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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1927)
J TilE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEil, OREGON" SUNDAY MORNING; AUGUST 21, 1927 3 LOGA1 GJPfflffiS DE'J .- s Pacific Health Ore Company Mines Valuabje Mineral Near Nestucca Bay Another of Oregon's natural resources is being developed by the Pacific Health-Ore company, Salem corporation financed " with local capital and promoted" by lo cal men. The president of the company, P. D. Ott. has been an Oregon resident for forty years, such time being spent within a ra dius of seventy; miles from Salem, lie moved to Salem two years ago from Hebo. whewhe-eonducted a general mercantile stor during which time he became acquainted With the remarkable merits of the product which the company la marketing. x : Dr. George EL Lewis, the vice president of the company, ia a local dentist who has made Sal em his home for a number of years. The secretary-treasurer. BlUIe N. Savage, returned to Sal em three years ago aHer spending eight years in Wyoming in the general mercantile business. Pri or to that time he had been a res Went of Salem 'for a number of years, having been a pupil at the local high school. The company was incorporated In May, 1926. and the first prod uct was marketed two months lat er, since which time steady prog ress in the distribution of Pacific-Health-Ore. Sales have been confined principally fo Oregon, although orders have heen receiv ed from all over the United States. The product is distribut ed by over four hundred dealers, a large number of doctors and seven sanitariums. . The product is mined near Nestucca Bay in Tillamook. County and is a very unusual mineral de posit. It is very different to the ordinary conception of a mineral ore, being In a soft shale forma tiontion. The company's geolo gist has compiled a very interest ing article on the probable origin of the substance from tropical and marine vegetation. A remark able feature is the presence of numerous layers of leaf fossils, perfect imprints of which are plainly visible in the freshly min ed ore. Many geological changes and formations are responsible lor the unusual combination of minerals which are present. The shale formed in this way contained most of the minerals usnential to health, but, the min erals were retained in such a rirm way that water could not wash them out. In this locked condition they were worthless to man. for the human body cannot line insoluble minerals. A meth od was discovered by which these minerals ran be made available to man.. It was found that if the wet shale was piled in bins and left undisturbed t for some time. It soon began tpoxidize (that is, absorb oxygen from the air) and get,warm. In this way it became roasted through self heat and his process liberated the valuable mineral salts so-that th.jy could be easily washedfout by water. Thi. heated ore ? constitutes the package product, Pacific Heallli Ore. after being screened and linud sorted.. ; The liquid form, of which one teapoonful is used in a glass of yatev to make a pleasant testing mineral water, is prepared by spaklng a pound of ore in two quarts of warm water, and fiHer lac " The water extracts most of the valuable minerals from the t, and holds them in solution In easily available form. This liquid contains over six percent .minerals by weight, being com posed of the following: Silica, Ifovi. Aluminum, "Titanium, Cal cf u ray Ma gnesi u m r , Sod i u n i, Po tas sjum Lithium, Sulphur,: " Phoai pliorus'. Chloride arid Iodine. !'lt is fecund that one pound of Itralth-Ore contains as much iron a U present in 8 10 tups of raisins 2801bs); aV much i calclirin as Is found in 32 glasses. of ' milk; as much magnesium .as..Jthere is . in ? pounds ""of potatoes; ?-as niuchi B&lpttur as there is in 45 dozen eg&s; etc. - - -. f 4 DuJing the past year the com pany .has received numerous re ports of remarkable benefits "ef fects thy the use jof , their product i9 the treatment of many ailments. At.-tny a i 1 in eTi ts are apparently enured by a lack of -one to several rainefala . which,. are .vital, to well being? thtts upsetting tfieScherai i&ai. balance of thebody and the blood stream.