Smm Mill vf 77 TW 17?oT7 . tH77 mm .aat - ar r - - mm m m aas - . - m w - a m m i . ... m w -m mm - m BE READY SOOfJ Excavated Dirt Taken Across 1 'Span to South Side of Stream is Plan i Construction of a bridge across South Mill creek where it -runs through the Oregon-Washington Y.'ater Service company's propertj vu under way Thursday as one "fr-the first tasks preliminary to the rection of the filtration plant, excavation for which was started. This bridge will be used in transporting the excavated earth id the south side of the creek re gaining way Just completed, where a' large fill will be made. A pipe and material yard will be estab lished on this fin, which will rise almost to the level of the Liberty tree fill. Earth will also be filled tn to the level of the Liber ty street fill. Earth will also be filled in to the level of the retain ing wall on the north, and on the western portion of this nil a gar age for the water company will be built. Construction of the filtration plant Is expected to be complet ed by August 20. The contract was let to C. Dudley DeYflbiss, who is now in Salem directing preliminary work.. The resident superintendent Is Major E. B. Butler. About 30 men will be employed, all but four of these being local men. Four experts In various departments of the need ed construction were brought be re from California. iLMOD GROUP EVES Will ISSUE (Continued from Page. X.) plans to circulate initiative peti ; ttoas looking toward the same purpose. The proposition of a test vote will be before the city council at Its next meeting, the Hollywood club members were informed by Alderman David O'Hara and --Chris Kowitz, who were in at tendance. I ' I'ropoeal Advanced By Mr. Pattoa determining in this fashion the sentiment of the voters for or against municipal ownership was suggested last week by Al derman Hal Patton, a member of the council's public utilities com mittee to which the matter had been previously referred. Mr. Patton pointed out that in this way it would be possible to learn whether or not the people want to take over the water system, without going to the expense of a appraisement of the property and the formulation of definite propositions for its purchase or condemnation. The council members who at tended the Hollywood meeting Thursday night were also of the opinion that the council would favor the repeal of the present Involved charter provision for acquiring ownership of public tilities, and that this change la the' charter may be put on the Hay election ballot without an Initiative such as the club was planning to Invoke. Members Favor 5 Crcgojry for Mayor Politics as well as water came In i for considerable attention at the club's meeting. The candi dacy of P. M. Gregory, president of the club whose- campaign was launched since the last meeting, came iQ for much favorable dis cussion. Foster Cone and Miller Hay den, candidates for the republi can nomination for justice of the peace in the Salem district, were also present and addressed the gathering. entertainment included read ings by Miss Virginia Hubbs and Alias Marcla Fuestman. HOT UTILE HI 'Til li BWEIU v CLEVELAND. March . (A9 Freedom ot the press wen an taer victory here today woes the ppeuaie coari overruled .a conn tempt el eenrt conviction of Lonia B, Seltser, editor, and Carlton K. Mateon, editorial writer of ' the Cleveland Tress, daily newspaper. The appellate, cow ordered - liaison and Slester not t pay 9509 fines nor to serve 30day sen tences - which were imposed oa this a year ago by Common Pleas Judge Frederick Walther.,, In ad dition, the appellate judges scored Jadge Walther for his anions in the, case and delivered an opinion that the rights el tree newspapers, nreressential to ' tree people. .Judge Walther tried and con victed Mateon kid 8eltset on the . contempt charge when bo took of ten 4 An editorial tn the Press which criticised a1 tor granting an . injunction restraining Sheriff E.'3J.- Haaratty treat stopping a .betting arsteii it rcr track, ' ' i" ' " i '-. " i i : . - HOCKEY, -GA3IK TIE SJ PORTLAND,' Ore..' MarrJL . (AP)-rBattltng t scoreless ov ertime tlo at the , Coliseum" here tonight, Portland "kni Vancouver , each advanced one paint tn- the standings . oat failed" to break .their tie for the leadership f the; -Pacific coast ice. 