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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1925)
THE OREGON TATES1IAN, SALEM, OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 14, 1923 LAW ENFORCEMENT IS TOPIC FOR THURSDAY NATIONALLY,' KNOWN' SPEAK ERA A HE COMING 1IEKE O. TV. Stewart and Mitts Norm O. Brown Have l'lacen B Fine " - Program The "Flying Squadron" law enforcement conference, to bo held, at the First Christian church uexiT.Thursday will be featured by two nationally , known speakers. ft alius :ormaa C. Brown .1 The .-meetings are being held in support fat constitutional govern ment,. Oliver Wayne Stewart, presi dent of the Flying Squadron foundation and editor, of the Na tional 'Enquirer and an associate of ex-Governor Hanley in organiz ing the organization is a former member of the Illinois legislature, 7and chairman of the prohibition national committee. " The other speaker Is -Miss Nor ma C. Brown, who has a long re cord for forensic ability, covering many phases of the work. , The program for the two days follows: ( Afternoon Session , 2:30-2:40 P. M. Opening Exer ' clses. llev. C. C. Poline, presid ing 2:40-2:-5 P Enforcement". M. "Local Law Ronald C. Glover Attorney. 2:55-3:30 P. M. Address by Norma; C Brown. 3.S0?at4S P. M. "The Woman Citizen"1.' .Mrs." La Moine R. Clark.j". '..-.. ' --," 3i43'i. IL-Open forum led by Hon. Oliver Wl Stewart. "''J - Kvenlng Session 8 1 GO P. M. Closing Mass Meet ins. -Governor Walter MPierce, presiding. . - Addresses' by Hon. Oliver W. Stewart, president Flying' Squad ron - Foundation and Miss Norma C. Brown, vice president Flying Squadron Foundation. DODSON SPEAKS MONDAY JOSEPHINE COOK FREED CHAMBER; V OF ' COMMERCE MANAGER COMING TO CITY D. B . Dodson. considered one of the foremost authorities on the Port of Portland, and was one of the moving spirits in the devel opment of the city's foreign com merce is to be the regular speak er at the Monday meeting of the Salem "Chamber of Commerce. Mr.' Dodson is a member of the Portland Chamber of Commerce and "has been . general manager, and in cooperation with - others has - worked- wonders for the big -ilty. .. '. . - Ilcretumed ' recently from a national conference of Chamber vf Commerce; secretaries and In the address Mr. Dodson will tell of his impressions of Herbert Hoover, ' national, known econom ist, ami a former resident of Sa lem-He will speak on "The In fluence of Chamber of Commerce In Natfonar Affairs." J F!C NIC PLANS ARE GIVEN KAIM-PORTLAND RESIDENTS Vl!J,MEETirX2 27 4'ormer residents of Salem who are npur" making their: homes in Portland, are to. meet for the an nual -iSajew-Porlland picnic, in LaureJhurst park, Portland,. June 27. according to a communication to Hal D. Patton, chairman of the local organization. A varied program has been ar ranged by the committees , in Germany's "Berliw to Bagdad19 Dream Comes Truc v w" . "German v U realix In t a Ions Whai 'Afferent fashion than she planned before the war.i Commercial planes are now plying regular lr from Derlin to Persia, with top atBagdad. TheCenaaa aviator,. HcrrMittlehober,; ij . cca charge, and a great time is prom ised. Visiting pioneersi are urged to bring their own lunches, but that coffee and creaa ' will be furnished by the cpmnijittee. All , former resident of Salem are invited by Roy It. jliiihop. who Is president of the .Portland or ganization, i ' AUTO TOURISTS PjRAISE SALEM CAMP GROUNDS VISITOR HERE KllOM ALL SECTIONS OF COUNTRY Portland Rose Festival Proves Mecca of Motorist: Halem Lauded : Tourist at the Salem Auto camp grounds pay niany compli-f ments to the .advantages that are offered here. Among! those who are stopping over !f on ja day or so are Mr. and Mrs. W. quires, of Lake View, Oregon. jThey have been traveling over the state en joying themselves,! ; and expect to spend part of the time in Port land attending the Rse Festival. Mrs. Squires paid! a tfigh compli ment! to the Salem. I well eared and attractive tourisf. camp. , "William and , Charles Lamb, brothers, from Liberal, Kansas, brought their families to North Eend. Oregon, to j visit their bro ther, Todd Lambj ant then decid ed to four the state, MrJ and Mrs. Carter of Marsh field are also in the j party. They expect to attend j the Rose FestI val. ! ' : ll; j . ilr. and Mrs. He'nry James of Belltngham, Washington, touring the state on a vacation, declare that the Willamette j valley com pares ifavorable withtheir section of the country. They too, are to view he Rose Festival. "Salem has one of the best prks we have visited," stated Mrs.lfJames. YEOMEN SESSION ENDED r -' 1 : t-r -4 li ; i : i ' - ' ' ' HOME WILL NOT BE BUILT IX ; OREGON THI.fi YEAR NEW YORK, June? 13. Broth erhood of American;! Yeomen in supreme conclave, elected as pres ident, W. R Shirley jdf Oklahoma; supreme board, W. jj E., , Hatley, Minneapolis, . A. j Morgan - Duke, Texas, A. H. Hoffman, . Iowa, Mark McKee. Michigan. Chil dren's home, Elgin, 111. Next su preme conclave, Portland, Oregon. 