TIIE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEMOREGON SUNDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 27, 1927 1 1 ' - - STOCK 1 MEETING institution Adopted; Chin f hilla Rabbits Discussed; . Pelts Shown . PermanpiTTT i t i o n V nneli the adoption of a consti ,in S affected by the Salem and' Small Stock Breeders' ferine in the Chamber of Com merit1 rooms. Tle objects of the organization are set out in the constitution a 3 follows: 1 jo ovide, encourage and develop the rabbit, cavy alid other fur bearing animals industry, and ,or ho purpose of establisninS a u,,ll organized central body charg .,1 with th'' duties of carrying out 'thN ol.je't in this territory.' ., x provide a center of infor i.nTion and advice on all matters pertaining to the above industry. 1 To promote by all possible means original investigation in the indnsfrv. and with that object in view in keep in touch with insti 1ui ions of learning and men of M i, n e interested in the industry. president Charles' ftj Anderson of the Oregon Chinchilla Rabbit Hreeders' association discussed tho rTiin"hi!l:i rabbits and the import ance of care in breeding, mention ing the need of better registration rules. Mrs. Anderson displayed an interesting collectino of rabbit pelts. K. M- Walker, vice president of h Chinchilla association, and his ind judge of Chinchilla rabbits, wife, wno is a ITceriftec! fe'gTstrar :, lso had a part in the program. Resident J. II. Zinser of the lo i:tl association presided. The third Tuesday of each month has been selected as tho association's meeting night.' Thiri i v members are now enrolled, and more are expected to sign np soon. This was the association's fourth meeting. Acclimated ornamental nursery stock, evergreens, rose . bushes, fruit and shade trees" at Pearcy Uroii. in season, ..'We have our own nurseries. 178 S. Com'l.' - () of pavedstfeetaf Clve thTpioneera a lRttft leeway tm their districts grow up. .. ; Beauty hint: Shoes that fit les sen facial wrinkles. - V V . No good news ever came in one cf those envelopes that have a lit tle sun parlor in front. mm V V A great movie director is one who can spend enough money on a picture to make VOU fore-pt hnv silly the story is. b Perhaps the street railway would be more popular if It would put out a new model every year. V Speaking of endurance tests, there's that Bristol. England as. year-old woman who has just died after 31 surgical operations. A Californian seeking a loca tion in this valley spent a few days in Salem recently. He was driving a Maxwell sedan on which ne Had paid a 53 license fee in California and 1 4 personal tax, a total of $7, and at the end of three years this personal tax is no long er required in that state. Here, he said, they demanded a $34 license on his car, but he went on up' into Washington state to look around before locating. He was interested in poultry raising." (The foregoing in quotation marks was handed to the Bits for Break fast man by a friend. It is the truth. A small thing. But small things have their influence. A man from New York came to Ore gon on an Important business mission.-involving possible large op erations in this state. The man in the room next to his m a Port land hotel was drunk and Vomited and raved and stormed around all night, so that he could not sleep. The New York man the next morning checked ont and returned hdme1. He judged Oregon by the bird" in the next room. An ex treme case. But a fact.) The Hamilton weacn electric cleaners nnd Monarch electric ranges both recommended by Good Housekeeping. Sold in Salem by C. S. Hamilton Furniture Co. () JU MULES LIKE VACUUM CLEANERS Scotts Mills C. W. Myers was in Portland Thursday on business. Mr. Jean Adams" of Portland is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. S. Korb. Miss Lorena Dale has been vis iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ,'oe Dale, the past week. rfy Mr George Haynes visited Mrs. Vjiza Htynes in SUveftnover the veek-end. "T " " I Miss Loraine Hogg of Salem visited her parents here over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Mell Haynes of Portland visited"' Mr. and. Mrs. Ceorge Haynes Monday. A. HItsman, who has been visit ing his sister in Portland, return ed home Saturday. u Miss Beatrice Amundson of Rtayton, visited her parents here over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Hogg were in Silverton Tuesda? afternoon on business. '' ... Fred Skirvin left Saturday f rf San Diego, Calif., being called by the serious illness of his son Rex. On arriving there found his son bHtc-r. 