The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 26, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

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heOrego
a . 4 j 4
y leaned daily gcept Monday ay .
THE STATESMAN PTXBUSHXSa COM7AVT
215 6uth Commercial St, Salem. Oregoa '
R. J, Hendricks -
- .. Manager
Managing Editor
-,Newa Editor :
Society Editor
Lee it, Mtrrimti
iartd Bunch
1 1 ii i i
, :U 'V-"i"r?- MEHBEX Or THE
1 b Aseoeletad Press ia exclusively
dlsaew.a
credited to it or aot otherwise
ewa pablisaed herein.
lm "r. Woreeeter Bldf; Portl and, Ore. -
Thomee P. Clark Co.. New Tork, 128-1 3S W. Slat St.; Chicago. Merqoette Bide
Poty A Paya,. Sharoa Bid,., Baa Francisco, Calif.; Higgla BWlS !XJ.l2e. CmlU.
....... .
TZXJBPHOHES l
Circulation OffJeefSS
. Baalaees Office- 2S or 88S
elety Editsr 0
Entered at tha Port Of flea la Salem, Oregon, aa second elass matter.
August 26, 1020
. ACTIONS WEIGHED "The Lord ia a God of knowledge, and by
Him actions are weighed." I Sam. 2:3.
MUSTIIAVE LARGER VOLUME! 1
P .We put up in Oregon annually over two million cases of
fruit and vegetables. That looks like a mountain of them
.. 'And over half this output is from Salem.
, t -But Oregon looks like a piker when compared with Cal
if on ria. That state puts up 24,000,000 cases annually of fruit
- ''and vegetables.
- - 'The few old timers' who imagine that the Salem district
is going to overdo some or all varieties of fruit and vegetables
should have heard R. H. Kipp at the Salem Rotary club yes-
terday noon. He is at the head of the marketing department
of . the Portland Chamber of Commerce,
. .-. - - What Oregon needs, and what Salem needs, is volume
then our fruits and vegetables will not have to be sold
throughout the country in California stands ; will not have to
.... .go as California products.
( Wearei only started in Salem-
J e roust Put UP 10,000,000 cases of fruits and vegetables
annually.
-h Mi . Thert we;will be fairly on
NOT JUST A DAY
(Portland
?p V
- ror vaientino, actor, column after column t)i newspaper
-space. ,
. . For Eliot, educator, a few inches.
More than 300 years ago there lived a man named Will
iam Shakespeare. One day, in the Globe theater, in London,
- there was aplay of his production. The play, as all plays do,
had a hero. And the hero was played by a 17th century
.dandy.'jcurled, perfumed and buskined.
" The man who played the hero died and through the
' : winding streets of London strutted a funeral procession.
Eight dapple-gray stallions drew the funeral chariot and
women wept profusely along the wayside.
The man Shakespeare died, almost alone. A modest funer
.al service committed his body to the earth. There were no
fanfares of crepe-draped trumpets ; no weeping crowds.
.'And there," laughed the 17tth century cynic; "is Eng
land!" V
' " Maybe! Maybe! But what is the name of the handsome
chap who played the hero in William Shakespeare's new play
at the old Globe theater in London?
YES; WE SHOULD
Notwithstanding the fact that we have had two years of
.average poor yields of grain, especially wheat, the Salem dis
trict should grow more grain.' This, district will never raise
too much grain if our growers will feed a large enough pro-
"portion of it to poultry and hogs and cows and live stock
"... generally . ,
And they will always have a good sale for their milling
oats ; for they can raise the best grown in the world.
"They cannot raise too much corn, either, for silage, and
for the hens and hogs.
They should raise better wheat and better oats, on the
average, in which case they will grow more to the acre, and
get higher prices, thus making the growing more profitable.
This is a good grain . country, and it will always grow
BRING
COFFEE POT
f ' ' v 1 . ' '
$ 1 for it no matter how; badly
damaged it may be
. Yes we mean exactly what we say. Makes
no-difference how worn, out your old coffee
pot or percolator may be during this sale
we credit you with $1.00 towards purchase of
a Quality Brand Percolator. T
Percolator 1 '. J-L $70 J? -
Your old coffee pot ...1 $1.00 r
' . ' ' :- " $60
Total if yon have no old percolator or coffee pot
wlll be 7.50. Buy today while we ran supply, ou.
