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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1928)
1 t, i! THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON, SUNDAY HORNING, JUNE 17. 1928 i ..1 f 1 If ft' J.-. i r 7 he Oregon Statesman Imk4 Daily Ezrapt lr THE STATESMAN PUBLUHXXG COMPANY 1 an aW-t O iaM ratal gtraat. Wataaa. Ort ft. J. Harieka Xrl U. MeSWrr Ktlaa C CarUa fcasalla Caaca Xaaciag Hint City Editor Saciaty KUtar Bala H. Kiataiac Aarartiarax Uard C rHitfla - - hwr W. EL, Haiitiaia, Circalatiaa Maaafat E. a. JUtataa Ltrastark K4ita W. a Oaaaar . PaaJtrr 4tt XXaCBZB Or TH. ASSOCLaXa'D fUU Taa AaaacUtad frui U azelaaivalr aatitlaa' t Hi aae- ra aaalicaaZia a tfl Maw 'patch eraditad it a mat aiaarwiaa ciaaUtal i taia j-apar t a aiaa iaa laeal mwi avMUaaa' aaraia. susnms omcEf Pacific Caaat Bapweaatatiaaa Dot? STpaa. Ia, Parti, Srearity Bldf.; Sao Fraaeiaca, Staia BM.; 11 Aagaiav 11 Wertara Pacific tf. Tbonaa P. Clark Co.. Kaw Yark. lzS-lSS W. 1 St, CUraa. MarqaaXta Bla. . ' Boaiaaas Offlca 21 r tl Satiety Hilar ! TZIfPHOSCS Kavi 1 apt Zl ar IJf a PepartaMat Cireatetioa Cffiaa .5SS Kaara4 at taa Paat Of fit Sala. Orrawa. as SUNDAY GUESSING - By the Regular It, might Uteteet some .of the langlers In our. Country- ta luiovr that on ome theory, not yet follr There was no great excitement whole Benton comity community explained, manylanglers In Sllets dllletante dudes f and "bursuerf j&f the festive fashions,- v ' . 'V at Salem about Hoorer being nom inated la the national Republican convention. -Old timers - recalled when the Hoorer boy lired at Sal- lato a music center by three Tears I5 on the Sllets rirer pay bo r M.unr.tnn ,tt r. v I Ashing license whatever. The ens- June 17, IOCS tj tta w.nt intn th house of God in the days of Abiathar the mt. r4at nfl did eat the sbewbread. which Is not lawful to eat. Ho nrit and rare also to them that were with Him? And He said unto them, The Sabbath was made for man. and not man for the Sabbath: Therefore the Son or man is i-ora aisw oi mo s" Mark 2:26-27-28. . . SALEM AND THE HOOVER SAGA The Statesman has an order from one of the great special news association for a "human interest" story concerning Herbert Hoover and his life as a boy in Salem. There will be others. Every story of the life of Herbert Hoover must include the record of bis formative years as a boy and young man in Salem. He was IX when he was brought to Ore eon from Iowa. He was 12 when he came with his uncle; Dr. H. J. Minthorn, from Newberg to Salem. He lived and worked and studied in Salem till he went to Stanford univer sity. He was in Salem six to eight years. He was well known to all the people who lived here at that time. Senator Chas. L. McNary and Herbert Hoover went together from Salem to Stanford. The Hoover saga, that will from now on cover the pare of thousands of newspapers in this country, will necessarily give Salem a vast volume of free advertising Good advertising. The little town in Iowa where Herbert .. - ' . . " VU a WBU IUUBUCU IW . ur. u rroiessor ana Mrs. Uet that tbe ladImM rr. Paul Petri. Through their labors I ration hare free flshinc rirhts for em In the days of the Oregon iana i along a score of activities the 5006 111 time to come. But how do they i company. Dr. Minthorn ana aea i students and the 7000 suburbaa I twist to apply to white men Urine Cook were the big real estate men i population of the county seat, down in the Siletx country? Well, selling, off -prune lands, already (these 12,000 people, young and old I isald to be as much as a license planted, to their Iowa neighbors, jd well la a musical atmosphere that! collector V life fa worth to broaeh Herbert Hoorer was an orphan I has been created In erery form of tbe subject in that territory,, and and lired with the Mlnthoms, expression from the accordeoa so-l whitestermarried some with' I working as office boy, and part hoist to the double-barrelled Bym-dlans and some pioneers' had In- of the time drove a deUrery wag-1 phony. The cbnserratlon of the I iiaa wires. on for the Oregon Land company I Corrallis Conservatory is of erea! and went to Salem public schools I importance toe the people of Ore- when only nine grades were I eon. as never before was an educa- taught. 