The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 08, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 8, 1927
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON
I !
:
The
Oregon Statesman
Ian4 Dliy Kxeapt Monday bjr
.TUX STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPACT
- tlS Soatk CMBrelal Bt, Salam, Oracoa
ft. J. Handrieka -.
V tit SMeSaarry -
Kalvk C. CurtJa -aVa4ra4
Baark
- - - - Manager
JMasatnag Editor
City Kditor
- Tel'craph Editor
- - Social, Kdifcar
W. H. Hratom -Ctreatettoa Miuiw
Ralph H. Kletziag - Advertising Ktir
Kraak JaakaU - - Maearar Job Dept.
E. A. Khotaa ..... Livestock Editor
W. C. Conaar ..... Paul try Editor
KXMBEB OT THE ASSOCIATES FKESS
Tk AMatat4 Pras U xetnaiTely entitled to tKa a for peblitatUa of all newt
LrpAteaaa credited to it or not otherwiao credited ia taia paper and alio tea local
Mws pablUaad a era i a.
BUSINESS omcu:
O. B. Belt, 225 Security Bide. Portia ad. Ore.
Thmaa P. Clark Co Now York. 12S-136 W. Slat St.; Cn!er, Marietta Bldf.
Coager Moody. California repreaeatattTe, Sharon Bldf, San Fvoetaeo, Hlrjina
Blda, Loa Angelea. r
Bailaeaa Off tea
Society Editor .
.29 or 583
10
TEXEPHOKES:
Newa I)ept. 23 or 10S
Job Department 583
Circulation Offl-a 583
Raterodat tke Poa Office in Sale. Oregon, aa aerond claas matter.
. . April 8, 1927
. A 'Wise son maketh a glad father;. but a foolisb man despiseth his
mother. Folly Is Joy to him that la destitute of wisdom; but a man of
understanding walketh uprightly. Proverbs IS: 20-21.
God and You
A LENTEN MEDITATION
By the Rev. Charles SteUle
God desires the complete redemption of mankind.
. To this end He is using the Church.
He has commissioned it to "preach the Gospel to every creature
And this Gosrel Is an all-inclusive eosDel.
' It stands for the redemption of all life, from waste, misuse and sin.
It seeks to brinr about a - better understanding between men and
nations.
It believes in social Justice and brotherhood.
. The Church proclaims the "good news" which is capable of solving
every problem facing humanity today:
ENDOWMENT FUND FOR SALEM Y
At the monthly meeting of the board of directors of the
T Salem Y. M..,A.., yesterday noon, there was present a repre-
sentative of the junior board of directors of that organiza
tion; the junior board being made up from the boy members
of the association, and cooperating with the regular ooara id
managing the activities
And this boy had a special message.
He said the members of the junior board had decided to
start an endowment fund for the Salem Y. M. C. A., and they
had made up among; themselves a purse of $10 for the pur-
pose
And this proposition of the boys was officially accepted
And now the endowment fund of the Salem Y is started
Jit is started with this $10. It will grow. Slowly, perhaps,
from now on
J But perhaps fast soon. And it will be a big fund in time
.An irreducible fund, only the interest on which can be used
. for the expenses of the association.
A carnenter did some work at the Tacoma Y. There was
) due him $8.50. He said he did not want the money ; he asked
fhat it be nut to work : to start an endowment fund. It was
I ? done. Manv additions have been made. Itns now a large
, W IUna. OUl 11, WitS SUiriCU Willi II1C po.tvr rroco ui uic
penter. '" ; : 1
It will be the same in Salem. And the boys have started
"" it, with their $10. Who will be the next? And the next?
-Pponle will mention the endowment of the Salem Y in
- --
rf their wills. But the boys of the junior board strated it with
jtheir$10 j
1
. -
THE BIG PRUNE INDUSTRY MEETING
Salem has been selected as the place for the most import-
ant prune industry meeting ever held in Oregon
And it is to begin at 10 o'clock next Tuesday, at the rooms
of the Salem Chamber of Commerce.
