W 3 3 i $Ti oatem oociety By AUDRED BUNCH Pnoat lGt Guests at Day Home Mriand Mri. G. W. Day, 645 ( hennpf ta street, hare had as their fr5 Kuests for the past month Mrs. Day's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Runyan of David City, Nebraska. On the return trip Mr. and Mrs. Kunyan will visit in Oakland, Cal. Week at Newport Mrs. Harriet Wygent of 171 N. Commercial -street, accompan ied by her son, Harry, and- her daughter, Beverley, are spending a week at Newport. Mrs.-Sears and two daughters are spending the week with them. Cooked Food Sale The Standard Bearer society of th West Salem Methodist church will sponsor a cooked food sale today at the S. P.. ticket office at I'M N. Liberty street. Proceeds will go to the benefit of the Sun day 'school. Dinner at Sisson Home Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Sisson en tertained at a dinner in their home last evening honoring Mr. and Mrs. O. M. , Sherman. Mr. Sherman is the business manager of the Chautauqua. Other, guests for the, evening... Included Mrs. Pickens: of Rbseiurg ;and ,Mr. J. 1). Taylor. ,i' , Wdek-Fnd Party at Keskowin y(r. and Mrs. B. E. Sisson spon - sortkl a delightful partjf'ae'rfes kovrta over the past weekf-end. i Tjie group included . Mr. i and Mrf George Waffan of Sunnyslde, Wash.. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Scott, Goldendale. Wash.; Mr. and Mrs. L. 'A. Sanderman of Sunnyslde, "Wash.; Mr. F. N. Sisson, Miss1 yLstella Sissoi I Dow and ( hi! ' art of MtMir Lstella Sisson, Mr. and Mrs. F. F. hildren, Carl and Stew- nnville; Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Sisson and children, Wil- Ham, Virginia and Elizabeth. Girl Reserves Make Camp at MeJiama A group of local Girl Reserves left for "Santaly," their summer camp at Mehama. yesterday morn ing, accompanied .by -Miss Marian Wyman and Miss Mary Erickson. The group plan to ' be gone 10 days. Among those who are in the group are Fiances Martin, Synthia Delano, Viola Crazer, Elizabeth WaM , Eloise White. ;Rose vFa,Jr ger. Vfmia Berger, Ruth Ham mond and Esther Gardner.'! Rosa lind Van Winkle and Constance Smart plan to be in attendance part of -the- time; - The Misses Lena and Lula Heist will take charge of some of the instructive .work. Mrs.. Robert Dann, who also accompanied the girls, will tell of the conference at Seabeek. : ' -- Miss Mary Erickson, a promi nent member of the Grax club, will instruct the girls in sports and swimming. . (Ill fata JT&i-m Tin lino VMrs. W. E. Ballantyne and little yon, Glenn, of Dallas on Thnrs- lay at her home, 296 N. Cottage street. Farewell Gathering at Rosedale Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Cammack of Rosedale gave a delightful fare well party to their berry pickers cn Wednesday evening. After playing ball, horseshoe and other outdoor games on the lawn, the company was served with Dixies and pake, and afterwards to the "House whr?i-prwgim-Ta given, consisting jaf-thirsicmf numbers 'and stunts. Considerable talent was sloB. Ofespecial interest, were the; liongs byMlsf Mjld'rfd. noy wun uxeieie accompaniment; the piano solos by Ralph Walker, and the representation of "The Virginia Judge," by Mr. Porter R. M. Cammack gave a splendid exhibition of Indian club swing' ing, lighted with Are. The following guests were pres ent: Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Porter, Mildred and Kenneth Cannoy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rauck. L' and Mulford Cook, Roger Taylor, f K K in M Kalph Walker, Helen and Ade- aide Winslow, Mae Vickers, Paul- e and Alfred Vickers. illet. Bruce McGhie, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Grown, Leo, 'Eva, Hazel, Stawart and Teddy sCrown, and M r. Stevenson. LemerexClub Mee&& u t iuwzt? n erne .. e -j Mrs. Ben Eilers wi lj6ste'ssJ at an attraetiTe party i Tiesday afternoqit fat her home en the River road when she entertained for members of the Lemere dnb. Mfdxummet flowers were attrac- ifjn tn rooms with' refresh mejnf served at small tables: Mrs Harry Harms assisted the hostess. Social Calendar T -Today- American War Mothers of Ore gon. Pien'lc at Champoeg Bearers o West Saleni Methodist church. 