t 1 1 1 . i A MET TGUT WWW Cost' of Shipping From Wil "derviile Quarry to Salem Set at $2;05 The public - service commission Saturday ;filorlzed a reduction o ftbe f rp- c.ye on lime rock shipped f: $"jhi state lime rock quarry at Tdlderrllle, Josephine county, to Salem. . from $2.50 to $2.05 per-ton. Toe rate Is base.! on carload lots of 90.000 pounds. The commission also has auth orized the' application of special low rates on agricultural lime from Salem based on the scale of rates previously In effect out of Gold Hill. The rate reductions were re quested by the state lime board which recently-moved, the state ifne plant from Gold Hill to the n .... . T . . : oi tne ireigni rate on lime rock .shipped from the : quarry ? near Gold Hill to the penitentiary- was promised byvthe Southern Pacific people to the lime board before the lime plant was removed to. the penitentiary, and It was one of the inducements that led Gover nor Pierce to take over the state lime plant and operate it as one of the penitentiary Industries. The prices for lime at the penitentiary AT THE TilEATnES- Oregon Zane Grey's story, "Desert Cold," with Neil Hamil ton, Shirley Mason, Josef Swickard and William Powell jneilig Rex Beach'ii "The Bar Bllgh Five acts vaudeville and pictures.- -f- f plant were fixed on this presump tion. They are $4.75 a ton for hulk lime in , any quantity, and $5.50 for lime in sacks, the sacks to be returned. If further reduc tions of price to the farmers using the lime can. consistently be made there will be such reductions. The penitentiary has so far been billed $2.50 a ton for the freight on the lime rock, but the freight bills have been held. up. pending the adjustment. They can now be paid, -according to the understanding with the lime board, at $2.05 a ton. RIVER WATER PROBLEM NECESSITATES STUDY take care of tne sewage of a pop ulation of about 500,000. It now has the problem of sewage dis posal from a popuation of 400, 000. Plans must be made for the immediate future." The talk, one of the most auth oritative made here in the opin ion of local authorities, was de livered before -one of the local luncheon.- clubs. , It Is published because .of Its marked tlmliness. Continuing, Mr. Harmon said: " The United States has been in terested ; for many; years in the prevention of pollution , of large navigable bodies of water.' The government Is interested in the pollution by sewage of the "Wil lamette river- because that river empties - into the navigable body, the Columbia river.- : ; ; ; "The Ohio river is already fast approaching the time when it can not . take care of the amount of sewage dumped into it. .The -Willamette river is not in immediate danger, but the time will come and if the matter is looked ; into and the right steps taken now, a lot' of money can be saved the cities along the Willamette river. ""Sewers are often laid with no consideration of the future. .The result is that cities have to go to large costs when they find it nec essary to change their sewer sys tems. All trunk sewers, in a city should meet at one place, so that the sewage Can be treated before being .emptied into the river. A "Portland Is now planning to dump all its sewage into the river at one point. The sewage, accord ing to tentative plans, , will be treated, as the Columbia during parts of the year is all but stag nant. The back waters or sloughs become filled with the pollution. - "Oxygen is needed to burn the sewage. If the sewage is not too plentiful the oxygen in the water will burn it, and the air will re turn the oxygen to the water. But when the sewage gets too plen tiful, the air cannot return the d. ws at Om Win- tor llhre Arrivals We have just received by express some of the new style shoes that are just out and we will receive many moreall through the month. You can come in almost any day and see new shoes that have just arrived as we keep them com- tggf w.eTinave a buying organization mat keeps us in t fitich withf any new. style that comes out and we have &ni produced at once and sent to us 'so we can give our "i-U i : 1.1 . : cc i 1 large siores of the coast. ! Some of the New Things are: Gray Kid Strap Pump With Ostrich Trim B lackPat Leather Str prump With Shark Trim Black Patent Leather With twenty eights , heel. Tnis shoehas a combination I Parchment and Lizzard trim. Parchment Kid ; Block heel, plain one strap a very dressy last ' ' Par chment With Bois DeRose trim. . This is an excellent sport pump e- ' with low 'heel 1 i ' " l r r, a This is only a few of the new bhes ranging, in price' from '-4 : v f DO YOtTR FEET 'irCRT? i V porns and , calluses re ' Bpved without pain, or sore rsaa. Ingrown nails removed svbd treated,- Pains In feet, -pald fooW Hat foot, foot strains and fallen arches ad . Julted. Do not suffer. I will . give you the best that sci snce can produce in scientific chiropody. Consult ;; -t ..DR. WILLIAMS About Your Feet : Hours 9 to 5:30 Phone (11 7 JIIEPIUCE- shoe PixDwOU 1 ca r$uuiBodb fid&ad&MU REPAIR DEPARTMENT ... - Our.shop Is equipped with all new machinery. Weuse nothing but the very "best grade of leather that money .will buy. - , , ' , Mr. Jacobson, in charge of this department, , is - an ex pert in his liner has spent years In factories aod repair: shops r and ,wlll do nothing but high grade work.