The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 28, 1928, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON. SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1928
iniEisieooD
DR: MAYO ASSERTS
Cause Women to Have
Smaller Calves, Says
Famous Physician
THE OLD HOME TOWri
LOS ANGELES, Apr. 27. (AP)
Women are sacrificing the shape
of their legs on an altar of high
heels, in the opinion of Dr. Charles
Mayo, famous surgeon and a mem
ber of the clinic bearing his fam
ily name at Rochester, Minn. Dr.
Majo is here on a racation.
"Ladies' legs are really an in
teresting study nowadays," he
said today. "They're losing their
calves. Why, these high heeled
shoes they're wearing are chang
1ns completely the shape of thier
legs.
"You know, after watching
them walking on their high heels,
1 made an experimeat some time
ago. I took several thinck cork
blocks and strapped them under
my own heels and tried walking
on them like the ladies do.
""And I found that it made ray
calves absolutely useless. In oth
er words, the ladies, by using high
heeled shoes, are generally atro
phying their calves, and you can
for yourself what it's doing to
their legs."
Women also are getting shorter,
according to the doctor.
"They ride In automobiles too
much," he explained. "So, not
walking, they get shorter, and be
cause they're getting shorter, and
they're wearing higher heels so
they can walk beside their men.
And the higher the heels the more
unshapely their legs get."
i.lui .,1 11 III Jj jyLJl iFL
" Sryk v
ODDS COffflllU
E
THREAT I
HI SOUTH
Affected Area Extends From
Arkansas on East as Far
as Florida
HANK HOi-COMS HAD WON EVEWf AM
UNTIL HIS HANDS QOT SO COLD. HS L.OST
CC?MTfOU OF THE HORSB SHOE THEN HIT MAO TH)S
UNEXpeCTD RINGER, THAT BfcOKE UP "IKE COHTmarr
HUH TO GET
F
RILL 1
Measure Expected to be For
warded to President Early
Next Week
WASHINGTON. Apr. 27 (AP)
The Mississippi river flood con
trol bill in practically the same
form that it passed the house will
be sent to President Coolidge,
probably next week.
The measure was ordered sent
to conference today by the senate
after its author. Senator Joues.
republican, Washington, had re
ceived a memorandum prepared
by army engineers and transmit
ted by President Coolidge outlin
ing eleven objections to the mea
sure as amended by the house.
Five of these related to pro
visions of the bill which are not in
controversy between th two
houses and consequently cannot
be considered. Of the remaining
U. only two are regarded as of
prime importance. One was tenta
tively agreed to by the senate
conferees in an informal confer
ence. while the other was reject
-d tentatively.
A majority of the senate con
ferees are prepared to accept the
houfe amendment under which
the federal government would be
required to provide flowage
rights that is pay sums to be
agreed upon to owners of the
lands for destructive flood wat
ers that will pass by reason of di
version from the main channel
of the Mississippi and would con
trol, confine and regulate such
diversions.
The amendment was objected
to by the administration as it in-
by the gale which struck that sec
tion. Two persons were Injured and
more than $60,000 damage. caused
by a storm which struck Jackson,
Miss., last night.
ARMY ATTACHE DROWNS
ATLANTA, Ga., Apr. 27. (AP)
'Windstorms, torrential rains and
floods continued their ravages in
the south today, from Arkansas
eastward to Florida.
A general storm with ;winds of
tornado force blew across the cen
tral portion of Florida, wrecking
buildings at Inverness, r70 miles
north of Tampa, disrupting com
munication and isolating more
than a dozen towns and villages.
Meager reports did not establish
whether there were any casualties.
Gainesville and Ocala were among
the isolated towns.
A small tornado wrecked sev
eral buildings on the outskirts of(jrial
Waycross, wnue
HONOLULU, Apr. 27. (AP)
Captain Harry M. Thatcher, at
tached to the quartermaster corps.
Fort Armstrong, Hawaii, was
drowned off the island of Kauai
yesterday a wireless dispatch re
ceived at the local army headquar
ters stated.
SPORTS
M
T
MS
C
LE
May 22 H. L. vs. Carp.
May 24 P. O. vs. P. E. P.
May 29 P. E. P. vs. Carp.
May SI P. O. ts. H. L.
June 6 P. E. P. vs. H. L.
Jane 12 Carp. vs. H. L.
June 14 P. E. P. vs. P. O.
June 19 Carp. vs. P. E. P.
June 21 H. L. ts. P. O.