' At this meeting there will be presented the findings of
1 the government survey. Chris L. Christensen, chief of the
.division of cooperative, marketing of the United States gov
ernment, Washington, D. C, will be present and present the
report. .
Out of this meeting should come the stabilizing of the
prune industry of this section
A thing that is of tremendous importance to all the people
of this section, of the Willamette valley, and of the state.
The report left Washington by air mail last evening.
All the prune districts of Oregon and western Washington
will be represented at' the meeting.
HEnct wKythV farmers of thVnbRliwest esl);iATly:af eouV of
tune with administrative policies' regarding agriculturistsL
ne may iniiuence some tu inose wnu resiue aiong me Atiuniif
seaboard to look westward and study the problems of the
United States rather than eastward to delve into Europe's
questions."
Very Well put. And ; the people of the east, speaking
generally, will have a good deal to learn about the west; its
size, its great undeveloped resources, its wonderful oppor
tunities; its outlook upon the world's greatest populations
across the Pacific ocean '
Very many things.
( And, among the others, the fact that the virile rnd
vigorous west is in the future going to demand more atten
tion to its needs by the rest of the country ; and more espe
cially by the smug and self complacent and narrow chested
elements of the people of the east.
r
o
Bits For BreaJcfeast
Honey bottling plant
And largest bee supply depot in
Oregon
a a
These are coming to Salem, and
they will help to keep the bee in
dustry going and growing here:
will help to make Salem the
greatest bee keeping center of the
United States, which it must be
come in order to assist the great
fruit industry of the valley.
S S
Salem gets the prune industry
meeting; the most important meet
ing for that industry ever held in
Oregon. To open at the Salem
Chamber of Commerce rooms at
10 o'clock next Tuesday morning.
S
Did you read the story in yes
terday's Statesman of the vision
of the man who says Angora goats
must be used-in reforestation, if
we are to have successful reforest
ation at all? And says the goats
will yield more profits than, the
timber that is to be grown for
pulp wood and lumber?- It is
worth thinking about may point
to a gigantic Industry
S
And one that -will aid in per
petuating the vast timber indus
tries of this section, which can
not last very long on a major
scale without reforestation.
"a S
The state lime plant cannot get
the raw supplies from southern
Oregon fast enough to keep up
with the demand for agricultural
lime. Something will have to be
done about it. Every acre of land
needing lime ought to have it,
where the owners of the land are
willing and ready to buy the lime.
Parker & Co.. 44 4 S. Commer
cial. Don't tall to see Parker
about repairing your car. Expert
mechanics t your service. All
work guaranteed.
TELEVISION SUCCESS:
SPEAKER SEEN FAR OFF
: (Can tinned from page 1.)
in Washington and Whippany were
thrown onto both small and large
h reens. On the screen designed
for the telephoner's use solely the
pictures were exceedingly clear,
f-asily recognizable as likenesses of
the person at the other end of
communication.
On the large screen, about one
ard one-half by three feet, the
results were not so clear. Espe
cially was this noticeable v.hen
Secretary Hoover's image was
transferred from the small screen,
on which it showed clearly while
he talked with President Walter
S. Gifford of the telephone com
pany, to the large screen for the
benefit of the half a hundred news
papermen and scientists present
at the demonstration.
At times during Mr. Ho. v r's
Salem is to have a honey bottling plant within a few
weeks; a plant that will run the year through; that has
advance orders sufficient to keep it going steadily the whole
twelve months. In connection there will be the largest bee
supply depot in the state. Salem is to become a honey center.
It has taken a long time to get this start. But it will lead to
great things for this valley.
pt'dresa the likeness on the screen
was recognizable, but at others it
so laded and rippled as if iv :r
were running over it, that it be
came nothing but a formless shad
ow. Again at changing moments.
only a pair of eyebrows, or an ear
or a moutn, would he visible as
the secretary's voice boomed from
the loud speaker.
