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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1927)
SOBIETY f Continued from page 2) y&repared; roasted and, there tor supper..; it .began rain Mrs. La.7"S, " ineui ,mj Into the kitchen to finish .their al. TOose who .yere present ulkey, Elizabeth Clement, Fran ks Lows, Doris Godsey, Margy Jenz and their guardian, Mrs. R. A Hestee, , icra!ttmindtlonal msionary Society Witt cet on Tuesday j The Interdenominational , Mis- nary Council will h,oid a meet 's at Leslie M.'E. church May 17 .-ginning at 1:20 p. m. This is We program: votlons Mjss ana Mcisary lo Mrs. D. H. Talmage Itoil Call of Crurches Business Session J Mrs. E. H. Shanks ?jfary Address . .-T, . ... . ; Mis3 Lain eopoye .Mrs. Harry styles As the Japanese kindergarten our special Interest at this time ull representation of all church lies is desired at the roll call. lem Girls Are Guests i Eugene Campus Miss Hope Crowthers and Miss Uine Glover are spending the ek-end at the University of Ore- In. They are house-guests at fj Pi Beta Phi sorority. "s. Mclntyre Entertains site Missionary Society Members of the women's home ksionary society of Leslie Meth- Ost church met on Wednesday ernoon at the home of Mrs. arles Mclntyre. An Interesting gram was followed by the tea ir. n the group were Mrs. Mason hop, Mrs. A. C, Bobjrnstedt, Mulligan. Mrs. Harry Hunrph MIss Esther Mulligan,' Mrs. 'tries Lucas. Mrs. Harry -Lucas. Hjspftner. Mrs. John "Bertelson, ) tMcShane, Mother, ' Shaver, ljfalpb Thompson, Mrs. Mont JaevT? Mrs. Her.tzog, Mrs. Low- Mrs, tj. A. Knoten, Airs. ecK, 3. Hansoerger ana her" two lighters, Mrs. E. ,T. Barfius. p: W. J. Lin foot and her moth- Mrs. Henry Gillon of Duluth, n.. Mrs. Hudkihson and the tess, Mrs. Mclntyre. fcific College Group Attends UA i raining uounca .ir. and Mrs. B. C- Miles have ouse-euests at their home this k two faculty members 2 1 and fc students from, Pacific college j are attending; the .TWCA nine council on the Willam- university campus. Ruests fc the M.lles home In. he Misa'tVa Miles, daughter of hosts. Miss Leona Watland. n of women at Pacific, and two tlents. Miss Genevieve Badley Miss Johanna Germs. 5. Henri Lee Will uertain Music Teachers '". 'he Salem branch of the dre- State Music Teachers' asaori- ltr'n mect n mesaay even ,'ie home of Mrs. Henry aNi15 Stewart street, in Par Groe. . Lee Presents Group of nyer Piano Students in ital on Friday icluded in a large group of ig piano students who appear n recital at Mrs. Henry Lee's jio on Friday were: Lenore I Marie Hersikom, Laura Gas- Leondine Asplnwall. Dorothy frell. nay Stowell, Charlotte Cleave , Arthur elements, Wirt. Wilabolyce Wirts. e SMncka. Xadlne King. Mar- Chase. Aiena Nash. Frances sienseu, Helen Engle, Doro Chappell, Anita Savage. Pat- ee. Barbara Kurtz and Lois T. i Reserves and Camp h Girls Assist in nation Sale lie Salem chapter of American Mothers realized a total of ! from the reeenl." carnation which was conducted with fjfZJr css inrougn me assisc ruf h group of Girl Reserves yS$U Fire girls, r ftiiwere offered to the jsirls feeding ( in selling j the most ms. Tin; first nrlta of S2.50 wou "by Miss Mar Jorie, Webb; second, prize, pf, $.50. by Esther Cook, and the two $1 s. br Miss Dorothy Kellogg Miss Echo Hall, f x ie girls who assisted the War lers were: Misses Roberta f. Colene Minhus, i Juanita person, Ardis Stanton, Mar- It Nunn. Virginia Bright. Doiw Cannon, KathrynSheIdr6iF, Harbison. Helen Lytle Helen ,' ' Let ha Mad ison. Gwendolyn rard. Esther ' Cook Ruth er, Echo Halt. Dorothy Kel I. and Marjorie Webb. S?vl Calendar lm at . First Congregational ch. "The Prodigal ' Son.3 v J ' ! X.' 11 . MMdy . r , A iw?a Legion ' Aujriliary And ncan iegion jorait tocui turn McCornack ' halH following lags. ' - terdenominAtlAnal nntirtt- t e Mi K.-charch. EoHess: 1085;i5brch stieet; Music Teachers association.' Mrs. Henry teei 735" Stewart street, hostess. . . Chadwlck chapter of Eastern Star. Initiatory work under aus pices of Past Matrons club. Ma sonic Templet ; Wednesday Regular meeting of Royal Neighbors. St. Paul's Parish house. . 8 o'clock. Mrs. Frank Churchill's piano program at TMCA auditorium. 