SALE NOW OAT
... " ll tiJ- i , :rr ijf J.-cups of delicious coffee right at table-i-piplng
Only a limited quantity of percolators wirt be sold.. ?, .hn,,,,, Hmo Patnt voiv-
It you have an old percolator or roffeo pot to.di!
pose of, don't wall, rotnt tx oar More at oace. Art
promptly wfaUe'thla sensational offer lasts. . ' v
THE OKEGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OKEGON
mSfatesniari
W. H. Headeraoa
. Ralph H. Kletxing
J , Prank JatkMki
I J?. A.Rhetea -I
W.UCMMf
Oireelatioa Manager
Adverttaiag Xtiiiftr
Manager Job Dept.
Livestock Editor
- - Poultry Editor
AVOCZATZO PKSS
entitled to that naa far Trahlleatkn n
eroditod ia thla ditmf id tiu tb iu-l
", rteve Departments S or 108
J0 lepax tmen t 6 8 i
our way.
News.)
GROW MORE GRAIN
IN "YOUR OLD
srs W i- : M a v. . va
t
graln7 especially in rotation schemes carried on intelligently.
This is not a griain country that will allow of straight
grain cropping on the same land year after year ; in fact,
there is no such country, outside of the Nile valley and other
valleys subject to annual overflow and the bringing dowii of
new soil from the upper reaches for every succeeding crop -
So we must have better cultural methods on the average,
and greater attention to good seed and the right varieties.
We now produce 63 'commercial varieties of wheat, for in
stance, whereas 12 would be a
One of the big and outstanding things for: the Salem
district in grain cropsj is the production of the milling'oats
f or which it is already" famous
- The breakfast food oats. .
We raise here an oat that weighs heavier to the bushel
than any other, arid that isthe best known for milling pur
poses; and for the uses made of it by the breakfast food man
ufacturers' of the United States. . ,
There is a big and growing demand for the oats of this
quality, and it would pay our farmers to specialize on this
variety more than they have done in the past; to specialize
and improve the quality; to render the product absolutely
clean.
, This line of agriculture might well be organized and
standardized. It is a line in which we have what amounts to
a franchise (with a small district of western Washington in
the Skagit valley), and we 'could profitably use the franchise,
to the very limit of the demand of that product of primacy ;
and the best authorities believe this could be carried very far.
The breakfast food demand is big in this country. This is
a line, too, that our own manufacturers would do well to
develop; to the end that the great bulk of the manufacturing
of high class breakfast foods for the whole country might be
here, instead of shipping the grains across the country and
then shipping them back again to our consumers in manu
factured form.
It is fortunate that there is now at the head of the local
flouring and feed mill business in Salem, in the person of
Ross C. Bidwell, a manufacturing chemist of years of training
and experience. He was for fifteen years the chemist and
milling superintendent of the great Sperry flour milling con
cern. He has here a modern chemisal laboratory. He will be
able to aid very materially our dairymen and ponltrymen in
their feeding problems. He will help wonderfully our poultry
boom here. There are few more desirable developments than
this.
O
I
O
Bits For Breakfast
o
Weather man says unsettled
-And
It looked that way for a
time last night.
a -Pity
the poor prune men. It
looked like a short harvest yester
day. Looked worse last night, af
ter the rain.
S
Raise more grain; but raise it
in rotation, and feed more of it
to poultry and pigs and dairy cows.
The walnut and filbert growers
are not worrying over the rain.
They were not worrying over the
sunshine, either. These are al
most weather proof crops here.
They will not be overdone for' a
long, long time, if ever.
a
The Sells-Floto circus played to
full tents in Salem yesterday, and
the general verdict was that this
world's Becond largest circus is
better than ever.
V "a
"The Hop Vine Scratch" is run
ning again on the Lake Brook hop
ranch. It is the publication on a
mimeograph machine ot the health
and recreation service of T. A.
Livesley & Co. Mrs. G. A. Robin
son and Lynn Boothby are the
health and recreation dire:-s,
working under the auspices of the
Salem YMCA.
S S S
Hop picking of the early variety
was to commence this morning at
the Lake Brook ranch, which has
7 2 acres of this variety. But last
f -Nine Cup Electric
Percolator i
'Famous quality brand electric percolator.
