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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1925)
7v If. 1 OXLY PEW BERRIES. AVAIL. ; ABLE FOR BARRKHVn ' The loganberry season Ig prac- uicr mr anotner year, al though a few berrfea are gtiU be ing received for barreling pur poses. -.The crop In the Safem dis trict this year was good and the price fair, j It Is estimated that approximately 2750 Uma of logan berries , have been .shipped from the Salem district this BeasoW, and figuripg at a price of five cents a poand for the entire crop, the amount brought, into. Salem this year by the loganberry approxi mates $275,000. Of this amount Rome $100000 ;went . to pickers and haulers. This year's success dees not seem to encourage 'many farmers into considering' replanting acre ages of loganberries. The logan berry has caused the downfall of more; than one good farmer in the last few years and . consequently l, people are a little, arrald to risk them again- The prospects for next year g crop, however,, are ex cellent and fit is expected that a bigger yield than this year will Ve received. SUMMER-SCHOOL ENDED FIVE WEEK' qOVRKE fs COM. ; I'LETED LAST "WEEK " I The five weeks summer, school held In Salem under the auspices f the Monmouth ij Normal j ecnool clased last week.. . The school this summer. has been one, of the most successful ever staged. Of he 53J) students enrolled nearly all fitfished the: courses. ren critic teachers' and 52 stnd teachera f rcTm Monmouth had chirge of the school ' under the supervision, of Miss Margaret Cos per. The school is held each suiri- mcjr primarily to afford the prac tice required by the normal school before degrees can be granted to prospective students. i Of this year's student body, the majority were In school or their own volition rather than because their attendance had been enconr .aged by school officials, i CLINICS ARE . SLATED HEALTH iEMO?C8TRlTtON TO II AVEj BUSY WEEK Clinics under the ' direction of the Marion-? county child health demonstration will be held in the county this week as follows: Tuesday land Wednesday the demonstration staff will hold clin ics at Scott? Mills. On Thursday and Fridays clinic will be staged at Liberty. Local committees ap pointed to take charge of arrange ments In the two towns are as fpl- . low:,-'-1 .. $J. .'jifc, t : . f. aj y& scotts Mills: MrsS. M. Bennett thalrman, Mrs, Leroy Frazler and , Mrsi Nellie Amundson. - Liberty: Mrs-. Claude Steven son chairman; - Mrs. Bruce -Cun n Ingham; Mrs. Harold Zosel, Mrs. Willis Dltllai, Mrs. Frank Mahoney and Mrs. Ffed Cone. Committees this week at Brooks 1 , on Tuesday! and .Wednesday, and v'WtPratuM.on Thursday and Friday, iyy,n were a's follows: , Brooks: Mrs. C. V. Ashbaugh. chairman:' jMrs Fred Batchelor, Mrs. S. A. Harris. Mrs. Walter Fuller and Mrs. Malcolm Ramp. Pratnm: Mrs. Carrie . Branch, MrB. George; Kleen, Mrs, William DeVries andj Mrs.' O. Myers., DANCE REVUE OFFERED MINIATURE , FOLLIES PRE SENTED AT BLJGII , Heading the new bill at the . BtfRh theater today is "The Minia ture! Follies of 1925." This num ber jls a refreshing revue with threl prettyjwomen and two men, making up one of the most pleas ing and delightful dancing acts of . . the leason. ,yt .';.;. ;. f ; ; j Oliver an$ Jv"an, In 'A Perfect Bay' will prove to be a most clever turn from the start. Many funny situations and comedy dia logue will bing many laughs from the audience. jj L.eroy ana jviaoei iiartt are a youthful p4ir of talented enter talners endowed with beautiful vtraUied voices and wonderful per sonalities. fThey offer a most en- Joyable,vochJl sketch which they t They tell a; story In song of the! r:i I, . i ATA , in .iha 1 vmith 4nj ' early '60s. ' -y 1 I , Jane Taps McKlnney, whose billing is "A Dancing Surprise,; is truly an artist in her r lino and there are , few dancers . who have worked out las nifty a turn as this pretty actress has. . i i - 'i Miss Chester, booked is "The Chattering Contortionist,".' ; comes to vaudeville frdm the clrcua ring,; where she starred several seasons.! Birthroorift