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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1928)
..-I . THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY S, 1923 13 A4 1 f , Local News Briefs I , ii Jf(j4th Baby jTkmu George Wolfe, eight a ad, ose-foarth pouad boy, arrived ,tha Bungalow Maternity home yasierday to hla parents,. Mr. tfilln. Will Wolfe of Woodburn, a v constant reminder of the Fourth: ' He was the only Iade rad.9fiee day baby reported from thajoeal hospitals.-? i. Irw,JHeaeee FW Week .Marion county . had bat five cavy cf communicable ; diseases t'Yt be week ending June 30. ac cording to the report of the state C0&mnt of health. tjsfi, were tuberculosis and one eah.cf mumps, diphtheria and measles. Measles were the most p-avalcnt over the state for the period, with 3 S cases, and spox ranked next with 20. There was oite of septic sore throat, in Jackson county. IHotUfw Wanted at Starr Frnit Predicts Co. Thursday T . m. Church and Mill Sts. Phono 431 nc kleneir Charged . ! - William Backs. 4(0 North 24th Btreet, was arrested Wednesday by a4city traffic officer on a charge of, reckless driving. Arretted for Speeding E. C. Cecily 430 North Com- metcial streetpwas arrested Wed-' i uesday on a charge of speeding, A. and will appear In municipal; court today. Furniture Upholsterer And repairing. Close-Powers Furniture Co. Dranfeon Craft On Thursday. Miss Hodnett will teach Popplea add Gladioli all In structions tree. Atlas Book Store. From Mrs. C. 8. Vernon and S. W. Vernon of Eugene were included in the visitors registering yester day -at the Marion hotel. Old Time Dance Crystal Garden Every Wednesday and Saturday night. IX urn South Mis9 Mae Hole, who had been visiting friends and relatives in this city while enjoying her an- IE BLOCKS ROAD ACTO CRASH TAKES PLACE EARLY THIS MORXIXQ Traffic on the Pacific Highway . south, of Salem was held up for more, than an hour early this - tnornicg when a large tree fell across the highway at about mid "night and was" struckt by an auto mobile. Although no injuries were re ported aa a result of the Incident. the ro&d was effectively blocked and motorists headed both waysj returning from late holiday cele- bratiocs were forced either to wait or to find long detours. Tfce accident took place about eight miles south of the Salem V city limits. The name of the driver of the car which struck the tree could not be learned at aa early hour this morning. Fourteen Injured When S. P. Train Goes in Ditch SAN FRANCISCO, July 4. f AP) Two trainmen and 12 pas- evngers were Injured today when th Southern Pacific's Shore Line limited train ran Into an open de rail switch at Bay Shore station, derailing the engine and two cars. Bounding off the rails at high speed the engine tore up 300 feet of track, and then upset In a ditch. John Weir, engineer, and George Miller, fireman, were the most seriously Injured. Polish Flyers Purchase Boat For S.ea Landing PARIS. July 4. (AP) The Polish aviators. Captains Idzigow rstey and Kapula, today brought a- collapsible rubber boat for use In case the plane In which they will. attempt to fly-across the At lantic should be forced down. Weatber reports still were un favorable tonight aad it waa un likely that the start of the east to wet- attempt would, be matTe be fore Friday morning. King Gives Monopoly On Lapis Lazuli Trade EDAR. Germany, July 4. (AP) A first evidence of the much heralded trade developments with Afghanistan e pec ted to result fi-ai King Amanullah's recent ris ir.. av local firm announces that it haa been granted by the Afghan monarch the monopoly for Im porting Afghan lapis lazuli. It la claimed that nowhere in the world Is lapis lazuli found of auh good quality as In Afghani stan. Xdar la small town on the river Nahe, a tributary of the Rhine-, and haa a special industry connected with -.the setting and mounting of semi-precious stones. HcHsnders Get There v Traveling On Bicycle , &XTDEN. Holland. July 4 CF Bicycles are more frsqaent ta Holland than automobile la noal vacation from office dntles with one of the lumber companies of that section, haa retained to her home la Marsh field. Married In South Clarence Roshelm and . Mable M. Hale, both of Sllvertoa. were married -at Medford, Monday. Jaly z. according to a news Item la the Dally News. Get . A Vancouver marriage license has been leaned to George -. W. Lynn. 37. and Mra. Elizabeth Mc- Two oflDoagal. 