- - . -' , . .. - ,i - j This product remedies' this de- fjrlf ricywhen jjsVd-regularly for a peioi of tfme, 'supplying iodine for .f"be glands,; chlorine for elim ination, calcium -for the -,bones. iron for the' blSdC pholphdsuV for th Drilln and u'ee3,"iuipTur fir purification, magnesium for the cells and secretion, etc. Many of these elements are lacking in the refined and fancy foods- of to-day,and the explana lion of the wonderful, result ob tained by Pacific" Health-Ore Is that H provides these building and working materials and enables the lod? itself to effect a -natural mre, thus deserving the . slogan "Results Beyond Belief., ... Sally's salli es Iw A man needs sand to propose to a girl tut if he marries her he's got to have rocks SEVERE TREMOR SHAKES EUREKA 15 SECOND OirAKE HKLD WORST SIXCI1 VKAR UM Several Women Faint When Build ings Sway and Chilliness Topple Over WASHINGTON, Aug. 20. (AP) Severe earth shocks wer recorded tonight by the George town university seismograph. They began at 7:01 p. m., reached a maximum intensity at 7:44 and were continued half an hoiir later. Director Tondorf esti mated the center of disturbance at 2300 miles south of Washing ton. EUREKA, CAL.. Aug. 20. (AP) Eureka and other towns in Httmboldt county were rocked shortly after 12 o'clock today by the most severe earthquake felt here since 1906. The tremblor lasting 15 seconds, impared the fire alarm system. C. C. Fiske, linotype operator for the Humboldt Standard, was slightly injured when his machine careened forward. Several women fainted on down-town streets while buildings swayed and the noise of toppling chimneys and breaking dishes could be heard. Plaster was knocked from many rooms. Reports from Scotia, Fortuna, Areata and Ferndale, stated mer chandise had been shaken from shelves; glass dishes and chim neys broken and some plaster Lnocked flown. Tank racks of the Shall Oil company in Areata, holding large drums of oil, sank, six inches into the ground. In Eureka plaster was knocked from several rooms in the courthouse and from tli ceiling of the city hall. Walls of the county jail holding 40 prison ers, remained intact. No. 71S IV THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MARION COUNTY Ciuarfliims Notify of Hale of I teal I'rorM-rty In the Matter of the Guardian ship of William McKimmey, a per son of unsound mind. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Ancillary Guardian of the estate of the above named v. ard in the State of Oregon, by virtue of an order duly made and entered in the above entitled Court and Cause on the lGth day of Au gust, 1927, will sell at private sale at the offices of Ladd and Bush Trust Company, Ladd and Bush ISanki.Bldg., in the City of Salem, Marion County, Oregon, on or af ter the 19th day of September, 1927, to the highest bidder for cash all of the right, title, Interest and estate of the above named ward, the said interest being an undivided one-eighth () interest as tenant in common, in and to those certain lots and parcels of real property particularly describ ed as follows, to-wit: Lots numbered thirty-seven (37). thirty-eight (38). seventy-one (71), . seventy two (72), seventy-three (J3), seventy-four- f 74), eighty four (84, elgfity-five (85), eighty-six, ( 8 6 ) ,1 eighty-seven 87-ad eighty-eight, 88). ' vin SmithsFruit Farms No. 2 in Marion . County, State of Oregon- 'The intereat-fif 8ald ward In the several lots and parcels of the above, described real property may be sold either, separately or to gether and not less than the sum of Fifty, (fSQVO.OXlDqllars of the amount bidden shall be paid upon account of" the purchase , price -of each lot If 'sald lots are sold sep arately7 or in 'groups, and If sold In a body dot less than tne sum oi Two Hundred S eve a-t y-ftv'e $2T5:00)"TJ6TIirs or the amount bid shall ber-patd In cash, at the UIU snail re jioiu " -"" '"'l, time of sale, -and the balance 6f the amWat'Md npon-each 'lot aggregate amount if sold in groups or as a whole shall be paja upon confirmation i sale toy the above entitle4 Court and" tne: tender of the Gtfardianideed; sale fa be made subject to the confirmation of the above entitled Court. The date of