The demonstration was held in
the auditorium of the laboratories
in West street.
The combined telephone and
television instruments were set in
cabinets shrouded from outerlight
by heavy maroon curtains, cabinets
reminiscent of those in which the
stage magician places the woman
who is mysteriously to disappear.
The first exchange, after the
official greetings, passed between
Frank B. Noyes, president of the
Associated Press, in Washington,
and Carl S. Brandesbury of the
New York office of the Associated
Press. The likeness of Mr. Noyes
was so clear in New York that
the scintillation of light on his
spectacles as he moved his head
in speaking could be seen plainly
The next part of the demonstra
tion, it having been conclusively
shown that television by telephone
wire was an actuality, was the
radio program from Whippany.
Here again the likenesses of the
speakers were thrown on the large
screen and were with almost no
exception distinct. Newspapermen
who sooke after a man and wom
an entertainer had sung were eas
ilv recognized by their associates
in New York.
Although the mechanism of tele
vision is naturally immensely tech
nical in detail, its basic principles
may be compared to those of the
telephone. As in the telephone in
struments are used which are elec
trically sensitive to sound, so now
instruments have been devised
sensitive in a like way to light.
The subject, as he telephones,
ia "placidly scanned" by three
great "photo-electric eyes." The
largest photo-electric cells ever
built. The impressions made on
these cells are translated into
varying intensities of electric cur
rent and as such are carried over
wire or air. At the receiving end
machinesd have been invente
which can turn the varying cur
n?nt back into light and shade, and
so reproduce the image of the
scene scanned by the electric
"ejes."
More than 15 complete images
of the scene are sent over wires or
air every second, so that motion
of the subject has no more of the
jirkiness than a moving picture.
The company announced that
there is no one inventor of tele
vision, many scientists at the lab
el atories having cooperated in its
development, but three men were
mentioned as having contributed
roost to the research which led to
the present stage. The three are
Herbert E. Ives, son of Frederick
fc. Ives, inventor of the half-tone
i-.tirr-Tav:.
:TinTcenngrAround Your Car in. the Middle
Mf! : :' : L! :! of the Road May Result in More Trouble
1 1 -4
V
a-oK,-- a"" IIM'.' 11
vltltTsecttonal
Sessions will
ttreeUngsr.rjeneral
be held tomorrnnr
forenoon and itternoon with Ac
tion ot officers.
WOULD SCRAP WARSHIPS
1'lan In Chamber of Deputies S
PAUIS, Aprtl 7. (AP)Aboli-
iiuu ui oaniesnips and battle
cruisers by international agreA
ment isuggested in a naval dis
armanient plan introduced in th
chamber of deputies today.
The plan isj contained in a rV
lution 8ponsored by eleven o?
eervative deputies and the royalist
deputies Jean) Le Cour Grandmai
son and the Marquise De La Fer
ronnays. It jcalU on tie French
government tp invite all civilized
nations to jojin in limiting navai
ai uiauiruis qu me basis it
gests.
Courtesy, National Safety Counril
It isn't any fun to have to get out and monkey with the engine on a lovely April day, when
you have planned to take afriend for a long d rive through the country. However, if you do
o-r cfr.ir rm trio rnjiH. rpmpmbpr vou're invitiner more trouble if you fail to draw up to one
he 'steoDincr on it." will have a clear stretch. The
motorists shown in the picture had plenty of space in which to park, instead of using the
highway as a public garage. Hogging the road always is discourteous and often is danger
ous. Courtesv and daution continue to be th e favorite sons of old man Safety.
process of reproduction; Frank
Gray' and H. M. Stoller.
The Dixie BaKery leads on high
class breads, pies, cookies and
fancy baked supplies of every
kind. Best by test. Ask old cus
tomersi. 439 Court St. ()
VESSEL SINKING AFTER
RUDDER BREAKS ON BAR
(Oontintied from page 1.)
