Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1926)
3 10 TOE OREGON STATESMAN, FRIDAYMORNINGp OCTOBER 8, 1926 neons 4 HI I" .-1. H if New Unit Will Give Plant - More Than Double fycsf V. eht Daily Capacity machinery ready for installation the nevplant'of the Oregon tolp Paper nipanyrreccBtly corn Dieted on South Commercial street 1 expected to bo running at toll capacity, by January or February; The new, machinery arrived yes terday and will be Installed in the new annex as "rapidly as possible. It consists of an entire 'paper making machine and ' additions and new parts for the company's three machines already in opera tion. " ;; ; -i;H -x The new machine to be installed will turn out a strip of paper 136 Inches wide. Those now In oper ation turn out strips with widths of 136, Jiff and: JO 0 Inches. j ;. 'The new machinery will give the company's i plant a capacity more , than twice Its present one, officials of the company say. LAt present about-59 tons a day are roducedU and a production of be tween 110 Jind 120 tons a day Is expected Uh the new equipment ill place. The payroll of the mill will be increased' from S3S,e00 per month to 160,000. ( Continued from page 7. ) i periences .fto f Toklo In - the recent earthquake-la ,1923, when thou sands of, people were overwhelm ed and destroyed in a lew minutes time. ' Mrs. Moore was burled deep In., the ruins of Yokohama and saved by Mr. Moore. ' House Guests at Doney Home Dr. ajid Mrs. Carl Gregg Doney have as their house guests their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Paul Doney and little daughter, .Jean . Marie, who will spend several days In Salem before returning to their Boston heme. V. D. Bridge Club. Meets at Pruitt Home - - i" The first autumn meeting of the U - D. ; bridge . club was held' ' on Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. A: Pruitt, with Michael mas daisies and cosmos decorating the rooms. Mrs. E. HI Burrell and Mrs. T, D. McClain joined the club as new members. The day's high score was wen by Mr.K. "Eckerlin, Sr. At the tea hour Mrs. Pruitt was assisted by Mrs... T. D... McQain, At the next meeting , of . the club Mrs. Harry We is will entertain. ' In the dub group are Mrs. E. Am One of Jthose sales thai they all talk about. We hare not been able to get enough of these articles together at a price to offer you a real sale for some .time. Ilowever a big shipment just came in. So this week Saturday, October 9th We offer you any of the following pieces. This is all high grade heavy warej 6 Cup Percolators 10 Quart Dish Pans Large Round Roasters 3 Piece Sauce Pan Sets JlVi and ' ' 5 and 6 5 and 6 t .7. TAKE NO PHONE OBDERS NONi; SET ASIDE. , We .1 v .J. l-:r-jir5y.7 ; Jdzz'dnd PiirUl lr ' v- .. . -vJ - Jt it i im - xi fist 11 ' I Puritan, and Jazz. King shake hands. President Coolidge, having made the trip to Saranac Lake, N. Y., to assist in break ing ground for the new Northwood sanitarium, is greeted by many stars of the theatrical world, among them Paul Whiteman, attired in the full glory of his plus-tens. H. Burrell, Mrs. T. D. McClain, Mrs. T. M. fiarr, Mrs. Stephen Breltensteln, Mrs. E. Eckerlin Sr., Mrs. C J. Healy, Mrs. James Hee nan, Mrs. John Nathman, Mrs. Frank Jaskoski, Mrs. C. D. Thom as, Mrs. Harry Weis and Mrs. E. A. Pruitt. M iss Harrison to Return to Muskegon Miss Anna Harrison of Muske-i gon. Mien., who has been the bouse guest during the summer and early fall of her sister, Mrs. Arietta M. Page and her niece and nephew, Dr. and Mrs. George H. Alden, will leave on Monday for her home, going by way of Cali fornia. In Los Angeles Miss Har rison will spend ten days witb Mrs. W. H. Abell (Margaret Al den). . i . S. Club Opens Neto Season Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Dav'es were hosts for members of the J. S. club on Wednesday evening when the group met for the first meet ing of the season. The high score was won by Dr. and Mrs. O. L. Scott and. the . consolation award by Mrs. A. J. Basey and Mr. and Mrs. Major Dennis. - Special guests for the evening were Dr. and Mrs.O. L. Scott and Mr. and Mrs. Claude Townsend. Dahlias and cosmos were used ef otiber Aluminum Sale 2 Quart Double Boilers Quart Handled Sauce Pahs Quart Covered Convex Kettles " ' 5 Quart Tea Kettles 3 Quart Tea Kettles 10 Quart Dairy Pails -10 Inch Angel Cake Pans 3 and 4 Quart Baking Pans ' . , Oblong Biscuit Pans ANY PIECE SATURDAY ONLY i ! an equal cnance at inese bargains. GEO;;E;r ALLEN Hardware, Paints and llachinery 236 North' Commercial Street 3 fectively in decorating the rooms. At the refreshment hour the hos tess was 'assisted in the serving by her