Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1930)
-1 The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morping.vFcbnary 16, 1930 PAGE FIFTEEN i. i I I TRADE GROUPS SEE 611110 IDEA WORKED NEW YORK. (APJ Tne con ference spirit in American busi ness will be kept alire and robust this year by almost 1M0 com mercial and industrial associa tions. There are that many names on the roll of national, international. Interstate, state and local organ izations working to stimulate par ticular trades or trade In general. The national, international and interstate groups account (or more than 2,000. State" and local associations are the rest. More than one European com mentator has attributed the- com mercial and Industrial, success ot America to teamwric;.$l It is not unusual td fcoine across items in foreign commercial pub lications malting a point ot the fact that American business men seem to know when to cooperate cordially and when to compete belligerently. . The guild idea goes back al most a thousand years and, 'In other forms, has roots in the rery beginning of Industry. The con ference spirit in the United States Is something different. Walnut growers, tack makers, wool dyers, wall paper manufac turers, laundry owners and can dlestick makers are part of the long and growing list that in cludes practically every product that is made, grown, bought and sold. Trade practice conferences for the adoption of ethical and finan cial codes are a more recent man ifestation of the conference spirit in America. These are informal gatherings of persons engaged in tUe came business and do not re-' essarily- involve a permanent or ganization. 1 BFI IS M Y GIRLS LIKE HOCKEY EVEN -IN - WINTER T r .rv If- 1 Z w J-' U -Sir S-T n J; 1 1 i J . & (J o w - r; BAD TIMES PISSED 1 11 SI T 2? Ueod Umlrerslty of Oregon. Bern they show, an T&nL pJST vLJk8 are: JtL!?w U rf-Vlrgini. Staatta, Portiaad; Oeaevieve E1Ml5?T Tfcotaia ted, Eoeiie: and Frmnees Isobettach. Clmek- Knr viVTTT 5??""' "ST?' Florence Petthind; Mvjorte Kelly, Medford; Makalaa L'H6.' .Medi,K, McGowan, liwaeo, Wash.; Joit Yoong, Port- - ii inin xaoii mp.iiir am, ronuao. ana isieanoT Cobbv New Essex Different in Every Detail CUT SUB HAZARDS By OSCAR LEIDING ' (AP Feature Senrice Writer) WASHINGTON .(AP) HeaTy toll of life in submarine disasters may be eliminated when the navy declares dividends on experiences with special diving bells and the "mechanical lung." The special bells are huge chambers which may be lowered from a vessel, attached te a sun ken submarine, filled with mem bers of the crew and released to the surface. The "lung enables rescue of individuals and is a slow process. Thus research has turned at Key West, Fla., to the bells in an effort to free as many as 12 per sons at once. New experiments with bells em ploy two types of chambers, the open-bottom and closed, but no approach has been made to the greatest depth of 371 feet, reach ed in experiments with the "lung." In the open-bottom type, the bell is lowered with several oc cupants and guided to the escape hatch by lines attached to the submarine hjr divers. Within the bell, as water rushes in, an air bubble is form ed where the occupants stand. Pressure increases with the depth. When the bell rests in place on the flange, a watertight joint is made, water is blown from- the Chamber and pressure equalized, and the cover on the escape hatch opened. Twelve of the crew of the sub marine may then climb into the chamber, the batch closed, and the bell released from within and raised to the vessel at the surface. FLYING COUPLES ARE COMMON iW 2 NOTMEAW The New Essex Challenger is actually new from radiator to rear bumpers. The design is modernistic and individual without being radical. A "head-on" view shows the changed frontal appearance, the only familiar part being the popular Essex hexasooal emblem, " Known Graves of Pioneer Indian Fighters Total 56 o- I PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Fif ty six graves of early day Indian fighters, prospectors and other pioneers are known to exist in the national forests of Washington and Oregon, according to recent reports made to District Forester C. M. Granger. Portland. These graves re those which have been observed by forest of ficers in the course of their reg ular field voik with no particu lar search being made. This information is being com piled by the forest service for all the national forests of the west which originated with a request from the Arizona Pioneer's His torical society. In a resolution passed recently ths society stated that no "honor can be too great 4 to bestow upon the men and wom en who braved Indians and bard-ships,- and "the graves of many of these people are scattered over the forest reserves and are get ting harder to Identify each year.'' The resolution asks for federal appropriations to be nsed in mark ing such graves. Fourteen of the national for ests1 of Oregon and Washington report pioneer, graves definitely known and worthy of 'marking. The Applegate district of the Cra ter national forest reads with 16 and the McKenzie brfdge district of the Cascade national forest Is second, with 9. Fifty-one of the graves are reported from Oregon national forests and only S from O Washington .national forests. Perhaps the best known of these graves is that of the pio neer woman on the old Barlow trail, Just east of the East fork of the Salmon river on. the Mount Hood loop highway. 