Jane Nettleton, 100 miles south,
was reported proceeding to the
Necanicum's assistance. !
Carried Lumber
PORTLAND, April 7. (AP.)
The Necanicum, reported in dis
tress off Coos bay, in command of
Capt. John Samuelson. was dis
patched from Portland at 5:30
o'clock Saturday afternoon in the
Nelson line service and reported
at Marshfield Monday morning.
The vessel carried merchandise for
delivery there and took aboard a
tleckload of lumber for San Fran
cisco. The Necanicum is owned by the
California & Oregon Lumber com
pany, is managed by A. F. Mahony
cf San Francisco, and is on her
IL'th voyage from Portland under
the agreement with the Nelson
line.
She -was turned out in 1912 at
Fairhaven, Cal., and is of 75 2 tons
tress and 565 tons net register.
Hor leugth is 178.5 feet, beam 39
feet, and depth of hold 13.3 feet.
Motorship Founders
DUTCH HARBOR, Alaska, April
, (AP) The motorship Iskum
BUDDIE AND HIS FRIENDS
LOSE FAT IN THIS
PLEASANT WAY
Not by abnormal exercise or diet, but
by correcting the cause of excess fat,
as ccmntli-ss people now are doing.
That Aay is Mnrmoia Prescription
Tablets, uscil for years; Today you
see the results in every circle, in fig
ures niaaic prirlish and slender. The use
of Marinola lias .crown to wry larpc
proportions because cf these proved
results. You owe yourself the test of a
scientific help which has done so much
for so many. The results will surprise
r.nd flcliplit you.
All drutrtjists supply Mnrmola at $1
a box. ; A lwoklet in each h'x tells why
it acts. Go get it now and watch the
results on fat.
BY ROBERT L, DICKEY
Six dwelling house permits were issued yesterday for
Salem, calling for an expenditure of $20,650. Growing. Yes,
Salem is growing. .Going to grow faster; backed bjf increas
ing industries oh the land, hoojeed up with industries in the
ci
COME WEST, YOUNG MAN AND OLD
"Go west young man, and grow up with the country'
advised Horace 5reeley. The advice was taken by hundreds
of! thousands, and the western borders of the west that was
meant as the west by Greeley moved ever westward till the
crjest of the Rockies was reached and then the shores of the
"Pacific. ; :' , ;v - ; ' .
Now. for' another reason, or other reasons, the liberty'
Magazine is commending to all residents of the eastern part
of the United States the example of President Coolidge, who
trt KrwnrT his summer vacation in 'the west. .That
magazine in its current issue says editorially:
I "President Coolidge, in deciding to spend his summer
vacation in the west, has set'a fit example, for his- fellow
" citizens of New England and New York. SHis visit will
rr.rnra manvtwho have refrained from going west through
fear of stage robberies, cow boys shooting up the town, or of
Thelnff scalped by Indians. Besides this, he will learn at first
44 AVE YOU AND ANGUS GOT ENA
FLEAS. CAN OTEr1 1
TOO
FLORlOA
(' lok XWW
I MAE EXPEfflEMCEO FJLEAS AtU-,
-THE" WAV FRAE. 1
To1 BROOKLYN, &UT CONPAPEO Tt
THESE BUT VVHAT5 TWE iJS ?
I'M TOO CSV FOR. COMPARISON;
HE"RE COMES1
H06 H
GOT A
ReMffpyJ
1 1 : VfcnnryrJlran tpapar Scnaaa
FLAS 7 UO OLE ?uORov.
MOtfTH IS THE WORST"- AFTER THAT
YOUiiL BE ,uDME50Me VVlTHOUTj
foundered on Unmak island, west
of here, yesterday when a heavy
pale came up making her drag
three anchors. She was 'tossed up
on the rocks of the island. The
crew, aided by natives on the is
land, reached shore safely and was
brought to Dutch Harbor by a
passing gas boat. It is feared that
the lskum and her cargo will be
a total loss.