'Then be quietly slipped It onal community Immersed in. and away to Leland Stanford unlrers- enthused for a single art as the ity and became known there as a I Oregon State college has been for student with other Oregon boys,! music in three short years, developing into a manager of field l Ted Roy. a tenor of national sports and financing football and I reputation has been produced. baseball for the student body. (Complete symphony concerts have MiCCMM MESS FO R 1926 Delivered by Dr. Cart Gregg Doney of Willamette Un iversity Last Sunday SPEW WORK GETS UDS Bill PLACES Then he disappeared into the con- been given. The finest military! JUSt 75 Children Report at Yew Park Playgrounds First Day stantly bigger and bigger mining 1 band in the state gives open air and engineering enterprises of the I concerts. Bunches of the student world. His eareer concluded as I body produce classical programs food administrator for war strick-land community singing has be en Euranean countries and went! ome a nnnnlar Initutv mrmr Th. into the Coolidge cabinet as sec-suggestion that the board of high-l BIUy Jud8n and Francis Dunn retarv of commerce. Thus he has Ur curricula rnt th- rr, I " the two 8tar members of the Uved In the minds of Oregon peo- work out of Corvallls will not meet! YeW Park baseball pie up to the present t'me. He stiUlwlth much favor, when it is neterr earnea meir ngnt jrn- holds his membership in the litUeito be forgotten that In tax-ridden I17, by T8jiant serrlce helping Highland Quaker churchnrst or-1 Oregon musical education at O. 8 ganlxed by the colony of Friends jc. does not cost the taxpayer a who bad settled at Salem. )enny, to put the grounds Into final or der for use. The grounds are small at the Yew Park school, and the "The Reinforcement of Life was the subject of the baccalaur- eate address of Dr. Carl Gregg Doney, president of Willamette University, delivered oa Sunday, last at the First Methodist church of Salem, to the graduating class of 1928 and friends, fining all the available' space of the audience room and gallery. Following Is the full text of the address: THE REINFORCEMENT OF LIFE I Cor. 6:17: "He that Is joined unto the Lord is one spirit." These words of St. Paul, which tremble with vivid meaning, are found in a letter to the Corinthian Christians, wherein he exhorts them to lead a life of purity. No people ever needed them more, for they lired in a flaming center of luxury and lewdness. Corinth stood where East and West met and passed on, leaving a tribute of wealth and rioting. It was proud with prosperity, and spent its rich es to sweep with wild abandon, the uttermost gamut of human exper again, or yielded to utter hopeless- It was then and to them that Pan! wrote. He knew what they endured; knew how futile their unaided? straggle therefore he de clared to them. "He that is joined unto the Lord Is one spirit. This was the sufficient Ally, the Infinite Power to give victory.' J,'You r do not doubt," said he In substance, "that your Christ has the strength to ITve a sinless life even in Cor inth,' you believe that He could go through the streets and mingle with the people, that He could go there about as surely righteous as He was in Galilee and Jerusalem. You believe with that utter cer tainty; then I say to you that if you be truly joined to Him, you will have the self-same spirit and power which is His." la not this a paraphrase of what Christ himself said? "I