8 o'clock. Saturday ISydla Temple, Daughters of the Nile. , Spring ceremoniaL Odd mon streets.. Fellows' Temple, Tenth and Sal , American Association of Univer sity Women. Gray Belle. 12:30 o'clock. ADDITIONAL SOCIETY NEWS IN FIRST SECTION LVESTI 1 PICTURES ENTICED WILL iS Type Calls for Splendidly Produced Pictures of Early Pioneer Days NEW YORK (AP) Stories of "sheiks" society life, and "flap pers" combined do not make up more than five per cent of the suc cessful motion pictures, says . Will II. Hayes, head of the industry. , Definite and conclusive tests, which Mr. Hayes announces, show (hat the public is interested, first in what are known in the motion picture trade as "Westerns"; sec ond, In comedies. The most popu lar subject in the short picture is the news reel. Next come the short comedies. "And , by Westerns we do not mean the rough and tumble shoot-'em-up stories on bad men and cowb,pys," he explains. "The day Of. the crude western story and cattle rustlers and dance halls has passed. Pictures of that kind have been succeeded, by splendid ly produced stories ot the West as itreally was and really is. , "The immense popularity of the old Broncho Billy pictures was an early indication of the public's in terest in the romance of the old West. Theft came Bill Hart, who was followed by other men who loved the West, and who actually lived the West Tom Mix, Hoot Gibson, KJen Maynard, Fred Thomson, Jack Holt, Tim McCoy and a host of others. A, few years ago the historical Westerns came into being. 'The Covered Wagon', I believe was the. first. The suc cess of this picture encouraged rtbe producers and brought td the screen 'The Vanishing American North of Thirty-Six,' 'The Iron Horse, 'The Last Frontier,' and 'The Flaming Frontier. In much the same .class are the western pictures starring dogs and horses, like Rin-Tin-Tln and Rex. "No automobile race ever pos sessed the thrill of a thundering body of horsemen. Studio sets seldom equal the grandeur and glory of real western. canyons, des erts, forests and mountains. "That the people like these stor ies fa proved by surveys made for the last two years. Theater own ers throughout the United States reported for each year the 104 pic tures that had . been attended by the most people. Of the 208 pic tures listed 60 were Westerns. 'Forty-three ' of the 208 were comediesfeature length come-1 dies. This survey did not check the popularity of short comedies. Only 13 out of . 208-could by any stretch of Imagination be classi fied under the heading of 'sheik flapper and society dramas. The others were sea stories, spectacles, war pictures, sports stories, mys tery dramas, dramas of small town life, etc." Mr.'1 Hays disclosed that It was the Influence of the . "Western" picture that caused him to accept his present position. .'",."." . . "While I was postmaster gener al the Drincioal picture producers, who realized that they had a new method of expression of tremen dous oower for good or evil.-ask ed me to head a new organization. I hesitated, and was. still undecid ed 'when 'I went home to Indiana for Christmas; taking with me three cowboy suits for my son and his two small cousins. When they put on the suits, I overheard the boys in another room, planning,,, to, show them- selres to me. They were disput ing about what character each should assume. . Whom do you suppose they; all wanted to, imper sonate? It was not Buffalo Bill, or Daniel- Boone or any other his toricil - character, but each boy wanted to be Bill Hart, the pic ture star. 'S . 1 -J ' " j'f Jf six year old boys love Hart so; much,'. I said to myself, 'here must be a work worthwhile lo un dertake." if. ;. . ; TRY IT ON YOUR- PIANO f ifORTl lilttftS M 'Miss Hanerva Silas ot Yliopistonkaty, Ftnldnd'wrUes she -would like to lle here, because she Is weary of spelling the name of her home tOWn- , . I-, --i . iOXDON." Arthnr Cknham. secTetiryof...the; SoaUL.iirlc4n Union, : says there kre 35) 00,0 6,0 sheeprthef'unfon.SOOO'OVtfOtf. "L" CARS ALMOST TOPPLE INTO STREET BELOW " . ? s .. . i :;: : - Defeciive switching is blamed for this "L" accident in' Chicago; at Van Buren and , Wells streets, where an eastbound Humboldt Park train crashed into, the rear of a Wilson avenue express at a switch turn. The cars careened as if they would plunge into the street below. Two persons were injured. . SHARP