8. P. ticket office, 184 N. . Liberty street. , 'i . T Sunday home,. 2 Cherry, avenue... Fran ces.EstenA Wright and; Clifford A. Smarts f tindi;JpptotJi721?ce smart.- and . Harold- ,Cook ReiioiT of Durbln clan, state ivews In the group were Mrs.! Floyd White, Mrs. William F. Anderson, Mrs. Harry Harms, Mrs. !W. J. Nelson, Mrs. Fred BroerJ Mrs. Frank Strubel, Mrs. Earl Barham, Mrs. D, R. Peterson. Mr. Floyd Shelton, Mrs. H. Davis, Mrs. Wil liam McLaughlin, Mrs. Will Pick ens, Mrs. Clifton Mndd and the hostess, Mrs. Ben Eilers. j Guests at Pearcy Home Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pearcy will entertain as their guests over the week-end Miss ' Laveraa Spitzen berger and Leland Lapham. both of Portland. Miss Spitzenberger is a member of the physical-education ." department at the j Salem high schooL , Today Mr. and Mrs. Pearcy, ac companied by their house guests Miss Spitzenberger and Mr. Lap ham, together with Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Parr, are leaving for the Valsetz country for a week-end camping trip. Pastor's Wife Arrives From Oklahoma . j Mrs. E. C. Whitaker. wife of Rev. Mr. Whitaker, pastor of the First Christian church, accom panied by their daughter, Eforothy has arrived. in Salem from Ponca City, Oklahoma. The Whitakers will make their home at the Court apartments. i..' K. Jason Lee Women's Societies to Meet The three women's, societies of Jason Lrf?e Methodist ehurett, jfrtll .met. on -.Wednesday; fbr n. day meeting at the church. ivF 1.. rom 10:30 to 12 pcjock the Wjoman's Home Missionary society will meet for is business meeting!. From' 12 to 1 o'clock a pot-luck j lunch eon will be served. From 1 to 2:30 o'clock the Woman's For eign Missionary society will meet for a business meeting and pro gram. From 2:30 to 4 o'clock the . Ladies' Aid society will hold a business meeting and : social hour. ! Miss Roberts Entertains Guest From Portland Miss Marjory Holman ot Port land is the guest of Miss Mildred Roberts, at fhe Roberts cottage at Agate beach. Vacation at Beach Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Hans Seitz of 1156 Court street are spending short time at Agate beach at the-John J. Roberts summer, home there.;: , ',f'lf. ' 't , "' "r Miss Thielsen in SaTewT Miss Nancy Thielsen has been visiting for a short time' with friends in Salem and-will return tr- Newport soon where the Thiel- sens are spending the summer In their cottage at Agate beach. Salem- Man- is Married in Corvallis A wedding of unusual interest was solemnised in Hout's grove, near coirvams, at e:su o cioca this morning when Miss Verna Miller, of the staff -of the Benton County National bank, was mar- tied to Ira Cave of San Francisco. Rev. C. W. Reynolds officiated at the service, with 45 relatives and friends there to witness the cere mony. Mr. and Mrs. Cave left today on a wedding trip ana are io go 10 San Francisco to reside. : , Mrs. Cave has been with the Benton County bank several years and has been an efficient and popular employe. Mr. Cave, an OAC grad uate and well known vocalist, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. -L Cave of Salem--. Ha is-now wjth the telephone J company '-i &k Francisco. Corvallis Gazette- Times. DEFENSE 'STATES NO " i. . VIOLENCE WAS USED (Continued from py 1.) the effect that it they had under stood the situation they would have sued the mill. The Jap anese