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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1926)
i ' si" s -. THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON THURSDAY -MORNING, SEPTEMBER 2, 1926 , AODKE.O EUNCH Phone 106 ?f.i. - f MeCalls Return From Five i Weeks Vacation at West Lake Mr. and Mrs. W. F. McCall re- mrueu oomv .inesaay evening from lire extremely enjoyable " weeks at their summer home at , West Lake. The McCall summer .home is beautifully situated be tween the lake and the river, with pwimming, boating- and fishing in any proportion the guests at the home may wish them. While at the beach Mr. and Mrs. McCall entertained as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Utley and son, Billy, during one week. Still "later in the month Mrs. McCall had as her guest her aunt, Mrs. M. N. Cusick. During their last week at the lake Mr. and Mrs. McCall -entertained John Crawford i& of Dundee, who returned with them. Due to the rains, the roads were in somewhat of a perilous condi tion, and In order to avoid passing over- them, the group chartered a barge on which to make an 18- mila trln down thn Kiudnw rivor to safer highways. Three automobiles-were taken on the barge for the trip, which was, the pas sengers considered, a thoroughly delightful experience in itself. The reflections of the autumn-tinted leaves on- the water made the iournev one an beautiful as anv trip down the Hudson, according to Mrs. McCall. The Craw ford s .were house- night, returning to Dundee Wed nesday morning. Mrs. Tomlinson Returns From Trip East Mrs. W. E. Tomlinson returned home yesterday morning from a two months visit in the east. Mr. Tomlinson will return to Salem late this month. He is now at tending to business matters in . Marphalltown, Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. Tomlinson enjoyed stops in To ledo,' Chicago. Buffalo, and at Ni agara Falls. From Toledo they went to Ridgefield. Pa., to be the guests of Rev. and Mrs. Paul Pol- 'tug (Olive Tomlinson) and their smill son,-Charles Earl, who was ittS flays old at the time his great grabdparents visited him. Mr. and Mrs. Tomlinson also made stops in Buffalo, Montreal, Wash ington. D. C, and New York city, as well as at Philadelphia: where they , attended the ifeesqul-centen-nial exposition. ' Ladies' Aid Meets at Schwabbauer Home Twenty members of the Ladies' Aid society of the German Luther an church met yesterday after noon at the home of Mrs. Paul Schwabbauer at 1675 South Higlr street for the. first meeting of the fall season. Autumn flowers vere arranged attractively in the rooms'. At the tea hour the hostess served refreshments. Visit in Eugene Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Minier and daughter, Jewell, spent the past week-end in Eugene visiting Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Stevenson at their attractive new home. Guests in Detroit Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Stearns and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Ashby spent Sunday in Detroit as the guests of friends. The Salem Hdw. Co., most pro gressive. Every, accommodation given to those , in need of best hardware supplies. Work and pros perity the motto. 120 N. Com'V () H. T. Love, the Jeweler, 335 State St. High quality jewelry, silverware and diamonds. The gold standard of values. Once a buyer always a customer, () Mrs. II. P. Stltti, millinery. Most beautiful hats in Salem; all shapes and colors; full stock from which to make fine selections. Best quality. 