the first publication of this notice is August 20th, 1927, and the last September 17th, 1927. - Dated this 20th day of August, 19T 4' , ' r LADD AND; BUSH TRUST v V. h - COMPANY - i Ancillary Guardian of the Estate of . William McKimmey, aT Person of Unsound Mind. i H - ! : ':-v;t-fir:---'A20-27-S3-10-i7 To Visit Marion an3: Polk County Groves Wednes-; day and Thursday The Western Nut Growers as sociation has scheduled its annual observation tour for August 24 and 25, reports C. E. Schuster, secretary of the association and nut specialist of the Oregon Agri cultural college horticultural de partment. It will begin near Dallas Wednesday morning and end at the Skyline orchards near Salem Thursday afternoon. Wednesday in Polk The topworked filbert grove of V. U. lirown near Dallas will be the first objective, and the Fran quette walnut grove of Mrs. Sarah J. Hammel, both near Dallas, the second. The 20-year old walnut and filbert groves of .1. C. Pow ell near Monmouth will lie inspect ed in a special study pf pollina tion problems and methods of working over walnut seedlings. The results of interplanting will le studied at, the Ira1 Powell grove of walnuts interplanted with filberts 20 years ago. . The rela tive merits of close and wide planting of filberts will be observ ed in the numerous groves of John Stump-, ranging from 21 year? down to three or four years, both walnut and filbert. Thursday in Marion The second day tour will start at Aumsville and go to the plant ings of A. Wolfe to study walnut management. The effect' or good and poor filbert stock will be stu died at the grovej 8f X A- Smi' where walnut plantings, will alsd be inspected. The caravan will then move on to study the effects of low gravelly soil on walnuts and filbert at the farm of Hen ry Crawford. Demonstration of control of mushroom root rot and walnut blight will be observed at the Skyline groves southeast of Salem, where the tour will end. Many leading growers make these tours. Professor Schuster says, in numbers ranging from r0 to 170. Explanations of the various phases of production stu died are made by specialists and owners, from which growers learn the best known methods of pro ducing high quality nuts econom ically. EER DIES MRS. STUMP, ONE TIME WIL LAMETTE STUDENT, DIES OREGON NORMAL SCHOOL, Monmouth, Ore., Aug. 19. (Spec ial.) Mrs. Mary Stump Campbell, beloved pioneer woman of Polk county, passed away at the family home at Monmouth on August 19, 1927, after a brief illness. Mrs. Campbell was born on the David Stump donation claim near the Luckiamute river six miles south of Monmouth on the twelfth of March, 1851. As a girl of 16, Mary Ann Stump entered Willamette Uni versity, later attending Christian college, graduating from that in stitution with the class of 1872. Her classmates were the late Judge Charles E. Wolverton, W. D. Fenton, Rruce Wolverton and Sarah Churchill Knox. From 1879 to 1881. she was publisher of the Christian Messenger, official pub lication of the Christian church, of which church she was a life-long and devoted member. In 1882 she attended Wellesley college, Mass.. being one of the first to enter an eastern college from the Pacific coast. On April 9. 1885, she was mar ried to T. P. Campbell, who was later president of Christian:college for many years. Since -her hus band's death in ;1 89ft1 &Irs. Camp bell has lived continuously :at the family home in Monmouth. Mrs. Campbell is survived by a sister, Miss Cassie B. Stump of Monmouth, a brother, John B. Stump, also 'of Monmouth, another 1 .... NOTICE. OF ASSESSMENT FOR THE COHT" OH iMPKOVRO SOUTH ifrTH . STREET . FROM THE NORTH: LIXE - OP" BELLE VtTE STRKET'TOTHE NORTH LINE OP LEETJIKET. .if l1 J6t!eeJls-lereby'igfVen that the Common-CoTmctl'ttftrnr-City of Salem, Oregon, will," at or about 7i30 p. :moni I fbV fctu day ol September, 1 9 2 7 , . prat -any su b-sequent- meeting9 'OP the said' Conn ell a thereafter, ia ; .'tjie Council Chamber of the City Hall of Salem, Oregon, proceed to'fassesft upon sfrd agalnsf eac lot Pt Part there of or- parcel of land-liabla there Xor Its tiropOTtloaate'lmare'.of the .. - , Smith 10th Improving-, ,f ut, ""1 Lee Street, in the City of Salem, Oregon. , . . , . t