said they were ''broke," the witness continued and he passed the hat collecting about 15. He said he turned this over to the spokesman of the Japanese who accepted it with a smile.' Wlrfs said that wnost of the yelling which atended the affair was done by children. Prosecu tion witnesses have testified that there were cries ot 'Get the Japs, drag them, out,'' Wirfs denied that he had seen any- Japanese man handled or- that doors of the Jap anese residences had been broken to. H. A. Schlecht followed Wlrfs on "the stand and was questioned closely by the prosecution as. to what: the: whites intended doing in event the, Japanese refused to leave - Toledo'. The witness re plied that therflffwere no plans be yond attempting; to peacefully per suade the Japanese to depart. He added that' the' Japanese had not been abused and. there, bad been no: threats .of violence. s4 j - Askedl; who -led the . crowd of , iThe- crowd' ' wa lei t by- the flag.''n -il . Richard W. Brooka'whd.fci var ious times' had ,! worked or the spruce corporation" testified! thai the JapanesV wefe treated' in "a kindly maimer and' that after the sltuadcm3bewlain4 JAlE .4havacorae-to JtaltHja.W;. u h MTSr"Inex- Riggsi-who-wwrls occurred twaa called anr denied seeing" any violertc ,'agatnat the Japanese! She said she Joined the crowd of whites and entered the house of I to Kawamoto", who test!-1 f led previously that he was beaten and dragged but. Mrs. Riggs as serted' that Kawamoto ' had not been injured In any way. Court adjourned late today to reconvene Monday afternoon. II to. Fifty to Attend Secon nual National, Congress, at Spokane Nearly 50 students and employ es of the Chemawa Indian school will leave next week for Spokane where they will take part in the second national Indian congress. They will present an operetta, an Indian suite and other features. The national Indian congress is educational, with delegates from all over. the United States. James H. McGregor, superintendent of the school, and George Bent, ath letic manager, will give talks. The Chemawa delegates are Operetta, Alice Clark:, Geneva llendrickfcon. Mabel Desautel, Ma- l tilda TuEcott, Kdna. Alette, Ra iiiuuK xr4ifP, iiiiih:i niemuer, He RTneliart. EWryrf -hitebar. Grace Peterson. Harriot Hill, Em ily Ivanoff, Agnes Orr, Grace Johnson, Alice Sanderson, Grace Mjinsdn, Jtono? Ilooth, Raymond rtaldane. George Flach, Charles De'Poe, Louis DuPuis, Walter Me troken, Clifford Celestine, Ernest Lapderson. Oexenlttie Stepin, Le- anaer Wilson, Moses George, lorn Anayah and Jacob Atkins. Suite Louis Walk-on-Ice, Crow and principal character; Albert Bercier, Chippewa medicine man; Jess Pretty Man, Crow; Jesse Steed, Sioux: Joseph Wesley, Yak ima; Steve Voice, Warm Springs; Thomas Spotted Dog, Sioux; Gus Bruno, Warm Springs; dancers. Allie Kelley, Yakima; Grace An drews, Warm Springs; Josephine Miller, Warm Springs; Alice Clark Hoopa; Sarah Cooper, Crow; Eve lyn Whitebear, Sioux. Orchestra Ruthyn Turney, vio lin and director; Mrs. Ruthyn Turney, piano; George Bent,; cor net; John Dexter, violin; Allan Shepherd, bass; Homer Bewley, trumpet; Charles Larson, trom bone. IS 4 : --. AND HERETO STAY F, H, Zinser Sees Many Im provements Here, and ; Looks for More F. H. Zinser is hack in Salem to stay. He sees many improve ments in this city, made ia his two years of absence, and he be lieves there will be great expan sion here in most lines In the near future. Mr. Zinser was for two and a half years in charge of the Boy Scout work in Salem, and he made a capable executive . and accom plished a good work. About two years ago he went to Spokane, to 1 take up the same line of ork'4 He now represents the Northern Savings,, and Loan associaMott of Bartlan$,fwith offices in the re-: gon building. BACK IN SALEM