- "s " oxygen .. to the water ; speeauy enough.. ' v ...".v: . - ' " "ThU leads to the death of fish, who cannot breathe, of course, if theynaven't a sufficient supply or oxygeiil Poisons from Industrial wastes emptied into streams, will also cause the death of fish. It la estimated that 100 gallons of Int d us trial waste is equal in pollu tion strength to 20.000 or 30,000 gallons of ordinary sewage. w; MIn all probability there will be a .large population along - the banks of, the, Willamette? river in the near future. The Willamette river, ander present sewer condi tions, can take care of the sew age from about 500,000 people. There are aready 400,0,00 people here ; -j "So the time is ripe for Salem, along with other cities along the river, to begin working toward the solution of the sewage problem." GENERAL WHITE PLANS FOR SUMMERi TRAINING (Cob tinned front VS !) the tnt city at Camp Jackson and for , housing facilities at Fort Stevens have been received from General White who is now at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where he is attending the command1 and staff school. . In a few weeks the camp site at Medford will be transformed from an almost barren plain to a thriving city of some 3000 popu lation. General White's plans call for the erection of approximately 800 tents, a supply warehouse, a motor transportation park, kit chens and mess halls and shower bath facilities. Funds for this purpose were requisitioned by General White last' fall from the federal government and are now available, It was said. At the close of the four days school : for officers provided for by the federal government and which t ended at Portland last Thursday, commanders of the various nation al guard units 'throughout the state were' given final Instructions covering the movement of their command from home stations . to the two camps. Arrangements have been made with the railroad companies to provide eight spe cial trains to carry the troops to Camp Jackson, and an additional special train for the troops to Fort Stevens. The heavy tentage, ma chine gun, engineer, hospital and other military impediments, in cluding the tractors and 75 m. m. guns for the field artillery will precede the troops to camp in a gigantic freight train. Both camps open June 15 and will end June 29. This is the first time since the World war that all components of the Oregon army will train within the borders of their own state and the govern ment will spend approximately $200,000.00 on the camps. A large percentage of this is in the form of pay and allowances for members of the national guard and will be at once thrown into circulation throughout the state. Oregon cities that will be repre sented at the camps are: Portland, Eugene, McMinnville, Salem, Roseburg, Oregon City, Silverton, Tillamook, Dallas, Corvallis, Med ford, Woodburn, Gresham, Grants Pass, Cottage Grove, Union, La Grande, Baker, Astoria. The Dal les, Forest Grove, Albany, Ash land, Marshfield, Newport, Toledo, Lebanon. Springfield, St. Helens, Pendleton. Destructive criticism requires no effort and takes little intelli gence. One Salem booster Is worth a dozen knockers. WATER STOCK CHECKED - MEDFORD Mar i 1 ( AP. ) -According to data compiled by tKi Medford irrigation district ' of f i cials, sufficient storage water is available in the Fish Lake and Four Mile reservoirs for Irrigation purposes to last until July 10. Drive carefully. There are C, 300,000 automobiles on the road today. ',.t Falrmount's milk Is a real food." Say the Farmer Boy. As the careful mother watches her baby's weight from week to week so will she carefully guard his growth, between the ages of 6 to 15 years. Bab ies cannot live without milk and growing" children grow the faster for it. Mothers should increase the quality of milk in the grow ing child's diet a quart a day is none too much for him. Order more milk today. ourit' DAIRY 'siA rwurarui er DiiAMriK iraac rm pvi i iui tne grai iam wai t ji r. i i my 1 SS,"T3m "liiifS OK f)YLCL9NIC thrills .... Wild rideW , Render romance.; Directed by the man who made The Vanishing Amer ican. . Comedy BURRASTON News aT to ttt1 r I T r n M ARM I OF ' il BRINGING YOU 1 The 1 1 - t 14 1 J Ml ' J f Interest; "'; til HEARTODA Y-THE D FORC ELECTRICITY MUSIC, the most wonderful the world has ever known RADIO Reception, improved beyond the dreams of science Brunswick Panutrppe and Radiola ELECTRICITY has bestowed upon the world another priceless gift: lUSICV of a quality and a richness never before attained. RADIO RECEPTION so vastly better that it astonishes everyone who hears it. This remarkable new invention called the Bruns wick Panatrope and Radiola is the joint achieve ment of four great5 electrical arid acoustical labo ratories Radio Corporation of America, General Electric Company, Westinghouse Electric & aMn ufacturing'5 Company,' and Brunswick. Only so imposing an,ef fort could have achieved so inspir ing a result; f ' The Brunswick Panatrope is the FIRST purely electrical reproducing musidal instrument known. So truly marvelous is its rendition; so incompar ably beyond anything else before it, that it is commanding front-page attention in the great metropolitan newspapers ofj the United States. Now on Display Today we offer you an opportunity to hear the Brunswick Panatrope and (Radiola. ' Hear what beyond question is one of ihe greatest -electrical achievements. The Panatrope inaugurates a new!" day both in music-reproduc sure to hear it. ion and in radio. ' Be PANATROPE: The joint achievement of F6ur4Wor Leaders in- musical and electrical acoustics Radio Cor poration of America, General Electric i Company, West- " lhghonse Electric & Mfg. Company, and Brunswick. The iiiebmpa all Sold Exclusively, in Salerri by y a. - Terms -Gladly; WitKou ; r : - j - ill . 0 The StdrenVIth he Friendly Spirit . Trade in r Your' ..... . .' Phonograph" -iru.i nn irmnTiif "r" n"""! I i - m- m m n A