--' BeautifuJ, superbly finished, an r amazing
electric percolator that never boils or spills
v the coffee -never overflows. Brews nine
o - . - - v
pumps water six to eight .times faster than
ordinary percolators. Fully guaranteed. Cord
and plug inclnded.
great plenty,
night's rain may hold up picking
somewhat.
a "a "a
Here is one of the news iteinj Ii
the first issue for this year of The
Hop Vine Scratch: "This is one
of the largest hop yards in Ameri
ca and the finest camp. Have yo i
noticed all the new apartments
taking the place of the tents? Mr.
Livesley is constantly trying to
make the camp better."
UNNAMED PLOT CHOSEN
FOR PUBLIC MARKET
(Continued from paea 1.)
way traffic through it is adopted,
congestion would be hopeless
there.
This plot would also be out of
sight from any of the main
streets of town, and it is thought
that business might suffer there
unless the public became used to
the location.
Another possible location given
considerable attention is at Cen
ter and Front streets, now occu
pied by a used car seUing estab
lishment. This land is owned by
the Southern Pacific, which
bought it several years ago with
a possible electric terminal site in
view, but the big growth of motor
stage transportation lias made
such use impracticable.
No consideration was given to
financial matters, as the commis
sion wishes to settle on a definite
site before giving money their at
tention. The site chosen may
play a big part in the financing
problem, as the amount of rent
demanded by some of the sites
varies considerably.
The' need of having a site near
the shopping district is consider
ed paramount by the commission,
as it is- generally believed that
most of the trading will be done
by women buyers who may" also
wish to shop and visit the market
on the same trip down town.
"I was in Eugene yesterday,"
said Edward Schunke, one of the
committee members, "and made
Satisfy your sweet tooth with
those good Whitman's candles. We
have the exclusive right of sale to
this line in Salem. Crown Drug
Store, 332 State. )
Instead of soda hereafter take
a little "Phillips Milk of Magne
sia" In water any time for Indi
gestion or sour, acid, gassy stom
ach, and relief wfll come Instantly.
For fifty years genuine "Phil
lips Milk of Magnesia has been
Sour Stomach
"Phillips Milk of Magnesia"
f Better than Soda 1
prescribed by physicians bcjuse
it overcomes three times as. much
acid In the stomach as a saturated
solution of bicarbonate of soda,
leaving the stomach sweet- and
free from all gases, -It neutralizes
acid . fermentations in. the bowels
and gently urges, the souring waste
from the system without purging.
Besides, It is more, pleasant . to
take : than . soda. k Insist upon
"Phillips." TwentyrflTSnt and
fifty cent bottles, an'y drugstore,
"Milk of Magnesla""has been the
II. S. Registered Trade MarBTof
The Charles IL . Phillips Chemical
Co. and its predecessor Charles II.
Phillips since 1875.- Adr. .
y i . - - ;
. ; . ..'.-.'-I. " .
"lTooUk)se Widows"
iianaw n 'if r ii iMa'min i 1 n"at:$qP m amin -1fll n iiiaraftanwriiiiv.T-i(i
quite a thorough investigation of
the public market there. Prac
tically all the buyers were wo
men." Most of this buying will be
done in the early morning hours,
according to the belief of several
of the committee members. Wo
men will make special trips down
to get the choicest fresh vegeta
bles as they come in from the
farm in the morning. This has
been found to be true in several
other cities, they say.
Fry's Drug Store, 280 N. Coml,
the pioneer store. Everything for
everybody in the drug supply line,
with standard goods and quality
ervice always. ()
W. G. Krneger, realtor; progres
sive, fair; equitable. Growing city
and country make possible buys
that will make yon good money.
Complete listings. 147 N. Com'I.
C)
SCHOOL HEAD ESTIMATES
6,0 0XJ STUDENTS IN 1926
(Contained from pate 1.)
crease in students of this class
until 1931, when a new building
will probably be required.'
The Englewood school, with
330 students last year, is expected
to reach its capacity of 3 60 by
1927, so that relief will be needed
after that date. The Highland
school is expected to reach its
capacity of 500 by 1929. It had
314 students last year. Opening
of the Parrish school and a new
parochial school recently near it
have helped handle the students
in that' district.
.Lincoln school, Yew Park and
Garfield schools will be able to
handle all the students for several
years to come, it is believed. Not
much increase in the Garfield en
rollment is expected, as it is near
the center of town. The new
Tuxedo park school is expected to
relieve the situation at Lincoln
and Yew Park.
The Richmond school will reach
its capacity of 440 by 1929, it is
predicted. It had 327 students
last year. The basement will be
needed for classroom space by
1927.