am' the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth In me, and I in him, the same brlngeth forth much fruit." But does it sound to this modern age like a figure of speech with no more meaning than a pleasant dream? It was not such to Paul.j He did not think of Christ as mere ly an historical person, but he did Mrim aad Mr. and Mrs. M . Town Snadav at Turner with an unua ually large number present. . i Many, friends gathered rec$r; at th Christian church toftne the" marriage of Miss Avalyn D?i sell, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. IV" C. Deisell, end Donald Fehlmnl of An ah aim, Cal. ti.. groom1 parents and sister of Cal Ifora!1 were '-present Mr. and Mra,1 Dpld Xehhnan will mak" their home on ah orange farm. Mrs? S.' A. Riches has purchase.1 200 .leghorn puUets eight. wee's old. Mrs. Riches was very succaja fuf with her chicken last year ReVi i. J Mickey, and famih were Sunday guests oi men daughter,- Mrt. Ivan Hadley and family. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Funston drove to Monmouth Wednesday Mrs Funston met her parents oi - a rit . . Portland .whose uaugmer. , mi Grace, was one of the graduate Kenneth Rear, who had business in indrjea4enca aeeomoanied the Funstons. Trace and Bob Glvens are sup plying the vicinity with canning strawberries. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Gnlvin of (Coatiaoad oa pa 18) IB RESIDENTS IT HS II mil "The Fat Boy" barbecue sand wich parlors at Hollywood have to ask who on earth cut down that tbe interest waa :ood' th diaci been opened by Charles Maxwell beautiful big tree that adorned plIne excellent. and th promise ud family after meeting many de- ihe Pacific highway at "The Duck- U for good sumDaer of Par leys and technicalities. It will take I Ian" corner at Brooks? It lUns- nearly a year's business profits toltrates why the state highway com ! , , . . , . nra 4.v- Pay cost of lawyers and loss of mission should develoo a deoju-t- an plecea or apparatus are to Hoover was born and grew to the age of 11 years, took two de to comply with the ment deTOted S 7"eAinJThe added to th equipment days and nights off after his nomination at Kansas City. ordinance. aatural beauty of our great na- so ,that there wiU eomethlng and celebrated. The people there got there town on the map Itural wealth of trees and flower- " k" , or fse8- 4 olory in bio: letters AJbert RIchrd Wet3en JPI Bhrubbery on all the highways. hon. raffia work, basketry, pa- in Dig leiiers-- , in the lead of Saturday Evening I u the greatest tourist asset of the and other sit-down Ana oaiem nau mure reuuus xur utawg a uay w tvru un i post short stories for June 9 and celebrating, for Herbert Hoover received more of the Liverpool Loehinvar." impulses of a career of usefulness here than he absorbed in all his life before. I ! rwv . . ... 7t v j.j ... rcu. xucre w aero seas loucnea. . v... on "e . . . . .. ... -r nl i The Sundav o, .u i.w. were a good crowd; but a.i. "1 Man- 01 HOUeriSOn IU " - mm. m. ... ... .stui: auu iiuui lop; auhbd. lmi i nr Why should employment will be j .... j I .. -W. 1 . . . I uuimug uu Ecnooi oaseanent lori A I xwunonwealth. aot? Salem can claim the honor ....... among its residents of having tbe I Have you ever seen a common nen ae weainer 18 6ad- An ef star writer or sea stories. In the I English Sparrow make a tramp indoor work or for light games when Jhe weather is bad. An ef fort is to be made to interest par- Everv one in Salem Who remembers him Well have recol-Pst there has been no striking! out of himself and rt M iv-lnt and otaer dits in the work i.