Ail persons" -interested Jn the said1 assessments are hereby -notified to- c appear . before the : said Council at said time" "affd 'place and present their objections, if any they have, to said assessment, and- apply to said Council to eqnalixe their proportionate share of same. j - Br order" of the Common Coun cil August' 151927. . I M. POULSEN, City Recorder i Date of first publica-tion is August 21,-1927 Date of1' final publication is August 24, 1927. a-21-23-24. OLD PI brother, Solomon Stamp has been a resident of Nome, Alaskafpr many years. She also leaves a daughter, Agnes Dorothy Campbell-and one' son, David Beasley Campbell of Portland. Another daughter, Catherine, Elizabeth Campbell' dfed in 1921". Besides her immediate family Mrs." Camp bell leaves a large circle of friends She spent much of her HTe In Polk county and as a neighbor She had the respect of all who knew -her. Tolerant in' her beliefs, generoas in her acts of charity and kind ness, none who knew her but loved her. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the Christian church at Monmouth. o o Bita For Breakfast '22 page Statesman today Pretty fair, for the dullest week of the dullest month in the year. S After the new press Is installed, next month, the Sunday States man will carry 28 pages and up, and the pages will be an inch Jonger, making what will amount to over a page and a quarter more, compared with the present size. Some of the jiages will be in color. S Oregon is taking in, $15, 000 a day in gasoline fees,- and the states of the Union as a whole are taking in $1,000,000 a day. V The motor vehicle licenses for this year in Oregon will foot up $0,500,000, and the gasoline fees $4,000,000. That department is bigger than all the rest of the general departments of the state combined. This means more and better highways. The Marlon county cow testing association should fill quickly With the planned membership. making room for the second one, and so on to still more and more. All the flax is in but perhaps less than 50 loads, making up a total of about 4000 tons. The warehouse room is all full, and some of the flax is stacked. This is being worked up as fast as pos sible; threshed and retted. Heavy rains now would make a lot of ex tra work, and do some damage to the stacked flax at the peniten tiary. . . v am V m ; V The Salem Y free employment office for the week endingFriday night had 245 applicants for work, and found jobs for 150 of them. Those sent to ' jobs were mostly agricultural and common laborers. S The lady at Newberg writing to the Salem postmaster to have him deliver a letter to some des cendant of James K. Wood, in which quest The Statesman "was appealed to, was accommodated very soon after daylight Friday morning; before the ink on the paper was fairly dry. Of course. Everybody reads The Statesman as the first duty and pleasure of the day. FAREWELL TO BE SAID Rev. R, L. Putnam Preaches Final Sermons Here Today Rev. R. L. Putnam, pastor of the Court Street Christian church for the past eight years-, will de liver his farewell sermons today. At the 11 o'clock services his sub ject will be "Forgetting and Pressing On." and at 8 p. m., "The Call of God." Rev. Putnam and his tomily will leave late this week for La Grande, where he has been .elected pastor of the the Central Chris tian chnrch. Evergreen Blackberries Bought by Sirvertori Firm SILVERTON. Ore., Aug. 20 (Special.) The Silverton. Food Products company has begun ia$ iu'g the evergreen "blackberries. Jest how many this company will handle has not been given out. There seems to be" very little' call and but a small. price for the' berries. The crop Is unusually good In the Silverton conmrunitj, NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT FOR THE COST OF OIPROVINGJOX. FORD STREET FROM THE EAST LINE OF CHURCH STREET TO THE EAST LINE OF HIGH STREET. Notice is hereby given that the Common Council of the City of Salem, Oregon, will, at or about 7;30 p. m., on the 6th day of September, 1927, or at any sub sequent meeting of 'the said Coun cil thereafter, in, the,. Council Chamber of the City Halt in Salem. Oregon, proceed to assess upon and against each lot or partthere- I of or parcel