333 State St. () Tea at Saurman Home Honors Mrs. McNary and Miss Gray Mrs. Charles L. McNary and Miss Margaret Gray shared hon ors at an enjoyable informal tea on Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. Shelley Saurman when Mrs. Saurman was hostess. Mrs. McNary, with Senator McNary, is spending the summer at their new home here, while Miss Gray, whose home is In Portland, is the house guest in Salem of Mrs. John: Mc Nary, her aunt. Zinnias and golden glow were arranged in a gorgeous manner on the tea table. Mrs. McNarv. who was asked to preside at the urns. was assisted bv Mrs. T. A. Lives- ley and Mrs. T. C. Smith Jr. Invitea ror tne affair were Mrs. McNary. Miss Grav. Mrs. T. C Smith Sr., of Los Angeles, Mrs. L-aurence Safford of Coronadn Colo., Mrs. David W. Eyre, Mrs. William -Walton, Mrs. O. C. Locke, Mrs. T. A. Livesley, Mrs Frederick Lamport, Mrs. John J. Roberts, Mrs. J. W. Harbison, Mrs. Curtis B. Cross, Mrs. George Rodgers, Mrs. W. Connell Dver. Miss Doro thy Livesley, Miss Rovena Eyre, and , Miss Beverley Helen Roberts. Salem Heights Club to Meet The first meeting of the year of the Salem Heights Women's Club will be held at the commun ity hall on Friday. September 3rd, beginning promptly at 2 o'clock. All women of the community are requested to be present. An interesting program will be given. Needlecraft Club Members of the Needlecraft club were delightfully entertained on Tuesday afternoon at the home of : Mrs. L. C- Brbtherton, 575 Winter street.. In the group were Mrs. E. E. Gilliamv Mrs. George Martin, Mrs. J. J. Newmeyer, Mrs. L. Bechtei, Mrs. Ruth Denison, Mrs. F. G. Stearns, and the host ess, Mrs. L. C. Brotherton. The hostess served refreshments at four-thirty. Leaves for Athena Merwin Stolzheise will leave to day for Athena Oregon, where he will teach and coach in the high school for the coming term. Mr. Cooper Improves The many friends of J. T. Cooper, father of Mrs. Walter B. Minier, will ,be. happy" to. know that he is recovering rapidly f rom his recent Illness and will be able to return ' home from Newport, where Mr. and Mrs. Cooper have been spending the summer, soon after Labor Day. Woman's Alliance to Meet The Woman's Alliance of the First Unitarian church will meet at 2:30 o'clock Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Florence Cradlebaugh, at the corner, of Washington and Saginaw streets. All members are especially invited to attend in order (o plan for the work of the new season. Mrs. Blanche Jones will give a review of the life and work of the late Dr. Charles Eliot. Special musical numbers will also be in cluded on the prpgram. U. of O. Student Visits Gerald J. Meindl; who" will re sume his studies as a junior at the University of Oregon this mouth, spent Wednesday in Salem as a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Tooze and family. Mr. Meindl whose home is at Oregon City has been at Government Camp, Crater ' Lake, during the summer season. Mrs. Steele Leaves on Trip Mrs. Charles Steele of 944 North Winter street, left late yes terday afternoon for an interest ing vacation trip which will take her to her old home in Greens- burg, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Steele will be gone for five weeks. She lias not visited in Greensburg for more than a quarter of a century, r Social Calendar o I Today Chapter G of the PEO sister hood. Past Presidents' luncheon. ElKs' club. Friday Woman's Alliance of First Uni tarian church. Mrs. Florence Cradlebaugh, corner Washington and Saginaw streets, hostess, 2:30 o'clock. Woman's Auxiliary of St. Paul's Episcopal church. Mrs. U. G. Shipley, hostess, 2:30 o'clock. Salem Heights Woman's club. Community hall, 2 o'clock. Monday Wisconsin club. Annual picnic, state fair grounds. having left twenty-five years ago for Nebraska where she remained for seven years before coming to Oregon. Mrs. Harvey Douglas of Canby, a sister of Mrs. Steele, joined her last evening for the first part of the anticipated journey. Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. Steele will spend Friday in Salt Lake City where they will spend the day sight-seeing and in attendance at the organ concert at the Temple, in Dillar. Nebraska the tourists will visit their brother. Asa Richardson and his family. They will go thence to Kansas City from which point Mrs. Douglas will begin her trip home. Mrs. Steele will ! continue her journey east, going by way of St. Louis. She will spend the greater part of her time at the old home at Greensburg, returning to Sa lem the middle of October. Millards Home From