of .Italy's King Will be Preserved Empty . . ; , . NAPLES-4-After much iscusslon as to the best way. ot preserving for posterity the room here in which King Victor Emmanuel III was born, Jliniater of Public; In struction Fedele, after consulting Benedetto; Groce, noted Sicilian philosopher , has decided to leave ftniCUESTER SKILLS 1 I ill -"-. Ainr l- .. -1 . cunreiy . empty, except for a marble tablet" in the middle of the room to record the event. ' It was first proposed to restore the room to its original appear ance at the t!me te .; king was born; then there was a plan to fill it with relics excavated from the ancient " city 'of Herculaneum, but both Ml ' these - suggestions were abandoned. ' Guam Children Trade' Old Relics for Movie Passes HONOLULUAn , ancient , sa cred relic in exchange for a ticket to the movies is the latest tale to float up from the mysterious Is lands of the South Seas where a group of scientists is attempting to solve the problem of the origin of the Polynesian race. i It is told In k letter from one of the workers j attached to the Bishop Museum, Honolulu, and concerns Guam and the Charaorrt children 'oi. the 1 sunbaked shores cf . that Island who will hunt as siduously -for bits of weathered stone In order to enjoy viewing the cowboys, train wrecks, shoot ing :scrapes and bathing girls that appear "on the Guam screen as re presenting that fir away and un known country, America. ... - The search la "hazardous," for thei children because of the tradi tion' that, the - strangely-shaped stones which are In such "great de mand at the -Agana "nipvie-house" belonged once to .the' "Taotao Mopa," or the "people of before timet"j: who are feared so greatly that none of the adult residents dare toiich" the relics. The stones are the implements and weapons left by. the former inhabitants of the Marianas,, who may have belonged to a race ante- dating the Polynesians, the scient ists' say. e Many varieties of the objects are necessary for. the study of the habits and customs of the ' race and the Bishop Museum expedi tion has contracted, with the Aga- na motion picture theater in one of the strangest compacts ever signed. Its terms provide for an exchange of the relics for free ad mission to the show,, the museum to redeem the stones, most of which have come from ""Tabu" or forbidden spots. .' They will be studied carefully and perhaps in them will be found the clue that will lead to the origin "of the Polynesian peoples.. ,i GERMAN V1NETARBS ARE nEALTHY , BERLIN An., excellent gTape crop, Is expected, throughout Ger many this year according to the federal statistical 'bureaoT" Almost all the wine producing areas re port that "the ' vinesare In splen did condition bo that the hope for a duplication of the banner year of 1922 la justified. I i General Market ' V1 -ii'n " i ' j' 1 , , PORTLAND, ;July 25. Buying prices:. Valley timothy, $18 19; do 'eastern Oregonl $21(5)24.50; alfalfa, $19; clover, $16.50; oat hay, $15.50; cheat, $15; oat and vetch, $16.50; straw, $7.508per ton. Selling prices $2 a ton more. Grain Futures PORTLAND.' July 25.-Wheat, hard white, blue stem, baart, July $1.45; August $1.44; September $1.43; soft white, July, August, $1.44; September, $1.43; western white, July, $1.44; Aug. $1.44; Sept., $1.43; ihard winter, July, $1.44; August, $1.43; September, $1.42; northern'sprfng, July $1.44 August $1.43;lSept., $1.42; west ern red, July $L40: August, $1.41 Sept., $1.40; BBB hard white. July $1.50; August, $1.48; Sept., $lr47. tl f-'( i ;"-; Oats No, t 2, white feed, July. $37; August, $30: Sept., $29; No. 2 gray, July. "$32; ' August and Sept., $29. k- , y , , - Corn No. 2 ' yellow, Jufy, $47.50; Augnst, $47.23; Sept., $47.25; No. 3 yellow, July, $46; August jihd Sept., $46.50. Millrun, standard, July, August, $29; Sept., $28.75. ; i Barley 44-pound, July, August and Sept., $31. 1 " Dairy Exchange PORTLAND, July 25. Butter. extras, 47c; standards, 46 Ac; prime firsts, 46c; firsts, 42c. , Eggs, . extras, -37c; firsts, 35c; pullets, 32c; current receipts. 