Th TTtv OsEQON STATES1CAK. Salem. Oregon, Sunday Morning, September 18, 1928 II GABRIELS DEAL 1H BMilG SUPPLIES 4 The Gabriel Power and Sapplr company is one of the leading con cerns in wood working supplies n Salem. This concern keep. everything that goes Into a build ln eyery slnrle thiar. from lumber to nails and paints. The Pittsburg paints are the specially line; made by one of the oldest ana best paint maanfactumig or Ran nations in this country, , , E. B. and C. C. Gabriel" are the men who own and manage and kPthe busineas going and grow ing. They bought the ptoaeer pow der buslnese of Watt Shlpp in Salem six years ago. They repre sent the Dupont and Giant powder People in Marion, Polk. Linn. Bea- yva, uocoin ana miuiooK coun ties, and bin 15 diffrnl at nr. age pi sees ror explosives and sup plies in that line in these six coun tries. Three years ago. the Gabriels erected at their present location. CIO North Capitol street, build ings for a general retail lumber building supply business, where they hare ample room and every facility for carrying on this part of their operations, and they bare not had a dull day since. Their business has grown, all the time, and they have become inportiant factors in the permanent forward morement in Salem. Just a Breath of English Countrycldo THE NOTTINGHAM DESIGN B1 SAIMMH MOT SATURDAY Salem grange number 17 met Saturday at the Chamber of Com merce in regular session. Two new members were voted Into this or ganisation. Miss Elisabeth Vaugh an and Norman Fletcher. They will be initiated at the next meet ing. Cooperation was the topic of wiiscusslon. This was spoken of by 'Dr. Slaughter, A. E" Zimmerman. k&and Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Taylor, la appreciation of the work that Mrs. J. J. McDonald and Mrs. A. E. Zimmerman did while serv ing on the home economics com. mittee, Mrs. R. T. Smith present ed them with flowers from the Van Trump gardens. VfaUtors at the meeting were Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Nittle and Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Townsend from Stayton and Dr. Carouthers from Turner. The next meeting of Salem grange number 17 will oe October 20 at which time a discussion of the initiative measures will take place. Pomona grange will meet at North Uowell on October 17. PECEDEDLY English in it atmosphere, an effect which is being experimented with considerably of late by the design ers of small homes, this little bungalow seldom fails to find approval with the small family. It has a compactness which makes -fo the saving of steps and the insurance of conven ience, considerations which every woman will value. No room is wasted. In this instance, further to carry out the English touch, a rough common brick is used, such as was for centuries the favorite material in the con struction of those delightful little cottages which dot the British countryside. In many instances in the old days the roofs there were thatched with straw. Here the material is a flat burned clay tile, decidedly the opposite from the view point of fire safety. The interior arrangement is strictly in accord with American ideas. Liv ing and dining rooms are connected with an virtually one and the batteries of windowt in each assure maximum cheerfulness under all conditions of weather. In the living room is a wide open grate, set deeply into the chimney and assuring good draft through the ex treme height of the latter. This will be a valuable asset in the cool evenings of spring and early autumn. Two sleeping rooms, with a small but ample bath between, and an inclosed sleeping porch in the rear, provide ample ac commodations for the small family for which this cozy lit tle home is designed. The bed rooms are reached through a little hall off the living room, the sleeping porch being con nected with both the rear hall and the bedroom in the rear. All are of good size. The kitchen is large, well appointed, with dining alcove, rear entrance, recessed ice box, convenient basement stair and all of the usual equipment placed to excep tional advantage. It is a home where a mini- T ' ' i 1 1 1 J VimqtM St till If M -USi t,M I ' It STATE INSTITUTIONS LEND- V BEAUTY TOt CAPITAL CITY Visitors to Salem 'Always Outspoken in Their Ad miration of Flowers, Lawns and Land scaping Artistry Found Here The group of buildings at the state deaf school are also much admired.: The buildings face the Oregon Electric line and part of the highway. In front of the several buildings the entire length of the group is a green lawn which has been of much pleasure to the many children of this school. This is partly landscaped with shrubs and trees, too.' The mkny white buildings at the cottage farm southeast of Salem- a few miles on the Turner road make a- sightly place, with the feseaa and tree trunks all white. The jrtate tuberculosis hospital a short .way beyond the. cottage farm is attractively built on a hill side and the low, long buildings look almost a part of the hills themselves. Many trees and flow ers make this group of buildings attractive. Girls' Training School The stata training school for girls Is a well kept and