New buildings will be necessary
to take the excess students at
these districts when the capacity
is reached, with Englewood the
first in 1927. The new building
at Grant will be necessary because
the present one is nearly worn
out. It is the oldest school build
ing in the city.
Only 455,000 of the 1923 half
million dollar bond issue will be
left when the Tuxedo park school
is. finished, so more bonds will
have to be sold to pay for the
needed buildings.
The Square Deal Hardware Co.,
230 N. Com'I. Most elegant and
practical lines of mechanics' tools,
builders' hardware, cutlery, etc. Go
there and save the difference. ( )
Cobbs & Mitchell Co., lumber
and building materials for every
purpose. Get estimates, look at
quality of material, then you will
order. 349 S. 12th St. ()
H. T. Love, the Jeweler, 33S
State St. High quality jewelry,
silverware and diamonds. The
gold standard of values. Once a
buyer always a customer. ()
U. S. WILL SLASH 1928
EXPENSES SAYS MADDEN
(Continued front page 1.)
or such items as tax refunds.
On going over the financial
situation with Mr. Madden, Mr
Coolidge emphasized the economy!
program of the administration and
urged that no unjustifiable expen
ditures be made. Mr. Madden,
who left for Chicago this noon
after being an overnight guest at
White Pine camp, plans to go to
Washington soon and confer with
Brigadier General Lord, director
of the budget. The hearings of
the house appropriations commit
tee on the supply measures for
next year, he said, would. begin in
Washington about November S.
While no provision- has yet been
included in the budget estimates
for next year to carry out the
$165,000,000 public buildings pro
gram. Madden-'indicated that some
amount would be provided with
the maximum- for any one year
limited to $25,000,000.
Mr. Madden made it clear that
he had not and was not prepared
to give any opinion as to whether
the. interest from funded war time
foreign debts should be used for
tax reduction, -retirement .of the
public, debt or any other' special
purpose. .
In addition to studying appro
"THURSDAY MORNING,
artaliinore . 1 oday.
priation questions. President Cool
idge today heard additional re
ports on the business conditions of
the country from Louis K. Liggett
of Boston, head of a chain of
drug stores.
Another summer White House
guest was Representative Wood,
republican, Indiana, chairman of
the republican congressional cam
paign committee, who came 'pre
pared to report on the progress of
the fall elections.
President Coolidge tomorrow
will go to Plattsburg to inspect
the citizens' training camp.
Mrs. H. P. Stith. millinery.
Most beautiful hats In Salem; all
shapes and colors; full stock from
which to make fine selections.
Best quality. 333 State St. ()
A darky in the American army
was asked what his rank was.
"Ise a pilot in de infantry," was
his somewhat startling reply.
"But there are no pilots in any-
thing but the flying corps, pro
tested his interlocutor.
"Oh yes dey is," insisted Jim,
"from de time I fust put on dis
unifohm de sergeant he began
sayin, 'take dis and dat and pile J
n aere, ana Dy gum, ise oeen pil
ing it ever since. Nobody can't
say I ain't a pilot, nossuh!".
A lumberjack with a broken leg
was taken to a hospital for treat
ment. After the leg had been set.
the nurse asked him how the ac
cident occurred. He replied:
"You see, ma'am, it was this
way: I was skyhooking for the
Potlatch Lumber company and I
had only one ground mole. , He
sent up a big bule butt and she
was a heavy one. I saw her yaw
and yelled to him to give her a St.
Croix, instead of which he threw a
sag "into her and gunned her, and
that broke my leg."
"Yes," the nurse replied, "but I
don't exactly understand."
'Neither do I," said the lumber
jack. "The darn fool must have
been crazy."
Cole Black had fallen foul of
the law and was having a prelimi
nary conference with his counsel.
"Can you prove an alibi" asked
the latter.
"Al what's that, boss?"
"Alibi. Can you prove where
you were at the time the offense
was committed?"
"Lowdy, boss, dat's jes' what
ah s skeered dey's gwin to do!"
A farmer rode into a Middle
' o
I at at Sk. enmn onea A . . r-
i L I o I c fi In i
v -o
a:oo.;no KTBR (263). 6-7, organ re-
i. i"urisr information.
o:uu-iz:iu ivuw (491). 6-7. dinner
.vui-rri: i 1 :., weather, .police
livestock and market reports 7 -45
. ehnrch leetnre: :20, vaudeville.