June 26 H. L. ts P. E. P.
June 28 Carp. ts. P. O.
AGGIE TEAM NIGKS
;
ber. Any boy who Is looking for a
good job should see him as soon
possible. After vacation a large
number will be employed and the.
turning out now will be ia line f r
a steady Job.
General Sheridan's famous r!
was made during the Civil War i.i
connection v with the Battle f
Cedar Creek, fought twenty mi'.-,
from Winchester, Virginia, accord
ing to an answered question 'i:
Liberty Magazine.
HUSKY
AGGREGATION
Na. EO
Sry.f the Aotu' Statement vf th.
AMERICAN OSBDIT INDEMNITY COM-
, - . PAXT OF NEW K
f St. in to State of Missouri on
the thirty first da; of December t7
U i. the Ininrance Commissioner of
111. State of Orefon. pursuant to law;
Capital
Aaawmt of capital stock
paid up .. )
Income
Net premium! raceiTed
during to year $
lairext, dividend and
rents received duricf
taa ear
lauame from other tour
es received during
the year
1,000.000 Ou
2.13.709 37
164.1 ji.S7
volved besides the purchase of
easement rights from the property
holders, the construction of le
vees and revements to control the
floods in the low lands of Arkan
sas, Mississippi and Louisiana.
The change proposed by the ad
ministration, and which the sen
ate conferees tentatively accepted
relates to the section making
available 510,000.000 of the pro
posed $325,000,000 fund for use
in prosecuting work heretofore
authorized and not included in the
new project. That includes levee
work on the Mississippi river be
tween Kock Island, 111., and Cape
Girardeau, Missouri, and on the
outlets and tributaries of the
Mississippi insofar as such outlets
or tributaries are affected by the
backwaters of the Mississippi.
The house proposed that for
such work on the tributaries, right
of way and 331 per cent of the
cost of this work should be paid
for by the states or leve districts
affected. The president insisted
that rights of way and one third
of the cost of the work on the
main stream between Rock Is
land and Cape Giradeau should
be provided for by the states or
levee districts.To that the senate
conferees tentatively agreed.
Mr. Coolidge still is convinced
that the amended Jones measure
wouia cosi tne government as
much as a billion and a half dol
lars. This appears to him all the
more excessive since according to
his best advices it would be ex-
pendedfor works which, if done
economically, should not cost
more than $3000,000.000.
REPUBLICAN LEAD
ED
TAKEN ON BY DEATH
Acute Heart Attack Sudden
ly Proves Fltal to Martin
B. Madden
from their
UMBER
BID
F
N
Output of Four Northwest
Concerns to be Handled
by Company
14,225.29
Total income
Dlibnrsamentt
X.I losses paid during
tbe year including ad
jnatraent expenses .... $
iMvidead paid on cap
ital stock during tba
y.ar
Cvounimiona aid salaries
paid during th. year
Taaas, licenses and fees
paid during tbe year .
AauMint of all oiber expenditures
Total expenditures 9
Assets
Value of real estate own
ed (market value) $
Valne of stocks and bonds
owned (market value)
Lvaas on mortgages and
collateral, etc .
Cask in baaks and on
kand ,
Premium notes
lararest and rents rue .
aad accrued
2.3S7.087.03
843.800.13
160,000.00
508,000.79
48.112.33
668.03S 32
2.327.931.59
None
3. 790.994. :.0
None
844.736.22
- 2G0.5;l..3
54.077.21
Total admitted asefs 9
Liabilities
(Sraasr claims for losses
. wapaid 9
Additional reserve ..........
Aawtt of unearned pre
miums on all outstand
ing risk ...
Dua for commission and
brokerage
All other liabilities
4,450.343 27
810.599 63
500,000.00
1,089,732.39
Kone
91,143.60
Total liabilities, ex-clu-
aive of capital stock of
91.000.000:00 $ 2.491.475.66
Boslnasa la Oregon for tbe Year
Nat premium received
. during the year 9 42.833.12
I .o sees paid during the
yaar - 10,433.82
Taaea incurred daring
tbe vear - 10.433.82
lUrnhlAS CREDIT INDEMNITY COM-
OF NEW YORK
S MrFmdd-n. Preaident.
SAX FRANCISCO. April 27.
(AP). Interested lumbermen
said today that negotiations for:
forming the Pacific-Atlantic-Lum-
ber corporation lor purchase of
Pacific coafit lumber designed fori
the Atlantic coast, probably will
be completed within two weeks.