Trip Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Millard are home from an enjoyable motor trip to Crater Lake and the Ore gon Caves, returning home by way of the McKenzie Pass. TuUys Home From Vacation Dr. and Mrs. Kendall Tully and children have returned home fol lowing a month's vacation spent in southern Oregon and at Ocean side. Dr. Tully will occupy his pulpit at the First Presbyterian church on Sunday. Chemeketa Chapter Chemeketa chapter of the Daughters of the American Revo lution will not meet this Saturday, September 4, since many of the members will be ont o town over foe Labor Day week-end." The first meeting of Chemeketa chap ter of the season will be held on September 17. Kletzings Return Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Kletzing re turned Wednesday evening from a week's motor trip to the Paget Sound country. They visited friends and relatives in Seattle, Tacoma, Bremerton, and Aber deen. In Aberdeen the Kletzings were guests at the John Marr home. ed. the messages stated,, as the Santiago and Lerma -rivers con tinued to overflow their banks. Reports of Amado Aguirre,' federal engineer, are of the most dismal nature and express fear that a town of 13,000 inhabitants, may be swept away by the Santiago river. The stream, his report con cluded, already had encircled the city and made it an island ap proachable only by boat. Nash leads the world in motor car values. Beautiful display of new models at the F. W. Petty John Co., 365 N. Com'l. (.) A. H. Moore, 235 N. High St. apartments, and store where yon can get high quality furniture and furnishings for every room in your house. () Did You Ever Stop To Think? By E. B. Wlt, Secretary, Shawn, Okla., Board ot Conacre FLOODS CAUSE DAMAGE SANTIAGO RIVER MAY SWEEP THOUSANDS AWAY NOGALES, Ariz., Sept. 1. (A.P.) Dispatches to the Herald today placed the loss of life due to floods in the states of Nayarit and Jalisco, Mexico, at more than 50, and the property damage at around six million pesoes. . Further Inundations were fear- R. J. Cromie, publisher of the Vancouver (B.C.) Sun says: That mass education is, through the newspapers, doing some won derful things for the North Amer ican continent. That subjects like (a) Physical Mechanics, (b) Food Chemistry, (c) Mental Mechanics, are three subjects which lend themselves to newspaper promotion in a way which will be of tremendous serv ice to the millions of newspaper readers of America. That these subjects can be "Henry Forded" and-merchandised to the masses in just the same way as an industrial product is merchandised. That along the line of (a) Phy sical Mechanics, Bernarr Macf ad den, of Physical Culture, has or 20 years led the field until today there is everywhere a conscious ness of the necessity of physical I well-being. ' That along the line of (b) Food Chemistry, Dr. Frank McCoy of Los Angeles is pre-eminent In his class. Business men are dropping off like flies; hospitals and sani toriums are filled with physical wrecks who have been unable to stand the pressure of modern bus iness. In plain, simple, A. B. C. language Dr. McCoy shows the mechanics of food chemistry; shows what to eat and what not to eat; shows bad combinations of good foods and proper combina tions of good foods, and in a straight merchandising way sells the people of America a new phil osophy of health. That in (c) Mental Mechanics, Arthur Brisbane has for 20 years led the field and has gone out and stimulated the minds of the mass es of America. Others like Glenn Frank and Dr. Frank Crane are now reaching out to the mental ity of America and in a straight merchandising way are carrying on mass education. That following (a (b) and (c will come a SPIRITUALIZATION OF AMERICA. This applies not so much in a religious sense but rather an appreciation of ethical values. This is today being sold to America by exponents like Swa mi Yogananda who has just start ed to merchandise through the press fo America the value of a fuller and more complete life; a life somewhere between the spir itualism of Calcutta and the ma terialism of Chicago. IT