2, both of Silrerton. A l-a Carte Service - In Dining Room Marlon Hotel. Corey Oa Business R. H. Corey, of the Coos bay district where he is manager of that division of the Oregon-Washington water service company, ar rived In Salem the first of the weak to attend to business mat ters for his company. Prom Mill City Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Turpla of Mill City were among the Fourth of July guests registered at the 'New Salem. Visits From Harrleburg ! Eleanor Catheart of Harrisburg was among the Fourth of July via- itors In this city. fOSOO New Modern Room English typ home at 84 S Hood street. $1000 down. $3000 to loan at " 4 per cent. Insurance. Mol vin Johnson, phone 137. Zeek Elected Counsellor Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Zeek of Baa don have been spending several days in Salem. Mr. Zeek was elected department counsellor of the Sons of Veterans at. the recent annual session of the O. A. R. and affiliated orders in Roseburg. California Visit Mr. and Mrs. J. B. T. Tuthill, formerly of Salem where Mr. Tut hill was manager of the gaa plant, are guests until Saturday morning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Park. They are on their way home to Saratoga, Cat., after a trip to Alaska. They are meet ing many old friends in Salem. the United States. There is a "rij- wiel, or bike, to every 2 and a half inhabitants. In a university town like Leyden., virtually every student, male or female, owns a wheel. The great popularity of the bi cycle la attributable to the fact that there are practically no hills In Holland. TJie uniformly level country offers every inducement to save ca'r fare by pedaling one's way. The importance of the bicycle is recognized by the authorities In that they provide separate "irj- wielpads" or bicycle roads run ning parallel to the automobile and horse-drawn vehicle roads. The pedestrian in Holland must take far greater care not to be run over by a bicycle than by an automobile, although the auto also is very popular. Name Plate On Pew Held To Be Right Of Renters PARIS, July 4. (AP) People who pay Iheir pew rent promptly may still have their names on lit tle brass plates to mark their seats. The council of state, the court of last resort in such matters has upheld the church and the pew renters against the city ordi nance of Rouffiac, issued by the mayor three eyars ago. It was the first time anyone had disputed the right of a church goer to get public credit for paying his pew rent. Therefore the case was taken to the courts and the recent decision now holds for all of France. People have long forgotten what started the trouble, but it was a brisk row while it lasted. Parish ioners who didn't pay pew-rent got Into a heated controversy with those who did over the reservation of the brass-plated pews for thoseil who paid for them. The mayor. hearing of the row, considered it a public matter, and ordered the priest to take off all the brass plates but the priest refused to comply. Truckload of Fireworks Explodes Hurting Score LAMAR. Mo., July 4. (AP).-! At least 25 persons were injured. 14 seriously tonight when a truck load of fireworks exploded prema turely In a crowd ot 5,000 people assembled In the public square. - In a stampede that followed the blast many persons were trampled. Several children were Injured. 1 The blast occurred when some one tossed a lighted firecracker under the truck just as the dis play was about to begin. Junior Lightweight Title Will be Decided Tonight .1. - -. . ' NEW YORK. July 4. (AP).--In a 15 round bout . postponed from today because of Promoter Humbert Fugaiy's objections te staging a show on a holiday. Tod Morgan of Seattle will defend his junior lightweight championship against Eddie "Cannonball" Mar tin of New York tomorrow at Eb beta field. . . - -J ' ,v, n A Ji;U SATS We have a 124 Ford Tudor 8dan well equipped; and has ma less than 7000 miles aad la Al condition Tor aS80.00. The H Tan ServUa BalM" JAZZ STEALS JOB OFGfPUGIf BUDAPEST. July 4 ( AP) Gypsy musicians in Hungary are faced with a serious crisis. Their grievance Is that the foreign In vader has taken the bread out of their mouths. The reality Is that the Jan craze has capturod the new generation of Hungarians. Interest in Gypsy music is waning, aad. apart from the villages., where it is still In vogue, there is little of it in the cities. Every, first class hotel and reatauraat in Hungary has its jazz band. "The saxaphone has displaced the violin, and thrown hundreds of members out of work," said Stephana Gaza, Gypsy primate of Hungary, who conducts concerts la the famous cafe "New York." "The government does not want to interfere In the conflict between centimes tal music and the discord ant cacophonous jazz. "It is a real pity that our un happy artists cannot find protec tion when their interests are threatened. There are in all 120 Gypsy bands in the capital, of which two-thirds are out of work. Gypsy musicians working in