'The-above meanstf that Oregon will not get the children's home of the Yeomen, for jjwhich it has been contending jforj ja long time. However, It may jbe ifhat the Yeo men will build children's homes in different sections of the coun try; that is two, or hree or four instead of one. . MrJ tEzell has su pervision of the (activities of the Yeomen in Oregon, jj j:. 'i'j ! "il! IU. ! French Aviators Discuss Trans-Atlantic Flight ' ' i.j ' aasaBaaaaaaa jf j j - I ' -r - -PARIS, June It. f-j'Our chances of success are five;in 100, and that is sufficient' sil'id PauF Tar ascon. warmaimed iviator, when questioned about the proposed Paris-New York non-stop flight which ! he and anottier war ace, Francis Coli, will jdttempt' this summer. (-;; jj j 1 . !' '."The big jump can be made. Given a smooth i wcrtklng motor, and a sound navigating plane with a lifting capacity sufficient to take off with enough fuelto stay, in the air 30 hours, the Paris-New York flight Mjno more dif ficult than several . f Hats perform in recent, years'j Coli opined. He referred to the Anerican trans continental, non-sfop jilight, neatly 200 miles, made iby American Viators in 1923, as Just as hazar dous as the proposed jocean fllglit. Expert mechanics are now busy tuning up the tnotorj while plane bdilders are putting the finishing touches to the mach ie. The lat ter part of July has fieen fixed au the. probable time, i jj j Five thousand litres of fuel and oil which, the plane tiust carry at the start present a problem. How tor store this liquid Without inter fering with the ! stability of the plane Is causing the ;experts much trouble'.' . . ':;.; h ! ! j . England, f Ireland Newfound land, and Nova Scotia is the pro posed itinerary. ! i S I - "'' & .'.'.V , f;Kl'-y Cherished dream, a4 open road Spain Reported Re&dy to Desert War on Moors and Let France Fight Alone i aS'- m , v . .... Vr .I'ed op on desert , warfare, Spain is reported; to be ready to; make peace wifh the rebellious Moors and leave France to fight the! tribesmen alone. General Riqualme of Spain is seen discussing a' 'proposed armistice with one of the of ''Sultan" Abd-el-Krim. NO ONE WORRIES AS OTY STREETS SLOWLY SUBSIDE SAN FRANCISCO. A vast area of San "Francisco is slowly but surely slipping into the sea," but this particular earth movement is occasioning so little; alarm that the general opinion seems to "be "let her slip." All of the migratory territory is on made land, and it was fig ured at the time that the vast fill was made that it would con to settle. The great Union Ferry building one of the biggest and showiest railroad terminals in the United States, has settled 14 inches since Its construction in 1898, en gineers estimate. The settlement has been so gradual and even, however, that no crack is apparent anywhere in ! the vast structure. Also the rate of subsidence I is growing gradually less, as a de pression of but 1.57 inches' har, been noted in the past six years. The building rests on a founda tion of 5,000 piles, which are set In. a series of ; piers made up of concrete to the amount of 56,000 tons. It is at the westernmost boundary of the big fill. i WThen the fill was made a sea wall more than a mile long and running through a snb-strata of mUd 150 feet thick, was construct ed to keep the filled in land, which Is now the lower end of the city, from slipping into the bay. The seawall was made by dredging a channel 50 feet wide and 20 feet deep, and then filling up this can nel with great granite rocks. The land behind the wall sub sided, andL it was necessary a year ago to raise the foot of Market street, where the ferry is located, and several connecting streets by several inches. . . : I Skyscrapers as high as 16 ? sto ries have been built on the fill, almost within a stone's throw, of the Ferry building, on foundations if piles driven to bedrock,: These piles run Into the thousands for each building, each vast strulture resting on a forest of.lhem. . NEW BOOKS -r SALEM PUBLIC LIBRARY :. Blind Raftery Donn Byrne, it Pimpernel and Rosemary Bar oness Orczy. ? " ' j : The' Bitter Country Anita Pet tibone. . .-y .- 1 x 1 S 1 "Berlin to Bagdad," but in some- 4 Moorish chiefs a representative The Invisible Quick. I I ' ,Tony i From Woman Herbert 'America K. H. I a lur. i :. General laws pt Oregon, ,1925. L For the Children ', The Adventures of Bob White ' T. W. Burgess. Happy Jack T.W. Burgess. ' Oljd Granny Fax T. W- Burgess Old Mother West Wind T. W. Burgess; j " The Good Dog Book. : A Mayflower Maid E. B. Knipe and A. A. Knipe.l : ;The Boarded-up House A. H. Seaman. i The Story of Pocahontas and Captain John Smith E. B. Smith. The Boy Officers of 1812 E. T. Tomlinson. j In the Hands of the Red Coats E. T. Tomlinson. f ; . On Guard Against Tory and Tar leton J. P. True, i Fairy Tales M. F. Lansing. : f The Golden Spears Edmund Leamy. ' i Classic Fables-H-E. H. L. Turpin. i Myths of the Red Children G. L. Wilson. j ; Life in the Greenwood M. F. Lansing. j 1 Harper's