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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1928)
A,,c oxATESMAN. salens, orecon, Sunday Morning, November S5, 198 I !r. w f 4 i - ' rUIIUI'MI I" n lin UVested Choir n n 1 : iinnnm nrnuinrn tk J lfau--ii-o fall V 1 1 111 I I I III HhKIIII - m mt.mmmmm& umuil uLllf lULu Salem District Divided Into - Five Groups for Thanks giving Worship Union Thanksgiving services will be held Thursday morning, with the city divided into five groups for the convenience of townspeople who desire to attend 'the observance, announces W. N. -' Coffee, secretary of the Salem . Ministerial association. All services will begin at 10 o' clock. Special offering will be tak- m for local charities, fepecial mus all the ic is being planned at churches. Following is the division, the church designated for the service and the minister assigned: South side group will meet at the South , Salem Friends' church, with the'Rev. Harry E. Gardner of the Jason Lee Memorial chuich delivering the message. Down town group will gather at tlia falvarv Rantisl rlinrrh in the a. w . .r - " - old Grand Opera house, where the. ti r .1 Hnw or tne Kirai I ' . w. - - - -Christian church will preach the lermoo. -The residents of the west side rtll meet at the Ford Memorial 'community church. The Rev. A. P. ! Lay ton of the First Evangelical church will occupy the pulpit. The Jason Lee church has been designated as the meeting place for the north Bide, with the Rev. W. Earl Cochran of the Calvary Baptist church to preach. Vrbe Rev. P. W. Eriksen of-the '. American Lutheran church will 'address the east side group at the j Knight Memorial church. a few nf the local churches will hold cervices Thajrksgiving morn ing, although generally the hour :does not conflict with the union service. PbWIet ew ext month The vested choir of the Knight Memorial Congregational church will present a concert of Thanks giving music tonizht at the church at 7:30 o'clock. The con cert will include the following anthems and special numbers: Chorus "Holy Holy", (Hey ser). Male quartet "Father, We Thank Thee." Chorus "Oh, Give Thanks," (Vail). Ladies' chortrs "Dear Land of Freedom," (Donizetti). Solo "Give Thanks and Sins." (Harris). Leonard Chadwick. Chorus "Praise Ye the Lord." (Zeisberg). Male quartet "T r0r T.ttfi Cottage." (O'Hara). Chorus "The Everlasting Hills." (Wilson). The organ numbers to be played bv Donald J. Allison will include "Evening Prayer". hv Beinecke "Large. From the New World Symphony." . Dvorak, (requested) and "March Pontifical?." Leni-mens. St. Paul's Plans Dinner For Men Tba narriac af B rrtl Hamilton, af Jacksonville, and Larry Browning, a nreestfnl young bnaine nil front Claralaad, wn on of nnuiual aimplieity and beauty: but rml factora, af dcap aignifieaaca to her nappiaasa, caused a jMiiineai in Byrd'g mind, avaa during :ha rarrmoav and within tba next few days (raw into a definite anxiety. Larry n at. undoubted magnetism and charm that women couldn't resist, which al ready bad brought him a dubious suc cess in business. Am had become the renter of a young crowd whoso only is crests in Ilia were jaxi, speed and money. Larry s friends became n permanent -ntertaintaent committee constantly banning dinners and prrties. The roup consisted of Tiny and Fred Ober- aa ka hai? whaAm a fnrtuaa in rttkr Janbtful anternrises: Jack Duncan, who was unserapuloas in business: his wife. uargy, who ass broken under tne car if their threa little children and the xorry orer her indifferent husband; ','het Keersoa and India Campbell, tnown as the "Wildcat" and a former weetbeart of Larry's. Byrd was distressed orer Larry's ex avagaara. - bis inability to fire her a aonthly allowance when he was paying Later -in' the night, Byrd heard Larry .y and India in the kitchen mixing cock .ails - and arraag.ng to go to a dance. The next day Byrd realized that Larry uaa -aiscoverea mat sse nao crimpea Byrd shook herself Impatiently out of this meditative state. She had been brooding altogether