COB ton in prices Many: Interesting Things Found by Experts in Com piling Farm History WASHINGTON (AP) Who re members the day when a. farmer could make a bor of matches last a year, but could get only 4 cents a dozen for eggs? Government statisticians have run across these as well as a host of other interesting figures for in clusion In the first comprehensive history of farm prices in the Uni ted States. Letters from old-timers on the farm today who remember what their fathers and grandfathers got and paid for this and that article; account books of hundreds , of country general stores showing hnw nrnducA was exchanged "fori general merchandise; tobacco stained price indices a century old -all areJfiguring in the unique undertaking. Its ouroose. one official explain ed, is to provide basic material for various economic studies. "Everyone is trying to forecast the future,", he said. "Big indus trial corporations have experts conttriaally at work figuring out the supply of raw materials and the demand for the finished prod uct. .The farmer is not a techni cian, so the department of agricul ture, extension workers and agri oiiitural fnllevr art collaborating la this work with a view to uncov ering data which may aid him bet ter to adjust his supply to the de mand." . Although they have been at their task for more than a year. the experts have yet to complete nrice history of a single state. They expect, however, to finish a tabulation of Maryland prices, be ginning with 1850, within a few months, and have begun work on Virginia, South Dakota and Illi nois. Prices discovered so far, if ef fective today, would slice family budgets probably 75 per cent or more, although some articles, scarce at the f time, were mucn higher than they are today. In a letter typical of many oth ers received a Salem, vs., rarmer wrote that 75 years, ago his father bought 150 acres of land for $2,- 500 and "everybody thought he was crazy for iylng so much." Two years ago, he said, the' land wouia nave orquS"1. i Farm hands got from z& to so coats i day for wbrkine from 'day-1 light to dark, or frojn $6-75 to $13.50 a month. Farm wages wlthoul "board onApril i, I 27, were $ 4 S-41 jalmont Ju X i While the father sold many thousands of eggs at ; cents a doxen and farie fine frying chick ens at from 10 to 16 cents apiece, the son, had paid as hlgh,as-80 cents for eggs and $1.80 tor thick ens no etter." : - J ": Dressed hogs', sold for '$3.50!, to $4.50 a- hundred poundsr -shoes were made by hand for. 50 cents si pair and p0 uushels of (flnest Irish potatoes" netted the gTower, clear of freight, drayage andepm missions,' only. $8.10 . or, slightly more than!l0.ceits a bushel. Inl?90 a country store operator sold 31 items to one man over a period, of, three months. .Twenty seven were rum, 45 gallons .being bodght for .15 cents a gallon.' ' lOthwUwnki; i , ,n :fr a. Tr. 1,1834--A 74:yar oldslare pold tkr $ 1 ; ja Iwbyr-old boy. ferqurjht 10. and :a nine ' year old - girl, $1.060, i-f4.;i-v3-. -L !1845Butter.old for.5 cents a pound; -eggjceuts adpzenFJf;. fiyhreaIyeafs-lat.4tterrbse 1851 Potatoes' 20 cents a bush el. They averaged a dollar in 1825. 1843 One nundred and twenty-four pounds of "beef with neck" sold for 2 cents a pound., 1894 -Wheat 47 cents a bushel. It is how around $1.35. 1832 Half gallon of whisky 25 cents. Comparative - iigures are not available. London's Soot Gives ... Black Eye to Statue LONDON (AP) Londo n s smoke and dust sometimes have a comic effect upon its statues. Over the entrance of Old Sailey, the central criminal bolice-court. are three beautiful female figures One, whose position exposes her to the washing of the rain, is nor mal; a second, whose face is pro tected from that cleansing, has the appearance of a negro with Grecian features, while the third has a black eye. A fine classic head which adorns the great Entrance archway to Waterloo-railway station, gathers in between periodical brushings dust on head, lip and cheek in such a way as to transform it into a fierce-looking mustached motorist, with cap and goggles complete. Veterans Seeking Medal for All Allied Schools PARIS (AP) A contest is open for a medal to be conferred an nually on schools in formerly al lied countries with courses of stu dy "best