FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 20, 1927 : TIIE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON OF HE . 7. -, Elslnore Theater " -" x Five ' exceptionally fine Taude Tllle acts wil Tie on the stage at the . Elslnore theater today, April, 19. The Olympic Trio cram more physical culture Into the fire min utes they are on the stare than the ordinary man undergoes in a year. They are acrobats supreme, strong and rigorous with the pow ers . of youth at - their command. Their wotsMs of the knockabout m type with r many of their stunts' difficult in the extreme, j . ; . "Dear Brute-ess." the laugh proToking skit presented by Bob ' Alderman and Eileen Robinson, ehovld serve as a -warning to bus bands and wires as to the futtfre if the modern trend of domestic .affairs continues. r . . The Duncan Sisters, Rosetta and Vivian, of .'Topsy and Era" fame, hare produced a marrelong -rauderille for their proteges," The Three Lawrence Sisters. The Lawrence, girls hare developed info perfect entertainers,; thanks to their Inimitable teachers, and are at the present time a: distinct credit to their sponsors. A figure that -Is almost un known to the TaudertHe patron Is jtbe- "old time fiddler! - will be ""privileged to hear one of the very best of the remaining few when "Dad" Pettis will appear at the Elslnore theater; today. Mr. and MrtifKarry Usher will , appear at the Elslnore theater to day fin their unique acts,- which ht icreated wide interest, in sci- , entitle, as - well as amusement circles. . , V ' Man's battle with the ; desert; hii' never-ending fight to iwrest &; 'mm living from the arid -wastelands. Is the background Into which Is woven Zane Grey's", story, "The Mysterious Rider," appearing at the Elslnore theater April 29-30. The fast riding Jack Holt plays the title , role of Bent - Wade, 'whose life is in danger at ' the hands of the homesteaders because of his suspected duplicity. ' The sequences in which he procres bis innocence at the same time gain ing them back: their meagre lands which they were in danger of los ing, form one of the most exciting motion pictures of the year. The famous Hollywood Fadettes will appear on the program at the Elslnore theater Sunday and Monday.- They have 30 people in the cast Including, two bands. Oregon Theater "The Overland Stage" shows af the Oregon April 29-30. The first National offering is replete with thrills, of story, set ting and the daring horseman ship which marks the dark haired Lothario of the West The tale is set in the days when the stage coach lines from the East and -the West were just be ing linked In the Indian country. Maynard has the role of a scout of the stage coach company, pos ing as a gambler, in an effort to discover who is robbing; the lines and at the same time stirring up Indian antagonism against the company's general store. .The romance that develops be tween the daring young agent and the daughter of the storekeeper will give the Oregon patrons one of the most enjoyable evenings of entertainment I the screen has of fered4n ome weeks. ' STATESMAN GIVFJI CREDIT FOR BEHEFIT For Bringing1 Good People Who Help to Mate Brooks ;. , Spotless. Town BROOKS, Oregon, April 28. Desiring to - become the . ."Spotless' Town" of, Oregon; Brooks has kept In the front ranks for some time past by picking up alt papers andcans and boxes and wires and pieces of glass that may often be found scattered about in larger towns, and all home owners are turning their attention tojbeautl . lying their premises by I flower gardens. . . . , - ' Among the newer residents who ar setting the pace for a more Jieantiful Brooks, is Mrs, llum phries and her son, who purchased the attractive home of Mrs. Re becca Jones at Main and j Pacific streets last falL The Humphries' returned last week front California,- where the spent the i winter, . and,; they are