too much lately. She'd hustle around and go to the bank to get the money for the fender that Chet had promised her. But before Byrd ever put her little nose out of the apartment door, she paid tribute to her mother's training by observing an abbreviated program of her housekeeping rites. She opened windows wide all over the apartment, and pinned back the draperies. She threw the handmade quilts back over the foot of the beds. She washed up theb reakfast dishes, stopping religiously to remove the stains from kitchen knives, and to scour the sink. She brushed the apartment and dusted It. In the bathroom, she shook her head chidinglv at a hannv.s-n. - w . tucay iarry. and picked ud a oappeaed the preceding day. and she'Dalr r Pajamas that Still lay in li.iii dreaded the scene that would inev-j collapsed circles. Showing Just ;1u hi v frktlrkw Ml iff l jirrv tiari initiate! ! v i i . . ... itably follow, aim-e Lnrry had instated m u strict tconotny program. The next day Bvrd borrowed fifty Jollars from diet, explaining that she where his two, fine, straight legs had walked out of them. She huntr ud bath tnwtla The male members and friends of the St. Paul's church will meet the rector, wardens and vestrv- men at a dinner to be held Tues day night at 6:30 o'clock at the parish house. The event has hen arranged that the men of the church may become better ac quainted and will be devoted sole ly to 9 social time. The commit tee of the vestrv in charge in cludes H. D. Chambers. George Arbuckle and T. F. Huston. - - - f is ....... - " tmiig uu Udl Z.",i Z-JZ, .7.- "I ' "L '"istrewn around the tile floor, nut uer father had sent her the content i away his shaving things, and nf a-small mvrng-n aceount. finally she got down on her knees At a baseball rstne. C'het's interet in,nnj i.v , . BrrC awakened a touch of jealousy in ""a' . ,l" powaer. re- Ijrry, and when Larry refused an inri tat ion for Maturday nirht. Byrd was convinced again of Larry's love, rioting her mind stubbonly to the .events of the night before. (.NOW UO OX WITH THE 8TOKY; e e B PICTl'KK AT CHURCH A special Sunday nighil feervfee at the First Coneregational church. Center and Liberty streets, will include t.ie first half of the moving picture-. "The Coun try Doctor." The theme of the sermon will be "Help Somebody." the motto of Phillips Brooks. This picture is a drama with a heart throb that will reach everyone. Children must be accompanied by their parents. The Rev. Francis Ahnlund of Seattle, superintendent of the i Swedish district of the Pupet ; SOnnd conference will be in Pa lem Tuesday, December 4, to conduct the first quarterly con ference of the Mill street Metho dist church, reports the local pas tor, Patrick Dahlin. Mr. Ahnlund was present at the fall conference of the Meth odist church when the Pacific Mission conference was dissolved, putting the California churches in the Southern California confer ence and those in Oregon and Washington in the Puget Sound conference. He will give a re port on the conference adoptions and will outline the future planti of the churches of the Swedish conference. The Swedish churches are rapidly moving toward en trance to the English speakir conference. The Mill street Methodist church, though still a member of the Swedish district, made the change from the Swedish to the English language some two years ajd is a strictly English speaking , church. SKRVICKfi ANXOrXCKD Week-day services will be held at the Emmanuel Full Gospel mis sion Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday nights at 7:45 o'clock. Ralph D. Bullock is the pastor. TO JHKKT THURSDAY Mid-week prayer service at the Chemeketa street Evangelical church will be held Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock. G. E. Ers kine is the pastor. CHAPTER XIX TRD sighed, and Bhook her golden, bird-like head as if it couldn't cope with the most exasperating problems of the universe, nor ever find an answer to that most perplexing enigma, how to manage a hus band. "No woman can ever make a -invi stif.eic zotheloccccccift-s man see the error's! of hrs'i-bjiyr constantly pointing them ; Out! p him. She just better wait for a ton of bricks to fall on his head and knock him unconscious," she said, half aloud; but she wagered in the same breath that Larry would escape the avalanche be fore it came. If only she could train herself to have a separate existence out side of Larry, just as he had out side of her, instead of always be ing so hopelessly conscious of her love for him. She wondered if that ace-old prilosophical truth would ever change: "Man's love is of man's life a thing apart. 