'Mrs. O. II. Brougher visited her Tfcwher, Mrs. Addie Smith, Thurs day evening. Miss Dora Sexton, president of Hie Itebekah assembly of Oregon, visited ivy Rebekah' Lodge Thurs day evening. ' Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mage have b n visiting in Portland the, past week. ., , . .. - , x Itay Telfer and his ttncle.-Prank Wilson, visited friends in Portland Sunday. ' " , ' ' Mr. and Mrs. Dixon and two sons or Battleground'; Wn., visited their s ns j. o- and H. S. "Dixon over th week end. Nervousness Disappears Af ter Few Times and Animals Show Pleasure NEW YORK. (Special.) The American army mule is being glor ified' by" 'vacuum cleanerand likes it. Use of vacuum cleaners in place of grooming by hand has been voted an unqualified success by commanders of horse and mule units of the army, according to a survey published in the current number of the Field Artillery Journal. The machines do a more thor ough job and complete the work in one-fifth of the time required by hand method, the survey show ed. On an average of a gallon of dirt was removed from every dozen animals and the coat took on a finer gloss. o effective were the vacuum cleaners m getting, the root of the dirt that army mules and horses in many posts were.perntitr ted to go through the winter months without their periodic clipping. Nervousness disappeared after one application of the new mach- ne and horses submitted quietly to .its use.' It was reported that mules seemed to experience sensa tions of pleasure from the mas sage effect, of the apliance. In fac erne" report told of a notorious mule which the soldiers dreaded to groom. Its reluctance vanish- ed at the initial touch and now the animal visibly leans against the suction brafeh with much content ment. For the wrecked and damaged automobile, Hull's, 267 SV Com'l. t T' l. r,T8. Tops, glass, radiator. "ly and fender work. No over charges here. Expert work.- () f- Bits For Breakfast Surprising most people Salem's building record is about doubling the banner year so far. And one man who thinks he is a good prophet pre-fli-ts that this will hold through out 1927. and more than hold He predicts a $5,000,000 building Jear. , There is a new RIn Tin dog pic ture at the Oregon theater today. 1 is the best yet; the best dog r.cture ever made. m S Perhaps it is a secret, but they 'Plannine for h nnt -Nation t Dank reception in the new 11- - - - j uuiiiim r vnr -vnsv w forn Ijext Saturday evening.' ' fians are to require sidewalks " new additions wherever streets are paved. Bits man is against tins. Why hamper the extension Your, Car Deeerrea SEIBERL1NGS American Tta TTf SJTTJUa 190 ft, OomiBercUl elr471 S THE CAPITAL a .. j i .. FOR ERSATZ FOOD Many Substitutes Found by Inspectors as Rounds of Storerooms Made CEfilALTICr useo i mum PARIS. Paris, apparently, is the capital of ersatz food. Food inspectors found more than half the samples they took recently from' stores were adulter ated or fraudulent. Of 728 arti cles of food or drink they reported that chemical 'analysis showed 396 were falsified in some way while only 332 were honest goods. There was everything from wa tered milk to synthetie wine, from chocolate that contained no choc olate, to sugar that contained no sugar. One of the curious pro ducts discovered -was milk manu factured -from water, chalk, sheep brains, gum arabic, fat and sugar. Another was mineral water fresh from a hydrant. There is published also by indig nant commentators long extracts from the annual report of a finan cially successful grocery jobber wherein the directors are told how the firm manufacturers food stitutes. Coffee is made from "wheat and chestnut flours, slight ly roasted, ground to a paste and moulded into the shape of coffee beans." Other substitutes described in this report are tea made from veg etable leaves, tomato puree from squash and crarots, and nice, small French artichokes carved from the Jerusalem variety. Army and Outing Store. Biggest bargains ift clothing, shoes', under wear, hosiery, gloves, valises and suit cases. N The working man's store, 189 N. Commercial. () Screen Women Spurn Diet and Start Taking on Flesh LOS ANGELES. The agitation against over-dieting to keep down fat is beginning to show results in the films. Casting directors, who have kept statistics on women of the silver sheet, say that there has been an average increase of one and three-quarters pounds each in four months in the weights of hun dreds of girls registered for work in motion pictures. Wardrobe de partments bear out tie report of the casting directors. Directors do not believe that women of the screen will willingly permit themselves to get into the. "fat" class,-' but" many ot them frankly admit the belief