daughters, Mrs. G. H. Taylor and Mrs. L. M. Davies. At the next meeting of the club Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bechte! will entertain. - Grange Meeting at Brush College Members of the Brush College range attended an enjoyable meeting this week when thay met at the school for a 6:30 o'clock dinner and program. Special mu- cical numbers were given by Mrs. William F. McCall, pianist. The speaker of the evening was C. Schuebel of Oregon City who speaking on "The Inequality of Taxation," gave one of the beet talks the organization has, had the pleasure of hearing. At the next meeting of the grange, on Nov. 5, the students at, Cbemawa will give the program. O. N. S. Club is Entertained Miss Signe Paulsen entertained members of the NOS club Tuesday evening at her home at 590 North Summer street. New officers for the rear were elected at this time. Miss Florence Lake was named president to succeed Miss Paul sen; Miss Bernice Schroeder, vice m J want every one to have ident, and Miss Lois Reed sec- !rv-treasurer. tans were made tor a. reception onbr delegates from the nor school during Institute week. iss Greta Ann Brumage will h charge of the refreshments; Elaa Egans of the program. Miss Lillian Schroeder of the rations. s Bohmstedt Is Guest 59 Alberta Bohrnstedt spent past week-end in Salem witb parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C.,i rnstedt. She was accompanied per room-mate, Miss Esther, i COURT HIE tor of Four Square Gos- I Church Sued fof Dam ages by Oebell ROSEBURG. Oct. 7. (AP) The Canyon'ville church row took a new angle today when Arthur L. DubeU filed suit for $2350 damages against A. M. Shaffer, pastor of the Four-Square Gospel church and mayor of the town of Canyonville, and Charles Bartley and Mark E. Elliott, leading mem bers of the church of which Mr. Shaffer is minister. DubeU was stabbed in the back Sunday, August 1, during a free-for-all fight which marked the close of a tent revival meeting which the preacher-mayor had leen conducting. : In his complaint filed in the cir cuit court today he charged that the defendants conspired to set upon him, and while pinioning him and holding him helpless did assault, strike and beat and stab "him nearly into unconsciousness, beating him to the ground, kick ing him In the head and stabbing him in the back with a knife." PHONE EXCHANGES BOUGHT MARSHFIELD. Ore., Oct. 7. (AP) Charles Hall and Earl W. Gates, of the Coos and Curry Tel ephone company, with headquar ters here tonight announced that they had purchased four telephone companies near Portland, involv ing $350,000. ROW TIES Mr. Sara A Conboy In a speech to the inmates of the NewJ York State Reformatory for Women at Bedford recently. Mrs. Sara A. Conboy, of New York City; gave her hearty indorsement to a new plan of wage payments to the inmates who are working in the garment Industry. Mrs. Conboy is International secretary treasurer of the United Textile .Workers of America and a member of the board of directors of the' national committee on prisons and prison labor. "Wages for the inmates of cor rectional institutions is not new," said Mrs. Conboy. "For thirty years wages have been required to be paid by the basic law of New York state, and the principle has been in operation in France for 100 years. Wage payments to the Inmates of a reformatory ' for i women are not new either. The Minnesota reformatory for women for the past five years has given wages even to those carrying on the maintenance work of the in stitution. "The industry in the Massachu setts reformatory for women is on a trade basis and has been a power for good in the institution for many years, but the law of Massachusetts does not allow the payment of any wages to the in mates of penal or reformatory in stitutions. "At Bedford the standards of outside industry and wage pay ments are combined for the first time in an institution for women. "The garment industry is vital ly interested in this experiment which is operated on the 'state use', basis, because it is a transfer of work formerly done in men's institutions to a women's institu tion, where it rightly belongs. The placing of the garment indus try in women's institutions will drive it out of the institutions for men, where it has been in opera tion for many years under the contract system with disastrous effect upon the prisoner and the free worker. The girl3 trained in the garment industry can find work upon release, men cannot, for the industry Is almost entirely operated by women. "The experiment at Bedford is part of a survey of industries suitable for women prisoners which is being made by the