now busily engaged in landscaping their premises and adding Mowers and shrubs to the already excellent collection. Prev ious to coming to Brooks, they re sided eighteen years at one home in Portland, which, because: of the flowers, was one of the most at- tractive in the city. , . . j 1 The Statesman may claim a little glory for securing these ex cellent - people as residents ' of Brooks, as they were subscribers . before coming here, having helped - a friend in a subscription contest; and through its columns-learning - of the advantages of this agricul tural district. ' ! .stead of giving it the 'patriotic glorification now accorded. Redding : entered his oration "Portentous Symbols an oration on the constitution. This oration placed second in the annual state old line contest recently. Red ding will deliver it today at Eugene In competition with orators from other Oregon colleges for the priv ilege of ' entering the western championship on the constitution at Los Angeles. s At Eugene; Redding's chief competitors will probably be Al fred Lyman, the O. A." C. speaker, and Benoit McCroskey, ! an . ex Salem - high ; student, who repre sents University of Oregon. ST. PAUL TEAMS DEFEAT GERVAIS Robert Witty Wins -. Oratorical Honors ST. PAUL, April 2 8.1 Special) -The St. Paul high school boys' and girls' baseball teams defeated the respective Gervais union high teams at Gervais Tuesday after noon. The score in tne Doys game was 13 to 9, and In the girls' game 34 to 5. ! In the previous games, ' played on the local grounds, St. Paul de feated Gervais in the boys' game- 7 to 2; in the girls' game 24 to 5. The Hneups Tuesday were: St. Paul Boya Gervais Harle . ... . . . .C - Manning Hansen , . . . Gooding McCarthy . . Berhorst W., Kerr Berhorst B. Blosser . '. , . Lehman -. . ..P .lb. .2b. 3b. 88 ,if. .cf . .rf . Redding ito Speak At State Con - test In Eugene Today Gervais . ..... Cross . .. Manning Sidebottom . ; , .Messer . . . Harms Faber, L. . i . . LS a Harris C, Jette . . . ... .RS. . Fuller Simon-Bittler LF. . . . . Lief, ; M Gooding . . . .CF. . . . . ... Lief, , R. Eder RF. ..... Harris, E. St. Paul -i Harle -. ; . Newcomer Faber R. Davidson Hiller . . Girls 4 Wu aO w aw IP . m m lb- i V 4 2l) 3 1) m Robert) Witty, a student' from Florida, lyesterday won the ora torical championship of Willam ette, university, and incidentally the Walter: C. Keyes prize of $15, when -he defeated his debate col league of the season, Charles Red " ding, in the annual school contest for top honors. James Rettle, of Fossil, Oregon, was- also' entered In the contest.' ' Witty 1 used , his oration "The Darkening Shadow" with which he . placed second In the Pacific coast centest and the .State Peace contest this year. It is a peace oration which, advocates the plac ing of war -in its true light, in- r.'OSE CLOGGED FROM A iCOLD OR CATARRH Apply Cream la Nostrils To Open Up Air Passages. AM 'What relief I Your clogged nostrils pea right up, the air pas sages of your Head sre clear ana you can breathe freely. No more bawking, saulin?, mucous discharge, headache, dryncza rfio stru-Unj for fcreaih at r.1 t, your cold or catarrh is gone. Im't stay stuffed op! Get a sntall fiott'e of 'L."y$ Cream Balm from your fn 't ;rw." Apply a little of this fr r'snt. anlivrlic cream ia your nos- tsilk let it penetrate throng every air M.-. i?e of the lrtad; sooUie and teal i'o!;. iz"srr.l rrjeous roeta- l-ra-.-N fiic you i.iiti-i rtllef. t'y'a CV "i Taliu is just v.t every coll rif t arrh m erer fcsa t'.ca . It's j ..