-a; m i. i .. i j I modern skirt element. "Dick" con-1 ast in th mnrino- k ri 1 land rood story-teller or enter- iecuons oi a very coiuesu iiuucbi., amuiuua w ouu j vunjc . . . . - , t.u., k.j .j,, Vi tt i . . . ' , ' , , . , pned himeelf to some obscure Jun-I he edge of a sidewalk and ciean ler of anT k!nd will be welcom- man. He played, but he worked more. He dreamed, but he ?te maIden the farthest Hisl ng off the bugs that wmmmmH by tbe dIrector the whole Biumeu more. -"ry is cui in r-apeua. pi jn the front of the automobile ra-J s"ubii. - TIo ttt0 momW nf 4r.o HnoVor itinn.h in TTJo-Vilan ariri I French capiUl of one of the Tahi-1 Jiator? It la a di.r.ia t.M.l MlM Esther Lisle, a senior in W. mPmWshin W in that rhurrh utili; Hp ha, thP Onake, l Sl " JS.. K"r and erprise by a new bug-'JTL'. r ii.ua iraciiic. nia uesenpuons anoi.loeist that waa nnt t.nrhi 1 c ra. wtocu. MISS instinct for service and thrift and good citizenship. Useless! vocabulary, s usual with him, are! Jy instinct. J Lisle was in charge of the girls idleness is anathema to him. It was so when he waa a bov. y rtcn ln co,or. actln and department of one of the big - r B ...A. I DA41a.4 1 a ci. u j r v. aa ;.fl I "- I A Salem clothlne store h. a I sruunas iasc year. jcmuu w ire H'uu 4 xiuiucuwo Mr Wetien is beelnnins' to at. A Salem clothing store has Ivindnw Hlenlnw KMM.HM r j r l . it.. tt:. j I . ... . . . I " in- ju luiuuuji wc me iittuius ui. utc ucaw picoiucui, ui. me vjjut-cu iu nci oiuer uierary peopie 10 sai-1 rreavsing vanity and susceDtibilitv states. OUR MINT INDUSTRY WILL GROW 60 KIDDIES HURT am. quit a delegation of promi- md extravagance in taste la not ap r'. I IfT nent writers, from Portland, pay-1 confined to the femal. hat Thar KI..IM ing the Wetjens a week-end visit. inthians built their city of outward splendor. Towering above it stood the Acrocorinthus, outrivalling the Athenian Acropolis and stronger than Gibralter. Its patron goddess was Aphrodite, whose temple hous ed a thousand female slaves, kept for the free entertainment of the visitors. Learning centered here, for the art of painting is said to hare been invented by Corinthians, and when Rome captured the city, pictures of inestimable value were tiken away. Architecture, sculptur ing and the plastic arts flourished, and poetry was cultivated. But to day Corinth is a squalid village, and among the illustrious authors of Greece not a single Corinthian name appears. When Paul wrote his letters, a rotting decay blotched all classes. Sensuality had overcome restraint and refinement, and nameless vic es 'were sanctioned openly. Life was on an accepted pla'ae of evil. and the skies of morality were Lm penetrably black. Yet in this center of glittering turpitude were gath ered groups of Christians, less than twined to the female sex. There bleachers on which 600 school I twenty years removed from the 8",8,' ?u?w wiauowxuieo witn cnuaren were seated, at the nhvaical nraenc of m .. m ose- colored and lavendar-pink Schuylkill county fair grounds this. lt ia the pure ln heart who see What is being done at Salem tc J 'shorts", cerise-red and baby-blue afternM resulted ln Injuries to Po- Ti Inryoof JM a ,n n rvarmavmnf vit .4- ISaVe DOTS and eirls from IOftin r I illK Pajamas, rainbow tintaH n,n- " w limuren, xuc uuki umia in uui Lici'tAi unit vii iciii uo uiai mxcaci I - ' ... ' ItK.ls llnu. t I 1 tti I Man J V II. - . is room for.steady expansion in our mint industry- " " "'T i .rr.:: -T "1U : papers boost price ' 1 , . vnij. ii 13 ELAND. Jun II i AT Press today announced that Mon day tbe price for a single issue would be increased from 2 to 3 cents. The announcement gave no reason tor the increaee. And this IS important news lare drowned, and men and women! ht to stand on the sidewalk and! The Cleveland News, the Cleve- And he says there IS a great future for US in the DrodUC-larown ai ine Deacnes ror lack on aoia oig nussy bop-growers and.Jand Plalndealer and the Cleveland tta, of other e sentia! oils and in crude dre products. The P4 SZSZZZ oiuKtii euiLor nas ueen saying mese imngs, ana repeating! thers make some provision forltn win transform them into exhl them often, fdr years. But Mr. Lyon, quoted in the news col-bathinS and swimming holes in lotions of retiring matadors, and umns, is a high authority. He is at the center of the consum- iaI"JA f"1 cref,f , ..,. . . . . Should not a committee of the ing mansei; me largest consuming market in the world, tie city council and police department is an expert. That is his business; his whole life. I cooperate to prevent loss of lives On account of the Japanese mint product and for other im"Vj !!7e" re Io!! u. -j.