calculated, to. promote., a knowledge of international af fairs." FIDAC (International Federa tion of Former Combatants) has invited artists of all allied coun tries to submit designs. Prizes have been provided by General L. G. Gignilliat, commander of Cul ver, Military Academy, at Culver. Indiana, member of the American Legion and 'of FIDAC. The idea was adopted at the Rome convention in 1925, but tbd rules have Just been announced. The art jury which will make the award has an American mem ber, Welles -Bosworth, an archi tect, now living nere. French Population Said; to Be-1 -13th Foreign PARIS (AP) Every thirteenth person in France is a . foreigner, and scientific and official France seems resigned, to rebuilding the nation by immigration. Naturalization formalities have been greatly relaxed, and students of - the, question seem agreed that foreign;. blool must reirlvd atpeoile suffering from a .low birth rate, ? , Every fourth person vakngr the Riviera Isa foreigner,. and 4here art districts where aUens "Jitedom Jfiatei retaining vthelr -forelg Schools,' k customs and., language. This Is particularly true of Ital- fans. :who nnmlwr Sfi7 nn inA the Poles who are 310,060.. Bel gians1 usually are considered the most desirable Immigrants. $ i The average , Frenchman does not welcome. the. Idea .oficrossing his race with outsiders. He real- i7s Germany and Italy in particu lar; are strongly growing "peoples and that the French here are at a standstill, but to him foreigners are "foreigners." ; . . ; PHSS ISFIGS i LANCA3TEK, Pa. A T pair of guinea pigs presented to the Lan caster Zoo have multiplied so rap idly that the sale ot their off spring 1& providing fuads if or. an excellent collection of birds, i : - . MANHATTAN, Kas. A bee's stlbger is only 1-32 of an inch in length, but H males a strong im pression when properly applied, says' UuHenjlt)t tfie Kaffsas Bt&ld Number of Offenses Actually Less Per Capita, Social , Worker Claims DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) Crime wave? There isnt any, de clares John A. Lapp of Chicago. It is his- business to know, foY as president of the National Con ference on Social Work he ha3 at bis fingertips extensive data on crime and its treatment. The fact is, he says, that few er people are in jails, prisons and reformatories in proportion to the nation's population than there were ten years ago. When the social workers meet In Des Moines they will spend no time, Lapp asserts, debating shch myths as the crime wave. They will discuss the very certain pro gress in handling criminals and will plan methods of holding their hard-won reforms. : "A popular hysteria about crime gives rise to the idea that there is a crime wave which must be checked by drastic methods," says Lapp. "But crime in its totality has decreased in ratio to popula tion., ,. - "It Is like the creation of a 'suicide wave. One or two spec tacular student suicides are played up to give an outward evidence ot an epidemic which is false." Two Persons Only Have Played on Old Organ VERSAILLES. Ky. (AP) For more than B0 years, the same organ In St. John's Episcopal church has been heard every Sun day here and during this time only four hands have played the keys.. The church has just celebrated the. fiftieth anniversary of. Miss Mary Wasserboehr as organist. presenting her with 1200 in gold after; special services. Mrs. Josephine K. Henry, i0 years old. who was Miss Wasser- boehr's predecessor, is a pioneer Kentucky suffragist and in 1890 was prominently mentioned as a candidate for .president on the Prohibition ticket. She, is the first' woman to run for estate of fice in Kentucky, baying been a sandidate for the clerk of the court of appeals in 18S-0 and 1894. SCHAEFFfcR'S ' I r j 1 - HERBAL : doUdHSYltUP - Relieves - IrritkteH Thrdat Steps ' Spatixxiodic Coufehiri ' ; SOLD ONLY AT QCHAETER'S M . bltUG 8TOIUB , , The ;pnty Ortjrfnal Yellow - . Front Druff Stord : " 135 North Conerda! tenslar Agency BUB EDUCATION HELP TO ALASKANS School Teachers j W i e I d I Scrub Brushes Weekly Get Good Results . , SEATTLE. (AP) bathtubs, supplanted by generous propor tions of soap and water, have been the tnaihsraVs !n thn rivil- izing of the Iridtans and Esklnyjs or AiasKa. Tnetr use raised these aborinigies