Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1926)
l;iUiAY AIOSN1NG, OCTOBEUlva92r,T O-T -H'.-'f f-s' ' 1 1' m if? j Yl 1 tl '7i Phone IOC j' ,: Chnneketa Chapter to lienor Miss Ixinfje With Luncheon aC-Elks? dlub TIk leading social event of tho vc'k promises to tie I the 1:30 n lo-k liiftfheoh which Chemeketa cliiiptcr. Iaugliter.v'of thq Ameri can Revolution will sponsor on SMwrrtay honoring Miaa Anne Jjfs vice president I general of organization. The luncheon t . lHin t held at the Elks club, in- .stfad ot at The Spa, (as was an- jpSkjponnced. i f Reserv Reservations maybe made with Mrs. lloy Mills, chairman, or any on-- of her assistants; Mrs. U. O. Shipley. Mrs. V. G. jBoyer, Mrs. Lewis Griffith, Mth. John Orr, Mrs. F. H. Spears and Mrs. Sey mbtir Jones. 1 DAR Board Meeting in Oregon City Is Reported The quarterly meeting pf the state hoard of the Daughters of American Revolution1 held In Ore gon City Saturday,- with usannah Lee Barlow chapter as-1 hostess, was attended by 55 members. The . meeting was held at the j McLoughlin home, the morning session opening at 10:30 o'clock. Presiding was Mrsc Gordon Mac Cracken of Ashland, state regent. Plans for the next three months were arranged and(otcer by&jnes transacted, arrangements being! made for the next cntarterly meet ing, the date and place to be de cided at a later time. - . Chapters represented at the session were from Ashland, Rose- urg, Kiamatn rails, Kugene, ai- Imny, Salem, Medford, McMinn- Vi!le, Portland and Oregon City. Salem dejegates were Mrs. Sey our Jones, Mrs. W. . H. Byrd, Mrs. C. C Clark, Mrs. U. G. Ship Iry and Miss Lillian applegate. Mrs. H. B. Cartlidge, regent of Susannah Lee Barlow chapter, vas toastmistress at the luncheon "which was served at the chamber of commerce rooms, a number of Oregon City girls assisting in serv ing. , Mis Botty Forbes, prettily at tired in a colonial costume, dis tributed favors, which were the rjiea of the original Declaration 1 r;:, "'-"rv:rr: A mh watch li i sfeiin. t i 1TM FOR THE I j BIG GALA OPENING OCT. 5 I . J m 1251 TOM calls this picture, "The highlight of hi$ career." Director Pwars enthusiasm couldn't L be! urpressed. Glance at the cast and then ddn't miss "Tin Gods"! AN MC ALLAi DWANl PR0DUCT10K SATURDAY i till 1 TtAupKEX) Punch J.. o Independence, presented by the Susannah Lee Barlow chapter, and also pretty nosegays. Greetings were heard (rom Mrt). Gordon MacCracken. Miss Anno Lang, The Dalles, vice president general ftr Oregon; Mrs. Seymoitr Jones, state regent, for l24-26. Salem; greetings from the tate regent of Montana, and an af!dreiisf by Eva Emery -Dye, who talked on "The Daughters of America Rev olution," being a member bf Su sannah Lee. Harlow chapterj. Salem Arts Leag-ue to j Sponsor Exhibit al YMCA Officers and frfends'pf jhe Sa lem Arts league are already mak ing definite"4 plans for the autumn art exhibit which will be leld the middle of this month on he see ona noor of the YMCA Kathryn Gunnetl has beeni select ed to take charge. Woman's Auxiliary to Meet t Mrs. James Walton wiljl enter tain members of the woman's aux mary of St. Paul's Ejpiscopal church this afternoon at her home. WRC Postpones Meetina On account nf the fair, the Wn man's Relief corps will not meet on Saturday, Oct. 2, the regular day. Mrs. Snedecor Has Quest MPs. Frank Snedecor is, enter taining as her house guest Misi Mary Beard of Birmingham, AIa.i who arrived in Salem yesterday. Mrs. Snedecor motored to Port land to meet her guest, who will spent the greater part of this month in Oregon. Return From Seattle Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Dennis have just returned home from an en joyable trip to Seattle where they visited relativjes and friends. While in Washington they attend ed the Puyallup fair and visiting Rainier national parki On thetr return trip they visited a nlei, Mrs. Amos Pkiser, in Kelso. i Return to Corvallis ; Mrs. "Walter I. Woods and Ilias Olive Patricia Woods,: mother and sister of Miss Sylvia Wootltf.