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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1927)
-1 THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 24. 1927 HEAR 9 fc... ' Sat. evening 8 WITNESSES FOR CHRIST; Sun. morning, 10:30 CHRISTIANS"- ANTS OR DWARFS; Sund ay, 3 and 8 LIFE STORY. Mrs. Ken nedy wiU tell her "remarkable life story Sunday afternoon and evening, includ ing recent tragic experiences. EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE t- i l3th and Ferry Streets LOCAL Will Attend Tuneral - Sam A. Kozer, secretary, of state, and a number of other stata officials, will go to Roseburg to day where they will attend the funeral of the late George W. Rid dle, commandant of the Oregon Soldiers Home. Mr. Riddle died In Roseburg Thursday. Eat Your Steak At the Lunch Box. s24 Hear Guy Fitch Phelps. s24 Wanted : Three experienced waitresses Steady employment: The Gray Belle. s25 Associate Editor Named !-; Edlotr Hugh McGIlvra, of the Jillamette Cdlleglan, university ent. pnhWcaftoni rannoUhced yesterday the appointment of Ella Pfeiffer, a senior, as associate editor. The first- issue of the paper will come oat next'Thurs day. . Try outs for positions on the staff have been held during the week. Hotel Mario Dollar dinners served 5:45 to 8 every evening.. . ' n26tf See the Birchfleld Overstuffed Furniture made at our exhibit, new pavilion state fair. Glese-Powers Furniture Stors. . s27 Follow the Crowds To Hazel Green Saturday Nite s24 Psychology, Educmtlon, " Philosophy Monday evening U. O. Salem Extension eourse. s24 Sweet. firtMi . For gale.? Phone tii'Mtf. W." Bean. , Wanted Three experienced waitresses Steady em ployaitnt jTh qa ay Belle s2S Our out-of-town, friends aud other visitors who will -be-in Salem this week attending the State Fair are cordially fnvited to make our office your head quarters: Write your letters; use the phone, and meet your friends here. It is our pleasure to rve you. We are located at 422 State St. over the Gray belle. Phone 2660. U. S. REALTY CO. -IV. A. Delzell, A M. Dalrymple, T. W. IIobnan' 443 Stata St. Tel. 2600 Oil! PHOTOGRAPHS COPIED Often you want old phbtograDhs reproduced, but fear entrusting them to strangers. Our reputation assures the safety and proper cars of yonr plcturs, which ws will copy, enlarge, frame or hand color at a price lower than the unknown agent can offer. . , ' . , NOW Evangelist Mother Kennedy This Is Your Opportunity to Hear Her Stirring Bible and Life Story MEWS Divorce Decreed A decree of divorce in the case of Phillip C. Morris vs. Rose Gamble Morris was handed down by Circuit Judge L. II. McMahan yesterday. There were no appli cations for marriage licenses dur ing the day. He Guy Fitch Phelps. 24 Wanted Three experienced waitresses. Steady employment. The Gray Belle. B25 See the Birohfield Overstuffed Furniture made at our exhibit, new pavilion state fair. Glese-Powers ' Furniture Store. 7 1 Fttirmount JIJll Home- Seven rooms, modern In every detail, hardwood floors through out, tiled bath, hot water heat. wonderful kitchen lncJudiogtJled uuarus ana automatic re frigeration. Price $12,000. terms. Becke & Hendricks, 189 N. High St. b27 Eat at Lunch Box 181 S. Liberty. s24 For Rent Strictly modern 5 room flat. 760 Marion St., S37.50. Strictly modern 5 room house, 970 Tamer ack St., $35. 5 room house, 291 Trade St.. $20. 4 room modern house, 2090 S. Church St. $32.00. Becke & Hendricks, 189 N. High St. s27 8 Oregon. Palp and Paper Co. Preferred. Limited amount for sale. Hawkins and Roberts. Phone 1427. JlyCtf Motion , Flled-p- 'A motion to declare the Graves Canning, company In default for not having answered his complaint was filed in circuit court here yes- ferday by Theodore Nicolai. 