- o-x.x . , , levery year from bathing in salt icusuus, me euuur oi x ne oiaiegman nas ieareu an over pro-1 and fresh water and lack of in duction of peppermint oil here. He has for some time put the8trtlctloB IfL PkP d drivinf soft pedal on advocating increased acreage. In the light oi I , Jf T fi' tnn were eyer lo ,v,i t u i.i.,. , , .. . In the World war. TtMiaiv lut . uuu ixtvs, mere is nine aaner oi mis, in a rea-l i BonaDie expansion, ine market demands are constantly grow- Today,, at Providence church ing. Our population is increasing, and the per capita con-nw s?, wiU be be,d tn ann"ai Climntinn nf tha o( ni. f.Vtn. l I u uuiuicuioni- " wiv. tauvix.K w pcruunv on is grow-1 tion of Joab Powell, in the neigh iaZ' ' . Jborhood where he baptised hun Our peppermint oil production may safely be doubled with-Idred of conTerta ln the ice cow I aaa aa an aaa 4V 4V aV a?l t f a in fi. few years, and keep on in a steady growth after that I ' " Perhaps abnormally high prices may not come again, and! ranked with peter cartwright, of they would likely not be good for the industry. But there wHi I,unoul Robert Booth, whose b, growing demand for our product, taken at remunerative iTS, prices. And we can turn it off at a much lower cost than our eapttoi grounds. There will be the only competitors, in Indiana and Michigan. I Umual lar sembiy. I wonder what degree of reso lution and courage and fortitude was needed to keep life clean and save It from despair in such a spot. I wonder at the faith which could dwell there and expect to be Chris tian. And knowing human frailty, I do not wonder that people stag gered and fell and tried to rise Gather for Annual Reunion Today TURNER. June 16. (Special) Turner had a good representa tion at the men's council meeting and banquet held at the M. E church in Silverton Wednesday evening. Those attending included Rev. M. Groves, G. A. G. Moore, Ralph Chavis, Prof. John .Watson, Cecil Martin, C. W. Hewitt, Myron Hewitt, C. A. Bear, Ivan Hadley, Professor Parks and Ray Richrer. A fine banquet and good program was reported. The Robertson family expect to meet in their annual ratherine send were delegates to the state Orange at Rainier last week. Prof. John Watson is starting east for extensive . summer auto mobile tour. Miss Agnes Gillette of Walla Walla, after a short visit with friends here, returned Friday eve ning to her brother's hoif in Portland. Otto Herrilng and sister, Mrs. Bertha Hirch, of eastern Oregon are visiting relatives in the iFfr. ley; including their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin HerrUng of Sa lem and brother' Ben of Turner. Miss Ruth Glvens who has Wu at the home of Dr. Mary Staples! for several years, was married Saturday to Paul Stephenson of Portland. 