Mr. Zinser, kept his m . ani'tlM1 Vf?1- ears ODen-dHnit hirfcbsnie from b capital 4ettyv andne gathered some ideas that he thinks will be helpful here,, which" he hopes to help work our for the good of the city of his first love and of his present choice. Forest Grove Local plants have barreled 250 tons straw berries this year. I Science for Service True education combines vtheory andT practice, and its goal Is service. Oregon's Land-Grant College affords the liberal train ing essential to personal; fultur and-civic efficiency.) combined with'special training for leadership in fields vital in modern life'. ' . : : :- s. ' - , -i i Basic and General Training f : In the School of Basic Arts and'-Sciences and the depart ments of Industrial Journalism, the Library, Physical Edu cation, and Music. Technical and Special Training With curricula leading to schools of AGRICULTURE CHEMICAL ENGINEER ING COMMERCE ENGINEERING FORESTRY Graduate work is offered In most of the schools. In addition to the Resident Instruction, the Experiment Station and Extension Service specialize In the application of science in every-day life. FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 20 For latest Catalogue THE REGISTRAR uregon Agricultural uouege w xjy uncivil k Death Comes as Shock to Thousands, Ignorant of His Physi cal Condition; Continued Active in Duties i Throughout Last Week Fnneral services S will be held Monday, July 19, at 3:30 o'clock In Portland. Charles U. Taylor, executive secretary of the. Oregon State Fed eration, of Labor, died Tuesday morning at the Good Samaritan ospitaL He had jsuffered from " tes for a number of years illness became acute only i Latere his death. Few r- . I- new s, ' - ?3li'tNPtion and his death . ajs-tiGeaHshocic to thousands I -.ES2&. Illness was reportl 1 leito-, headquarters MondaJ j W;. v.? was none who knew ; iSfl-" iousness ot his condition uhij ,4 death was reported; Tuesday. He had worked al of last week,' returning Saturday; afternoon from a trip to Eugene and other Willamette valley points. He was born March 21, 1881. He was employed ; by the PEP company in the autumn of 1911 and in 1912 became a clerk and inspector for the company. In 1918 he -was made secretary of the brotherhood, a beneficiary in stitution of the PEP employes. ft He wag elected president of the $treet Carmen's union at the close Of 1919 and served, in. that capa city: from the first of 1920 until July. 1925. resigning. when he be cjime aeting presides t of the Ore gon State Federation of Labor. In 1921 he was elected. 11th interna tional vice president of the Amal gamated Association pf Street and Electric Railway Employes, con tinuing as such until his death. In January, ,1924, he became vice president of the Oregon State, Federation of Labor and was re elected for the following year. When O. R. Hartwig, who sus tained serious injuries in an auto mobile accident, aBked to be re lieved of active duties as president of the State .Federation in 1925, Taylor becane acUng president, assuming that office and continu ing until the close of the year. At the convention in Marshfield last August the federation conferred executive powers on the secretary and Mr. Taylor was .nominated for that position.. He wpn in the ref erendum election, the vote from Sis own union being ia great, trib ute to the esteem in which he was held by. his fellow unionises. . '', The first of this year he was in stalled aa executive1 secretary and from that time to within two days preceding his death he threw in to the work the last ounce of his energy. Just before taking; up the work of the federation last July, accom panied by Mrs. Taylor, he made a tri plover land to their former home in Indiana. He is tnrriTed by his wttdT and by a son, Donald Taylor, who-rei sides