-t ei kuiiJL " O . .. - - ' -.i.iv LAWYERS JfUSCEROTJS CHICAGO Seven thousand lawyers practice in Chicago, one to every 435 of the city's popula tion. - - VALUABLE nEeORDS Freschweiler . t Seeley . . . Stokx Tooley, E. . . . Rouch Tooley. S.l ... Kuhn ...... Eder oil pining ' - i T - LI ll-WLI.Ma.ll.llllll.ll i , District Manager Allen of the Hunt Cannery Has Been Keeping Records , (The McMlnnville Telephone Register of April 22 has the fol lowing, interesting to all who are concerned in any way in the prune indnstry: ) "With growers debating as to the outlook for the Italian prune crop this year, data kept by W. jG. Allen, district manager for .Hunt Bros., on his prune crop In the Dundee section, covering a period of 15 years, is of interest as show ing the apparent relationship of sizes of crops from, one year to another. " . - "We are pretty sure from watch ing crops year after year that un less conditions are extra favor able,' to have a smalled year fol lowing a big year." Batted Mr. Allen. , "Last year there were quanti ties of 50-60 prunes, and as a re sult we are pretty sure that there will be no 50-60s to speak of this year. The preceding year we had ou an titles of 30s, and last year there were no 30s ts speak of. Had the growers found some satis factory means of carrying over their 30s another year they would have had a big advantage. We need some method of doing this to even up the1 distribution of sizes, and ! belieVe it may be worked out, in fact quite sure it will. "Last year we had" a big, prune crop, and this year it looks like a light crop. However, there is bloom enough now on our Dundee orchard to give us half a crop if we do not get a lot of rain." The 15-year period . on which Mr. Allen has kept a crop . record for his 240-acre Dundee orchard of Italian prunes from 1905 to 1919, inclusive, and an analysis of the results from year to year In dicates the influence of one year's crop on the next and gives some sort of a basis to make estimates of the possibility of the crop, al though this, as giiown again by analysis of the figures, is not con clusive. . - The record for the period is as flollows: . f Year Lbs.- 1905 400,000 1906, . . . . ; '406,000 . 1907 488,502 1908 527,976 1909 430,000 1910 738,000 1911 . 491,623 M912 ..101,578 1913 ,32,339 - '3914 . . :r, 236.320 1915 . . . : 281,000 1916 , 652,350 1917 316,300 i 1918 . 856,696 1919 ........ 539,774 Total ... .6,999,358 EPIDEMIC PERIL DUE TO FLOODS PROBLEM (Contiuued from Pace 1.) flats and broken or damaged sani tation facilities. - With the "entire water supply In the nooaed areas out or com mission," Dr. RJaftlden declared another menace lay in the path of the " physicians who must conquer the aftermath of the flood. Vaccination of everyone, insur ance.of safe drinking water and milk through proper sanitation. and immediate Isolation of all cases of disease were proposed to therhealth officials as ' most' effec tive measures to combat the Bitu ation. Kamcn Novarro and lilay,, McAvoy In Ben Hur, Oregon Theater, May 1 and 2 satisfied that nothing can prevent war. Then there are those who, in their desire to abolish war, wish to make it as horrible as pos- sible. Sentiment ' Needed . "It. would seem to be clear that you cannot rely on declarations Or resolutions, oiv papers, to prevent war, unless back of all these is the triumph of the spirit of rea sonableness among peoples who have ceased -to think. In terms of war;, a habit of peace which will not be found while causes of strife still exist, and dreams of successful appeals to force for the vindication of injuries" -or the ex tension of power continue to fas cinate, and nations are . so intent on preparation for fighting that they find it Impossible to agree upon any measures for,, the re duction or limitation of burden some expenditures of armament. "It would appear to be worthy of consideration that if there is not Sufficient compelling humane sentiment to induce agreement, if war should come, o mitigate un necessary cruelties and" to spare noa-combatants from unrestrained violenee, little progress has been made in cultivating, the reasonable disposition by which war may be prevented," ( CITY'S SAFETY HOPES J PINNED ON