com mittee on care and training of de linquent women and girls of the national committee on prisons and prison lobar." Mrs. Conboy was elected to the L It's not too early to think of Christmas pictures "Yes secretary treasurershlp - of the United Textile Workers of Ameri ca in 1915. She was one of five women selected! by President Wit- son aird only woman' representing labor at Mr. Wilson's conference in ,118. She- represented the American Federation of Labor at the British trades! congress in England in 1920 the only wom an ever' elected 'to that position; Is chairman of the advisory board on vocational training in the pub lic schools of Itfew York and a member of the New York state housing committee. Mrs. Conboy was- also one of the four women selected by President Harding for the unemployment conference in Washington in 3.921. She was born and educated in Boston. WILL-O'-THE-WISP ! Once upon a 'time there lived a Princess so beautiful that the fame of her grace and charm had spread even unto the farthermost kingdoms. One sad day, as 'twas foretold, the "Princess Beautiful pricked her finger with a needle, and straightway fell asleep. And the Princess slept for many years until Prince Charming rode her way and awakened her with a kiss. "And the Prince and the Princ ess lived Jiappy ever after!" A very.Joyous ending for a very pretty story in the time of fair ies. . Toda the world is no longer In its happy-go-lucky adolescence. Life is real and life is earnest, and it takes something less ephermal than a kiss upon which to safely found so mighty an institution as marriage. Marital happiness is' ' decidely will-o'-thewispish. At that second it seems most surely to be safe within one's grasp pouf! off it flits across love's moors, and we who desire its capture must re double our efforts or it is gone forever. Whether the Great Adventure shall bring us weal or woe is Sir, That's My fTlHATS THE GIFT hell appreciate .A a little bit of yourself. And if you have the photograph- taken in our stu dios, it WILL be a Kttle bit of yourself . It will accentuate your personality, emphasize your real charm that's the "art of photography, as we know it. Come in and make arrangements for a sitting, or TELEPHONE 951, KENNELL"ElM I 1 SALEM- 'ALBANY , EUGENE t largely determined by the spirit In whichL we set about pursuing; this will o the wisp. , ' ' 'V K we seek happiness for our self alone it is likely to elude us. i If we wish to win It to share It with another It is apt to prove not so elusive. And there is none so foolish as we" who,' having sought for and found marital happiness, make no attempt to hold it. Toiave and to lose, the saddest of all sad fates ' A fate that overtakes many of us because we like the Sleeping Beauty trust too Implicitly in the potency of kisses. Such stuff as dreams are made of this is the romance of mar riage. But after the witching honey moon comes reality, inevitable. commonplace. To vitalize every day living with interest, contentment, beauty is no one mate's Job. It Is a task that the Prince and the Princess needs must tackle together. Faith and loyaiity with these the Prince and the Princess erect a barrier against jealousy and cri ticism. Understanding and sympathy and through the portals of the Prince and. Princess intolerance can not pass. Courage and whatever crises comes they are safely tided over. Co-operation and the spirit of give and take this is the alchemy by which two personalities retain, their own individualty, and are Becke Baby it's like yet blended into perfect partner- hip... , . : V - . OrfOve ana marxiasa ana. ure the; Happy Ending that no longer follows, fairy-tale fashion, as a matter of course, but that the Prince and Princess attain only by concentrated effort, selfish devo tion. Intrepid hearts. . ELY IDSHG DPiiiu o;j SUIT Proof of. Collusive Agreement Between Driver and Owner Lacking .i Zadoc RIggs did not enter into a collusive agreement with hi3 mother-in-law, Mrs. Janet Waller, es claimed by an insurance com pany from which Mrs. Waller has beon trying to, collect insurance money as a result of a wreck,, it was held by Percy KjelJy, circuit Judge, yesterday.. The insurance company claimed that Mrs. Waller had entered into a contract with Biggs to sue him to collect the damages from the irsurance company. " Riggs had been driving, the, car at the time of the accident. " Judge Kelly Jield, however, that the agreement between Mrs. Wal ler and RIggs was not such as to furnish cooperation or assistance to the insurance company. & Hendricks Insurance of All Kind TeL 161 Hellg Theater Lobby. 189 N.-Hlgh 1 V i i i m V 1 - i 4 i i