cafes and restaurants draw starvation wages. They depend chiefly on tips for their livelihood. Lurlcrous as it may appear, a Gypsy musi cian's salary is 32 a month." FRENCH llfATALS en RAISE III PAY PARIS. July 4 In order that the green-robed immortals of the French academy may live their mortal days "respectably" their pay has been raised from $60 a year to $200. Even after the government de elded to be more generous with the distinguished "Forty" French men they received tbe same oh" pay checks for awhile, until one day Prime Minister Polncare, who is a member of the academy, saw to it that the oversight of the state treasury was rectified. ? The allowances of the lmmort als were fixed by the revolution The convention of 1795 assigned them 1,500 francs a year "in or der to enable them to live respect ably." That wasn't much money even then, but what, with a uni form, sword, plumed hat and oth er requirements of the rank, it takes more than a year's salary, even with, the new raise, for a member to get ready to take his seat in the assembly of the Im mortals. Windstorm Sweeps East Nebraska to Kill Babe OMAHA. Nebr., July 4. (AP). . One child was killed and four persons were injured in a violent windstorm which swept eastern Nebraska early this morning causing thousands ot dollars of damage by wrecking houses and tearing down treesfand telephone poles. We board Dogs at our farm FLAKE'S PETLAND 9TS State aiMl Pacific Higiiway FLORAL DESIGNS CUT FLOWERS, PLANTS GOLD FISH, BIRDS 43. F. BKZTTBACFT Telepkoae 880 til State It. w ..... mil TOBIO M4ia hMM. W to. ExMBiaauaa tf. - Thompson -Olutsch Optical Co. I 110 K. Omb'I ex ELECTRIC MOTORS Re wooed and Repaired. New or Used Motors VD3BERT & TODD .Tillage Boctsical . f 1 South High ; TeL 1 wgw $495 FEAR OF PEDSfflT TORBALX. Turkey. July 4. The Intermittent earthquakes which have continued to terrify this region of Anatolia, devastated by th esevere Smyrna quake thla Lspriag. have brought forth curious superstitions held by the peasants. as soon aa ia wvu wtiu w tremble the neaaaats 11a down full. length wherever they are. In the'Fitxmaurico, Captain Hermans flelde. streets, the 'coffee-houses. Koehl and Baron von Haenefeld or their homes, not through f ear 1 flew across the Atlantic ocean, has or being knocked down by the! been stripped of all Its moveable quake, bat because-oT the super-! fixtures by persona in the vicinity stitlon that he who defies Allah where the plane landed, according by remaining upright when Hei to reports received here today, shakes the universe will have both The Bremen lies in a dllapl legs paralyzed for life. (dated condition midway between Thus recumbent the peasants Long Point and Biancsablon in solace themeelvea with another Labrador. it been unguarded. superstition: if the earth beneath a person rocks him from side to side instead of tossing him up and means that u is not his but his) neighbor's earthquake Robinson Voices Plea For Religious Liberty LITTLE ROCK. Ark.. July 4 (AP) Senator Joseph T. Robin son sounded a plea for religious tolerance at an Independence Day celebration here today In his first formal address since ha was nom inated for vice president oa the democratic ticket. The celebration was a state wide event under the auspices of the Little Rock and North Little Rock posts of the American Le gion given In honor of Arkansas' first nominee on a national poli tical ticket. "The Jige of bigotry has passed." he declared. "The battalions that advance uader the black banner ot Intolerance- can never undermine or destroy the fortress of liberty. "No man should be preferred or discriminated against In public au thority because of his affiliation with a particular church." Elaborate Ceremonies To Dedicate Library LOUVAIN, Belgium, July 4 (AP) With elaborate ceremonial the restored library of Louvain university was dedicated today with many mutual expressions of Belgain-raerlcan friendship am; regard. There was no regretable Inci dent arising from the recent dis pute over the banned Latin in scription, but the dedication cere monies were held without the presence of the architect. Whitney Warren, who bad gone to Italy ap parently to avoid what might have been an embarrassing situation. Publishes Novel Written When 11 -Year Old Girl LONDON. July 4. (AP). An 11-year-old school girl's 300.000 word novel, recently discovered among rubbish in a drawer where it was laid away 20 years ago and forgotten, has made Its first ap pearance on London book stalls. The novel la entitled "Paz. the For Aotomobilelnsuraiice palGHT fV KLIABLK EASOX ABLE Bee 8TANDLKY FOLEY Bash Bank Bldg. Tel. 84 T PILESCURED Wttkeet eyerstlsa r less t DK. MARSHALL Ste Orgm Bits. JLaDD & BUGHI, Banlicri Established 1868 GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. LONG AND SHORT DISTANCE HAULING PUBLIC AND PRIVATE STORAGE FIREPROOF BUILDING FEED and SEED . ' - Free Delirery to any part of the city Quotations on Application 1 " - -r .,a . - ... ; . v . ... Farmers ; Warehouse PAUL TRAGLIO, Prop. Day Telephone 28- Night Telephone 1267-W Adventurous HorseV and Its au thor Is Miss Muriel Hedder. daughter ot Colonel Wi M. Hod der. The story Is aot merely the tale of a horse, as the title indi cates, bat deals with the behavior of adalta. as seen through the ayaa of a child. . . Transatlantic Airplanes . - : . 