LEVEE CUf (Continued from Page 1.) to the days of French control of the Mississippi valley. Plans of state engineers regarding the exact methods to be used and the extent of the break to be made still were carefully guarded secrets. Break to be Gradual Those versed in river engineer ing lore, however, said there would be little of the dramatic about the actual break itself, that probably small charges of dynamite would be used so as not to weaken too great a stretch of the levee, with the mighty rush of the flood cur rent left to complete the break thus begun. - This would mean that the in undation of the parishes ! of St. Bernard and Plaquemines ; would be very gradual, with time still left fcr the hundreds of residents who have refused to Join the caravans of refugees to make their way to safety. . Opposition Expressed i There has been a tense feeling in the territory to be flooded ever since the proposal .to dynamite the levee first was broached early in the week, with some of the trap pers of that section refusing to leave and with other residents who have sought refuge in camps here expressing dissatisfaction with the forced removal. ; While prepared for any eventu ality, state officials anticipated no open resistance when theirj forces move to the scene early tomorrow to carry out -their drastic plan for the relief of New Orleans: which has the tacit sanction -of the fed eral government and the full ap proval of the army engineers. year period and carry interest of 4 34 Per cant. . The incinerator when construe-' ed will require very little fuel, committeemen pointed out, except during cannery season, and only one man will DO needed to super Intend its operation, at a'cost not to exceed that now required. Ashes from the incinerator will be dumped In fills. The five 'mill levy which will provide about : $100,000 a year based cm Salem's increased valua tion, will be sufficient to care for construction of bridges and Im provement of streets. The South Commercial street bridge is espe cially 'in need: of replacement. It was said, and a good share of the f irsuyear's returns would be de voted to this purpose. " ' Purchase of new equipment for the fire department, construction of new fire houses,' Installation of fire alarm systems,, and mainten ance of the department including payment of ' salaries will be ' fur nished necessary funds under the two mill levy. for. these purposes. ' Provision Handicap The city has been , badly, handi capped in the past by the charter provision making it impossible to employ any one in a city office who has not resided in the Salem fora period of three years. There have been , opportunities, commit teemen said, for the employment experienced firemen and -tech nical experts - which .could not be taken advantage of because of this stipulation.. Its repeal is sought. Another mater which, has caused city officials difficulty is the fact that it has been. Impossible to, col lect from house owners for laying of sidewalks in front of their prop erty, because this is not provided for in the city charter. It has been looked upon as a minor lien on the property which could not be foreclosed. Only when the prop erty changes hands has the city been able to collect for the Im provement. . Inclusion of the word SIX MEASURES FAVORED ;T0 GO ON JUNE BALLOT (Continued from Page incinerator will be on a serial basis also. They will . run . for j a ten DRESSMAKING! Reasonable prices.- Don't for get our hemstitching, stamping, button making and pleating. , THE PETITE SHOP Over Busick's Telephone 1 1981 WATCHES, CLOCKS AND V JEWELRY i i Carefully Repaired and , , , Guaranteed at j PRESCOTFS ! 