of land liable therefor its proportionate. share of, the cost t r improving Oxford Street front the east line -of Church- Street , to the -east . line1 of High Street, In the City of Salem, Oregdn, ' -" i All persons interested In the said assessments are hereby noti fied to appear before lbsaid Council at said time and place and present their objections- if any they have,, to said assessment and apply to said Council to i equalize their proportionate share of same. : By order of the Common Coun cil August 15, 1927. t i sM. POULSEN, City Recorder 'Date of first publication' hereof ls:'Augnstrf211922-.;.i'kI. : Date of final publication hereof 1 Aairast 24. 1927.- a-21-23-24. - . KELLEY HEARING tnOTF-AGAINtfe ARGUMENT DELAYED 'At QUEST OF DEFENSE, WilloH Stay of Execution Plea May le llcurtl at Albany; Cage, Waits. Hearing of the application for a permanent writ of habeas cor pus in the case of Ellsworth Kel ley .heduled for Saturday, was continued until Monday. The de lay, was requested by Martin L. Pipes, attorney for Kelley. be cause of important business mat ters requiring his attention in Portland.' , It is probable that arguments also will be heard Monday 'on a Petition filed" by vpradley Ewers, Portland attorney, f requesting a stay of execution of James Willos unUl he pad bees examined by a sanity commission. The petition involving Willis will be heard; by .juuge -ercy .rveiiy. . s Willos and Kelley were convict ed of first degree murder in-con-nection with the slaying of Milton Holman and John Sweeney, guards during a break at the state peni tentiary here in August. 1925 1 hey were under sentence to 7e Hanged last Friday, but the exe cutions were halted by the filing of legal procedings. Postponement of the hearing on the writ of habaes corpus was made after an agreement between Willis S. Moore, assistant attorney general. District Attprney Carson and his associates, and Martin L. Pipes, Kelley's attorney. Pipes indicated yesterday that he was ready to proceed with arguments at once if the state in sisted, but that his ' arguments would extend 'over Into Monday. He said .if the case were de ferred, however, he would have more time to prepare his data. Moore agreed that it would be bet ter to have the whole case present ed at once, than to have a Sunday interruption. Willos' insanity hearing may be taken -to Albany for hearing before Judge Percy Kelley, who has occu pied theircuit court bench in all the previous action in the case of the State of Oregon against Tom Murray, James Willos and Ells woftlu Kelley. Chief points on which Kelley's attorneys base their petition for a permanent "writ of habeas corpus are that Kelley was committed to the state penitentiary from Jose phine county, January 10, 1923, on a charge not known to law. The defense answer, however, admits that Kelley pleaded guilty to a charge of feloniously conveying hack saw blades to Bert O. Jones to aid 4n his escape from the Jo sephine county jail. That Kelley had knowledge of the crime for which Jones was held, was net charged in the in dictment under the statutes, the answer further alleges, thus rais ing the Constitutional point on which the plea is based, it is con tended. Kelley's attorneys allege that his commitment was unconstitu tional, and that the circuit court for Marion county had no juris diction when he was tried on a charge of first degree murder for the' death of John Sweeney, pen itentiary guard who was killed in the prison break of August, 1925. "ARREST THEM" ADVICE Warning Not Enough for Illegal Hau'dbilf Distributors "If the police will arrest the boys who . throw handbills and ether matter into automobiles, instead of merely warning them, the practice will be quickly stop ped," says E. B. Flake,, local licensed distributor. f ' Mr. Flake Is using every effort to cooperate in the enforcement of the ordinance against such dis tribution, and has a strict rule inJ his organization against It." ;The illegal .distribution is beng done by boys, who are employed at randonTjtthodt "refefehces he" states. " . The police have caught some boya throwing handbills in cars parked downtown, but have let them off i with a warning, Mr. Flake stated Saturday