at Heltonville, Ind, and. by his father and a brother in Port land. '. y Telegrams sent to the vraihing ton State Federation of Labor! con vention at Everett Tuesday' called forth a resolution expressing a sense of the loss sustained "by. la bor and extending sympathy to' his family. Joe Reed, ; fraternal; dele gate from the Oregon federation to he Washington convention, and C. O. Young, organizer for the American Federation of Iabor, sent telegrams " conveying; an ex pression of theirpronal iorfowr sPreaideht B. TV. SJeerkin in thartederationpsf fyfof, nd laliHbaivherfwill, U&JftMys, cail4aaeuztg ;of ie'xcwtive S By proTlsida- t Ibe- Coni stifutiil,th ,ucce8Sbri.hosen- by the xecutiire bard will ;sr. the rest oT;the tnn jWhicli falor was elected," till; thai;firsi "tjf .the year. The executive! board meet ing will probably be called for Sat urday, July 31, and will also take up other matters which will need consideration for presentation to the convention that opens' at the bachelor's degree in the HOME ECONOMICS MILITARY SCIENCE MINES PHARMACY I VOCATIONAL EDUCA TION aad information address CORVALLIS ! i ,J , J Taylor Called , Funeral Monday Klamath Falls on August 30. Mr. Sleeman has notified all ex ecutive board members and all central labor bodies in the state of Mr. Taylor's demise. Oregon Labor Press. MILES REMAINS MANAGER PORTLAND, July 16. (By As sociated Press. ) Amalgamation of the Oregon Gra.vcl company of Saleni, with the Rosa Island Sand ;, i ' I ' ..-j. ' 3' 1 ; A - I-' .' . . i c, Y'y'' t j S X' IS M-frm I ivIllX f rs'n aV '"V t ' '""O f I? AT, dlMppolnted Ihflove. sets out ' -'v;X I rl, Irk Mi II , i Pwl H II II 1 1 Vll I I - IU omj, ain oneijht mi, Inn :' r:v 3 , I l I k f i X lfm Vi 1 11 II I Itl R k I k I I .--,, . Short'oBw, bromd naa -in-b- . r, X JJZl . r" I J I Lvlh, UngmB fiiat entcrtaiiuBent . i - IrCvrT f --? C i' . x ts vi.AiTwiBii AiiSo l .--flSflT ''"rlV'lV'"n'T'BURK2roN 8CETS irL y iV'i ; n IV Q IV JLJL 0 .V ; Super Symphony quality . and Gravel -company and tlK Beaver Portland Cement company, the latter two of which wers amalgamated in June, was an nounced today by D. L. Carpenter, who heads' the latter firms. It was reported that the consider ation was approximately'" $100, 000. The Salem company will continue its corporate identity under the management of Ross Miles, although the Ross Island and Beaver Portland company have acquired control of the stock and will handle sales and distribution. TOURISTS BREAK RKCORD PORTLAND. Ore., July 16. (AP.) The 1926 motor tourist wave has arrived in Oregon, and. L according to available records, ex ceeds all previous records. Ip iinlylv) y c n i ..... .... j. . ,;. m ) ) In h ri r 1 :VZ LEVENS ADVISED CASH RUNS LOW Curtailment of Activities May Result, $30,000 Left for Year r The state treasurer yesterday advised William Levens, state pro hibition director, that the pro-i hibition department has received $50,000 this year, which is the maximum amount allowed during any single year from fines col lected by the counties for prohi4 bitiou violations. The prohibition department now Today; ' r . - . i At The Theatres THE KLSIXORK R a y m o n d Griffith in "Wet Paint-Vf iv - - " i .; v : i f Oregon Norman Terry in "Un. der Western Skies." , RI.IGH 5 ;Act9 Vaddevilleand. i4 Pictures. " . . . " has approximately ?30,000 to op-terete on during the remainder of this year. -Mr. Levens said it might be necessary " fSr; him to curtail expenses by reducing his force of field operatives.' Levens has expended i approxi mately 10,0 0 6 in prohibitioa law enforcement work , since he as sumed office' early in the "year i92&. - :.-' r-'- : - Sunday, - Monday s f BIATIXEES - . S. 10c - 35c M; n ETEXTXGS, Ml. 20c - 50c 4;: Ay-r - laixxrouns J Ulng la Toledo yben ihg .gjiction 1 1