30c. 3 2 2 (c).Qi V4 1 -S 3t 4 .VrN Si DAY r- i .. w BL:I &M Jtrs. Mabel G.'Reinecke j How does a. mere Woman who Is commonly supposed to have no head'tor figures,, acquire a knowl edge of taxes, that will enable her to hold down a job like that of "Mrs. Mabel Q. Reinecke, collector Lof internal revenue of the Chicago district? , Well.;; this is the 'way Mrs. Reinecke did jt. " She became-interested in poll tices and suffrage as a very yonng girl and at her first euff rage con vention was mad;r a., member of the board. She was often called the f'baby .member." . When the Woman's National Republican Committee was organized , Mrs. Reinecke was- made' secretary and Mrs. . Medill McCormick, chair man. Mrs. Bigler, treasurer ofrthe Illinois state association,; suggest ed the , study of taxed to her. 'Every time we ;talk to men in the legislature about . appropria tion jthey talk taxes. You go learn , something about taxes so we can answer them," she said, j, In 1917 Mrs.' Reinecke was ap pointed on the board of assessors and gathered, information about state taxes. Then came the war which. Interrupted " her - studies! After the wa,r she was appointed assistant collector of internal rev enue in the Chicago office where she studied federal taxes. Shortly after her appointment the collec tor became ill and Mrs. Reinecke did the work, and a year later 1923 when; he died, President Harding appointed her in his place. . Collecting1 $2,000,000 each year from thousands of taxpayers MrsJ Reinecke - calls a "housekeeping Job." c-She isaya the -big problem! is to make all the details of ad ministration time correctly like getting all the dinner cooked at . i once. . Mrs.' Reinecke has" a husband who is proud of his wife's ability. bhe says the combination of home making and career works very well in her case but thinks it is impossible to generalize on the subject. The 1926 convention of the Na tiohal League of Woman Voters will meet In St. Louis, Mo., April 14-21. " Special interest will be attached ' to this gathering be cause it was lu St. Louis In the spring of &919 that the organiza tion of the National League was projected bjr Mrs. 'Carrie Chapman Catt;- - H';:'! '7v v Mrs. Ernest Mott of San Fran cisco, has been appointed director ofthe 7th region of the. National League of Women Voters to suc ceed Mrs. Walter A: Shockley of Reno.rNevada, who, resigned. Mre. Mott will1 have, direction of the League work in, AHona,. Califor nia, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, 'Utah and Washington. . - - i i i,' ry i :. , . J It Blends Perfectly JONTEEL COLD CREAM FACE POWDER An Udded ; Chkrm It Stays On Jonteel Face Powder with the new cold cream base blends !with, thercomplex ion perfectly and is so soft and clinging that you will like-it. " Let us show you your favorite shade. Perry Drurj Store 113' South Xbnrmorcial . Salem, Oregon . I i I, The League has definitely plac ed Itself on record as against nil "eleventh hour" reservations to the World Court resolution now pending In the United States sen ate. Its executive committee his served notice that the League Tnd the women voters comprising- its membership "will be impatient with lukewarm leadership and long-drawn out and pointless de bate." December. 1 7 next is the date when the senate will bring up for action the resolution de signed to make the United States a member of the Permanent Courl of International Justice. The. Marchioness Townshend, well known British society wom an," has opened an hotel for work Ing people In London. Her plans call for single rooms, suites, res taurant and communal kitchen. Miss Louise Price Is national gin eoui camp director and is making a tour of the camps in ine western pari or tne country to study camp problems and ad vise with camp councils. ev. J. Lineham, president of the United Methodists Conference meeting at Blythi England, advo cated asking educated women to become preachers to fill vacancies in the ranks due to the decrease of ministers In the country. "We might Call in the women,' lie said, "'because in these days women are undertaking