'Tls woman's whole esistence." Then she had agreed to stand by Larry "for better, for worse." Even If "for worse" was far more terrifying than her brave. little mind could ever have anti cipated. moved those tell-tale rines that encircled the tub each day after Larry's bath. Never having . known Larry's mother, who had died many years ago. she wondered 1 list hnw miifri mothers were to blame for these! aericencies in their sons. But here ahe was, like every body else picking up and carry ing for him. Everybody but India. Tnrlia was possessed of that fatal magic wnicn prevailed upon all men so that they fetched and carried for ner. a The Euclid branch of. the First National bank was trttfyj five minute walk from the apartment. Byrd found Chet In a small pri vate office in the new building. His name was printed on the ground-glass door. Beautiful, feathery Circassian walnut panelled the walla tn cPiling. A polished table and files and hiehbacked chai an air of importance to the room. Ana these surroundings seemed actually to add inches to Phpfs Jstature. It dawned on Byrd that Chet measured up to the room, and she seemed to see In his firm, slender body, the hazy outlines of the lu ture president of the First National. Byrd stopped abruptly on the threshold. Fbe showed that she vas impressed. And Chefs eyes, franklv wor ried and difttraiifrht cmttrht Byrd's, seeming to say that he ap-jhad taste and style in dress. She precited her keen perceptions, her quiet and accurate decisions, her clear and undeviatlng vision which were struggling to bravely not to be swept into the whirl pools that were eddying around her. "Hello, Earlybird," he said. his lips turned up into a convention al smile, attempting to conceal the worry which lay in his eyes. For Chet had reasons to be concerned. He had Just had two visitors in succession. And they had set him thinking. India had pat in an appearance just after he, himself, had ar rived. In spite of himself, Chet had felt, momentarily, that old. quick ened puise, as ner small, languor ous body swayed into the room. Her almond-shaped eyes were accentuated wlthh eavy markings of eyebrow pencil, with lids and lashes heavily- shaded. , They looked like black diamonds "glit tering in a hard, scintillating way. ; India always reminded Chet of those Cleopatra-like figures that were silhouetted on the tomb nf Egyption kings, swaying, tigerish. languia ngures, under whose tor por there was k volna boiling and seething and foaming of unrestrained passions. Hello, darling." said India in her intimate way, her languid voice almost brushinsr the like an indiscreet caress. As her eyes turned un to his Chet felt that th ev had an un canny Egyption slant. A feline slant. A soft, purring, languor ous cat ready to pounce upon her Prey. "Gosh! This Is some office. Everything smeared with dignity! Ana respectability! It scares me!" She kept rolling her spark ling eyes around the room and back again, seductively, to Chet. All you need is a dais, a throne done in royal purple, and a line of suppliants begging for gold from the royal exchequer." Under India's ba nterino thpra was a thin edge of scorn. India never resneeted anv nna or any thing long. I ve got a lot of work tn dn this morninr" said rht ii tated. "Anything I can do for you?" "Not in that tone, old dear." said India, in her throatiest tones. "Not unless you say you'd love to do me a favor and would consider It a rare