of the fcorth from a state of savagery to a point where they are . rapidly! taking a place alongside the whites of the north land. . .. . - Jonothan H...' Wagner, chief of the Alaska. division of the United States bureau of .education, says the transformation has been per formed in less than 40 years by the bureau's little land of em ployes working tirelessly and vir tually alone in an effort to stem the tide of disease and starvation which once threatened to extermi nate these peojjles. Coming of the white trader spread disease and suffering and depopulated the Eskimos' sea fish eries, he relates. Actual starva tion was apparent in many places. To the bureau of education was delegated the task of saving the race from extinction. "It was accomplished in many ways," he says, '"but the bathtub, soap and water'were the -symbols of the bureau's work." School houses were erected; nurses, physicians and sanitary experts sent in and reindeer herds were established. The bureau maintains 94 school nouses, each of which Is equipped with a battub. At the close of the school week, Friday after noons, the little brown-skinned pupils are thoroughly and individ ually scrubbed by the teacher. The bathing idea has been readily ac cepted by the natives and many of them have bathtubs Installed in their homes. Well constructed homes have taken the place of nianv itrloos. More than half the natives who a generation ago were without a written language, speak,' read and write English and a nnnVber of the villages have shown industrial en terprise, establishing sawmills, canneries and salteries. w en scour EARNS OW BADGE First in City to Obtain Award, . "I'm Going; A-Mifking"; Meant It ATLANTA. Qr. (Special) "I'm going a-milking," said Mar garet Da'rrington. arid she wasn't reciting Mother Goose, either. She actually meant it. , So for two 'months Ae went a milklng, measured the milk and churned the butter, and now she Is possessor of the only Girl Scout "dairymaid badge" in Atlanta. Margaret has been a Girl Scout for two and a half years. During this time she has won nearly ev ery badge that the Girl Scouts have lo offer. Milking is just the latest of lier accomplishments and the milkmaid badge is her 26th reward. "1 had learned to do almost ev erything described in the Scout book except take care of a cow, she said, "so I determlbed I would do that. j - "Mother said I shouldn't do it because milking makes ifhe knuck les' bis, and besides,' ' she said where, was I going to jget the cow? Now, that was a nroblem. We didn't have any cow, and none of the neighbors . bad one that I knew of. . '" "But a few days later I found my cow, She was tethered in a field several , Mocks from our house, a nice 'Jersey cow named 'Daisy that isK I named her Daisy . right Jnvay, Nobody was there to "tell me" who owned her but I waited around until the boy came to get the ( cow. Then, I fouid out that Daisy belonged to Mrs., Tohi Jarrett .who lives over on Hutchinson .street. "So I went over to Mrs. Jar rett'8 and told 3ier what I wanted to do if she wotild let me: I would milk the cow, strain the milk and make the butter for her for a" month.. , :Well, she didn't think I could do it,- but she allowed me to come over for several days 'and watch' her. Milking looked awfully easy; but ; when she finally let me try, it wasn't so simple as it looked. I soon got on to it. however; - and learned to- use aoth hands in real expert fashion. "Then 1 began to keep a record of what ITdid, according to the regulations In the Scorft book," Margaret went on. "The rule is that to receive a' dairymaid badge you 'have, to take care of acow one month, feed her.inllk her'a'nd learn to handls the milk and make thW butter.. Besides this, there are lots of questions ab6ut cows in general that you have to answer. "After I had learned all I could .at Mrs. Jarret'fi, I got a private interview with, a farmer, arid got him to tell me all the things 1 needed to know to answer the questions. I hid to know and be able to i-ecogrilze three different kinds of cows aad tell which gave the most milk and which milk was the richest. "Then I was ready to be ex amined for the badge. I answered the questions, and Mrs. Frank p. Holland, our commissioner, toldt me I was the only cow expert