Beginning Electricity D. C. Shafer. j -J-I Black Beauty. Anna Sewell. , Little Dramas S-Skinner & Law rence. ; Japanese Plant Gardens As Models of Perfection i SEATTLE Japanese look up on a garden as a picture, beauti fully designed and framed, much as the- Occidental loks upon a painting, ProL jTakuma Tono, landscape ; architect of Waseda University, Japan.ttold Seattle on a lecture tour of the United States. Professor (Tono is a grad uate of Cornell University. ! "Our Japansese-'gardens are en tirely , different from gardens in any other part of the world," Mr. Tono said. "In all . western na tions the garden is considered a collection ofrare and beautiful plants, flowers shrubs and trees, rather than' a' picture for which the Japanese strive. Japanese gardens are more naturalistic than architecturaL" Lift Off-No Pain! . i i f h ; ,w f -lit .1 M . t , ., .: ? Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little "Freezone"- on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right orf with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or irritation. ' AdT. FLAX MILL: MACHINERY IS TO ARRIVE MONDAY ANOTHER SHIPMENT IS TO BE L RECEIVED ON JULY 2 Twister anl Yirn Softener IncluI , sl in Equipment for Miles Factory - Machinery for the twine factory of the Miles , Linen company is scheduled to arrive .in Portland Monday, and will bo prepared for shipment here immediately.' One machine was made in Leeds, Eng land, another in Belfast, Ireland. One fa a Brownell twister and the other a yarn softener. - The rest of the machinery will arrive in the west on July 2. The nrachines were shipped from Eng land and entered the country free of duty because of special arrange ments with the federal authori ties. " .. ". - ' The machinery arriving Monday will be loaded on trucks atfthe dock and sent directly to Salem. , It is estimated that the value of the plant will be $150,000. Active operations are expected to be start ed in September. Italian Critics Praise American Comic Films ROME. June 13 The work of American moving picture comed ians is creating a new comic tra dition comparable in excellence only with that launched by the famous Venetian art theatre of the 18th century, according to Italian cinematograph critics. An underlying similarity, the critics say, . is that each moving picture comedian maintains his particular personality and stage businessln all of his pictures, in stead of adapting himself to the stories which; are being filmed. Thus Charlie i Chaplin is always Charlie Chaplin whether he be tramp or millionaire. Just as the centuries have mul tiplied the Colombines, Pierrots and Harlequins of the Venetian theatre, so they will multiply the Chapllns, the Harold Lloyds and the Larry Semons who eventually will evolve into constant types. It is pointed out. that the Ameri can comic films, far from being contemptible from the point of view of art, ; have mu c ncoih view of art, have much in common with the great works of the hum orous masters from Aristophanes until our day, particularly in their use of thegrotesque and of for malized plots. The one outstand ing difference, it is said, is that the American movies insist upon pointing a moral and upon having happy endings. One critic rhapsodizes that the American films have created types which symbolize marvellously cer tain grotesque and humorous as pects of humanity, t Board of Trade Debates Greedy Cows of Quesnel QUESNEL, B. C, June 13 There has been much good-natured discussion 'at meetings of the Board of Trade here over, the ques tion of enforcing . the pound law, and after the hearing of many opinions it has been decided that the only thing to do is to protect the pound-keeper from rough ' x m m u 1 mm'- m a m m i i a Best buy of the season Genuine Cowhide Suitcase, well made, good material Regular $12.00 Value SPECIAL lvjiax j. ourem FURNITURE LUGGAGE 179 N. Commercial, Salem, Oregon TToy Land's New English Ruler P Appointment of Field Mar- ' shal Lord Plumer (above) hi British high commissioner i; Palestine, a British protectorate, carries military as well as racial and religious significance. The principal danger of war in the East now centers In Mesopatamta where the Turks have severs! divisions on the frontier. Plum er is not a-Jew, as was his pre deccssor, Sir Herbert Samuel. treatment at the hands of irate cow owners, and let the law take its course. The chief difficulty in enforcing the pound act is the retaining of a ponnd-keeper. For a time, one year,- the president of the Board of Trade acted in that capacity, but his life being threatened on one or two. occasions by cow own era whose animals he had im pounded; no one else has offered to take the job. "It's not thel gardens they de stroy that bothers me; mine is well fenced," remarked one mem ber of the board, "but in the spring before the grass gets green the cows come up to my store and try to scoop the green things out of the plate glass window." CILES Now is the Time to Get Rid of , Those Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need ot feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Oth ine double strength is guaranteed rto remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine double strength from any drug or department store' and apply a little of it night and morning and yon should soon see that eyen the worst freckles have begun to dis appear, while the lighter ones have van ished, entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful com plexion. ' Tie sure to ask for the double strength Othine as this is bold under guarantee ot money back if it fails to remove your) freckles. - . We recommend Othine Complexion Soap for use with Othine, also as a shampoo it's wonderful for bobbed bair 25c a rake at all drug or department stores or bv mail. Othine Laboratories, Inc., Buf falo. i. Y. Adv. BRITISH LORDS TOLD OF SLAVE TRADING IN SECTIONS OF EMPIRE LONDON Rather a tone of un easiness on the question ot slave raiding in several parts of the world, including a suggestion that parts of the. British Empire might be affected, was displayed in the House of Lords recently when sev eral peers made demands for facts concerning the slave trade activ ity. Earl Bnxton started the ball rolling by asking the government whether the report upon slavery which the foreign secretary under took to call for in 1923 had as yet been received, and also whether the League of Nations had asked to be supplied with any available information on the subject of slavery- In northern Africa and the Far East, he said, slave raid ing and trading still existed, and it was known, he alleged, that raids had been made in Kenya and the Sudan. . Lord Oliver asserted that there was a good deal of information on the subject of slavery in the pos session of the government which the public had the right to know. The earl in this connection, said conditions in Abyssinia were much as they had always been and slav ery raiding existed there today. Replying for the government. Viseonnt Cecil explained that the government was eager to the ut most of its power to . help 'in- the suppression of slavery in-general and slave raids in particular. The League of Nations had undertak en inquiries into this subject, he said, and one great advantage of the league was that it worked with the utmost publicity. That fact alone, put an end to any suspicion that the British government de sired to hide in any way anything that its officials were doing in that direction.1 .Viscount Cecil went on to say that the government was prepared to place all it3 information at the cisposal of the league. His infor mation was that there had been no slave raids in Kenya, but he would cause further inquiries to be made. Lord Gainford maintained that from information in his possession Hummisig-BM PURE SILK HOSIERY . Pure Silk Thread is the Strongest Textile Fibre Known Humming Birds are not ordinary Silk Stockings. They are the best silk stockings in their price range. Knit from the highest grade of pure silk, by the finest machinery and scientifically dyed in fadeless colors. They wear longer. Humming Birds are the surest, safest pure silk hose you can buy for the price. . They Give You Unusual Good Service 34 NEW SHADES Jack Rabbit , Cobalt Blue Harvest French Nude Grain Sandalwood Mauve Evening Sil- Ver ; Fraise Straw berry Nude . Stone Grey. Noisette Windsor vfasr laraex Mai aise S Amber Chairi THE SILK IS PURE DYED No metallic loading reinforced to stand the stresses of your many outdoor activities. CASH SELLING A visit to our store will convince you of the big ; advantage in cash buying, and selling. Youll find our goods of the highest standard, selling for less. It will pay- you to come in and get familiar with the wide scope of our courteous service. - - "CAN Salem Store 460 State SC. it -appeared certain that raids had been made from Abyssinia and British subjects made slaves .and transported across the Red 'Sea and through Arabia to Mesopo tamia and he could not : under stand why the government natt no Information along those lines. The subject is -to be" brought up again for further discussion. It's all right to dispute the right of way with the engineer, but not while he's in his train. SAVE -zvitT: atyour Only the highest grade of Up River Bolivian Para; rubber is used in the manufacture of our exclusive line of Swim-Kaps The Palm Beach model is a good example of the . quality which characterizes." the entire line. It is made wholly In one piece without seams or. binding and is of diving cap style. Price 65c If your preference runs to the more fancy, elaborate Kaps you will fjnd them here in great va riety and at . very attractive prices. Perry Drug Store Tfr &CKcdtJL Sou 1I." South (Commercial Halem, Oregon f $i.5o a pair Log Cabin White Black Sudan Parisian Bonde Satin Oriental Cordovan Cafeaulait i - . Atmosphere Beaver Gun Metal Airdale Dawn fc Calf Salmon Mandarin Tan Bark . - - 1 AND DO" Portland 6111c Shop , ' 883 Alder . - r-'i i V;