evening. H. B. VANDUSER CHOSEN Highway Commission Names Head Cllne Made Secretary , BANDONi Ore.; Aug. 20. (AP) Meeting in the course of a tour of the -Roosevelt highway, the state' highway commission at Port Orford today elected ,H. "B. Van- Duser chairman of the, commission and named Roy E. Cline secretary. The commission today, confirmed the appointment of Cline in 'one as highway .engineer: !A party' in cluding Governor ;i L. Patterson la accompanying- the highway group on 'the' tcmr. - . ' ' MARRIAGE PROVES SURPRISE STAYTON, Aug.L 2 Oi ( Special 1 The marriage of Ralph Scanton and Miss Blanche Lewis came as a surpriae to their many friends hereof The bride Is .the . oldest daughter 'of "Mr. and Mrs. Claud Lewis and $ Is employed : as -at eh ographer..in the First A-National bank The1 groom Is the. flnlyveon or, Mr? r im4 Mrs: -Pranlt; Scaooa aadsmpIoymeii(wttJJi0J Clayton canning company - me couple will reside fn-EUyton.:? I OC -V ft 4 m. V. Fi - . 1 ; - il fit - pp jl - I : m I p I pi 92 I I I - It Won't Be Ijong m "Chang," HP 2nd or the p Rig 4l on the way Official E TO SPURN RELIGION Sacco ind !Vanzetti Expect to Enter Death Room Without Priest CHARLESTON STATE PRIS ON, Boston. Mass., Aug. 20. (AP) Nicola Sacco and Bartolo meo Vansetti, from their cells in the prison here, tonight faced the last forty eight honra of life before the end of the respite whieh ten days ago saved them from the electric chair, with no apparent modification of their extreme views toward life, death and religion. For nearly an hour today Van- zftti sat on a bench outside the teel-narred door of his cell and talked with the sister whom he had not seen for nineteen years. The sister, Miss Luigia Vanzettl arrived in America yesterday with the announced hope of trying to induce her brother, a professed athiest, to return to the child hood . faith -to which she has ad hered.- They conversed, in .their native tohgueT Italian but" Beyond the normal . exchange of news, of themaelvesand'their relatives aiid friends little of what was discus sed was disclosed. As Miss Vanzetti left the prison it was. aparent, hqwever, that she was depressed and that she ' had found, little in the words of her brother to cheer her. , Sacco, like his companion, Van zetti, long ago renounced relig ion. None has attempted to In duce him to return to his faith. The " prison chaplain, the Rev. Michael .J. . Murphy, has . .talked with the men, but his visits have not dealt with , spiritual affairs. Today he conversed with them for a, short, time hot it was said neither; man " expressed any 'desire fb the , solace bf teligfon . Uh IjesV thejyv request : It themselves no clergyman will accompany them v from their -cells ' . to . "the electHcfH chair. Although both twerevrithin a half honr of death whenaespite' saved them on the niitht of Angust 10, neither at that, time gave any Intention of 1 changing of. Views. - -Accompanied by Mrs. Rose Sacr co.wife of Nicola. Miss .Vanzetti arrived at .the " prison shortly be fore noon. . Warden Will Jam E. Hendry, went- with them. j' On arrlvfngVit Vanietti'a cell, the"-warden innlocked the heavy door .and called : the condemned man into the. corridor. . It was the first 'time ,1a' many 1 years that a prisoner, awaiting execution - has been.' allowed tft meet a visitor without .bars between ; them. v As crarau THITCniIM ' o liotloii If tares tun hovrn tUAST 'THEATRES, who have always foUowed the set rule of showing lite bent efforts, of all the producer re. tardlm Of expense. GRRtTER MOVIE KK.1HOV, there fore, promises to be a part imtarly Interesting; one in- ELSIWQiRE -' THE COOLEST SPOT.tN TOWN Eddie Maill, famous Singing Master of Cere monies of West Coast Theatreit opeiiti a permanent engagement today. Starting Today. J2 Days Only Fanchon-Marco's Unique Idea tict i n i ivnucnmi) Featuring , JOE MEMEYER, world famous eccentric dancer. and the TOMMY ATKINS SEXTETTE DORIS WALKER, Broadway's most popular Black Bottom dancer. ' - , . y ON THE SCREEN Charlie Murray and Jack -Mulhall in "The Poor , t. Nut." . . ITS A RIOT ORE G &N i j , ....... '. ' 1 ' i "... . ONLY A FEW DAYS REMAIN TtrSKE A MAX'S PICTTHE T1IAT WOMEN LOVE ,t i' - . -.