privilege." She laughed her low, seductive laugh. Chet looked at her coollv. And analyzing it. he discovered he wasn't moved by it. If he were a piano-tuner, he might be interested to know hnw she muted the high strings in the larynx, for he knew she could dp liberately vibrate those chords to me mooa of her victim. The white bandage on her arm was noticeable under the black georgette There was no doubt that India HOMECOMING EVEN AT KEIZER TODAY .IfCEIZER, Ore., Nov. 24. (Spe cial ): The Keizer church and Bund ay school will hold the an rfljal Homecoming program at the Keizer school today, begin ning at 10 o'clock. There will be a basket dinner at noon and an. afternoon session, but no eve- ', nlng services. ; ' The complete program follows: . Morning: Sunday school, 10 o'clock. Preaching, 11 o'clock, : Trof. W. H. Hertzog of Willam , ette. j Basket dinner. 12 o'clock. V'Arternoon: quartette Ernest. ; Glen. Wlllard and Ollbert Sav- ge: reading, Lorraine Becroft- n's chorus; instrumental duet' Carroll p00le and Willard Sav Mfr solo. John Gardner; piano pU Ruth Melson and LaVaun Gardner; reading. Robert Be- ill. numbers; reading, ilr A' E- Cummlngs: solo. Dav id? Sancy. Thy afternoon ad rn will be given by the Rev. D fl. : Cole. I f Joint Revival f t Campaign Plan IP -X001l SKDAJfc t. ft tWO week' eries evanee Vrtlo -eilcee will .be held by the v-..uan ana Missionary alliance nd the Church of the Nazarene at the; alliance tabernacle t 655 Fer ry street, beginning today, the Rev. J. o. Minton of the alliance announced. The Rev. L. D. Smith Js pastor of the church of the Nazarene .and with Mr. Minton Will conduct the campaign here. A feature of the joint series will be a children's night. Satur day, December 8. when a specral message appropriate to the occa sion will be given and a children's chorus wil sing. ST "' SPONSOR BAZAAR Pfhe Ladies' Aid of the First Baptist church. North Cottage and D streets. Fnonaored a bazaar t'the church Friday night, with apj interesting program preceding t sale of needlework. Pro ceec were annlied fn the f!ht m ine new church and missions. Ar1 i I I ii coups ob I ' OLDFUCE KWC; I I - . 745 595 N TOU 1 I i-Door Gedan - - $g 9 OAVE I coupe- - - ' , 45 a595- 1 .flan) Phaetca ' . 95 '645 aOT Cabriolet ty COOT I . '!mt to JPIAV SPirnaT. KcnvirKs i Thattltseiying services will be Iwld Thursday morn inn at -30:30 o'clock., at the St. Paul's E-piseo-church, of which the Her. H. rancan Chambers . is rector. , Spe eiaf music .by' the rested 'choir Dy far the most sensational Croup of motor car barsains ever offered in tnis city, our stock of brand new, current model Pontlac Sizes, with prices reduced $150, is coins at record-breaking speed. All include such Important advantages as beautiful, lux urious Fisher bodies the cross-flow radiator the exous G-M-R cylinder head and -scores of additional ad ancements which have never been offered before at such low prices. f Small down payment easy monthly terms-your old car taken in trade! Come In and choose yours while they last. Corner Hi ah & Trade Associate Dealers : Benton Motor Conioan v. Inc l.ar Cortinanv. Silvprlnn. flrprnn H 1 Shrra 6m rtoiir, r- t r r r i Ij V . Bilyeu, anon. C Oregon; always did the bizarre, the quix otic tning. Aa now, when the streets were full of pastel-shaded summer frocks, India made a stunning and startling figure in black with a grey fox scarf and close black hat of straw, and in mid-winter, when the eye tired of the proces sion of fur coats and fur-trimmed salts, India caused a flurry in the down town stores by appearing I ai in wnite. "Yon'd like to borow a little J vj iue aocior 0111. said Chet, start nr frownnlnrlv ' " ner arm. "Bravo, little Anna Eva Fav." India jeered, "but von nurelv don't blame me for being in an accident?" - India had borrowed money from men for years anyone from whom she- could wheedle a loan. - The clerks in the men's wear at the department store where she worked had been her first victims, and each guiltily con cealed the facts from otherjs.".Cbet