-WhoAe wedding will be an event of the last of this month.' returned to their home in Corvallis o Wed nesday after spending several days in Sajem as the guest of Miss Woods. -,, Guests at Laflar Home Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Laflar have as their hbuse guests this week Mr. and- Mrs J. L. Harper and Mr. and Mrs. Ri G. J5eit-helberger 61 Ridgefield, - Wash. The Harpers are of Portland. ; Miss HarrisoSi Returns Front Tualatin ;v Miis Anna Harrison of - Muske gon. Mtrh.,- a hoifce guest at the George H. Alden tiome thii sea son, returned home the middle of the week rom sthree days spent in Tualatin where she was a guest of Mr. and Mr&. Richardson. Visitors in Portland Mr. and Mrs. Milton Meyers and Mr. and Mrs. W'alter A.Denr ton visited in Portland early in the week. f V' I "' i ' 1 f 1 r x Mrs. Bishop to Visit in Salem Mrs. Roy j Bishop of Portland will arrive in Snlem tomorrow to be a gWst over the week-end of Mr. 4ind Mrs. ( P. Bishop, who ib'ave issued invitations for tho ob- Rervance of their golden wt-ddlng anniversary next Thursday. Monumental Beetliorcn Programs in Toronto i: An unusual tribute to the mem ory of Beethoven is being offered rj ine i niversity or joronto. as its contribution to observance of Mfteethoven Centenary The u.ivi'rsiiy win present, in live con certs, the entire 17 string quartets written by Beethovn. The an nouncement of this monumental series says: "This season of 1926-7 is the Centenary of the death of Ludwig jvon Beethoven, greatest master of I musical composition of all time. an occasion which will be com memorated throughout the musi cal world. It is with a Xeeling of reverence and a desire to open for its audiences a vista of un dreamed beauties, that the Hart House String quartet of the Uni rersity of Toronto has arranged to present the 17 quartets of Bee thoven in a series of five concerts. 1'hree of these will be played by pie Hart House quartet, one by tb,e excellent quartet from the Eastman school of Rochester, and one by the renowned Flonzaley quartet. This is the most am bitious nyisical program ever at tempted in Canada, placing Toron to in line' with the other great musical centers of Europe and America. "Beethoven's genius for soaring to the highest pinnacles of human emotion, his power to rise above the unfortunate circumstances of his own unhappy life, and his por trayal of feeling from deepest de jection and sorrow to utmost joy, have placed him among the world's immortals. Each concert fcas been arranged to contain the greatest variety and appeal of the roaster's works." The Hart House quartet will n'vade the United States several times during the coming eason. It is scheduled for three ippear ances in New York, and one each in Chicago, Boston. Pittsburgn, Rochester, Buffalo and other cities Hal Hibbard Auxiliary Postpones Meeting " Hal Hibbard auxiliary, Unitedj Spanish War Veterans, will not meet today on account of the state fair. The next meeting will be oh; October 15. Cooked Food Sale Tomorrow The Salem War Mothers will sponsor a cooked food sale to morrow afternoon in the S. P. Mcket office on North Liberty Mreet. Mi$s Miles is Guest in Salem .JVfiss Eva Miles, head of the modern language department at the college in Newberg, was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Miles, early in the week. Miss Tartar in Corvallis Miss Lena Belle Tartar spent Wednesday in Corvallis as the guest' of relatives. Dinner at Loveland .Home Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Loveland of NewToday! & r" ? Elmory Jonson's Epic Drama of the Great Ocean Jump. Peggy O'Neil llll. .NEWS COMEDY v - ' 1 I 34 5 South 1 5th atreet entertained with a ,6 o'clock dinner Tnffdat eyejjiqg In honor .of "their 'house. guests for fair week. 