8ARAJEVO. Jugoslavia (AP) Tradition In Bosnia and Herze govina that theNlead must be car ried rather than carted, to the grave was broken recently when Moslem priest permitted a cof fin to be transported In a motor hearse, Orthodox Mohammedans dispute the correctness ' of the pfjesfs ruling; Just About 'Tifty-Hfty" V t-temuves-Mj &,5oo Juno PtctaCMsro 12) 5!,500 AUTO ACCIOBU4-T FTXUfltS3 I 1 ukof ibna Lives NrL 1 .1 i - 1 airy, vi i,,,,. vni .-1 1 1 'a-thM. tnm0A tint nodesfrtanliafl lost about m mtftr- I J J7LTttZlhtnm to the cemetery,' Of CTty" DTemK jruii .mniniMT liiD) wm Bcdcatzlaiia. 'tt bV t National Kafetv according w r-rr-zal, ThAnrhtlMnML Tndlffer. tT JlskooSatwirharo reached tno top ot tho Ma tn nationiJ cum ' mom ' - T. - as tk amnl nu mm tOMMm sv o ABto xataUUes ""pui Jersal isspioilhlUty tor tko SSyrt toSdlS S5?S. HSlocrt. Speed ft, day: If you fall t o . receive your Statesman by 6:S0 a. m., phone 500 and a copy will be sent to you. ... WASHINGTON (AP) "We" is not the only flying partnership. Other married couples than the Lindberghs are taking to the air, judging by the latest list of li censed pilots issued by the Aero nautical Chamber of Commerce. Besides Aune Lindbergh there are three other women with avi ator husbands who are seeking their own private licenses as pil ots. They are Mrs. Stanley Stan ton who honeymooned on the 1929 national air tour with her husband, Mrs. Assen Jordandorff and Mrs. Ivan Gates. The pioneer flying husband and wife are Phoebe Omlie and her husband Vernon C. Omlie. Both are transport pilots. u. w. and T. w. Kenyon. as they are officially listed, are mar ried and known around the Bos ton airport as Ted and Teddie, The "flying Fennos" are not cir cus acrobats, but aviators, J. K. and his wife, Sarah. They fly out 01 Providence. R. I. Other couples in aviation In clude the Thadens of Pittsburgh, the O'Donnells of California, May and Jim Halzllp, Blanche and Dewey Neyes, Claire and Herbert Fahy, Esther and EarlVance, Phyllis and Norman Goddard and Francis and Bill Marsalis. SAN T RANCISCO (AP) Ac tions on the New York stock ex change stent always mirrored on the San Francisco floor. Thus 192S will be remembered here as long, perhaps longer than 1929, the year that punctured quoted values throughout the na tion. Mid summer's recession ot 1928, led by the Glanninl shares, caused the year's total turnover to top two billion shares, where as the series. ot slumps last fall brought 1929's turnover to only 1893,081,834. Comparative severity of the two sinking spells is not precisely indicated by the lump sums, for the 1928 collapse came in June, and there was time for marked recovery and return of heavy transactions, whereas 1929's pan ic came near the year-end and trading could not climb back. Similarly, transactions on the Los Angeles exchange dropped in 1929 to approximately $740,000, 000 aTaip of only 289.000.000. compared with San Francisco's drop of above a billion. These decreases left San Fran cisco the largest securities mar ket in the west by $153,000,000. San Francisco s exchange start ed this year in a new $2,700,- 000 plant, with a new president, George N. Keyston. The Los An geles exchange also this year moves into a new $1,500,000 home, while Seattle is building a 23-story exchange to cost $3,650, 000. Its 23 stories will make it one of the tallest re-inforced con crete buildings in the nation. Little Economies Aid in Paring Cost The Ford Motor company was able to reduce the price of the Ford car and to increase the min imum wage of its employees by the almost daily development of new economies through better manufacturing methods. A recent Instance of this Is new hard chrome plating and heat treating method for hard surfac ing tools used in the manufac ture, of Ford automobiles. Steel. o& which the tools are made, alter being treated by the new method, has been found to give 218Tiours of service in cer tain grinding operations against four hours, the limit of service under old. conditions. OLD ill CASE CALLEO TO Mi PENDLETON, Ore. (AP) The case of the Klamath county commissioners seeking reimburse ment from the - federal . govern ment ot taxes on reservation land brings up a similar possibility in Umatilla county with a reserva tion dating back 60 years. Umatilla county could ask the government for reimbursement amounting to more than fire mil lion dollars on land in the Uma tilla reservation not exempt from taxation. Had this - land been owned by private individuals it would, hare returned this much to the county and would have in creased the property valuation of the county by three million dol lars. t It is pointed out here that such money would reduce the county tax levy and makes possible road improvement in the reservation district. Prohibition Drive Made in Alabama BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb. 15. AP) With more than 200 persons already under arrest .on liquor charges, Birmingham police and Jefferson -county officers to nglht continued their drive against an "organized band of liquor run ners and racketeers,' planning