6:O0.10:0OKFWV (212). 6-7. orehea
tra; clo, music and program ;' 8. pro
fjam; , pronram; 11-12, pipe orran
8:00-10:0O KOIX (319. 6-7. pipoor
V Ran; H stringed orchestra; 9-10 sttt
dio mnsicsli'. '
i fu- J ( : no K r J It (263). 7:30-8.-30
erenina Mory ; 9-10, musical hour. K
eal artists. '
6:00 KHQ (?04). Spokane. 6. orche.-
wm ronrert; -io. prorram.
-ivr 1 (,), 1.0 Anceles. NtirhtW
ProBram; 8. profirami 9. pro"
eram: 10. iane orchestra.
6:00 KFVVI (250). San FraneUeo. 7.
program; 8, reading; 8:30, music; 9,
vocal; 10, orrhestra; 1112. orchestra
eaaa BUtVn,
6:00 KGO (361). Oakland. , orehea
tra; 8, vacation program; 9-12, orehea
6:0O KPSN (315). Pasadena. -6, dinner
(I OO V UTD Mlui . . -
""' ''"iiywooa. m. pm-
tra concert orctiestra; 9, orche
rt:0O-KPWn (252). Hollywood. V mu
mL?f.r'm:,?' "hra aai pro
rram : - Kl-l 1, frolic.
6:3.rrK.J I, Anreleji. 8-30
eniiaren a hour; 7:30, Bible reading; 8.
:30-lklb-(428. 'rta.V.naUr'.-rao
B:30 -KXX (237). Hollywood. :30r
rheMra5 prrm! .-'
V22j??JSSh S?" 7-9, pro
orehestra "" program; 10-1 1,
T:a-KraS (233), I,nr Beaeh. 7:30.
rrant; 10-11, oinsic. J
8:00 KTB to to), O.klaad, 10. pr
rram ef mnclit. Kr
8:ao F4R tW4, Seattle. :30-liWtn
10:30. musical program; 16:80-12.
SrrW'.ra.1:'. .KM yT Eadiatia.
:trZU 6,. Seattle. 0,;V,,
AUGUST 26, 1926
Notice Js herebyi giren that tne
undersigned , has been appointed
by the County Court of the Stat
of Oregon for the County of Mar
ion, as administrator of the estate
of Harry H. Hill, deceased and
that he has duly qualified as such
administrator. All persons having
claims against the estate of said
decedent are hereby notified to
present the same to me, duly veri
fied, and wUh proper Touchers, al
716..N. Capitol street, Salem. Ore
gon, within six weeks from the
date of this . notice. .
Dated at Salem, Oregon, thl?
29th day of July, 1926. .
M. D.. PILKENTON,
"Administrator of the Estate of
Harry H. Hill, .Deceased.
July 29-A5-12-19-26-S2
TAXPAYERS' NOTICE
The board of equalisation meets
on the second Monday in Septem
ber of each year for the purpose
of examining and equalizing the
assessment rolls of Marlon county,
Oregon.
All persons desiring to protest
any assessment- on said rolls must
do sd according to the following
provisions of the law:
' "Petitions or applications foi
the reduction of a particular as
sessment shall be made in writ
ing, verified by oath of the appli
cant or his attorney and be filed
with the board during the firs!
week it is, by law, required to be
in session, and any petition or ap
plication not so made, verified,
and filed, shall not be considered
or acted upon by the board."
OSCAR A. STEELHAMMER.
County Assessor.
; al 9-26-82
Western town and inquired of the
first man he met-where he could
find an undertaker.
"An undertaker?" the man ask
ed. "Is there some one dead at
your house?"
"No, there is no one dead." re
plied the farmer, "but my wife is
pretty sick."
"Well, then," the man advised,
"you want a doctor, not an un
dertaker." "No." said the farmer. What
I want is an undertaker. You
know, I have Joined the Co-ops,
and we have cut out the middle
men." "Brother Johnson." said the
parson, "cain't you-all donate
some small cantribushun to de
fund for fencing in de culud cem
etery." "t dunno as I kin, parson," re
plied Brother Johnson. "I don't
see no use in a fence round no
cemetery. You see, them what's
in there cain't git out, and them
what's out sho' doan's wanta git
in."
a name to be
remembered
for surface protec
tion, economy and
colorful beauty.