1 Stripped of Souvenirs ST. JOHNS. N. F.. t Jaly 4 (AP) The Junkers monoplane Bremea in which Captala Jamas . shotgun Charge Enters Head of Seattle Woman SEATTLE. July 4. (AP) When a firecracker jarred a shot gun left standing against the side of aa automobile this afternoon. the gun toppled to the i ground and sent Its charge through the head of a young moth er who was holding her baby in her arms. The victim was Mrs.' Vilma CappleUo. 22. of Seattle. Her friends lifted her dead body to find her It months old baby unhurt. Philadelphia Speed King Wins 100 Mile Auto Race AMATOL. N. J., July 4. AP) F red Wlnnai. Philadelphia speed king, today won the-100 mile antomobile race, the mala event of the Atlantic City speed way's Fourth of July program. His time was 50 minutea. 38 2-5 seconds, a trifle more thaa 100 miles an hour. OBITUARY Nash Anna Nash, late of 892 N. Win ter street, died at the home of her sister, 2590 Fairground Road, July 8. She is survived by three brothers, M. A. and F. T. Nash of Salem and J. K. Nash of Ronan, Montana, and by two sisters, Marie A. Smith and Evelyn Nash of this city. The remains are In care of the Salem mortuary. Rec itation of the rosary Thursday evening. July 5, at 7 o'clock at 2590 Fairground Road. An nouncement of funeral will ap pear at a later date. MT. CREST ABBEY MAUSOLEUM VAULT ENTOMBMENT LLOYD T. RJGDOX. Ungr. TERWILLIGERS rerfect Funeral Service For Leas Licensed Lady Mortician 770 Cnemeketa 8 tree Telephone 794 Clough-Huston Company; FUNERAL DIRECTORS Lady Assistant Formerly Webb's Funeral Parlors PHONE 120 and Remember the Larmer Transfer and Storage Has mov ing: vans and good supply of blankets and pads for furni ture handlers. Have just completed our new three story concrete? warehouse and are now well prepared to handle best of furniture and pianos. Fuel Oil In Bulk - Any quantity delivered in your Tank See Us Before You Order ' When ready call 930 and let us serve you Fear thousands year ago there lived a qneen who alone held the secret of silk. She didn't want anyone else to have the rich and lus troos fabrlo which clans; to the body like a filament of flame. It was far too good tor any, save her. Bat her husband wanted the lorely cloth to decorate hla throne. She told htm the secret the first but not the last man to discover bow utterly and deeply women lore the feel ing: of luxury, which only silk can give. . Thia original queen was Si-Una" Chi, favored SPECIAL PURCHASE OF. THE NEWEST, SILKS OFFERED AT BIG SAVINGS Special Assortment SILKS One group ot silks that hare been great ly reduced. In thla lot you'll find Crepe do China, Georgette, plain colored can ton, silk net tubing, chameuee. Spe cially priced $1.00 Yard Crepe de Chine AU the latest shades la good heavy quality, 40 inches wide. This la aa extra good value. $1.49 YARD . CASH or CREDIT , Buy for cash or one our 80-day account service, o r if yon deeire you may buy oa our ten paymen plan ml the same low price. This Is Just another Kafoury service. ' , Charge Purchases Payable August 1st ;'V a: 466 STATE STREET SALEM & Storage SALEM, OREGON AVINGSPORYOU iALEPCRUS QUEEN OF FABRICS and the Fabric of Queens wife of Huanjc Figured GEORGETTE The : eeaeoo'a newest patterns will be found hern in thia figured georgette, 40 iachea wide. Extra Special $1.59 YARD PORTLAND - tl. emperor of China In Its historic days, 2640 years before the birth or Christ. . " All through the ages, silk has kept its regal plendor. At first It waa only used for rich altar cloths In the great cathedrals, them for kings, queen and finally it waa need by the higher nobility. Today Silk Richer, more lustrous and far more beautiful thaa ever before, retains Its proud title even through the agea. It la still the queen of fabrics and the fabric of queens. Figured SILKS The latest of patterns including all col ors and sines of dots In flat crepes aad . crepe do cblnea. 40 lachee wide. A super value at . $1.59 Chiffon Taffeta Thla is a real bargain. Chiffon Taffeta in all f tbo aeweat of pastel shades. $1.49 YARD PHONE 877. - SPRINGFIEJJJ 1