had long ago forgotten how ranch money he had given her from time to time, for India ha couraged him to forsret Thorp was no doubt that she did! "If I don't eet it. noma nut else will!" she used to air tn hi to let him know she denlnrod hi generosity as much as nnv nno And it was true. For in thnJ dys Chet used money as a. com modity to' get what he desired for himself and his friends. Mon ey was meant to have a good time with. "l ean lend yon fiftv dollars, but I'd like a note . . . and it's the last time. . rm nrnnr little every month. , ." said Chet. moiling into her eyes without flinching. "No, thanks, old MMa " coi India, with a snort under' her light tone. "I don't thtnt t your money after all." Inwardly, India shook herself impatiently. Chet had discovered that she was furious with him. She loved to make others angry, but it was ""r ui II? r Tenets IICTr tn I ijry nerseir. And here her ris ing temper was Jjlazing in her eyes. "Got a cigarette?" she aslrH in a steadier innp India stood VfTV rlnco c r t tint the nenetratinir frurrr 44 - o 111 Marriage d'Amour" filled h nostrils. But Chet's hands were steady' and his eyes calculating, as he lighted her cigarette. "Since you're dying to know all about the accident we had I'll tell you." she said, with a smile hovering over her lips, hut her eyes seemed still to smolder like covered embers, veiled in an Or iental mystery. "I was driving out with Larry the other night, at his express in vitation." India flickered her wildcat eyes at him. "Larry calls me up altogether too often, and I can't always resist him. He m wild about me. Yn can't under- Nothing could melt that take of , , , ice uoa gave you in piacc 01 heart. Some day it may, melt a drop or two. . . I wouldn't be sur prised!" Her voice curved up significantly, as she regarded i Cbet with smothered amusimnt In her coal-black eyes. "For Heaven's sake!" riP,i Chet, exasperated. "I wisjh t goodness you'd get out f :l,i, I've got wjrk to do. I rVf-r heard such darn fool talk in a I my life." (TO BE CONTINUED ) Ready to S 1 1 . ' ,- "' '' ((- j 9mK"'m?k I Our fleet of trucks are at your service. . If you want moving or hauling work done careful ly and quickly ' Just Call BD Fuel for Fall! WE HANDLE FUEL and DIESEL Oil FOR FURNACES Also Gas & Diamond Briquets Larmer Transfer Co. Office 143 S. Liberty Warehouse 889 N. Liberty Win? gets Kidded most UNFORTUNATELY for the individual and for the tire business at large, there still exists the tyj5fe of buyer who thinks he is putting one over when he buys a tire for 5(K; Jess than any reputable dealer could sell it and stay in business. We suppose this is more or less true in every line of business. And we wonder often how these buyers come out in the long run. We have been in the tire business for four years- We have seen a lot of dealers come and go and we have never yet seen one who could sell this kind of merchandise and get away with it. Perhaps you have heard this kind of a "shrewd" buyer tell how he does-it. Perhaps he didn't say that the tire he bought was worth just exactly what he paid for it and no more. Perhaps he did "kid" the dealer into selling him a tire, and losing money on it. Not the kind of dealers who stay in the business. ' And when we hear of these cases and see some of the un known brands of tires that come in to our service station for re pairs after three or four thous and miles of service we wonder who got kidded the most. The business of buying tires is like anything else. You get just about what you pay for. When you buy MILLER quality at MILLER'S fair prices you get the best the market affords for your dollar. You get the warranty of a manufacturer, who values our reputation as his , own, and you get our word that MILLER TIRES win make good or we will- That seems to us to be just jood business. If you feel the same way, come in and let's talk it over. filler Tire & So. Commercial at Ferry "Huss" Smith Phone 313 ASSOCIATE DEALERS 4 -Harbison Stations 1 Capitol at Market West Salem 1095 So. Com'. St.