0 i t t a. m. Till Lunch Midnight. Box. 824 Fire Loads lO-Ineh Mill Wood . $17.50. Salem Transfer and Fuel Co.. 395 S. High. Tel. 529, Night 1988. ! s24tf Ready to Occupy Strictly modern 4 room house. hardwood floors, basement, fur nace, garage, 94.0 . Columbia St. $3750. Terms to suit. Becke ft Hendricks, 189 N. High St., s27 Those JUg Black Grapes Now Ripe at Fiala Vineyards, three miles north in Polk county. Phone 13JF2. " V a2 Owner Will Sell or Trade ' Five room houle, 1768 Court St., . basement, good condition, payement paid, $3350. Becke & Hendricks, 189 N. HIgt St. a27 ICENNELL-ELLIS STUDIO 423 Oregon Eds. HEAR Message BRIEFS Farmer Pastor Visits Rev. George S. Roeder, former ly pastor of the Center Street Methodist church, passed through Salem yesterday on his way to Eu gene, where his son Wesley is at tending the state university. FurnJtnre Upholstered And repairing. Glese-Powers Furniture Co. f!3tf Hear Guy Fitch Phelps. s24 See the Birchfield Overstuffed Furniture made at our exhibit, new pavilion state fair. Giese-Powers Furnitura Store s27 Old Time Da lire Crystal Garana Every Saturday night at 8:30. - S24 Join An Extension Study Group - For best use of evening hours. s24 Thursday Evening Art. literature, education. Uni versity Extension, Salem High School. B24 Bargain Iot 50x150 on Lincoln St., between Commercial and Saginaw, north front, alley along side. Price on ly $1350, pavement paid. Becke & Hendricks. 189 N. High St. s27 Commercial Design Class For Art students. U. of O. Exten sion classes. s24 "Rise of American Civilization" And Oregon History Friday University Extension courses. s24 Chincilla Quaint Animal And Valuable Fur Bearer (Reprint from Sportsman-Fan-""" cier ) The western slope of the An des mountains in Chile and Pern produce the real chinchilla (genns chinchilla Lanigera) which is 'a little hopping rodent a little lar- Announcing the Official OPENING of "The Butterfly Linen Shoppe 99 Monday, Sept. 26th To '.the! first "9" people visiting: bur shoppe Monday morning, we will present a useful and attractive sift. i n n SAYS We have a 1927 Star tour ing that has hardly been j Min hoe tiAtv ja o nnoof. " teas iiaa aiv- tt voi. arvav ance with several extras. Priced at $525.00. Yes and we have two prac tically new Dodge sedans. uu The Hodm That Service Ballf ger than our common squirrel. It is covered with a ' soft, dense, pearl grey fur about one and a quarter inches long. The aver age male weighs about 18 ounces and the female about 19 ounces. The fur of the real chinchilla is considered to be the most beauti ful as well as the most costly fur in the world. The skins meas ure ahout 7x12 inches and on the raw fur market sell at from $100 to $200 per skin, depending upon the color, texture, primeness, etc. When you realize that one of these skins 1n the raw brings from $1.50 to $2 per square inch and that a finished coat brings from $40,000 to $65,000, you can bet ter understand the real value of this little animal as a fur-bearer. In February."! 9 2 7, there was Incorporated at'' Portland a com pany known as' the" Real "South American Chinchilla Fur Farms, Inc. 'This company,' which is the first company of Its kind in the United States, if not in the entire wf rid, was organized to breed and raise the real South American chinchilla in captivity. The history of the real chin chilla i9 hard to trace, but con sidering its characteristics, habits. how it lives, how it breeds, etc., leads one to believe that it is a descendant of the guinea-pig fam ily. - Possibly its ancestors away back in the far distant past were in some way connected with the guinea pig. Today the habitat of the real chinchilla is only on the higher elevations of the Andes-Jftou- tains, but