no let up until ''higher ups" have been apprehended. - In addition to the arrests, 14 stills have been confiscated and several hundred gallons of whis key and mash destroyed. BIRKDALE. England (AP) Recent gales blew a thousand tons of seashore sand over local railway tracks--and the company loaded It up and sold it in York shire and Derbyshire. Usually lo cal authorities charge the rail ways $5 a ton for sand taken from the beaches. UUtl CUM ifU. but can you STOW FlflTIES M ID DUE TO nil GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP)- Snowbound in the high peaks. watching the snow pile up at-the rate of a foot an hour that was the recent experience of two par ties of men one headed by Sam uel Baker, president of the cham ber of commerce, and sponsor of the city slogan "It's the Climate.' The other party was headed by Earle Voorhies, managing editor of the Grants Pass Courier. In neither case did the mem bers of the party suffer, either from exposure or lack of food. Baker and his party were maroon ed at a hotel at Oregon Caves When they were finally rescued by a miner who had gone into the district on skiis. Baker and his associates had worked a trail sev eral miles down the mountain side. Voorhies, who did not get out ot his mountain camp near a mine for nearly a. week, spent much of his time breaking trail to Holland, which is southwest of here. Mrs. Voorhies and little son were left In the snowbound dist rict where they are staying with a. family, the father of which is working an old mine. The place where Voorhies was marooned was at Tigertown, prob ably one of the most colorful ghost mining towns in Oregon. It was here that some of the richest strikes in Oregon were made dur ing the rush days. It was here that scores of men clashed and shot It out at the numerous saloons and public houses which flourished then. Many of the old buildings still stand. Voorhies and party was camped In one of the hotels and in days gone by was the scene of many a frontier event that wlU never be re-enacted in American history. GRANTS PASS FOLK STRIKE HARD LUCK GRANTS PASS. Ore. (AP) Mystery and ill fortune seem to be dogging the steps of the L. E. McDaniels family here. Jack McDaniels, a son, who went to Casper, Wyoming, to fill an engagement to sing over the radio, was found unconscious on the doorsteps of -the Casper hos pital. Two weeks later he had not regained consciousness enough to tell his parents what became of his money and watch. Dashing to his bedside his fa ther ran into a heavy snowstorm and had to desert his automobile. Before the father could return home with the unconscious youth word was received from another son aboard the airplane tender Saratoga that he was being taken to a hospital. The message came sharply on the heels of word that two had been killed in a fire on the ship. The message contained no other additional information. Shipment ot Chrysler Cars Shows Increase January shipments of Chrysler built passenger cars, trucks, buses and commercial vehicles show an increase of more than 50 per cent over December, with orders call inr for still further Increases in production in February, accord ing to figures released today. Retail sales are continuing their steady progressive gain each week over the previous week's performance, last week's sales to the public ot Chrysler products being 18 per cent higher than the week before.. Dodge Brothers' passenger ear shipments in January totaled 8 790 units; DeSoto, 4,407; Chrys ler lines, including the Imperial, "77". "19-, ana z,z; Plymouth. 1,596: Dodge trucks. buses and motor coaches. 1,489 and Fargo commercial vehicles, Sis. Awaits you. if you have not seen the new - Appearance, Performance, Comfort, Value w 4 - Ccnnplefe Lixid Now on Display, 5N.Co1St. The European corn borer mov ed west last year to the extreme north-western part of Indiana. "Without SKIDDING" AGAINST Accidents Caused by SKIDDINQ! Equip Your Car With Urn Geared-to-the-Road The TIRE that holds to the road and is guaranteed t o out-wear any tire of equal price. Trade in Tour Old Tires on a Set of . "MILLER'S" WHAT! A FLAT TE1E! 3fl 4k and our service car 0 3 T"1 ?j5? t FREE Tire Service Anywhere Within the City limit. JUST PHONE 818 Rlillci? Tiro CcpvIcq Co 197 S. Commercial Phone 313 A beyond all previous stand ards la ootoring Am 1930 marfcot, Dodgo Brothers wore fcooor conscious of two lal facts First that mis year mora man ovar, vobo wil bo Iha basis of that tho public b today batter qoaCSod man ever to fodgo Dodga onginoers root these conditions by obslgniog two now cars wim foaturas that not oisoiisfythdenandsaf amrhtyonde for ahead of any provious conception, SpodftcoBy thsio 5E-WSAT0ONAL VALUE'S a New SIX $835 AND UT. F.O.B. FACTCMSr tho lowest-priced Six Dodgo Brorhors havo ofTsi ndL "tho lownst-piicod modol Qodgo Brothers tho lowost-pricod (Stoat) Body aw wth "tha lowast-ericed S2x wtSb A NEW eiSHT AND UP. F.O.B. moost waasarched of Its price for power Kite field for and style.. in vahe (SseeQ Body, Dow Draft retlotv weatherproof f oar-wheel by of fSmc Th new cars have) Emmm the saruatioa of the winter outewnobffa shows. See them d your nearest Dodge Brothers decWs showroocL ST " upHQinm evecy fOAsmoa cf soooa aopottaASturr 474 s. cor MEZZO TELEPnONB 423