1 ALTITUDE RECORD PHILADELPHIA. June 16. (AP) A new American altitude record for the PN-12 type of sea planes carrying a useful load of 1.000 kilograms was made todav by the PN-12 No. 2, which rose to approximately 18,200 feet over thu Philadelphia navy yard. The for mer record was 16,014 feet. .3V?b ' 0 ipolED t fttt ewe JyJ 7Zft 7Ur 71 M fit y t Jt.2f Eecke & Hendricks 189 N. High Telephone 161 i - -aMai aw i r " " - 1 - 1 jt m - I i i ' """aBaWBaBaaBjBauaaBmtSaaaaBBaaBaBBa . : . -rfe A. BIG BUSINESS IN BULBS ; Bead the thirteen reasons, given in this morning's States- ' m ' a'" . a a! . - " . " . - man. wny mere is a great Held for the expansion of our bulb industry i . Wny big business in bulbs wiU be Drofitable here. The thirteen reasons are riven bv W. C. Dfthk the nio. neer of the industry in this district. They are conclusive rea sons. They will bear the acid test. They are founded on facts that have been proven by experimentation; that exist in the . nature of things and in the modern march of events Salem has a right to invite with perfect confidence a lar growth of the bulb business; to solicit large .capital invest ment here in that industry home money and money from .outsiders. i v ; : There is perhaps no other one indnstrv that offer atv-i. large returns per acre from a primary vcrop. Counting the manufacturing processes, up to the fine linens, like napkins and tible cloths and handkerchiefs and tanestrw. etj tw. hips our flax industry promises larger per acre totals of money ror community use. But not from the primary crop to ineiarmer. ; . v - The facts presented by Mr. Dibble would justify a nation wide and a world wide appeal to men of capital and industry to; come here and engage in the' growing and rmarketing of : With the confident hope of bringing an ever increasing volume of money from far places for the channels: of business June In Salem haa bMn tiauoua rose and strawberrv fea. tlvaL Canaerles are' ruaslag . aad aumsanas of iamfly laharers are at work In fields and facta. I rpnttia vp strawberrlea.' Ma nea aad. children ara aarmte goo moaeyta buy family suppUea and saving i IltUe for vaeatiaaa f the mountains and at thm and to buy school books' with when the fall term opens. Salem Will Lata limit,.. ...! iorwara in - industrial edtMe.iM The machine shops are to be en- t M m I wgea ior a motor car repair de partment and sixtv hnn r. k.1 started in under Chief Machinist Bergman, who is preparing an au to mechanics course of .study and i nej wui tearn tn na tnvt. Mtt vreciea cars will he dismaa- uea ana rebuilt and repaired. It is to Te Intensely nraetleai which they wiU learn to do ia good macmne snop style. - ' The Roekef ellera nn , s a a a a I franca to rtmir th mrt dows Of the Cathedral nf is mat not a broad stand for a I oroaa-minred type of American BaOtlStB tO talcai timnl M. 4 In a' Catholio; .. cathedral i The wuninui ireuuis ira icirninv the Rockefeller tna of ruw - V ar vaaaatvav-vtMi 1 aSM t?aa,l W V A A m - -- I uuiuica co nan ale Dig iThey .re now talking of a McNary-Haugen bill with the equalization pimdple;M be like the play of , . Hamlet without the door Dane. The McNary-Haugen idea re-i Toives around the eojialization principle. It would be nothing Jwt a gestera without it It would be like a criminal law with out a petusty;' It: would out-FlastXf 1 FaHstaf f as an enforc er of its Eiayjsions, West Salem that 1 boomlnr sioag toward a Bohemian art snh- urh has banned the bis ugly bill-j boards. Major Robertson declined ail offers of Foster 4 Klelser to decorate his beautiful suburb. President Kerr Is proud of the! transfers alio n ot O. A. C. and the OWCITS lay 62 edl BMtaday Sale at Furniture .for the Entire Horate ; i r ' ... -. . TOIS FURNITURE SALE HAS BEEN SUCH A SUCCEaSS THAT 1 HAVE DECIDED TO CONTINUE IT. MANY HAVE TAKEN Al - VANTAGE OF OUR DRASTIC REDUCTIONS AND HAVE ROT ir,HT- - FURNISHINGS FOR THEIR HOMES AT BIG SAVINGS. IN MANY IN-- races Are Reduced From 25 to 50 BELOW THE OCULAR PRICE. if?-?:-? ' This is Your Oppfnit jCome Early-Buy-Savie You are Welcome to Credit on AnvPimhaia. s7Ma a.TI" c . 1 Ji Up. EaaBaaaataaV1 ? :9 -if v N J. . .'IV - . ... - . m r;-'t. ,.$ ' - -.; .. - i -w ; . - , .-. r..- r .., s , . ... . . ; ; . USE-YOUR )1T LKEIl XnrnittutQ POWERS (knnpany . WE - CHARGE' NO INTEREST J( 'jj' . . ... - i-.f i v1 - """""""aaamaasaaaaaaajat,1,,aaa,jBa - . Tr. 'f. 1.:. . SHU.