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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1929)
r x page two i ; I T v " SrWoi& states t " T7f, m llr w: --yr i r J; IJ- 1 - . i , , II in II niTlini ml Lii ' : ; ; r ' . 1 .ir coram tatnese reports, senatori r-w II .: va I HI Fil tili-i IWIPjiVl IV i ' , , i i -j.wuMii iiivii .-1 rw iiitririiiiiiiiiii. riii iiru iiimwwiiu.wi ui.ii jwiiiiimuu im us morMimt . of a -i ri i ; 1 in r-r mnwM m m mnu mini : i -. - - a a mi - w sm.m Mgrvi Fumasloni Calls Upon President; Much Specu lation Started WASHINGTON. July , (AP) The action of President Hoover ' In receiving Mgr. Fumasient Bt roadie apostolic delegate la. the "United States, at the White Honse thisj week had revived speculation In official -and diplomatic circles regarding the itatns of Ameriean VaUcaa relations. . 1 . There ' has been considerable discussion In these circles over the fact! that Mgr. Blondi delivered to the president a, copy of the Later an treaty recentjly signed between the Vatican and, Italy, in which the j latter recognized the sover eignty of the papal state. the visit was described in Cath olic) circles here as the customary ' Tisit which the delegate pays aft er the president assumes office. Mgr. Bipndi, who has been in Rome in connection with the Mex ican vchurch settlement almost continuously since March 4, does not! have any diplomatic rank which is recognised by the Ameri can! governments While the Tisit itself was em phasized in high administration ircjles to indicate no intention ol recognition of the Vatican by the United States, it was said at the state department; today there is no doubt that the United State j Is now officially aware of the extst- ence ol tne sovereignty 01 me i Vatican. The department, so far as it could be learned, in the absence of Secretary Stimson and other, high "officials, did not arrange the call of jMgr.ABiohdi at the hite Ilo'ase. - i ' 1 American officials in Italy fully informed the ; department of the progress of the Lateran treaty ne gotiations while they took place recently In Rome and the delivery of (the copy of the treaty to the president by Mgr. Biondi was not regarded as significant by molt department, officials. ' Heretofore, the Washington government has been extremely cautious In avoiding diplomatic incidents which might lead t in timations of recognition of a state which the United States did not desire to recognize. TO BE HELD T 1' Funeral servicer for William Dillon Smith, whtf died sudda4? Friday at the home at 1865 Cen ter! street at; the age fct 8 9 years, two months and one day, will be held Monday at the. Rigdon Mort uary, Rev. F. C Taylot ofntiat Ing. '" i .." r- ' v';' .-' wmiam Dillon Smith eame to Salem from Iowa In 1908 and. -has -j-eatded iere since that time. For a number, of years in early life he; was a teacher, and until 1889, when he was admitted to the Kan sas bar and entered law practice in 1st. Francis, Kan. He also prac ticed law in Iowa and upon com ing to Salem continued his prac tice until a tew. years prior to his' 'death. As a young man he at tended Oskaloesa college, now Drake nnlrersltv'. and was rrad- uated from Healdis business col lege pf Oakland. Calif., in .1876. Mr! and Mrs. Smith would have 'celebrated their 62nd wedding an niversary here Monday. He bad been a member of the Methodist church for 50 years and of the First church In iialenj, for the past 21 years.! Surviving him are. his widow. Mary Elizabeth Smithi and five children: William Ercfest Smith, Grace Elizabeth Smith and Ray U Smith, of Salem; Mrs.1 R. W. Walton, of Montclair, New Jersey. and Paul R. Smith of Santa Ioni- ' ca, California.; He also leaves a brother, Aaron Smith and a sis ter, Matilda Confer, residing at St. Francis, Kansas. Merged Church i ; Will Organize . Organisation of the board of ! : trustees and the board of stewards 1 of the merged- First Evangelical church will be perfected at a meet . ing to e held at the church : Thursday evening. ' 'The Chemeketa street Evangel- leal church was merged with the ; Fir3t church Tnesday evening ol this week, when ail offices were declared vacant and -a new board of. trustees chosen. Rev. A. P. Lay ten continues as pastor of the . xnereed . church, jrhich has ; a membership of .between 2 6d and ; 00 persons. Showing Yea will marvel at the Ml Dill facial treatment wffl develop this hidden ehain, for Colonial Dames. Beaaty