IS MY BELIEF THAT MASS EDUCATION ALONG THESE FOUR LINES IS A NEW PHASE OF JOURNALISM, THE POTEN TIALITIES OF WHICH ARE JUST MAKING THEMSEDVES FELT AMONG THE NEWSPA PER PUBLISHERS OF THIS CONTINENT. (Copyright 1926) Patton's Book Store is showing a wonderful contrivance called "Memindex." It's made up for real personal efficiency. Automatic re minder of individual matters. () ' Quality painting, both varnish and laquer work, In our modern equipped paint shop. Washing, greasing and night service; tire repairs. Wood's Auto Service Co. Eiker Auto Co.,i Ferry at Lib erty St. Autos stored, and bought and sold. Cars washed day and night. Low prices and service will make long friends.. () I Vn) 'Hit;: 1. ATI J 1 ij i H I i s "IBI,I'I,I' . ! BRICK WAREHOUSE ; Coal and Dry Woo3 at Reasonable Prices Crating Local and; Long - Hauling IJovmg 143 SculH Liberty. j, hi,-,,; Lai- Telephone 030 FIFTY-FOUR Sylvia and Steve sat in Marion Allison's sun porch, composing a telegram. They had been at it for some time, as a number of scat tered sheets of paper, covered with hurriedly scrawled words, amply indicated. Suddenly Steve threw down his pencil, began to speak. "How's this, Adorable?" he cried, his free arm abont Sylvia's waist. "Mrs. A. R. Hollins, Rose mont. Long Island. Was married last night to that terrible Thorne girl. See daily papers from now on for full particulars. Leaving Saturday for New York and Paris, where Sylvia is to take a look at a play she is going to do in pictures this summer. Kill all the fatted calves in Rosemont. Will be with you soon. Love from us both. Steve." "You old silly." Sylvia said, dodging an enthusiastic kiss. "DonTyou think, with all thqse words, you might have told your mother what has happened?" "What's the use? She'll read all about it in the papers." He took a photograph from the table, gazed at it quizzically. "It's a darned good thing Mon sieur Varnay has a wife and three children in Paris. Of course it's fine, the way he's stood back of you and everything, but wb does he have to put his arm around you, in all these press pictures? And why does he refer to you aS his 'little American sweetheart?' I tell yon, I'm getting jealous." This time Sylvia did not at tempt to dodge his kiss. "As an archaeologist, Steve Hol lins," she whispered, "you ought to know an antique when you see one. Monsieur Vernay is a per fect old dear, and I love him, but he's harmless. Now that you've fixed up the wire to your mother, don't forget we've got to send one to Dad. He'll be the happiest man in Millersburg. As for the rest of the bunch the ones that thought I had slipped and tried to push me into the gutter, I'd like to see their faces when they read Monsieur Vernay's big story, and all the other publicity the Inter national is going to put out. Do you really realize, my dear Steve, that you have married a celeb rity?" "I've married the sweetest girl in the world and I didn't need, and don't need, any moving picture jiress agent to tell me that. How about another kiss?" He swept Sylvia joyously Into his arms as he spoke. Marion Allison, coming into the sun room in search of them paused and mischieviously regarded the scene before her with a slightly amused smile. Mr. Used Car Buyer: Have you seen the real buys at the Capitol Motors Incorporation? See Biddy Bishop, 350 N. High St. Tele phones 2125 and 2126. () Pure Japan silk plated over lisle hose for men. Regular price $1- special this week 55c. Scotch Woolen Mills Store, 426 State street. () The Commercial Book Store has everything you need in books and stationery and supplies for the school, office or home at the low est possible prices. () A Large Assortment of Good Quality Bedspreads yc 340 Court Street ; "How is Mr. Hollins this morn ing?" she asked mischievously. "And Mrs. Hollins' husband?" Marion," Sylvia stormed, "if you ever call Steve that again I'll be through with you for life. I haven's the least doubt that if he wanted to go into pictures he could make Valentino and all the rest of them sit up and take no tice." She regarded Steve