This ia the time to .
. paint, before rain
' tets in. - . l-
- , Your Raimutien
dealer will help you .
choose paints and . ;
colors. ;
RASMUSSEN 8t COMPANY
Portland - Seattle
For Em
RASMUSSEN PURE PAINT
-AJae Cteoeota Bhinala 8tain; Porch Floor Paint; Bars and Root
Pmintt Track. Tractor and lanaaeancat Paint: Autoanobila p ' '
spar va
s; Koos Coating; Costareta and CemcBt Coating,
1 .
For Interior
Wan-Dora WaehebU Wall Paint: Kacolite Bnamel: laaide Floor
raJDt: UU Btasn; Moor and Varnish stain; Hath Tub Kaaanat; LTur-
w wxi dumb, rnor ana vhhiu diui, sm
bie Faaar Varnish; rraato la faruea Uoav
HUTCHEON PAINT STORE
tt 154 South Commercial, Salem, Oregon
. -"BDY TOUR PAINT AT A PAINT STORE" r
, ; C. V. CAJtMlCIIEIj, Monitor, Oregon
. " N. RKCKKR A SON, Woodbarn, Oregon . 1
P. N. SMITH FIJRNITURE CO., 31t. Angrl, Oregon
Union Roster
K.ra Laeal Ka. 441. W.
p. . Call 178 for ma.
Ha. 210 Praaiaant, ii. r. JCvaaaj aaa A.t
en Saturday, S:00 p. m.
...n..frDa rrvmv NO. 1063
ifaata Thura. aTaainr. Artaar
i r..ii.nt- Wra. Pettit. aeeratary
Skilled machaaica foraiaaed. Paaaa 17
annol. IVTt RESTAURANT KM
ployaea local 452, eary tb?t Maaaay,
. . -a t m .a 1 at a
8 A LEU UNIOS LAB Eli LEAGUE J
Maata st Labor Hall oa call of praaij
deat. T. W. Basra, aaeraUry, Uaa"
.443, Salens Ore. ;
Lodge Roster
PBATERNAL ORDER OP EAGLES, eneai
.n WadnadaT. Frataroity iiau. HI
M. Willett. See"y. Tel. 889-R.
KNIGHTS OP PYTHIAS MEETS AT
. Fraternal Mall every l neaaay aTa-i-a
' Viaitera Uvited.- M. Park Btarfea, U.U.
' Walter Lanon. K. of K. S.
CTht Oregon Dtatttfrnan
Pnbtiahad every aaemiat (axeap Mea
day) at SaUm, tka capital of Oraaw.
T
Local Rates
For Classified
Advertising
Daily or Sunday
amenta per word
S easts pec word
8 eeata par word
One time
Three timea
Six tinea
1 ma. dailv and 8nn 20 eeata par word
Ia order to eara tha mora taaa one
time rate, advertiaemeBt moat raa ia
eonaecutire ittuea.
No Ad -taken for lee tfcaa t5.
Ada. run Sunday ONLY charred at
one-time rata.
AdTertiaeaieate (aieep Paraoaala
and Situation! Wanted) will be takes
ver the telephone U tha adrartlaer it
a enhaeriber to phone.
The Stateamaa will reeelva. adver
tiaementa at any time of the day or
night. To Insure proper elaaaiflee
tiona ada thoald be In before T p. am.
TELEPHONE 23 OR' 58S
Money to Loan,
ON REAL' E8TA.TX VT I
T. K. FOED, . ,
Orr Ladd Bmh Btttl
ADVERTISING
HONEST ADVKRTISING Theae eel
iat nanat be kept free from anytalag
of a qneationable nature. U Urepreaea
tationa will not be tolerated. Infor
mation ihowinc any questionable ia
rtieer J
tent oa the part ot tne aavertt
boa Id be reportea to tata aa
paper or the Salem Ad elab,
Ante) Tops
- s
BEE US FOR TOP AND PAINT WORK
O. J. Hall Anto Top and faint Shop
287 S. Commercial. Sal lit
Selp Wavatotl
WANTED BEAN PICKERS.
Miller, Marion, Oregon. '
E. J.
9a2
START PICKING AT WILLIAMS HOI
yard Wednesday, Sept. 1st. Hauling
campers Monday and Tneaday. Phona
115F12. 9a31
t trior a
' for aaora-
3Py
AM
7 V 1 J
ft m
8
r
i; t