. ' 1 Mr. Pritchard came to Brazil to prepare for the exhibitionX'JIe has discovered that the climate here is unsurpassed for drying bis paintings, which are made calf skin to secure the peduliar effect resembling a. watery at- mosphere. I If a man is on the ropes be can often swing a pretty bid deal. We r t.'r: We offer 1 QuaKty Discovere3n Cbmedjr-Drama ' " " Presented By St. Joseph's Group Small Crowd Attends Kxcellent Offering Lst XiBht ; Members of fast Are Won Adapted to Their Parts ' By AUDRED BUNCH A' real discovery In dramatics was found last eyening at . St. Joseph's auditorium when a cast of nine persons presented "The Green-Eyed Monster's Touch," a ccmedy-drama in four acts. While the feize of the audience was noticeably small, the quality of the drama' was surpassing in every way. The entire cast took their parts' in a way that will give a, lasting reputation to St. Joseph's dramatic club and which, for the audience present, gave an evening of unbroken delight. The action, taking place in the 'sitting room" of the old fashioned Winn homestead, in the state of New5 York, Is engrossingly real and replete with humor from the June afternoon when the play opens to the snowy evening in January when it closes. The characters, all nine, adapt ed themselves in a really notable manner to their parts, Mary Bud row, as the plaintive widow with her gliding eyes, her pension, and her "symptoms" was as consistent a character as .came onto the stage. S. J. Gentzkow, as Josiah Tizzard, the ever-present umbrella mender, was a sprightly addition to the cast. Mary Lebold as Ruth Winn, Martin's daughter, was dis tinctly the heroine of the evening, and proved herself: ably competent for the part.j- Charles Coffey as Leonard Everett, a son of the soil, played his part with commendable sincerity, and Martin Win, the father of Ruth, hi3 own, with- fi delity. Harold' Vincent, the rival from New York, was personified in Gerald Suing, who played through out acts two and three with the necessary confidence and con trst. Virginia McEntee as " Alma Wayne, a friend from the city; Gladys Redding as Aunt Melissa, the virtual mother of Ruth, and Gladys La Forest as LJndy Jane, who "helps around," all added zest t W -n, Most Cordially Invite the. Public to Visit Our This And Inspect Willys have several new models 7Tt javet Salem. Among them is the (Coach) the Willys-Knight Coach, and many others. Come in and enjoy the music and see what we have to in fine Motor Cars. We have eighteen of our models here on display. Last night our salesroom , A a. and distinction to the growing complication 4 of the plot which , centered about Ruth's city lover versus her country friend the latter becoming the successful fi ance. 1 The Sacred Heart academy or chestra contributed music between acts.- ' ... j r :; ' The Attraction Marie: "Why did Jane throw over Phil for that skinny little chap Smith? I thought she liked chickens RENT ;FEEE Address Service Care Statesman 2L Sales Rooms ting Our Line of . 1 i shown for the first time in Overland Two Door Six Models, the Oakland was filled with people. , Patty: "She does. And that's Just the type of car Smith has.? j - Norman B. Gerald, ' III CATCH "The Midnight t --- ' -y- Express" For a period of time to a party who will establish a SERVICE STATION. Good location on highway. Living quarters, garden spot and place for furnished right party SicaSoim ZD Sedan latest rs..; X i t t 1 t