Aids brings added yoath and beaaty te yon complexion. Colonial Dames Preparations are made with Almond ou tncy n&rixm urn lxntu xissuas ana saa rutaiAixin. oeamy. A specialist Is here frem free facials. New yen may that ilvet natural, true VEST. : .i 1 - j'iQS SUte Street Realistic Perfection I Given bf Sounds' Reproduced ; Very Accurately , "Stark Mad," " Tamer . Bros.' latest 100 per 'cent ill-talking pic ture, opens today aBlighs Cap itol theatre. The st ry 13 by Jer ome Kingston. Har rey Gates did the scenario and Ll yd Bacon, son of the famous author and star of "Ughtnln. direct id." The cast includes H. B., Warner, Louise Jacqueline -Logan, Henry B. Walthall, i Lionel Belmore, Claude CillingwaterJ Andre Be ran ker, i (Warner , JUct mond. Floyd Shackelford, and las but far from leasts Bungawunga- largest - gor illa ia captivity, wh is really" the star' actor. 5 . The story is that of a party of eminently respectable people who come by boat to th 1 jungle coun try of Central Ame lea, to search for the lost son of l he. founder of the expedition. Vitaphone is tre mendous in its perfect reproduc tion of all words spoken by the ac tors, off all sounds (shrieks, wind, rain, cries of terror, and the woof- ling words of Bunaunga himself and symphonic accompaniment of startlingly interpretative char acter. Hi B. Warner gives a fine per formance as the protector of the party who brings a madman through the wilderness to the May an ruins wnere, the party is mar- ooned amid flying knows, dlsap pearing ' floors, creaking hidden doors and such hodgepodge of horror and mirth as has never before been seen on the screen, si- lent or talking. Norma Taimadge In "The Dove" i - v 1 - : Does Fine Work orma TalmadgeL star of "Thei Dove," which comek to the Elsi nore theatre, Wednesday, on the same bill with, Fanthon and Mar co's "Opportunity Idea," which features Miss Salem has been the subject of many newspaper and magazine stories. She has, in fact, been called one lof the most "written up" womek of all times. Ten tnousana ana one newspa per reporters have asked Norma Taimadge numberless Questions about Tarious things, and always she has given what she sincerely though on any subject she has been asked about. There is hard ly a phase of Norma Talmadge's character that a thousand writ ers have-not, at some time or an other, used as eopyi for. a story. la The Dove" Norma puts forth one of the best, character isations of her entire Bcreen car eer, which has. been sponsored by Joseph- M. Seheaea, president of United Artists, and her husband "The Dove" is fully synchronised with sound. Bobby Folsom is Singer Although She Didh't Study. Bliss Bobby Folsom, famous star in musical comedy and head- liner of the variety stage, will be seen and heard in the Yltaphone presentation program at the iiign-g capitoi tneater today in a' song sketch . titled . "Typical Types," in which she sings two of Bobby Folsom is'la star own rlgiit as singer of musical comedy despite thre fact that she never took a musib lesson la her life, : Hi s- Si " 1 ""T ' L . X- -.- SSI a. e - - - - Unique! ... 1 -A4l 1 In her the .better method of make-up, using added youth and beafty hidden within the 'Colonial Dames Laboratories in see for yenrself the jBETFEB methed beaotv and adds to year ! real charm, As mm T:. it?: VJ-UWUlett I ir 1 1 :i -p r ADMITS "4 r , ? V ' 5 H I &ij.-0.Zm- or k ' mm IT v ! - ...tj.-J.t - -.. - . -n Maurice Chevalier and Margaret Livingstone axe depicted In sccno from the Innocents of Parte' now showing at the Elsinore. NEWS JOB ALL WRONG .. So Says Wickland Snell, FILM MAKES If 'everyone took; the advice of Wickland SneK (Walter foustbn) who takes the leading role of feature reporter in " Gentlemen of the Press," the public would soon be spared the job Of reading what reporters think about talkies and in a short time ignorance would sweep the land. W have it on no less authority than that of Will Rogers that all most folks know Is "what they read In the papers" For Snell says ; that anyone with reason would stay out of such a game. When his daughter Is born, he's too busy to be con gratulated by the L doctor, when she graduates from school a bfg story holds him up and when, well, that would be giving away the plot. Anyway Snell Is captt vated by newspaper work and yet the stripling cub who forces him- ttgeir into the Closing scenes 01 1 tnls newest movie drama is ad vised to stay