The entire output of four big lum
ber manufacturing concerns
would be handled.
The companies interested are
Sudden and Christenson. Charles
Nelson company, Tacoma Lumber
company of Tacoma and Charles
R. McCormick Lumber company.
Lubermen said the proposed cor
poration would be an independent
concern, with etock owned by
men in the organizing companies,
and would be operated to reduce
overhead in shipping lumber east.
Three of the companies negoti
ating own or control 28 vessels
the Tacoma company has none
which would be used to carry lum
ber to New York. Philadelphia,
Boston and other large eastern
ports. Supportere of the plan
said economies could be effected
by sending all vessels with full
cargoes, and by consolidating
eastern offices.
Lumbermen here said organiz
ation of the new corporation
awaited decision of the Tacoma
porate under th laws of peleware
company. They expect to incor
and issue 10.00e shares of stock
with no par value.
WASHINGTON, Apr. 27 (AP)
Martin B. Madden, of Illinois
one of the republican leaders in
congress and a power In the house
of representatives was stricken
with an acute heart attack today
and died a few minutes later.
The end came as he sat at his
desk in his capitol office, talking
with a colleague. He suddenly
placed his hand over his heart
and sank down In his chair. He
was removed to a couch in the
romm and despite efforts to re
vive him he passed away without
regaining consciousness.
Up to the moment of his death
Mr. Madden had been in a cherry
mood. He had received a number
of callers, including Rep. Tilson
of Connecticut, the house republi
can leader.
Word of Mr. Madden's death
spread rapidly about the house
and within a few, minutes, the
house. In whose stormy legisla
tive battles he had participated
for 23 years, adjuorned out of re
spect for the "chief," as he was
called by many of his friends.
There was silence in the chain
i . ,
uer as me announcement was
made and members seemed stun
ned at the news, that the white
haired chairman of the house ap
propiiations committee, for whom
all had deep admiration and re-
pect, had passed
ranks.
Mr. Madden was 7 3years of
age and was serving his twelfth
continuous term as a representa
tive from the first Chicago con
gressional district. He is survived
by his widow and one daughter,
Mrs. Paul Henderson, wife of a
former assistant postmaster gen
eral. Mr. Madden's body was taken to
his Washington home where it
will remain until Sunday. Then
it will be brought back to the
capitol to lie in state between the
hours of noon and 2 p. m. in the
chamber of the house. It will be
placed on a train for Chicago
where on Monday afternoon fun
eral services will be held at his
home at Hinsdale, a Chicago
suburb.
towns reported high winds and
heavy rains.
Rivers of southern Georgia, al
ready out of their banks with last
Sunday's torrential rainfall, re
ceived new volumes of water and
many places reported record
stages.
Serious flood conditions were
forecast along the Apalachicola
and Choctawatchee rivers in north
western Florida because of new
floods piling up on the crest of the
deluge, which already has caused
tremendous damage to the upper
valleys.
The inhabitants of West afain-
bridge, Ga., on the Flint river,
were prepared to evacuate their
homes with the river seven feet
above flood stage and rising stead
ily. In the Choctawatchee river val
ley, Carryville, Fla., inundated by
the recent flood, and evacuated by
more than a thousand persons, was
menaced again, as was Westville
across th river, a village of sev
eral hundred population.
The highest flood stage ever
known was rushing down the
Withlacoochee river on the border
of Georgia and Florida. The stream
was endangering a stretch of the
Atlantic Coast line railway as well
as numerous highway bridges.
A house was blown through tel
egraph wires at Brooksville, Fla.,
King George Quotes
Word of King Solomon
LONDON (AP) Bits of wis
dom handed down by old King
Solomon were quoted by King
George in opening the new home
of Lloyd's underwriters' agents,
completed at a cost of $10,000,-
000.
"It was a very wise man." said
the king at the inaugural exer
cises, "who, nearly JJ.000 years
ago, said: 'Two are "better than
one, for if they fell the one will
life the other; but wo to him
that i alone when he falieth.' . . .
After referring to the romance
of the sea the king continued: "It
is the organized system of marine
insurance which has transformed
overseas trade from a daring and
hazardous to the orderly and
smoothly working exchange of
commodities on which modern
civilization depends."
Representatives of the Indus-
and Commercial baseball
other Georgia leagues met la'st night for the
third4 time this season in the lob
by of the Y. M. C. A. and prac
tically put the finishing touches
to their plans for the coming sea
son which opens Tuesday evening,
with eleven teams competing. One
more team was needed in the
Commercial league, this vacancy
being filled when a team repre
centing the Capital Super Serv
ice station, located on Front and
Center streets, entered the league.