'Dr. and- Mrs. J. K. Keer pf Shelby, Ohio. Covers were placed for Mr. and Mrs. Keer. Mrs. II. G. Loveland, Mrs. Ida Shoesmith, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Loveland, Mrs. Florence Loveland Oldenborg. and daugh ter, Ernestine Loveland. and the hots, Mr. and Mrs. C. F.- Ive- land. Mrs. Keer is a cousin of it. G.'and V. K. Loveland. Unirersity of Oregon College President to Be Honored Faculty members at the Uni versity of Oregon will hold a for mal reception to honor Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Bennett Hall on Sat urday evening. This exclusive faculty event fo welcome the new president and his wife will be held in alumni hall of the woman's building beginning at 8 o'clock. Mrs. Virginia Judy Esterly. dean of women, will introduce faculty .nembers ana the Mesdamos Jtenry D. Sheldon. L. H. Johnson and Karl Ontbank, joint hostesses, will be in the main receiving line. Supper will.be served following introductions. Mrs. J. H. Gilbert, Mrs. Dean H. Walker, Mrs. Anna Landsbury Beck, Mrs. Eric W. Al- Matinee 35c lfw- 'j MANAGERS ASSOCIATION 1 iiih T O D' A V 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 5 BIG TIME ACTS HEADL1NER! Araerifa's Loveliest Coloratura Soprano DORIS JUDY & LORENZ TRIO In "A Vaudeville Recital" BORDE-ROBINSON In "Figure It Out" ,Merbert E. Denton & Company In The Split Second Comedy of Vaudeville "Poughkeepsie" f Dick Ferguson and May Sunderland In "Bits of Musical Coinpy" FEATURE IOUISE BROOKS r- fcgX; MMCptMStCtAia IW n j - T- f THE SHOW PLACE OF OREGON Today and Saturday I f ii I . I fl II i .J . J i J n I I xBj-cdaxgegf toe npper wniCtt wjir be "served by Mesdames John Straub, F. G. Young," George Re bee. Alfred Powers, Walter Barnes and El lis V. Lawrence. Other faculty women will assist in the Uining room. Regents 't the university have been invited to the affair, but it is not yet known how many will find it possible to at lend. No formal program is being planned -inrt the evening will le given to introduction- and itJiirsatlon. Kugeue Register. " I General Market UVESTOCK roi:Ti.ANr. rc.. s.i. rn -iad ling nominally tfady; r"rMpts 4". on iTontraci. Slauuhii-r pif-s tiu-lltu pi.umU. niecliuni. good arid i-h.Mi-e $l;j.5ii(ii 14; ffedcr and stockrr iiiss tl 13H pounds, nir dium s"d and lioii p J 1 .'tfiui 1 4. at tie ami e.tlvis nuiiiiiially steadj. . N'n rf pcipts. .-Mifep nud Iiiii1s nominallr steady: no rf-eipts. PRODUCE POKTI-AND. Ore, S-r. r.o. (AIM Ruttrr sksdy, extra cubes, city 4 1c; standards 4V.c; prime firsts nrto; firsts ft"V--c: print 47c: cartons 48c. Milk steady ; lcst (huroiiiK cream 44c Tier pound, net shipper' tract in zone 1. Cream delivered Portland 4hc per nnnd. Itaw milk (4 per cent) ?2.: rwt, f. o. b. Portland. Poultry steady; heavy liens 2."i(i'2tii Evening 50c PAUL BROTHERS Kcrentrtcities PHOTOPLAY 7 Matinee -25c Evening 35 c ITtht - 17; kpriecs . light 2S3: 26e : da har 2I6??2f ; Tonnp wbit duckt 2V S3e:- colored i5Wl"r. Vfrfabls etad,T; oaitn local 759 $1 ,lb r Walia - Walla ff 1 potaW l.SM'l.'Jj .sark. GRAIN rORTT.AVD, Or.. Spt. SO. (AP) What: HKIVtiatti riuv harrt h. H. Baarf. HevrmT, Ortoher. Naatrr I !.;!."; frdraucD, soft whitr. mrifrn whitf. hard wuncr. northern sprioc Spr. t.-t.. Nov.. $1.34: western reJ, HptMii- twr. (Widiff. .VsTt-mher $1.3::. ' Oats No. J. -W, pound, wfcif fefil and fray Spteukner, lN-lh-r, Nnrfmtrtr r,o. Barley No. 2. 43 pound BV, September $2S: Oriotier, N'oTemlwr f-S.