VICTORIA, B. C, April 7.
(AP.)-rTwo bcows, one laden with
100,000 feet of lumber and the
other 'empty, were piled high and
dry on Shoal point, at the entrance
of the inner harbor here during
a storm early today.
The scows were owned by the
Wilfert Lumber company of Es
quiniault harbor. Tugs prevented
two other scows, laden with 400,
000 feet of lumber, from breaking
away from their moorings.
You'll enjoy driving a Pontlac.
It handles so easily and performs
so well it is a real pleasure to
drive it or ride in it. Vick Bros.,
High and Trade. ()
EDUCATION WILL START
EARLIER SAYS SPEAKER
(Continued from paga 1.)
public liars in history," he de
clared, referring to irresponsible
speakers. "Fluency is not wis
dom, nor are figures necessarily
faets."
.He estimated that $18,000,000
are lost to Oregon annually
through preventable disease and
urged that health education be
emphasized.
The ' afternoon was occupied
8U-
i I
Whitman Orator Winner
: Extemporaneous Contest
TJORYALLIS, Ore.. April 8.
(AP) Harry Rothrock. repre
senting Whijtman college, "Walla
Walla, won jfirst place in the ex
temporaneous speaking contest
held here tonight. Arthur Silvert
son, the University of Southern
California, placed second, and
Carolyn Witeger from Washing
ton State college, won third place.
The contept was held as part of
the Pacific coast league confer
ence. Allan; Nichols, coach of the ,
Southern California " debate team.J
was chairman. I
I
Quldren yS' j
cially prepared for Infants in
MOTHER : Fletcher's
is a pleasant, harm
less Substitute for Castor Oil,
Paregoric, Teething Drop
and Sooffiing Syrups, espe
arms and Children all ages.
of
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature
proven directions rvi each rackapc. Physicians everywhere recommend it
IF YOUR ADS
Ml?
nDcmimtt ,
Suit
Have Us Write Them
For You
MARTIN
ADVERTISING
SERVICE
" 325 Oregon Bldg.
Phone 793
Directors ot
Profitable Publicity
Announcement
4
Quicker Telephone Service is now
Available to Albany, Dallas.
Independence,' Monmouth and
Silverton
When you desire a connection with a telephone iri
any one of these exchanges, just ask "Information"
for the number and then give the number to your
local operator as you would in placing a call to a
party in Salem, When the operator says "Number,
please?" announce your own number and say, for.
example : "I want Albany 330."
The connection will be completed as in a local call.
You do not have to ask for "Long Distance." The.
date and item will appear on your bill the first of
the month following. This service is designed to
give you quicker and more satisfactory service to
the points mentioned above when you desire "station
to-station" service. It does not apply to calls in
which you desire a particular party; in which case
calls will be placed with "Long Distance" as pre
viously. For further, particulars apply, to our Bus
iness Off ice. ' .
1 !
epnone
and Telegraph Co.
in
Blanks : that : are : Legal
We carry In stock over 115 legal blanks suited to most any business
transactions. We may have just the form you are looking for at a big
saving as compared to made to order f onus, T
Some of the forms: Contract of SaTe, Road Notice, Will forms, Assign
ment of Mortgage, Mortgage forms, Quit Claim Deeds, Abstract forms,
Bill of Sale, Building Contract, Promissory Notes, Installment Notes,
General Leaser Power of Attorney, Prune Books and Pads, Scale Re- -ceipts,
Etc These forms are carefully prepared for the courts and
private use. Price on forms ranges from 4. cents to 16 cents apiece, v
and on note books from 25 to 50 cents.
' , PRINTED AND FOR SALE BY
The Statesman Publishing Co.
LEGAL BLANK HEADQUARTERS
At Business Office, Grouni Floor
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