'hockey. league. .Each team now has 4 points.-: ; !; iv-rr V"' ,:-v;-4f : - .", HrwrBER TARIFF ASKED " ' EUGENE, ore Jlarch ; fAP) The Central Loof conn- cu or ttagene aas gone on rocuru tavorinar- adeeaate tariff en lumber. The Call Board By OLIVE M. DOAK GRAXD North Hifli between Conrt sad Htsts Today "Two Weeks Off," with. Dorothy Mackaill. HUGH'S CAPITOL Its! between High tad Chorea Today "She Couldn't Say No," with Winnie Lig' t ner. FOX ELSIXORE Hi5. between State aaa Trade Today "Chaiaing Rain- bows," with Bessie Love. HOLLYWOOD Xorth Capitol street. North Salem Today "T h e Mysterious Island." Winnie Lightner sprang into -fame with the "Golddiggers of Broadway." Ia that play she was comedy, genuine and unusual. She was introduced to Salem au diences at Bligh's Capitol and she Is again appearing there in her latest work "She Couldn't Say No. The theme makes a differ ent tort of person out of Winnie than seen heretofore. Ia "She Couldn't Say No" Win nie Is a night club entertainer but one tees very little of her in her chosen profession. Most of the scenes are the development of the tangled affairs of Winnie and Jer ry Casey, handsome young rack eteer, whom Winnie lias mother ed and loved, and to whom she has been a pal. She did her best to make- a man of him. He falls in love with a girl of a superior social circle. The story has to do with the love of the three people and especially the love of Winnie and Jerry. Eaeb tries to be fair to the other there is a peculiar ly honest situation between them. Winnie admits to Jerry how much she loves him but she does not try to hold him. and he is hon estly sorry that he is in love with the society girl. The philosophy of Winnie Is funny but it has a dramatic ele ment that grips. There are few people as honest and decent to their fellowmen as Winnie in this picture. When they are It seems they get the same tough breaks that Winnie got. Winnie Lightner is the whole show. The voices are poorly re corded if Thursday afternoon was any criterion and the photography is not at all good. I can't say much for Chester Morris. He did only an average piece of work. A few times he reached above that but only a few times. However Winnie makes a good show and that is that. An all year around road into Breltenbush Hot springs ia for cast now that county and federal officials have finally agreed upon matching district and federal funds for the graveling of the road during the coming summer. The agreement was reached this week when County Commissioner Smith, Roadmaster Frank John son and County Engineer Hedda Swart journeyed to the district In company with government rep resentatives. According to present plant it will take about S6000 to put the road in good shape. The govern ment, however, will spend more than half of that figure because the forest service expects to dig ditches along the road to take care of surplus surface water. ' The trip was made to Brelten bush to investigate a slide which had cut the springs off from the outside world. Efficient work with one of the county's graders enabled the road to be cleared sufficiently for an automobile to pass through.' Engineer Swart estimated that the grader was re moving the dirt and rock at the small cost of nine cents a cubic yard. v . Wreckage of Western Air Plane Found LOS ANGELES, Marcfc f. tAF) Strewn wreckage of a Western Air Express tri-motored transport, which disappeared 12 days ago with its crew ef three in the snowbound San Bernardino mountains; was found late today la '.an Isolated canyon by Dudley Steele, one of a group of airplane pilots searching for the lost ship. Steele, head of the a-iation de partment et the-Richfield Oil com pany, flying with Miss Juanlta Bums et Lot Angeles at an ob server, sighted the wreckage in canyon five mn-s northwest of Cexeys ranek and about 30 miles from Lake Arrowhead of the cast er nslope of the mountains, Rough Language Brings Fine and Jail Sentence Changing his plea ef not guilty to one ot guilty, Elvis Pully Was sentenced U pay a fin of 150 and serve JO day in the county jail by Bra tier .Small