ecstatically. "Better let him be your business manager, dear. It's safer, in this business, Mr. Solberg and Mon sieur Vernay are waiting for you. They want to take you over to the studio to be photographed. The happy couple, and all that, you know. It's part ot the publicity campaign." "H m." Steve grinned, "There is no doubt about It I've married an? entire picture company, press agent and all. Aren't they ever going to let us have any time to ourselves? Come along, Miss Thorne. If you are ready, your husband is. Let's go. And arm in arm they went but through the door. Marion Allison, gazing after them, found sudden tears in her eyes. "Youth,-love, and theu spring," she whispered. "Could anything be more wonderful?" She glanced for a moment at the reflection of her middle-aged and somewhat tired face in the mirror over her.writing table, then tcok up a pencil and went back to the work that lay before her. (THE END) cl i BreUhaupt, florist and decorator. 123 K: Liberty. Phone 380. Flowers, bulbs', floral de signs for all occasions. Pioneer and leader in Salem. () U. of 0. Woman Honored . in Literature Contest iini UNIVERSITY O F OREGON. Eugene. Aug. 31. (Special). Julia Godman, a freshman major ing in history at the University of Oregon, was given honorable men tion in the nation-wide intercol legiate literary contest for prose writing conducted by Harper's magazine. Miss Godman, who was a stu dent in short story writing under W. F. G. Thacher, of the school of journalism faculty, competed, with Satisfy your sweet tooth with those good Whitman's candies. We have the exclusive right, of sale to this line in Salem. Crown Drug Store, 332 State. ) several .'hundred others. T h f judges weteChristopher Morley William McFee- and Zona Oale. - , GIRLS CATCH RATS LONDON Another mark for your record book the' Jahvls family, including three girls, arp in business as rat catchers and average 700 to 1000 "rodents week. The grand parents on both sides followed the same trade. -. ; Eugene Pacific Christian hos pital to be enlarged for 12 more patients. C. A. Luthy. Reliable jewelry store. What yon are looking for in jewelry. Where a child can buy as safely as a man or woman. Repairing in, all lines. (; Bonesteele Motor Co., 4 74 S. Com'l., has the Dodge automobile for you. All stoel body. Lasts a lifetime. Ask Dodge owners. They will tell you. () To CALIFORNIA By PICKWICK STAGES 30 HOURS TO SAN FRANCISCO Through Reclining Chair Car Service Four Schedule ' Each Day With Stop Over Privilege - - - - Leaving: the Terminal Hotel 9:20 A. M., 12:20 P. 7 P.M 1:25 A. M. SAN FRANCISCO One Way . -$15.50 Round Trip One Way -$30,003 LOS ANGELES Round Trip For Information Call At TERMINAL HOTEL or Phone 696 : .S27.3& .$50.00 ..T-I night and day The villain, Weather, is at his destructive work night and day. Give him an inch and he'll take an ell. Let the tiniest crack appear in the surface and he's there with both hands to tear down , to let moisture seep in to rot or rust to let wind blow away to finally leave ramshackle di-lapidation. Surface, protection calls for. Rasmussen Paints and Varnishes Money was not Invested in homes, and in outbuildings, in factories and warehouses, -tobewstedthToughcare-lessness in attending to their preservation. Preservation means, first of all, surface-protection ; and surface-protection calls for Rasmussen Paints and Var nishes as often as is neces sary. Rasmussen surface-protecting products have the qualities that preserve and last Products that demon strate the. value of ..finer manufacturing methods and constant testing: or covering capacity k or smoo th drying . or wearing qualities j and for finish a V All of which means ur face protection and at tractive be&ttty. , c e - i Choose Rasm usscn-USE Rasm ussen Painted! ia v arms nes ana ine villain, w earner will never have defiance. -1 Sold by RASMUSSEN & COMPANY Portland - Seattle j. For Exterior ' : , ' . RASMUSSEN PURE PAXNT Also Creosote Shingle SUih; Porch 1 Floor Paint; Barn and Roof Paint; . 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