attractive place and although the new build Labish School For Japanese Closes Monday ITAZEL GREEN. Sept. 15. I (Special) The school for Japan ese children in the Labish vicinity will close next Monday. All inter ested friends have been invited to attend the prqgram Sunday after noon beginning at 1:30 o'clock. The program will be given In the .Japanese language. The school was opened June 16 with 19 pupils attending. Two weeks vacation was held early in August. Miss Terue Otsuki, who was assistant teacher last year, has been in charge. Miss Otsuki and her parents made an automo bile loop trip through the north west during the vacation period, visiting Mount Rainier, Glacier National park and Yellowstone National Park, returning over the Columbia River highway. Miss Otsuki Ira junior at Willamette university. Vfoinen Planning To Reduce Debt Upon Clubhouse STAYTON. Ore.. Sept. 15. (Special.) Hoping to reduce the debt on the new club house the Women's Community club is plan ning a paper drive. The members urge everyone to begin now to gather up old papers and magaslnes and they will call for them the first of the month. In anlla nf lha far-t that a pneui deal of time and hard work was and Women's club, a very small amount of money was realized. So the past month the women have been serving luncheons at the various auction sales about the country, and so far have been well repaid for their efforts. They wU put on the lunch at the W. C. James?- Albert Savage and W. P. Brantley sales in the next few weeks. open door so wide that it makes the rooms mum depreciation will be registered. The Commoa Brick Manufacturers Association. Cleveland. Ohio, eaa fnrnUh complate drawing! for this eaaic. I tana n brick eoaatrnetfea aeat apon rcqucat. Guiding Your Child By Mrs. Agnes Lyne OFF TO SCHOOL When the child walks into school for the first time he walks into his first impersonal life situation. It is extremely Important that he should like school, that he should make friends there, that he should achieve a creditable record. The way he acts in school is a pretty good Indication of the way he will act all his life. Here for the first time he must stand on his own feet, getting recognition only for what he does, being liked only when he is lik able. Here there is no mother to ter, act as a buffer between him and the unbiased Judgment of the world. It is a great step. The child who responds well to the varied demands of school life speaks volumes in favor of his. home training. Yet many a child who has back of him a wise moth er is so temperamentally con structed that unless the situation is shrewdly handled he is sure to find the first weeks of schocf something of an ordeal. For most children the first day of school is a great event prepared for by new clothes suitable to the dignity of dally public appearance by conversation over the dinner table, by the importance attached to tbe proceeding by older broth ers and sisters or by the children next door. The little one should be started out equipped not only with his new outfit and his family's good wishes, but with the proper frame of mind. First and -last his thoughts and feelings should be facussed on all the new and inter esting things there will be for him to do. He should think of school as a place where he will hear stories and learn to read them, where he will play games with other children, where he will find more things to work and play with than he knew existed. Too often the child, from par ents and playmates, gets the im pression that school is a kind of battlefield of competition' for 1 i grades and honors. The usual school tends naturally to empha size these things. Parents at least should start the child with his interest where it belongs in doing, in making and in learning. And now rumor has it that Henry Ford may buy 40 acres at Linnton. And. so more rumor says, he will build a plant there that will employ 1200 men. Per haps this rumor has something to do with the late revised talk of the opening of the iron deposits . Scannoose. Seannoose Reels. Being an international pastime. it'a funny there la no event in the Olrmnica for clarinc at the um pire. Detroit News. Hawkins & . Roberts, Inc. Residence Loans, Straight o Monthly Payments 205 Oregon Bldg. By RUTH FISHER NOLAN ENHANCING the beaaty of Salem and vicinity are the numerous atata institutions with their well constructed buildings and beau tifully landscaped gardens and grounds. There are few states where so many of tbe state institutions are located in or near the same city that la the state capitol. Ja most states the institutions are at va rious towns f the states most adapted to the particular needs of the laatttationa themselves. j la Oregon, however, institutions in the earlier dara of the state wers bunt n&re and although at times there has been talk of mov ing different state institutions to other Oregon citlbs they have re mained in Salem. In more recent years new structures to house other state Institutions hsve been built. All those fines buildlncs and their spadous grounds have added SMtch beaaty to Salens. The gronnds surrounding all of the atata buildings here are always