injustice - court Thursday. The case against Fully waa a master t the Salem Just ice court trjonvWoodburm : J. J, Berschberger compulned against' PuUy 1 for tuiag rough.' abusive, -protaae and v ebacene laagtagi ln'-s) pYbXIo place. It wad ckarged inat Puny committed the act la the Hubbard stage depot ia the presence ot several persons. MONEY S mm FOR WlulK DM ROAD DRV STATUTES HELD BENEFIT Arguments Advanced by Li quor Advocates Refuted By Prohi Backers (Continued from Face L) social, entertainments "an unut terable nuisance and their only anxiety was as to how most ef fectually free themselves and their families of it." Poll Among Society Matrons Recownted Her testimony was based, she said on replies to a poll she con ducted among society matrons af ter conferring with former Chief Justice William Howard Taft. Out of 2,330 women approached, she said 1,337 favored obeying the law while only 247 disapproved. She characterized Mr. Atter busy'g testimony favoring repeal as "utterly unsportsmanlike and unworthy a leader of publle opin ion. She termed Mr. Dn Pont a private prohibitionist "In his own gun powder plant and nubile nn antl-prohibitionist for himself and nis motor driving friends." -After arguing the farmer was immeasurably better off under prohibition, as a result of better markets and prices for almost all his products, Taber said it was "indefensible for the president of a great railroad V advocate nulli fication and return of the sa loon." Without mentioning by name either Mr. Atterbury or Mr. Dn Pont," Taber said "an automobile manufacturer placed himself in a ridiculous position of advocating Intoxicating liquors when every one recognizes that as drunken drivers on the highways increase, the use of automobiles must de cline." Taber said the reason why the liquor irarue would never return to America was the automobile. Asserting that it was evident that the 18th amendment would not be repealed and the saloon would not return in any form, he said me government would not bo forced into the liquor business. E FAIRBANKS, Alaska. March ( (AP) The aerial funeral cor tege which left Teller today for jaimanKs via Nome and Ruby with the bodies of Carl Ben Eiel- son and Earl Borland will remain overnight at Ruby because of poor flying conditions between Tanana and Fairbanks, telephone advices received here tonleht said. The planes were brought to the ground at Ruby for refueling af ter tne flight of more than 300 miles from Teller and will resume ineir mgnt or Z50 miles to Fair banks tomorrow, provided weath er conditions permit. It was snow ing at Fairbanks today and tnere was practically no viaibll ity for flying. Two American planes, one of which contained the bodies of hieison and Borland, accompanied oy a Kusslan plane, took off from Teller this morning for Nome but were unable to land there because of snow drifted conditions of the field. Memorial services were held on the ground while the planes circiea aDove and the flight to ttuDy was then resumed. The American planes were nil. oted by Ed Young and Joe Cross- on, Alaskan pilots, while the Rus sian plane was piloted by Com mander Mavrlck Slipenov. They were joined at Kome by a fourth plane, flown by Harold Gillam, who was accompanied bv Pt Reid and William Hughes, Cana dian aviators sent north to en gage in the Eielson-Borland searcn. 14 DIE IS SES5I1 WASHINGTON. Marrh a . (AP) Death has taken fourteen representatives and three sena tors ironv the seventy-first con gress. . The first to co was William A Oldfield, ot Arkansas democratic wnip in tne nouse, who succumb ed arter a short illness on Novem ber i, 1128, Just after bis elec tion to another term. The last was Representative James Glrnn of Connecticut, who tied suddenly on a train today while return ing from the funeral of Represen tative Hughes, of West Virginia, wno oaea Bunuay. In addition to those who have died, there bare been seven realc- nations. three in the senate and' tour in the house. The senate va cancies have been filled but there are now eight vacancies in the house. Senator Tfcrson. of Tennessee died last August 34, Senator Bur ton f Olio oa October it, and m9 "r- V BeUerea a Wradache or Nenwlgla ta SO SBJaurree. cavecks a Cold the first day, and checks- Malaria ia three dags CS3 abe) ia Uquld. EIELSO'S CORPS ON ITS ffl Oil ISSffl Senator Warren of Wyoming on xsovemoer Z4. In additions to Representatives Oldfield and Glynn, the following nouse members hare died: Charles L. Faust, Missouri, De- cemDer 17, if zs. Edward J. King, Illinois; Feb. 17, 1SZV. Royal H. Weller, New Tori, March 1, im. Charles W. Roark. of Kentmw S7, apru a. iaz9. WhltmeU P. Martin, Louisiana. April , 1929. John J. Casev. PennsTlvanla m, nil. Leslie J. Steele, Georgia, July 2t, IVZ9. O. J. Kvale, Minnesota, Sept. 11. 