tasks as they , have never done, before. Women would, do wonderful work as ministers,, as they have love a.nd sympathy, and a delicate Jntu itioni which, nyJti have not" Mayor Sentences Boys ; ; to.Go to Sunday School WILLI AMSPORT, Pa. Placing them where they shall be taught "Thou shalt "not stealA Mayor Gilmore 'sentenced four ' boys whose ages range from 9 to ,14 years to attend Sunday School re gularly for an Indefinite period. The boys were charged with tak-: ing a pocketbook belonging to their school principal and were taken Into custody when the grandmother of one of. them . dis covered the theft and notified the police. ",; J "", ' .; .. . v, , ;. . ,. . After pleading guilty. the boys were shown cells in the city A 2 WEEKS AT THE RIVOLI! i , I in --New oaay-- rt Hicume or great ; I II ithnlltt nnri Innatt . I . . I ill IVIVAl 111 frlVxiV 1&-Z&st$r Anfono ' ' . M 0 ' 'E 0 '."'' ' .rT A drama set in VHTT 1 if .splendor., iVvijQf -.:;.: -:?Jrt .G R AND TODAY i ' MONDAY TUESDAY j ; - . II y ti .r'V prat vvsr- ; 'XHlirsri num. MRWf I f i Jail, reprimanded .and Mayor Gil- more. '.Imparled the Sunday School sentence. lie warned, them . that their cases would be reopened it they fall to carry Out faithfully the sentence Imposed. SHIP FRIENDS OF MRS. F.E. SHAFER ARE HERE Particularly Interesting -guests In 'Salem last week were "Little Billie". a Lilliputian actor, and his companion. Captain- Patrick O'Hay who stopped here to renew acquaintance with their ship friends. Mrs. F. E. Shafer and W. Earl. Shafer. The four know each other from having traveled togeth er when Mrs. Shafer and her son made their voyage to New Zealand in 192$. "Little Billie" and his companion were especially hon ored at a breakfast while here Captain O'Hay and "Little Billie" are on tour of the country by mo tor, having left New York City exactly 30 days prior to their ar. rival here. Captain O'Hay, wlio 19 a imurer 01 note, la tmiv n fighting Irishman" hlng fought in nine wars under the English and American flags. Both travel ers are loud in their praise of the scenery and the highways of the northwest. It wad their opinion mat no highway on which they nave ever traveled surpasses that from The Dalles to Portland--the Columbia highway. "Little Bil lie" and his companion left Salem to continue their tour Into Cali fornia and Arizona, returning to ew Yoik City by the southern! route. Dane Scores Government -1 for Help to MacMIIlan COPENHAGEN The Danish explorer Peter Frenchen, launch ed a violent newspaper attack on tne Danish government for per muting the American "expforer, MacMillan, to search the ruins of Viking homesteads In Greenland on terms hitherto refused to high ly reputed Danish explorers. ,- treuchen winds up his attack by saying that while Amundsen I remained unheard from, any at tempt at saving him even by MacMIIlan might have been tole rated, but how that Amundsen Is safe there is too reason to grant MacMillan any facilities. . Oregon .wheat crop estimated'at 18;000,000 lrotthel3, ah average yield. . OS Dominates: Theaters of- EuropeTrltic States BERLIN America . Is . setting its Imprint upon he French the ater Quite as 'nfuch- as "upon that of Germany or' t Austria, in the opinion pf.lleltmuth Barnick". Crit ic, In .-writing in the txkal An zeirer; -.-- ' "America Is Uio bacillus," he ob w rves, ."which ) i infecting Eu rope.dnV notices thU Jn Paris fitilto as much as in Berlin or VI trtrta. AVhat Italian would haVe thought of DroduHn AI1' In !. open air'outside, of Vienna for an' nu'ltence'nutnbering tena of thor-. sands. yrw;1t not for the fact that Nt-w jYork ! transformed a church Into a theater, and "ma'i a theater Into a cltHfch? Arter1a with Its super-European . .dlnieu pions simply kills Hie theater halls that have "Wen "kept up srnce the daya Of baroque. At Hollywood America builds up the whole in ner city of Parts In order to film the photoplay. Nob e Dame.' Amer ica eracks the whip in the Casino I;. ?ri? and,,B ht OIymPa. all Paris applaud." RIXO FOR SPECIAL GERMAN , .SERVICE t -STUTTGART -i- The "German Ring" has been created as a new uistinction by the Foreign "Ger man Institute. This finger-ring i? to be accorded every year to such person who has merited the dls Unction by reason of having serv ed the German cause abroad n dome special form. t New York atyThe day I started ,tking Carter's Lktle liver Pills," y Mr. John A. Petry, "my habitual bad breath and bad stomach stopped. I strongly recommend them to all those afflicted 'with tbete nany eoubles. 