( , , , MELODRAMA -tinged und colored by the finest art the motion picture has yet re vealed. The sweep of the' story; the cast of individual (excellence make 'this the finest screen entertainment available. A CONTINVOUS SHOW TODAY THE XlGHT F IXVE" .with Vilma Bankey, AN Y SEAT Starting Tomorrow for two days pictures of Ieniitey-Shrkey Fight the young woniAn embraced her brother she broke into tearsl A moment later they seated them selves on a bench where" they were left alone while they . talked. The death cells are constantly watched by two guards,, seated In the corridor outside. Beyond the wall of the corridor is another door, opening into - the prison yard. Another officer is stationed there,' thongh the outer door is not visible to the-prisoners. These guards remained, but they learned nothing of the conversation. While Vanzetti and bis sister talked; Mrs, Sacco conversed "with her husband, whom 'She has seen almost' daily since he was re moved to the prison from the Ded ham jail several weeks ago. Be fore the departure of the two women Mrs. Sacco introduced Miss Vanzetti to Nicola. The two never had met and their corivefSa tion was brief. " OFFICIALS PREDICT Governor Patterson Likely Will Call - Multnomah .Election Upon) Return' j . r --l i ----- . A predlctlqn was made here yes terday by persons purporting to know that Governor Patterson will call- a special election in Multno t?fah connty within ten days to se lect a successor to the late Maurice E.' Crum packer, representative, in congress from the "third congres sional district.. ' .v-; ;- V. ; Assuming that Governor vPat terpon issues the ' call immediately fallowing his return from south ern Oregon ? next " week, officials said it would not be possible to hold the election until early In Oc tober. This Assertion was said to have been based on that section of END SICKNESS THIS KEV-17AY No medicine, drugs or. .dieting. Jnst a light,4 small, ce'm fort able In expensive Radio-Active Pad, worn on the back by day and over the stomach at nighL Sold on trial. Ton can be aura it is helping yon before yon bay it. Over 100,000 sold on this plan. Thousands have written- as that it healed . them of Neuritis,' Rheumatism, High Blood Pressure, - Constipation, -Nervous Prostration; Jleart, Langs, Llrer, Kidney and : Bladder trouble, etc. No matter, what yon have tried, or what your - trouble - may be, ; try tr Degnen's Radlo-Actiye Solar Pad it our risk.-iWrlte today for! Trial offerand deseriptire litera ture. Radium-Appliance Co., Bradbury Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. by WEST Stage Presentation Today . at . 3:30 S:8U 7:SO and 0;3O . 1 Us 'I V Pictures r i ! ! ' 1 7 if" ' I i , the election laws which provide that 40 days Is the minimum tim in i whioh candidates have, to-flit their; petitions with the secretary' 'y of state for certification to th . county clerks. . There also Is a provision of law ( which requires the county clerk to"'"' close the registration books .'' ' days prior to theelection. 'After the registration books are closed;-' it is incumbent upon the county clerk to copy the registration into the poll books and voters' list. In view of these legal requirements'' officials Baid that at'least 40 days '. would have to elapse between the' ' time of issuing the . call and the date of holding the election. Although both' the- republican and 'democratic " county "'central committees of the 1 third .district have indicated that. they will hold conventions and "nominate candi dates bearing the party labels, ihls1;' would not prevent other1 aspirants ."' from entering the . contest. Two " other methods .were said to' be '' available under which candidates may. file. One of these Is by cer-"" t'ficate of nomination by an as- scmbly of 100 or more voters and.' the other by certificate of nomina- -tion by Independent electors. The""" secretary of state made' It -plain that he would accept certificates' of nomination filed under either' of these classifications: " ' " ' Pay Me As You "Are. Paid BATES The Eye Man ;- ' '.. y 'Makes , . ' Glasses That Fit I- " 'X Eaay;Tcrni3 - v" " Conveniently' located on the jround floor with i V- J Barrett Bros. -v y l Cr-sVCa- .. v I !;? i J I U4 . : : v;:: . . t . : ... -