1929. . . w. W. Griest, Pennsylvania. William K. Kaynor, Massachu setts, Dec. 20, 1929. Elmer O. Leatherwood, Utah, uec. zs, 19Z9. James A. Hughes, West Virgi nia March 2, 1930. DEATH TAKES CHIEF OFnuravif BERLIN, March (AP) me aeatn today of Admiral Al fred Von Tlrplta removes from Germany's public scene one of the staunchest personifications of the old regime a one-time great na val leader who could not adjust himself to the republic When once he assured a naws- nftnArman that Tn.A v. t MA only ahead for Germany" he revealed his true inner self. The greatest blow to his hones nrAhot.1. v r.. p-;:m.; w."' President Von Hlndenburg, whom no naa persuaded to run for the presidency, had proved a firm bul- wark for th n.w .,t,Tt.. .iJil er for a reeiored monareh aa disappointed too, to see a large section of the nationalists gradually dropping monarchism as a dead issue. He therennnn withdrew from nolitto. .,Vw r ,t nT.nat""? iLB,!.!2l TilnVw.' wr"::"1" bricks. There were 12 arrest- hausen was . great Wis. SThta Berlis where' It STttitZl -Ther were 9330 Peaf"l dem friend "LniSS&S tS Chicago, Baltimore. oecIillT in feriir k v. rnanoU9' w- c- Oakland, Cal., JSLJSJ? Texas. St. Louis San - r- r.ur7 in KILLS 5PERS0MS MEMPHIS. Tenn., March (AP) .Tearing throurh MiBt sippi, Arkansas and Louisiana to night, a tornado took a tail nt five Hve3, injured nearly two score persons, vlrtuallv wined out one village, disputed communica tions and caused property damage of upwards ot 2100,000. The wrecklna- wind first trtiV plantations and villages ia Boll Tar, Sunflower and Humphreys counties in Mississippi, it cut an 800-foot swath across Bolivar connty. The tornado killed two negroes, injured ten persons and destroyed 15 houses. Damage there was estimated at 220,000. Near Koscuisko. Miss., a 65- year-old woman, Mrs. J. W. Ad ams, was killed, and two negro farm tenants Injured as the storm swept the Adams' plantation. The next point struck-was Gre gory, Ark., a village .200 near Augusta. The villaccyxas vir tually destroyed, the property damage being estimated at 230,- vuv. Twicrffiv IntA T I I tornado hit Harris, near Homer. killed two negroes, probably fa tally injured a third and caused damage expected to amount to several tnousand dollars. More than a score of persons were in jured. FROSH TO SWIM UNIVERSITY OF OREGnV. March fi (Special) The Oregon varsity ana irpsn squads will be ai ineir iuu strength for the swimming meet with the Staters at corvaiu Saturday evening. Bob Needham ia one of the star frpsh swimmers, and will proba- oiy win hie events in the meet Baturaay. This Great Healing Oil Most CrJsfi Eczcnia end Skin Treves r Or Tour Money Back Make ap your mind today that fen are going to giro your skin I real chance to get well. NeTr salad what caused it you've probably been, like a lot of oth er people, convinced that the only thing to use waa an ointment or salve (some of them are vary goof), but In the big majority -ef cases taeie gucxy sarves siapr slog the pores, and tha condition' primarily remains the name. GO to Perry's Drue Store er any good drug stora today and get an original bottle of Moose's Emerald Oil (full ttrength). , tu very nrat application will giro you relief, and a few short tmtmentg will thoroughly eon vmce yon mat py nicking txlth fully to It for a short while your skin troubles wm be a thing of tha. past, .... oae bottle ws know will ahov you beyond, all -atiestiea that you nave at last discovered one surf way to restore roar skin ta narW feet health. ' Remember thai tfaona'a l!a,h aid QU la a clean. oowerfBf: aevia. trattag, anUseptle ott