201 N. Commercial St., Salem ARMS LIMITING SEEN . AS MAKING PROGRESS (Continued from Pag 1.). indifference,' he. said. "Funda mentally, ft appears that the com pelling sentiment does not exist. First, there are those who are so Intent on abolishing war, that the have no patience ' with regu lations of war. There are others, nerhana , as 'numerous, who are 4 TONIGHT 8:15 f i. Prologue for Music Weak 75 DANCERS From Mrs. Ralph White's School of the Dance , ' ' , Assisted By . . Students of Jv - Miss Beatrice Shelton I - MUSIC SONG DANCE , , ; i - X ; Doors Open at 7:30 Curtain at 8:15 f '- I . - No Seats Reserved ' ' ' . , " ; - Adults - 50! Chilircn 23c Saturday Hro Gootl Act Levey N. Y. Vaudeville PROLOGUE OF MUSIC WEEK Presented by Pupils of Mrs. Ralph White School of the Dance . And -,' r , -k-;v. Miss Beatrice Shelton V School of the Piano ai 4' vt . ' Seventy-Five Salem Children in Ballet 4 . -'' Capitol Theater, Tonight, 8 : 1 5 , $ also . "Pageantry of Play V. Given in Honor of , iom Thumb and His Bride Pictures of those iri this-play, which was riven Salem 35 years ago, will be shown on the-screen; many of whom are grown men and , women well Known in Salem today. - I I f 0 ft kii d7 ($)" sidewalks, along with pavement In the charter under street Improve ments win remove this difficulty. All the proposals will be acted upon a council meeting next Mon day and If approved, will find their place on the ballot in June. The ways and means committee consists of W. W. Itosebraugh, S. E. Purvfne. and Harry M. Haw kins. .Members of the' ordinance committee are S. E. Purvine, Wat son Townsend and L. J. SJmeral. OAC BEATS BAPTISTS CORVALLIS, April 28. (AP) The Oregon 'Agricultural: college defeated the Linf ield college base ball team 19 to 4 here today. Savory pitched for the Orangemen and, : except for a rather aw trous blowup in the second, Wu master of the Wildcat sluggers ALBANY WIN'S MEET ALBANY. Or.. April 28. (AP Albany college defeated Oregoa State normal. in a dual track mJ! here today 73 J-4 to 51 3-4. 1 bany won eight first 6 second and 6 third places, and7 Monmouth s firsts, 5 seconds nd 5 third's TRT US FIRST SALEM HARD WARP rn v-r r w Iae. The Winchester stnr - 8ALEM. OREGON Phone 172 ; 120 N. Oom'L St. C. A. LUTHY . Jeweler la New Location t2S STATE STREET WatchesM Clocks and Jeweler Repaired It Time to Think of PAINTING and CLEANING CP We Sell Martin Senour 100 Per Cent Pure Paint DOUGHTON A SHERWDf 288 N. Commercial Tel. 039 1m 2005 N. Capitol. . Phone 620 " Last Time Tonight 7 and O p. m. : "ROCKING MOON A big picture taken in Alaska. Don't miss this one Comedies Always 25c, Children 10c THE OREGON Today - Saturday Special morning matinee for children under 11 years of age at the Oregon Saturday Morning at 10:30. Doors open at 10 a. m. Children under 11, brine 5c and Statesman Coupon. OREGON SUNDAY AND MONDAY Evenings At 8:30 Matinee Mon. At 2:30 The first and only presentations in Salem this year of ? ; " the Magnificent $4,000,000 CINEMA SPECTACLE IT iW n 1 li 'g pf L-J lyj us rJhe Greatest Attraction America has everknown FOUR MILLION DOLLAR PICTURE Based on Ijtv'viXllace's Immortal Story A METE0-G01DWYN - MAYER. production irmrmmmenlioikh Y A.L.ER1ANGER. CBDILUNGHAM F.ZIBGTELD Jr -Presented Exactly as iri New York" and Los Angeles . With TOURING ORCHESTRA And Complete Auricular Effects PRICES (including tax) Evenings 75c, $l10-and ?1.65. Matinee 50c, 75c and $1.10 I ; Seats Now on Sale at Box Office N. Z&NE GREY'S TO E A f 1 l N p. .'I '-t .1 " VM - ; i I . - 'Hg 9 i ll Kn"y New ' I I " Vl lntcrpretUon , -V , 1 sSj : - H II A Pifturixa- XO i , iS. m ggFdj 1 ' tszz?i'k tioa ot the j ; foe., "IVcd., Thnr. . I : ... III "SORROWS OF I i ll.i s r.w : ' I'. . Marie Corelli in. . jjxrector . - . i . . . BIG ACTS e t or Western Association Vaudeville The L'ahtira . Olympic Trio Iet t is & IIowcll iAwrcnce Sisters Vs Ml. X. PnlJlMlta . niurriiMU THE : .'!:'. : ;.. J .... "f-' .. ....... -V . - vE LSI WO RE Sunday and MOB FANCHOX & MARCO Hollywood Fadettes and 9- .lleadliners- -3 18 Giris 2 Bands 30 People 18 j 50 j J