In Atlanta when he awarded the dairymaid badg'3 to me.' At this point Margaret stretched out her arm and ; pointed to a small square of khaki, with a milking stool embroidered on It. CAMPAIGN TO HELP, . , ... CHILDREN GAINING (Continued from Page !.) that state. This provision- is on the Legion's minimum, program and the bill which will be intro duced in .the legislature at the first opportunity will be specif ically sponsored by. the veterans. The executlye committee instruct ed the Georgia Legion's legisla- tive-eoymlfteVto make an,fe'ffbri to-have it passed; C;hej e-tfecutlvei cdtomittee 1 lsb i approve ' toot other chpd yrpVir? hills,,-peHaJ0-ing to the juvenile court lawman other on desertion affd non-support, another v, regarding inegltlr mate dxildreh and one iertaldlnS to adoption ' - ;- ' - :- A recent fa vorahte. hearing was held in Wisconsin on a senate hill that will affect fuvenile court and ' probation wnrjt: I It'afithcSrli es the appointment .of eounty pro bation officers In counties having a population of - less -thkh I50,- 000. i King iPIahs Holding : 2 Z , I? ' Real Part for Scotch LONDON : CAP) Klnif Gebrgel; arid i Queen Miry i are the tnio frlenai of Scotch plaid mahufac; turers. , The eirderi ittr which "ofr? Majeslicswlll give aC Ilolyrod Cas tie, Edinburgh July' 1 s; will W the biggest social function' ifl ScoU lahd f6r yeara.' , ; ..-.; More ihiin 4,6ob Invitations aro to be issued and all ' the Scotch! clans are digging their Harry Ladder costumes out of the moth balls and placing orders for kilts t" teplace those which vdo&nOt measure up to the regal stand' i Bagpipers from all 6ver St6t land are seeking riyal cominafids to supply 1 musie r for the patty which wUl bo all the' mofO Iriter osting to Highlanders as" the Duch- ess of York, 'who is a trtie' High land -Mary with genuine Scotch ascestry, will be back' trom Aus tralia by . that, time .and is expect ed to assist Queen Mary. cowxs worn bxGi:it 4i PARIS. Gowns are being wora longer, this ear--In tlmeV t. f j Jean Patou. mod (ate,, says tho increased value of the franc i -Bpoilslbie ior 3ec9hbmy of his, ctiaN, tomers. At least half of them are; Americans, , ? ' . . . J - DICTIOIlAHY : r i1 -THE MERRtAM WEBSTER ; -i; -. - --v Becttuie Hundreds .of Supreme Court Judges concur in highest praise of the work as their Authority. The Presidents of sll leading Uni versities, Colleges, arid. Normal Schools give their hearty tndorf "t". ;.V,' t ;V.,.. i. , All States that have' adopted a , large. dictionary standard frtyn selected Webster's New Intern a- itionkL -. ' "(" Ste Schoolbooks pf the Cwintrf . here to the, eimyWebstct systehi of diacritical rks. V , TTt Gnvcriment Prlhtiriflt Office ' at Washington uses it si authority. I .WRITE tar a moidm oik at the New J Words, apectnica of RcguUf and India Jj Pi ban. FX. ; 'iiilrf,s...rf L, Merriaas r.t rtf Tiaio. . Mass. tor r They AH Say It Is the Best Food They Have Ever Had in Salem. J. ... .Jr v .-v .-. Black Cat Restaurant IS South ' "Liberty 8tret One Half Block from SUt -T V We SeU and Recdfaimtiid the Wbdtwtow A Soperior Washer "i.A1 a" If Yoiir tC4r Injured Someone?' If Your Houe Burtied? yf Yoii Shbiild Die As insurance experts we shall be glad to-assist you in cbeck-' Ing up bn jrbur insurance cover age and requirepients. Consult us freely and without obligation ; regarding your Insurance proW lems. . t ITioue 2349 ' BLAMPIED "& BRABkc General Agents .Ommh Life '4 mm Jllfl-17 BlJgh "KUzs, ".. r, " . r .-.. Certainly --- Orange Btossoin j i??- 1 iEHECrUACTa. S37 Court Orange Blossom because it3.sfenlficiftce hks bceti vwwvuivu uic marriage ceremony tnrougn the ages. - Orange Blossom because. this exclusive Traub design speaks the last word in .wedding ring fashion. Orange Blossom because the Traub trade mark, found only in Genuine Orange Blossom rings, definitely establishes iupremequality; Let us show you the three, txrfectly matched leaders plo tmedrjelowertgcTrientklitaire,bride'srih arid bridegroom's Ting. ' Remcmberf.Traub tittgs, fall of die; highest quality, are priced a lrrv as $12. HAkf lvlAiv Bitos. SQUAIUS DEAL JKWIXJKnS Corner State and. Liberty,, EXCLUSIVE SALEM AGENTS 11 7 5' r!ter cub, Hr. W; f.-rargo of t,hem pur? merjopSr 9 9 cents, , ; Agricultural college.