that doea aot ataia er leave a greaey reaA Vao. and that ft ntnat rfr m.. leti satlafactlon er your money ahoortnlbr rofnedad Ada . , SOUTH mniunn UNITED STATES RIOTS SUBSIDE Parades Held in Nearly All Larger Cities of Nation On Thursday LenJ? jured tn the prison ward of Belle- vuo hospital, and in Cleveland. Detroit and Seattle hundreds of persons' who no doubt are not communists at all, nor even out of Jobs, were recovering from nightstick blows. New York Reds Have Biggest Demonstration With, nearly 100 injured and al most as many arrested, including WlUiam Z. Foster, presidential candidate of the Worker's com- munlst party In 1928. New Tork'a demonstration was the biggest, in Detroit 12 were reported In- it! 21 A crowd 1AA AAA L . J T ; uiarev UJ WUUlfr DOUCO BX avv.wwv JUU1UCU 111 LU U1B UimDUl . -uaiwua aaa vauiua square, tiack- ins up anio woodward avenue half a mile from city hall. Two thousand police finally cleared them out partly bv runnina- busses and street cars through the moes. In Washington, the police used a tear gas bomb and their night bucks to disperse a smaller crowd lufc wuiaiao mo wnue rested. In Cleveland 2.000 paraded te u . vti a . p- L"!"' .mo siueu tu puuuc square, mount- Police charged in and broke up the demonstration. There was one arrest on Boa- I " common, zu out or a crowd J? l"to . ' ton Common. 20 out of a crowd of a parade that broke uo before it got started In Pittsburgh. In Fox Elsinore Saturday morning Seattle 1,000 communists and at 11 o'clock and bring your in communist sympathizers battled strumeit with you. Prof. Feugy the police while 5.000 curious 8ay" we r8 getting along fine fcU puc wnue o.wuo curious looked on. Someone started throw- SgS? "d rranclsco, Cal., and elsewhere. IIIMI M OFFICER IfJ SCANDAL TOKYO. March 7. fAP) (Friday) Emperor Hlrohito to day ordered the indictment of In chita Kobashi, former minister of education, on charges ot accept ing a orine. Thus, the series of hleli scan. dais which hitherto have chiefly involved the Seiyukal part lead ers had touched- the Minselto par- ln T-l LI . oiuto nuouai was a member of the ministry of Prime Minister Hamaguchl. until his resignation November 29. when chareea In volving him threatened to weak en tne cabinet. Kobashi then de .i. . ... . . . vitttca uo was innocent but re- signeu so as not to embarrass the government. The indictment charges that Kobashi accepted funds in con nection with the government pur- cuas oi a private railway In 1927, when he was a member of the lower house and of the now defunct Seiyuhonto party. BOAT FISHING HIT n.LUrJiNE, Ore., March S. (AP) A definite movement was ; started here today for introduc-1 tion of a bill in the next legisla- I mr io uo away with boat fishing in certain parts of the McKenzie ! river. (InllUFT pa. mm hWI a. SAT. SUN.. ONLY LT3 Johnson & Dckcr Straws ia tha wind Delhi Sisters. Hnmoristle Dancers and that Intricate, shnfflinj, iriarathbii Time-Step DrCl by h BELCHER DANCERS V. nOSNCirjWTWAOTTAliTiLSlTC manager oTthe Satle fox theatres, came up to see what we Mice do on Saturday afternoons ana he applauded, louder than anybody. If a man like him an- piauaa Tor us, we should be proud oi our Mickey Mouse club M M C One of these Saturdays, we are going to nave some special things for the Mickey Mice, who are on our Honor Boll. It isn't much I work h n tt,. trAn. rn. all you have to do is bring a note I from Vflllf mnthop covin have been good in your school I work, rood At bntn A, AA aims kind deed, and bring it te Chief I M Mnnu TVn1 Tl.. .1 I - -vroo va I nDDcir Ro thla wn.V I "" "yjm. miv. Waldo Wlxel. S B Lincoln Dorothy Thomas. S A Garfield iioraon Summers. b wb- mgton. Evelyn Lewis, 1 A McKInley, M M C Practice on your Yo Yo's. Try-outs next week. M M C Monday is revival dav at'thT. Fox Elsinore. and next Mnndav wut ormg a revival of ' Chang," tne marvelous little animal pic- Irnra vhioli ail irt-i- i , i Unoiw .T" c .a,"' i :r ciiuua4ig t 4:00 when all "'"w mice wm be admitted I M M C There is still room for manv more in our orcnestra. if von rn i Play aQ instrument, come to tha ana tnis week he and Bill Bra- zeau are golnr to snUt tha or !