It is believed that in years back it lived and thrived in the lower altitudes. This belief is strengthened by the fact that when this animal is brought down by easy stages it thrives better and produces an offspring that is larger than the parents, j ' 1 . " i O'BRIEN LOSES FIGHT SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 23. ' fAP) Frankie Klick, 125, of San Francisco, stopped Tommy O'Brien, 126 of Portland, in the seventh round of their scheduled 10 round bout at Golden Gate rink tonight. O'Brien took a hard beat ing to the face and body, and suf fered a bad cut on the lip. The referee stopped the fight to save, him from further punishment as he was outclassed from the start. cjfaison wfcy (i OF MANY) INSURANCE Your best insur ance against engine-troubles and repairs. STANDARD OIL COWANV Or CALIFORNIA BEE OUR Perennial Gardens On th Wallace Road . CP. BREITHATJFT Telephone $80 111 Stata St. 1827 FREE WAIXPAPE3 BA1IPIJS BOOKS - Call, phons or writ ' BIAXO.BUHEN . 17 K. Commercial Salem Distinctly Correct Footwear For Men Boys v - For' Women Girls. John J. Rotlla Expert Shoe Filters r . 41.1 fit at n fit- m y CANT BUY A BETTER OIlX -than X THE NEW NZEROLENR' (5 LIFE DEVOTED 01 Daughter Chief Interest; Tells of Long Experience In Evangelism Mrs. Minnie Kennedy, better known as "Mother -Kennedy," mother of the well-known Aimee Semple-McPhereon, has only one interest in life has had and will continue to have jnst one inter est the success and well-being of her daughter. Mrs. Kennedy, a well groomed and refined lady of about fifty years, told something of her life story yesterday to a Statesman re porter as she rested in her suite at the Marion hotel. This woman, of whom so much has been written, and who has been In the limelight the past year, feels 'that fate has been, In a way. rather unkind to her. All her life she has deroted to one single purpose', that of helping her daughter. ' "I was born in Canada and my daughter, Aimee, was born there. I spent 35 years of my life in the Salvation Army always interested in the spiritual things of life. Aimee inherited that desire, talent. or call it what you will. She fi nally got started for herself. When she found failure and sickness, with no friends In sight, I hastened to her side. " I stayed by her through thick and thin. 1 am do- ing it now, and God helping, I shall always "stick." : " Mrs. Kennedy refused to discuss the famous "kidnapping" case wherein ber daughter figured. She promised to take that up, "so far as possible" in her Sunday night meeting at the Evangelistic Tem ple where she is holding a few meetings during her stay-over in Salem. At this meeting she will review her entire life as it has been taken up with spirifnal work. "I'm just an old-fashioned Meth odist of the John Wesley school," said Mrs. Kennedy. "I have my Bible and I stick to fundament als." Whatever the world or news papers say about Mrs. Kennedy, she impressed the writer as a good, honest woman, who started out to spread the gospel with: no thought of financial rewards, and upon whom the ups and downs of life have left no ill effects except that of experience and which shows plainly In the lines that are beginning to draw gently over a motherly and genteel. face. Charley Stoneham. Giants' own er, buys soccer club. He would have been better joff if he had bought a couple of socking ball Players Liberty School Open With Big Attendance Teaching Staff Unchanged From Last Year's Personnel . v I LIBERTY, Sept. 23. (Special ) School started here last Mon day with an attendance about the same as last year, which was the largest for 'many years. The same teachers are in charge: Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Hoag, Miss Jessie King, and Miss Dorothy Sloop. A new traveling library has just been added to the books available at the school library The' public is invited to use these books. ........ in Salem this year, as she will at Ladies'. wool dresses cleaned and pressed, - $1.00 up. Men's, and Ladies' . Suits cleaned and pressed $1.00. -, ,, VARLET CLEANERS Over Basfcks FOR SALE OR RENT Suburban home; mile and halt from Bush Bank, paved road, modern house except furnace, bearing fruit trees, F. L. WOOD, 341 State St. ELECTRIC BIOTORS Rewound and Repaired, Nsw or fl ; Used Motors VmBERT & TODD Tbiaga Electrical ltl South High - TaL Jill YICKSOHERBCO.' v';, t n. LEONO, Msr - .l"-Onr Ufa's work has i7 been spent In studying the healing - properties I V - f Chinese barbs and -4 X ; ' noir Hy -tra relieve thosa suffering from s' 'tonveh. llrerand kld ' . r f ney trouble.' rheuma ; su v tlszk and gall . stones, also disorders cf man, women and children -. -. . - -..j- .. . IVea Oonaaltatioa Call er TTrtta Ora O A. U, to 0 P. U. T3 Clzis ZL, Cil Ore-ca In Salem this year, a sshe will at tend night school there. George Eaplin and family have moved over - near the Jeferson highway. " ... Sidney Penn and family of 'Port land were Sunday guests at the Bruce Cunningham home. , ' Mr. Syverson and family have moved to Independence, and Mr. Young, and family from Salem now occupy the Syverson home. Prune picking is still. In pro gress in this section, although the crop Is reported to be light. Mrs. J. S. Schotthoefer has been very ill for the past week. Mrs. J. R. Rains and family re cently visited relatives in Oregon City. The Liberty school has the only garden club in the county in the industrial department. This means that the county exhibit must de pend upon this club for all of its vegetables. -Mrs.. Kate Holder is the club leader,. andhAS-done good work. i - . Several cases' of Intestinal flu are reported in the neighborhood. Miss Jessie King, the intermedi ate teacher, is staying In South Salem this winter. Miss Dorothy Davis, recently from Dallas, is attending school here, being in the ninth grade. Clive Tittle, who has been in California for the past three months, was a visitor at the P. G. Judd home last Thursday. His home is in Monmouth. PICTURES BY AIRPLANE . CHICAGO, Sept. 22. (AP) Paramount news photos service chartered a special airplane from the national air transport com pany to rush news photos of the fight spectacle to New York Im mediately after the championship fight. , - The plane was expected to ar rive In New York by 7 or 8 o'clock a. m. OBITUARY Hemming At the residence of her daugh ter, 1031 South street, Thursday, Sept. 22, Mrs. Robert Hemming; age 68 years, mother of Mrs. J A. Drake of Albany, Mrs. New- berg, Mrs. R. Smith and Mrs. Geo. Gergeon of Salem, and one son, C. L. Hemming of St.,Paul, Minn., grandmother of Clarence and Harold Goheen and Robert New- bere of Salem and Mrs. John Sporesof Wendling and ilnth'and Marie Hemming of St. Paul, Minn., Also survived by one great-grand child. Mrs. Hemming was a member of the Jason Lee M. E church. 1 Funeral services Satur day, Sept. 24th at 3 p. m. from the Rigdon mortuary. Gilbreath At the residence. No. 246 West Wilson street, Thursday, Sept. 22, Mrs. Bertha. Hilda Gilbreath, age 36 years, wife of Ira Gilbreath, mother of Leona, Stella, Daisy, Jack, Opal and George Gilbreath. Announcement of fneral later from the Rigdon mortuary. TERWILLIGERS Perfect. Funeral Service . , For Less Licensed Lady Mortician 770 Chemeketa Street Telephone 724 Casey's Guaranteed RHEUMATISM REMEDY Money refunded if it does not cure your case NELSON A HUNT, Drwggiata Cor. Court and Liberty Tel. 7 - HEMSTITCHING 9, S and 10 cents per yard. Also buttons, stamping and pleating. ANNA H. KRUEGER Over Miller's Telephone 117 Special for Sweetest Day, Saturday, October 8th The Family Box . Assorted Chocolates . 