clear of the job. her well known character songs written especially for her by Ne ville Fleeson. v Miss Folsom's career is unique, for a singer, la a sense that she has never studied singing. She ran away from boarding school with a desire for a theatrical career. She couldn't do anything on the stage and yet her first contract was with Aborn Opera company. Ac cording to Miss Folsom, she came to New York and made the rounds of the agencies. She was asked if she coujld sing. She carefully look ed around, saw there was -no pia no, and eald: that she could. She was sent to Virginia to join the Opera Company. Once there her voice was tested, and she had none. But it was too expensive to send her back to New York, and for six months she stood in the wings watching the operas. Local Dealer to Join in National Radio Celebration During the week beginning Mon day Atwater-Kerit fans through out the United States. will cele brate the dedication of a new 16 acre factory which Fill make the firm's, plant double the size of any other existing in the world. The plant will cover am area of 32 acres when joined with the pres ent home of the company. To tie-in with the national cele bration' the Sduare Deal Hard ware Co, local distributors, have arranged an : attractive window display and pictures of the win dow display-will be sent to north west headquarters - for Atwater Kent and from there they .will be forwarded to the national con- test headi L.:3 quarters. . rlos Meier To Play Special . Organ Numbers . f : 1 !: . ' L..Carlo3 Meier, organist at the Elsinore; has received some excep tionally ood mnsical novely nam- bera from Neir York' and Chicago, which hi promises to offer on the Elsinore organ to local theatre goers.' j i i" - - ' Meier was one of the Terr few organist; la the country to intro duce the community singing Idea, in which patrons in the audience join in ir lomeuj vocu Hwcumu. M m . . ' roar features! Even one Hollywood te rive yon these of make-up, the tnake-ep . PHONE It)B ' APFOIHT ti: I - - Agents for; 0wl jpraj Ck T Journalist, of N. Y REAL HIT Anyone with a grain of sense expects a movie to create a situa tion in order to make us "wa folk", whofoTget our troubles in an hour of retreat, thoroughly en joy the affair. "Gentlemen of the PressV Is overdone. No newspaper today is so dependent on one man that all situations " demand his presence. No newspaper today is represented so exclusively by re porters whose acquaintanceship with the bottle is more intimate than with the typewriter. But despite these obvious Incon sistencies, "Gentlemen of the Press" tells an interesting yarn and weaves in enough actuaity to make the film appealing both to the laity and to the "gentlemen of the press" as the publicity seek ing xnasoleum builder would in sistently designate the members or tne news uepartment of a pa-! per I For people desiring an evening of something different "Gentle men of the Press" will meet the requirements. Houston is well cast as a feature reporter on a targe city paper. Charlie Haven is too drunk to hold a job on any; paper, but Charles Ruggles who; plays the part, knows how to put! a lot of humor into a situation; and keeps the audience in an up roar as long as he is allowed to talk. Everyone can have his or her own idea of Myra May and the way Katherine Francis interprets her. To us she was scarcely subtle enough to vamp a supposedly brainy star reporter but mayhap we were, wrong, she s a vamp, alright I The play is soon teome to the Elsinore and will afford an en joyable evening to many people who dally read a newspaper put who have no idea whatever of the processes used in building it Charles Darsie To Preach Here Charles Dersie of Indianapolis, Ind., will bring the message at the! 11 o clock service today at the First Christian church. Mr. Darsie; has been the Bpecial guest in structor in the leadership training scnool at the Turner conventions No services will be held at thl$ local church this evening on acn count of the Convention. i ! - Wafted Gently from Vj'f The jkter Enterteinment Elsinore iuiisf fc) iiiiXl vQiiV ill V ) Pl IS" 1 The Great Idol! of 'Francfeh! MAuy , lW4D Hailed . . . Acclaimed ... as the -r,0W JA tOlTfl WL. Worlds Greatest En:ertainer! Plapg! tmWkWm -CheyaKr Sing ' yi l4?! "Louise" f IIVn Trf7mWI ) MwStfr V! "Mf Cherio- JY I "JedaTacMW WttmMi M L Jlhnofeentr, M lMiYyv "j v s 1 1 xvj Or ral IJi ? LiSJ JLLJ-itogSS.