- iwa into a junior and a senior GRAND THEATRE "WHERE SOUND 19 BEST' Today and Saturday "2 WEEKS OFF" JACK MULHALL DOROTHY MacKAILL In the breeziest summer romance ever screened It's a Riot of Laughs Also PRINCESS PAT The Miracle Baby Tells Tour Name Describes Any Article while Blindfolded on Stage and too MADAME HOLTON nstoonds .Tout Mystifies Ton I t Entertains You! I I Ask Her She Known AT REGULAR PRICES i aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaal ""M"waaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Jaaa aaaa" " mm FANCHON & MARCO'S Mod- General Ed b Yinw Aa army of fun I LAST TTME3 . TODAY Mickey Mouse NOTES BY SCRIBE Mickey Moose Zolle Volcbok team so we can get ahead faster so be on hand on time Satur day. M M C Many of you still don't know tne Mickey Mouse Yell, so learn it. The best thing to do is clip it out or tne paper. Handy, Bandy, Sweet as Candy, Happy kids are we, Enie, Ickey, Minnie. Mickey. MOUSE Mickey! M M O From Barbara Barnes School of Dance we were joyously enter tained with a song and dance specialty by Emily Ann Kollen- bom, and Pauline Zoo Chambers; and a "Billy Bumpkins" by Bar bara Schmall and Evelyn Lewis. These little dancers are certainly cute. M MC Another surprise cromiax'. Barnes this week. She sure good to us. M M O iiemember. we wera enter tained by twenty little children In a Musical Melange. Well, we are to near from them again soon. M M C The feature for Saturdav la Richard Dix in "Seven Keys to Bampate," Fanchon and Marco'a Feasant" Idea, Chapter ef Tarzan" and our own Mlckev Mouse In "Jazz Fool" also a game commission reel. M M C Only one more Tarzan. then a new aerial "The Vanishing West" with these eight stars, Yakima Cannutt, Leo Maloney, Jack HOLLYWOOD; Home of 25c Talkies Today and Saturday MICKEY MOUSE MATINEE SATURDAY 1:30 P. M. Jules Verne's Great Submarine Story la Technicolor Dialogue and Sound The great anderseaa spectacle I Two years to make! Amazing I Thrilling! With LIONEL BARRYMORB LLOYD HUGHES JANE DALY Also Talking Comedies and Mickey Moue Coming Sunday Three Days THE SPIRIT of quiet refinement that prevails throaghoat the Fox-Ekdnore appeals ta every visitor rh rightfni- ty expects cnceptloBal sive expense, and always - , - t i Hill I EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT OUR GUEST DANCE PARTY Those Attending nr last Show will set Fanchrnt& Marco's Pleasant Idea at 9:C3. pchard Dix in 7 Keys to Baldpate at 9 :45 Then at 11 he our snests and to tha juste ef tha Fox Ehinore TEP CLUB Oreliestrartfaiieo in our besatifal lobby ta nidnisht. Carl CoCns, master of ceremonies, let's got i Bessie Lore - Chas. Kin - llarfp Dressier "Chasing narnfioivs" A IXcsieal Ccmedy Lab Ctett Dougherty. Eileen Sedgewick. William Fairbanks, Jack Perriru Fred Church and little Mickey Bennett. More about thia next week. M MO Be aure and get The Statesman eaclr Friday morning and read these notes. MHO See yon Saturday. 1 bites sir THEY DOfJT BELO' JS (Continue xrom Page X.) petition was turned In later than the three days before election as prescribed by the student body constitution, Wplf replied "that the student body constitution did not enter Into the Question, an that so far as he Is concerned It a mere scrap of paper. He further Indicated that he believed the assertions of th. two yell candidates, consider h. their fellow atudenta atramr u. cret society men, that they were not affiliated. A one-act play presented during- the assembly by Louise Mo DougalL Listen Parrlsh and Joe King, was enthnsiastiraii - ceived by the student boyd. The fclay was written a eonni years ago by two students ia Mrs. Ellen Fisher's superior English class. Movies of tha student - -- mm w waT eatatf, ef the one-act play wera takn k. a representative of a film com pany, and will be showi on the screen In Salem next week end Movies were also tvn 4v- !t0 . nd mcaln abops, the school buses, some of the physi cal education worlr. th m-w school cafeteria, and scenes at the grade schools. The Beet Seaad ia Town! f TODAY and SATURDAY The original "Gold-digger of Broadway" ncmr "Amom and Andy" oa the WW m.m m radio every ere at 8:80 NEXT SUNDAY BRINtiH GLORIA SWANSON la her first Ulkla 'THE TRESPASSER' eajoraaeat wit boat exces the best