99c Quality. & Quantity Place Your Orders - . NOWI, Perry's Druj Stcro -115 S; Ccnmsrcial 4 , .. - . . ... . one toht Salem Acquires. One of the Best Equipepd Amusement Places on the Coast - The Salem Recreation company bowling academy owned and op erated by Virgil M. Stoliker and Mert C- Hemenway. will have its grand opening tonight at 8 o' clock. "... Mayor T. A. Llvesley will be on deck to roll the- first boll, and teams representing a number of local business firms and organiza tions will be on hand to vie for the generous prizes offered to the skillful one; These teams . will represent Hawkins & Roberts, Rodgers Pa per company, the Elks, the First National Bank, and the Cherry City bakery; there will . be two from the American Legion, and others. This bowling academy - is ! not only one of the finest equipped plants of its kind In the country. with every convenience supplied for its patrons, but is a real bowl ing academy where the game will be taken seriously, rather than a plac of Idle amusement.1 -' " The proprietors are men who are interested In bowling and .its development; especially Mr. Stol- iker, who has been and still Is. when he finds the time to com pete, one of America's crack bowl ers. . - ' .- ...:; Several years ago. while -repre sentlng the University of Wash ington, he turned In the first perr feet 360 score at .one of New' York City's leading alleys. He al so set a high average for a series. Z5S 1-3. He also held the high indiv!d- LADD & BUSH, Bankers BsUbllaiied 1861 General Banking Business : Office Honrs from 10 a. m. to t p. m.' m Big Farmers AUCTION Saturday 1:30 P.M. Auction Market ; i ... i i : - : 1610 IT. Suminer Street"; 1 dappled grey horse C years old, Forks, shovels,; chains, doable weight 1300 pounds. Sennd and JP'Z'K U n" .- triw to aU harness. slged by Vt. A. MeFarUne alM. . . 1 Indian doable cylinder motor- l brown mare, II years aid, good A cycle ,Q A-1 coition. .in at namenu. . - .' S9 white 'Ilatuen - & . IUnkard 1 brown mare, 11 years old, good, strain strain pallets and roost la all harness. '' en, Jane hatch. 1 new aet doable breeching barn- 3 B. L. R.' pullets. i n 12 Barred Rock pullets. 1 set farm harness. 1 Bange, heater, new linoleum, I McCormlck mower, 8 ft. cut. , ' rags, linoleum by the yard, good I McCormlck hay rake, 10 ft. eat. organ, furniture of all kinds, I first-class stock trailer. ' beds, etc . . Farmers Bring In Anything You Want Sold ' I "I Pay Cash for Used Furniture" Phone 511 i TRANSFER Long and Short Distance Ha Public and Private Storage , ; Fireproof Euiliinj - - y. GRAIN, FEED AND SEED V . . Ftie Delivery to any part cX tha city Quotalicna ca AppIIcclIca 1 1 Have us make a thorough examination " " v of your eyes. 1 r- There is'no charge or obllgatioa, connected with this service. FINEST .READING .LENSE only $4.95 The best optlcat service need not be expensive. THOMPSON-GLUTSCH OPTICAL CO. 110 XV Commercial near State uai score in 1923 in the American National bowling tournament, which was held in New York, with a tally of 251, and averaged 224 4-5, which was a pew record for the run. ' . l; : ' ' But his best record wa's'niade Jn the Individual, tournament, also in New York City the same year, when he made a perfect run of 300, twelve successive strikes! He made; ot,ber good-scores in A that tournament, "but Jpst the, .finals by one pin and that one , wobbled buV didn't' fall.' ' w ' Buy. Statesman '. Want Ads , ;FOR INFORMATION ABOUT, LOCAL OR EASTERN RAILROAD TRIPS ' 'lHONE 72T Oregon Electric Ry. Willamette Valley Line j .aiwsjr? r cni STORAGE t . . Day 1 -.4 i