that" Hie" 'boyish figure," at least when in duced by strenuous dieting, soon will be a thing of the past. Symbol of Constituted Auth ority Important Part of Sittings WASHINGTON. (AP) A cer emonial mace, the symbol of con stituted authority rooted in the customs of the ancient Roman Republic, is as much a part of the sittings of the House of Represen tatives as the members are, them selves. Whenever the House is in ses sion, it is mounted in a marble pedestal to the right of the speak er's chair. If the members are meeting as a committee of the whole on the stat eof the union, it stands in a lower pedestal near by. ' It is never unguarded, and for more than eight years has been in the custody of A. C. Jordan of Ly ons, Kansas, tall, stalwart, genial assistant sergeant at arms whose duty is to maintain order on the floor. Made in 1842 of ebony fasces, or rods, three feet long, resperent ing the states, bound with thongs of silver and surmounted with a silver globe and spreading eaglt. the mace of the House represents powers rarely exercised, including sub-r , meraiH'r. Usually, when the assistant ser geant at arms is called upon to restore order, he is able to do so merely by marching through the disturbed aisles carrying the mace or by holding it over two excited members. If a' misbehaving mem ber fails to heed that display of authority, however, he may lay it beside him. That act automatical ly expells him, and formal rein statement would have to be ob tained for him to resume his place in the membership. Mr. Jordan is glad he has never had to lay down the mace. IT. T. Lots, tlie Jeweler, snn State St. High quality jewelery. silverware and diamonds. The gold standard of values. Once :i buyer always a customer. ( CHINESE RACE FOR SHANGHAI CAXTOXKSFJ A X I M K X OF SHAXTl'XfJ TO KKJHT SOOX RUX OVER; FEW IX JURIES SILVERTON, Ore.. Feb. 2 6. (Special.) Little Thomas Patty, the son of Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Pat ty, was run over by the Valley Market delivery truck Saturday afternono. With the exception of a few bruises he seemed to be all right. SHANGHAI, Feb. 26. (AP) Eight thousand foreign residents of this city awaited today the re sult of alignments of forces by contending warlords for its posses sion the richest prize dangling before the militarists of China. Thousands of soldiers from Shantung province continued to pour in from the north to swell the army fo fts governor, General Chang Tsung-Chan.s:, who has dis placed Marshal Sun Chuan-Fang in military control of this pro vince? of Kiangsu. Sun, not long ago dictator of five provinces and 113,000,(r0 people, has fallen into obscurity, and Chang rides the un certain Chinese wave of power. Chang Tsung-Chang, lesses war- PASSAGE at your home Telephone 2214 SH. Logan Man Found Dead in Home Missed By His Neghbors SILVERTON, Ore., Feb. 26. (Special) John W. Redding. 82, was found dead in his home on East Hill Friday. It was thought he had been dead 48 hours at least when tound by neighbors. Mr. Redding has been a resident of Silvterton since 1317, and be sides his widow he leaves nine children. Funeral services will be held from the Jack ft Ekman chapel with Interment in the ' Silterton cemetery. u :' ' ' ,XT'S TlSlti M - . THINK OP PAIN TIN Q AND CLEANING UP We Sell Martin Senour 100 Per Cent Pare Paint" v? " DOUGHTON A SHfcRWtN 280 N. Corn!. ' Telephone 039 YickSbHerfcCoT Ert'd. 18 Tear In Slfa T H. LEOXG, Ms.: If other, treatments have failed; try our Chinese remedie for asthma, bronchitis; cr6ap and cough. We have given relief to many aufferinc with 'throat trouble. " Never neglect a cold. We , also . treat all disorders - of. men, women and, children. Consultation Free Gall or write 420-420 Btato St. " ealeiau Oregon Phone 33 " - 7 When Your Child Fails to Gain His diet may be deficient in body-building elements, but the biggest cause lies in the fact that the nerves which control the assimulation have been pinched off where they leave the spine. Consult a Chiropractor About Your Child's Condition'" ; OIL SCOFIELD Straight Palmer Chirofactar , 806 , First National Bank JiuiJdins TEACHER OF PIANO Conservatory graduate, experi enced accompanist for soloists or choruses, either piano or pipe organ. Call 720-R After -6 P. M. LOLKTA BAKKE ' 'Pay Me as You Are Paid' 4 t fc;t' 1 fe z j ' I f l J 1 ord oflne nortnern auiance head- tator, Chang Tso-Lin, concentrated ed " h y i he- Ta moifs- Ma mrhtrf fin d i his troops near Shanghai today jireparatory to' rnovmg sbwuv alonS' the railroads' to- SungMaVig' to'de battle wfth the ViclOrtotj'sc ad vancing army of Ctantonese. i 'Small clashes took' place when Chang's troops halted - deserting scfldters ef Sun Chhafr-Falog. flee ing toward Shanghai to aroid fac ing the Cantonese who drove them from Hangchow eight day ago. Sun's beaten army, once 40.00i strong, depleted by tapture tfnd its morale weakened by threatening army and Cantonese propaganda withinits ranks, had disihtegrate'.f todayuntil litfle more1 thin 10,000 remained to block the advance of the Cantonese1. ' '-! ' Diplomatic Crisis Averted ' by Qujqk" fnktpp pr WASHINGTON (AP) A diplo matic crisis was averted' at1 tie Washington auditorium ny the di plomacy of afl usner. An orches tra from Minneapolis waV giving a coneert. Sir tea me lioarS, Hrit ish ambassanor, arrived early andi; with his party, filled a box: Later, the Belgian ambassador, Bawn de Cartier de Marchfenne, dean of the diplomatic corps, came in with his party, armed with ticket for that box. - Quick searvhing of Rritish pock ets failed to bring our box' checks. Thp British could show no treaty right for their box concession. Gig gling was gaining headway among the irreverant juniors of the dip lomats. Then the diplomatic nsher took a hand asking in whoso name the Rritishor's box had boon engaged. MAIMED SCM : Del Sarte Considers Statue His Best; Dedicated' "TV Those Who Suffer" PARIS. (API A great monument- dedicated "To Those' Who Suffer" will soon " be- set up in Paris. It win" 'represent Christ, His cross on His shoulders -supported' by poiTUs, laborers and a; horcfe of halt; lame and folirrrT.' ' " The sculptor, Maxime de! "Sarte, is himself a 'wounded poflu. " He rosf his left forearm before Ver dun. - He considers the statue his mas terpiece. The monument, already acquired by the Paris municipality, will be placed either on tire heights of Montmartre, or in front of the Pantheon where France's illus- I trion dead repose"1" "The latter ("place was -once 'adorned" by R6- fdfn.'s statue "The Thinker." Maxime del Sarte is a desecend an of Andrea del Sarto, a Floren tine' master whom Francis First, husDaHd of Mary Qireen of Scots, brought from Itafy to embellish OUR SPECIAL DEAtttMENT FiJI of ' PARTY Favors Prizes Tally Cards and Folders Place Cards Decorations and Beautifications Atlas Book Store W. I. XKKDHAM 45 State Sti-ect his domain. "Like his ancestor clei Sarte would; like to serve a king of Fran cV.1 JTer tsr a'rt- arent loy alist and is always in tlie front line when Toyaltsts battle the po ItO "of ' the third ' RepubTic. His one go6i'"ar"jn' can 'weild a stout caSiei-f-1- r-'; - ' r f " ,;' " ' ''' Ilia career as a militant royal ist sia Meet ' when he was a student of IS at the' Sorhonn and puftlic IV "paTaked his' professor of histbry, Wifhvfhe" Sid- of fellow students, because he 'had disparaged Joan of Arc'frf a' lecture: .Iier Sarte. bad ly1 dama ged' by the pol ice", was put in prfson 'forhia' escapiide. Later wlien Clemehcek-fl. hen minister of the interior ctiarged with main taining' pubjic order, saw and ad mire'dt del Sarte"s work at a war time exposition, he seat for the artist he had imprisoned. Wfeen he , saw s th4 warmainied soldier promoted from vblanteer privafrt to a lieutenanVryi fclr gallantry,' Me took", hfm ;in his arms- am kissed him.; 'Since then the two -hava heen friends. Sutherlin Xorton cannery paf4 $43,231 for fruit and 31,00l;for labor, during 1926. ' : -: Casej's Guaranteed RB.w aflfl KK31KDT , 1 Voney refunded if it doei not cure your case -k NELSON & HUNT DrngfttetJi Cor. Conrt nd Liberty Tel. t f mPk Adversary YQU ARE INVITED Uead.Cherry City Baking Co. Advert tsement on Page 7 t r t I .it .p o I fen Yoot . ... '" Eyes Are Worth a Thorough Examination The most important thing about a pair of glasses is the examination of your eyes.. Here in my newly equipped office I am pleased to announce that I am prepared to render a better optical service than ever before during my twelve years of prac tice in Salem. Phone 625 v Dr. C. B. O'Neill ' Optometrist ,v-A- .A , 401 First National Bank Building ;1 in- o o d a a o a ' q o o p p O'D a a n p n u-a o A I BIN "o m r - VM-.i1 Elf BATES "THE EYE MAN MAKES Glasses that fit Convenient Terms 457 State Street With Burnett Bros. Finished His Drive Successfully and after eating Rested on Cres-to-Rest Sprieff s Sold in Oregon Only at the Five Powers' Stores and a Lyke-Down Mattiress - furnished By iIESE-POWERS FURNITURE STORE I .Mi Df TCtl D EstlsnHeJ1868 General Banldnfj BuslntzA um. -tarn-- mjui a" Ik at' Pffloi Ilomn froM ? g, to. a B t bU Helso rested on this same bed before attempting the drive. Naturally he choose the;best , v , " Nv J Members Commercial Associates; Inc., the Largest J . ' tp. ' Furniture Bnyirrg Organization in the United States . - ? it' ' '