wsU kept and are always colorful plaeea. . - i Stato Hospital Famouts Tha atata hospital xrotfnds and the many buildings at that instU tution are always the object of ad. miration by many people who go there to enjoy the beauty of the grounds. These grounds are, for the year round, tilled with bloom, ing flowers for which there is a background of many kinds of shrubs and trees. The hydran gia hedge following two of the main drives Is a mass of pastel tints in the summer and occasions praise from all who visit there. . The supreme court building, oc cupying a half block Just east of the state capitol, is a structure to bring praise from all who sea it. The full half block of soft green lawn to the north of the state su preme court building has for a number of years made an ideal setting of the annual Willamette university May festival. Capitol Is Beauatilul The state capitol itself Is a beautiful building and thousands of tourists and visitors admire it each year. The grounds around it are a pride to Salem. Thev are always well kept and contain many unusual and rare trees and plants as well as it least one each of the native trees and shrubs. The Circuit Rider, an addition in the last few years, is a beautiful me morial given to the state by R. A. Booth in memory of his father, one of the circuit riders of the early Oregon days. The new buildings at the state blind school are perhaps next in attractiveness of the state build ings la Salem. The buildings them selves the new ones are of red brick, with white trimminzr. This school is set amonc a e-rove nf trees on South Church street and! occupies over a block. It too, has a spacious and well kept lawn. There is not such an abundance of flowers in, these grounds but it is a most restful and beautiful place. lags for th atata training: school for boys are near Woodburn the old bandings which are still in use are well placed sseosg attractive trees and have wen kept gardens. The feeble minded school has a pleasant grouping of its buildings and here too the gardens and lawns are of much beauty. The state penitentiary grounds at the east end of Stats street are very attractive and the flowers and shrubs landscaped along the Mill creek are most attractive. Brothers to Run Waffle Bungalow The 'Waffle Bungalow, at IS North high street, will he opened for business Monday, it was an nounced Saturday by the proprie tors. Jack and Verne Wlkoff, brothers who recently returned to Salem, their home town, after three and one-half years in the "- spent principally in the Orient. CASH BUYERS Peppermint Oil and Cascara Bark w. J. LAKE A CO.. Board of Trade Bldg., Portland Oregon Our Salem R representative of H. STEINBOCK Capitol Bargain House 145 Center St. Phone 308 DQLL HOUSES " For THE KIDDIES Given with every Six National Mazda Lamps Fleener Electric an rvHiH phmm qsa ii "Electrical Contractors Mutual Savings and Loan Association A Salem Institution Organised in 1910 Place your savings with us Let us finance your home'on weekly or monthly payments 142 South Liberty Street TV !S)H(5)I?- H5uoG,OQ(5(floIImi It is the "range of color tones, unap proached in any other material, which makes for such wonderful mass effects in the brick home, winning for it of late such tremendous popularity in the field of residence construction. You pay for a brick home Why not own one? PHONE 1812 SALEM, ORE. Frank H. Struble Architect 512 Bank of Commerce Bldg. 'Yours for better buildings in the Salem district' Perfect! Nothing short of perfect work, perfect service and perfect cleanKness will satisfy us. We are the most particular people in the world that's why we hare never found anyone so particular that ws couldn't satisfy them perfectlyl Japanese Hand Laundry and " Cleaner 455 Ferry Street Telephone 752 "There's a pot of gold at the end of your rainbow of home building if you select your lumber with care." -says Practy CaL LUMBER and All Building Materials Gabriel Powder&Supply Co. Office, Yard and Warehouse 010 North Capitol Telephone 2248 t Even Better than You Expected.... THE NE W 1929 J A A. , Hi A USE DDE USES (sin We said the new Kolster Radio Models were worth waiting for. Now we are ready to prove it. We advised our customers to wait for these new receivers. Today they are thanking us. Never in all our radio experience have been seen and heard such a combination of perform ance, appearance, and craftsmanship. Comparison with others sets only confirms our belief that the 1929 Kolster Radio is the supreme value of the Season. 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Properly designed Audio system with newly designed mag netic and dynamic speakers produce a fidelity of reproduc tion that is absolutely lifelike. Wide Price Range - Six and seven-tube models with magnetic and dynamic speakers ranging in price from $89.50 table models to de luxe console with Dynamic Speaker selling for $375. New. Kolster Speakers from $35.00. Yon will want to own a new KOLSTER ifflfffmfl Y f f t t T V f " .Jar..i .a stf -x-.v . a, I iii v" ii if i gwiir ii ri ,, m , i i nri im r - J. i n rriTiM flriirriafTTiTi "i - m mirman i iMHiT i I i i im 1 r 337 COURT ST. : 1 V o t i-