-iO. Corn No. 2 E fiLipment SptiDbr, iVtohtr 4i".'7.5t: N'otcmbfr f7. Millrun, slandanl Sptuihrr $22.50: tti lolwr f23. NoTnihr $24. HAT PORTI.ANTt. Ore.. Sept 3. (AP) rty l,uyin; prices: f'.tern Oregon 4irj O'hy .'owjJ; do vaUy $ 17 ur 1 T.iS : cheat 1!:. alfalfa $ 1 7.56f 'l X ; oat ca $13: oat and vetch $14 JiOlci 1 5 ; straw 7fa 7 ' per ton. Selling j.rices $2 9 ton more. HOPS STEADY NEW YOKK, Kept. :A ( AP) Evap orated apple steady: t'rHn's- more in quiry: apricots and peaches, ipiiet, but Ue.tdy. t Hops steady. WOOL BOSTON". Sept. SO. i P) Ohio wool-, are active at slightly ahovo recent selling ; price. Quite a lar?e offering of J r - r wj r aj 4 a v We've tried to make Tru-Bake Crackers so GOOD that folks who seldom eat crackers will enjoy them immensely. And we think we have succeeded- Every operation from setting the tponge to packing Tru-Bake -it a rite. So rigid is the inapection that an imperfectly baked Tru-Bake Cracker can not get by Ask your grocer for Tru-Bake Cracker. Baked by the TRU-BLU BISCUIT CO., Originators of TruBluHontySweeUried Grahams and M e n's Cotton shirts or draw ers, garment 85c 141 No. Com'l Street The season when we need warmer under wear js - -. r; " . i Jiere. ,Cottons, part wool and all wool garments will keep thathilly feeling away. ... ; i . Men's Fleece Lined Unions Men's heavy cotton grey mottled Men's Heavy Ecru or ,grey, Wool spun Good winter weight Part Wool1 Unions "Men's Atnitco" 25 wool medium weight ribbed underwear Light Weight Unions Part wool. A splendid garment for a CO C man who wishes a lighter garment 'v"3 x Bradford's Unions : Men's Grey 65 wool gar-' -J0 OC ment. r Ilea vy weight $0OD ert's iJSMrjsqr Grey $root mixed i ,;3ieavy weight , j... . ,j , . . ,i . ' . lki -Ijotaitwn at-l 4&e," 4h skit prie l 46f" MisrVoncm ' firm at that fiturW. Sl'of kaU-felood eonhinr ar 44 pd c: Ofcio S-t and 14 tlooI qjiii firm at 45e With millt still offering roBn4 44e. 'Any bnki ,iha that -JianntuMSi ple4 at 4S Its keen for knia! parcel of tb. vrry eavoie: est offerings.' ,,. 4 WHEAT CHICAGO. Sept. , so. vAP Ercfpt during, befated month-end liquidation Just at the list, wheat showed an advance In priced most of the time today. New export tales of North American wheat totalled more than l.uoO.iiOti ImsheU. and Prance was alio buyinj future deUveriea. Cloiinir quotation on wheat, however, were unsettled at the same a yesterday's flaiih to 1 5-8o lower, th e latter for September contracts, with corn 14 to I J 4c down, oats at 1 2c decline to i-t advance aud provisions varying from 12 ff t o 30 3-c np. Rosedale - School opened Monday with Miss McMillan of Porttand and Miss Riheie of Salem in charge. Miss Helen Commaek went to Portland Monday where she will attend X. P. K. I. the coming year. Miss Laura Commaek left Mon day to begin another years work at Monmouth. All are iuvited to the Sunday i -vj" &--'m Toss51 ,4 56 STORES a . fr IN THE WEST Store No. 24 $1.45 Ribbed Unions union $1.98 $2,65 'Drawers Boy $1.75 T I At tl&ft Theater TcCay t jO , , , . , , o i The Klalnore 5 actst Bl Tlmf: Vaudefille and Adolpha Menjoii, Ioulrte Brooks, Chester Conkllo in j A4Soelal Owlbrjity."H :h4 ' ' ;:.T ' Oregon Peffy O'Nell In Thf None Stop PllRht." j :. - Bllgh The Valley of Bravery" starring Bob caster. school rally at the Friendi church, next Sunday. There j will -will b a basket dinner at noon and a special program at -2 o'clock.", . John Trachsel of Portland visit ed friends here oveT the weefc-end. He also Fang at the Friends church In the morning and even-f ing. j r DOnald Smith la stavln? at tha Alexander home. Harry Nelson 19 also back. I ! I " Mr. and Mrs. Herman -Bole- ari living on the Elgin place whicli they have -rented -for. the -rom Ing year. 1 , f jmt Grocer J mcnt ha will up ' p'y - y t h U- BAKES whn you erdtr them.. 11 Spokane, Pcrtlanl. Settle 4lCut Custard" CookU Cakes LU Boys Fleece lined unions ? 90c Salem, Oregon mm Bead About Our ;; Big Values In n , Men's Unions .. Cottoa rib anions' la r' medium avnd be&Ty wtlshU. tor arlr fall and winter . .f yrue. . lions' - alt tm . and . i aakl Unftli. "; ' -! 1- - -Li-; V; Price $L25 J Boys Unions , t S it ! ' ' Medium weight cotton , - i J w 0 Q " Sizes 6 to 16 r:.;.l,;.u...;XJ C , s'i Atnitco Unions ' Wool mixed ribbed unions r'M ' A C A splendid winter eight.;V' i i 1 ; ! i i i ? t t-1 l n j ! -'!' if . vU'-T-'-'lK-- -5 i'