1 aksure you that my own case was a bad one, causing me untold embarrassment. and Carters helped me rignt trorn tne start."1 Bad breath comes from sour stomach and can usually be relieved quickly by Carters Little Liver Fids. They are woMertui xor constipation, sick-headache and indigestion and tney chvtie the svstero In a mild and centle manner, no bad after enects.At an - . . . . .. Druggists. raid Adv. : - - cu W" 9 j A Don't Kill the Nearly fifty per cent of the hens in every flock do not lay a sufficient number of eggs to p4y for! the cost of their feed alone., Nearly fiftyvper. cent of the male birjla in every flock are not worth breeding from. There fore, one-half of the poultry owned by the average poultryman consumes the profits that he makes on the other half of his flock. , . . , i .... , The most important thing that should be known to every poultryman is to tell how to selec his good layers, how to pick,the birds that consume food but do not lay and. how. to pick birds that should be held over as' breeders.' ; . , - , , ' -: During, the nexfew week's is the important, time, to cull but these , loafers. Hens that lhave ceased to lay eggs should be disposed of at once. "By culling out these hens now; you will not only save feed but you will get higher market pricds.'for the culled out hens. The longer you keep these, hens, the lower thelraarket price will be and the more feed they will eat. . Cull them out fend $ell them as soon as they cease egg production. 'Keep the hens that lay late in the summer and into the fall months. It is easy and simple to tell these hens if you have the plain methods and secret, given in ' . --- . - , ' TheCafl of thb Hen" A new revised edition ;of this book by Prof. T. E. Quisenberry, -gives all the latest information on culling out the non-layers, selecting for, heavy . egg production, culling,-etc. Hundreds of thousands of copies of earlier editions of this book. have been TSold and gave4 entire satisf action It is. 1 worth $100.00 to any poultry raiser. - . . . - . . . The new revised "edition is strictly fjownto-theminute in election by, 'color 'changes, bodily 'changes, pigmentation, head points,' changes in moulting all the latest authoritative information "is' worked out by state t ihvestigators and leading poultrymen. . . . , " ' Endorsed by leading' authoritiesgovrTrtntnt and "state, county agents, farm bureaus, poultry clubs, and experienced poultry-men every where. Next to the trapnest itself,, this is .the best known methods . Wll Dositively tell the good from the bad. Contains many illustrations showing - just how to cull out loafers, how to tell good producers without trapnests, how to select the breeders to keep over, etc. It win prove ten times what you pay for it in a single "season. Even if you raise but a few hens. on. a back city lot, you need this book. The method is so ' simple ' that a' child can apply it. v - i Guaranteed absolutely) td please you or "your'.money. refunded.', iiun-' dreds of thousands have been sold with this positive mqney back guarantee and not a book was ever Returned. Send $2.00 for a copy, postage prepaid. Address all orders - ' " - , .nt- -"i .ML". - 7 Your Money s Worth Vhenyouome-to us for optical work you may be sure Every Dollar Biiys 100 CenU Worth , Staples Optical Company ' Portland Corner State and High Streets cETiN r- ' -i,::;":; iJ T OREGON TodayMonday Tuesday PORTLAND i ' ut.ou. ..... m UTTHE OAFER ,1 Liayera, Market the Culls, arid Save Feed tpjthe . i .i- ir ... .11-. .VI 215South Commercial, Salem, : : . Sal em Salem, Oregon ELKS' PARADE I-: 1 Tr Orecn t ' IEMS v