This makes six teams in the Com
mercial league. Names of the
players of each of the teams were
also turned in at the meeting last
night. which was in charge of Bob
Boardman in the absence of Coach
Roy Keene, who is chairman.
The teams .that will make up
the Commercial league are Elks,
Legion, Eagles, Knights of Colum
bus, Capital Super service station,
and Oregon Pulp and Paper com
pany. Their schedule will be out
sometime this afternoon and may
be had in the office of Bob Board
man in the Y. M. C. A.
The complete schedule for the
Industrial league is as follows:
May 1 Carpenters vs. Han
sen & Lilequist.
May 3 Portland Electric
Power company vs. Post Office.
May 8 Carp. vs. P. E. P.
May 10 II. G. vs. P. O.
May 15 H. L. vs. P. E. P.
May 17 Carp. vs. P. O.
SEATTLE, Apr. 27. (AP) ,
Three Husky pitchers failed to!
stem the rising tides of Oregon
State college hits when the Aggie i
ball team defeated the University
of Washington here, 13 to 3.
The Orangemen nicked the Hus
kies' trio for 17 hits. Washington
got 11 safe wallops, but they were
scattered.
The way Ralph Colt man's outfit
was hitting they could have de
feated almost any college nine.
Score: It II E
O. A. C ir 13 17 3
Washington 3 11 5
Cloyes and Maple; Calhoun, Mc
Lean, Falconer and McKenzie.
BILL WADE NEW
PRO AT ILLAHEE
SAWMILL RESUMES
taGRANDE. Ore.. Apr. 27.
(AP) The Bowman Hicks Lum
ber company will resume opera
tions in the sawmill here and in
the logging camps in Wallowa
county on Tuesday. May 1. The I
company has been Inactive since
Sensational Ten Cent
ED e msrmDstmm
You can finish a floor
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HOUSEHOLD
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LACQ will be demonstrated here in our store
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The beautiful high bright dec
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SPECIAL!
This coupon and lOo
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4. Pint) of any
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BRING IT IN NOW
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If your dealer has not yet received
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SHAVING CREAM
W. J. "Bill" Wade, golf profes-
sional arrived in Salem this week j
from Klamath Falls and will he!
the golf instructor at the Illihee!
country club. He has a remarkable;
record back of him as a golfer and
Illahee club members consider!
themselves fortunate to get a man
of this caliber as instructor. Be
fore going to Klamath Falls, Wade
was In Portland, where he made
an excellent record.
Wade urges that as many cad
dies as possible come out to the
links on Saturday and Sundays, as
he will be able to use a large num-
Fltzgerald-Sherwin
Motor Co.
Corner Liberty & Chemeketa
Telephone 1132
Golf for exercise! A car for
distance! Distance and depend
ability for your dollar ta our
fine cars.
Chrysler Roadster 1927
Buirk 1924
Chrysler Coupe 1926
West of Fire Station
Fitzgerald-Sherwin
Motor Co.
Corner Liberty & Chemketa
Telephone 1132
"The House of Courteoni
Service"
C. W. STANDISH
2095 No. 5th St.
Phone 1393-J
Mm
g3 its i
MAZOLA OIL
Fine for Salad or All Kinds of
Cooking
25c pt.
ARGO
Corn or Gloss Starch
Packages
25c
gjjf Phillips Pancake
fb and
Sssa Waffle Flour
SpiIpJi&j 10 Lb. Sack
s-L-r 60c
GOLDEN SWEET CORN
3 Cans 48c
EXTRA SPECIAL
7 Piece WATER SET, 6 GLASSES with JUG to
MATCH and 1 Quart Pure VINEGAR. CQ
AH for only .". DC
MINCED RAZOR
CLAMS
Oz. Cans 18c each,
2 for
35c
COLLEGE INN DEVILED CHICKEN
15c Two Cans for
U. S. L. Battery Service
i
-AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRICIANS
215 Center Street
IN CONNECTION WITH THE
CAPITOL SUPER SERVICE; STATION
Ford Size Battery
With 1 Year Guarantee $7.50
And Your Old Battery '
OPEN SUNDAYS AND EVENINGS -
TELEPHONE 1915
CORNER FRONT AND CENTER
attorney lor aarviaa;
l&at October.
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