-? sJKT 1 I f1 A PARKMCNT PICTURE MdodW W-rUtjer J? ;ftjEtalMJste4T''' adTcntvre of an expedition trapped in I j rfiill'l " V ii 1 i i ! :!' 1 the raise of a anciot inca Temple J See, bear and 1 ' - 11 1 iKsJf; v SttCA J .:r"? i Jj. yii.? h nfh P-W- 7 : Blot! r ' Eleven y . . X s - v, -J. i JMfl . l ft , - :-v - ;- . 4 4 v., : " W i HOTEL GEARHART ! : U I "By The Sea" -I ' : - J j r ; Gearhart, Oregon - I 'A' liney ioai Tnrougn nurniii.UfiAKiiAKi' ana over J the GOLF i COURSE" bringing '.Perfect .Comfort with every. Breath. .- --h, j- . . , :. "V Come and Enjoy Them at iHOTEL GEARIIART whera j every Convenience, every Luxury Awaits You; , ' . . : : Rooms $2.00 nnr! TJn. ' J ' - 1 fsvt i a hm wtvoii ' PoPUr .Prices in Dining Boom. U i .T T 7ri Popular Prices in the-Dining Room. MRS. O. W. TAYLOR, Manager. Chevalier in "Innocents j of rans anows rus eai ."You've got to be good to dick in New York,- That is what anybody who knows his "Main Stem" will tell you.n " li- .: By the same token the same person will tell yoa that Maurice Chevalier, fdol of the French: and British stage," clicked in INew York recently when he made his first appearance in the United States at. the Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic Chevalier Is now appearing in the Paramount all-talking, sing-1 ing and dancing production, "In nocents of Paris," now being ex hibited at the Elsinore theatre. The .French star was" a failure at. everything he attempted until he found the proper field for. his talents. As a boy of 11 he sought work to help his widowed mother support i the large family. He Wasr an apprentice carpenter, electfi-; eian, printer and doll painter. . At 13 he was a salesman for a paint ing shop. He was dismissed from practically every job he had. Fin ally he got a chance as a singer in the Casino des Tourelles. He was in love with the new job! and : he made acting his life's profession. ARTILLERY UNITS new The advance detail of men for the. annual coast artillery camp at Camp Worden leaves Salem to-: day to prepare for the main group which will leave tor the camp.' Tuesday. Salem will be represent ed by the headquarters battery of the 249th coast artillery. Captain Clifton M. Irwin is in command. In the detail leaving today are Master Sergeant Ratcllffe, First Sergeant Charles Unruh, Staff Sergeant Vergil C. Busey, Corp oral Harold J. Miranda, and Pri vates George Cleary, Donald Ba ker and Eugene. R, Rowland. ; OTTAWA, Oat., July G (AP Suggestions contained in Wash ington dispatches that the scope of the: proposed conference between Premier MacDonald, President Hoover and Premier Mackenzie King, should be enlarged so as to sw w-S a vw a v w connPE WBEEHUnGED CCmiNG TO . I TOjloi " New Screen Grid Sets now in stock. Come in and tec them. I. .SiHtA.! OVPtLAX III . I I I I I , ! - . I mm wm ' IA Vitaphone Talking . J Jp : I tsz: Mf,-jWlte-yy r ' 'III I Another fflTY DEGREES COOLER tllJDlOllfe I ' 7J000 i the Sparkling Waves. ! 1 ;- A I ' president and. Mr. King: certain, matters affect-' Ins Canadian-American relations j have aroused Interest here.-According to these reports. Senator Borah favors personal talk be tween the president and Mr. Ha on' rook matters as the radio rU nation, and tha morement ot liquor fronv Canada to the United SUtee. Mr. King never has intimated, however, that ha was officially aware such a meeting was to take place. Neither has he given any in dication that he Intended to be present when Mr. Hoover and Mri Mac Donald meet. Presumably, when the conference takes defin ite shape. If Mr. King is asked to be present, ho will some statement to make. Yovire there withal 5EuSILY t But j , I i "You have to c va a New 1930 Models on display Radio Headquarters 175 So. High St. Phone 1161 The Ebff Electric Lo -- 1 f ' - ' - Great f tTUTT TZrHM 1 H . :i ' L- J !M ; , f - (Thero C)xtx Wednesday! III 16 Beautiful Girls Oft Boy 1 - t 1 IJiw kfnslr EIEIEM: 9 in let us show you how radio's new principle is applied in Atwater Kent Screen Grid Radio with the ex perience of 27 years of precision manufacture. New tome New power New nogt-New se lectivity but the same Atwater Knt day-after-day dependability. Come in listen sec here today. Table Sets and Cabinet Models Complete 220 N. Announcing Tne Appointment of as :al Distributors for W1W IBleetro- IDynainic New Models Now on Display Cafl us for a Demonstration Square Deal, Hardware Com! Phone 1650 J Go. 3 ,