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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1930)
The OREGON STATESMAN, Salsa, Oregon, Sunday Morning, April 2d, 1930 PARE FIVE Local News Briefs II Institute Sucre Many teach ers attended the county Institute held yesterday at Stayton, reports yi. W. Fox, rural school super visor who was there from Salem. Final papers in the county reach ing surrey which has been under way for several weeks were turned In at the institute and a prelim inary report was "given on the re sults ot the arithmetic tests which were held over the county last fall. Teachers evinced much in terest in tne report which Mrs. Mary Gibson and Mrs. Mae Eagel made on the two-way methods of teaching which they have used at the union school this year. Re ports on the Modern Teachers' club and the P. E. P. club were Siren by Mrs. Hazel K. Marshall end Miss Agnes Booth, respec tive 1 J. Closing out all men's suits, 917.95, 122.95. Aaron Astill, Ma sonic Bldg. High St. The tulip field of the 8alem Bulb Co. is on the Pacific high way,, four miles north. Picnic Planned The Chemeke tans are planning a picnic to be held at Bush's pasture Tuesday evening, April 22, at :30 o'clock. Thle affair, to which all who are Interested are invited, will take the place of the monthly social ot this outdoor organization. Every one is asked to bring his or her wn lunch, but coffee will be erred by the club. Persons go ing will meet at the bridge on the M lesion street entrance to the pas ture. In case ot Inclement weath er, other arrangements will be made and will be announced through the papers or on the bul letin board at the T. M. C. A. Husky higrade baby chicks. Another big hatch unloading to morrow morning. Special prices on Reds, Barred Rocks, Aneonas, Buff Orphingtons. White Leghorns hatching Tuesday. Salem's Pet land. 273 State. Census Count Gives The cens us count as taken April 16 shows 4,859 for this district, divided: Marion county. 2,864; "oik. 699; Tillamook, 470; and Yamhill, 186; Salem city alone, 1,606. Highest count that day was made by Mrs. Gladys S. Seamen in Sa lem with 183; and second high est, 163, by Mrs. H. V. Greene, also in Salem. Easter Lilies Lutz Flower Shop, 16th and Market. Phone 2124. We deliver. Open Sat. eve. and Sunday. School Clerk Here Leonard Walker, clerk of the West Stay- ton school district was a business visitor here Saturday, calling while in town at the office of the eounty school superintendent. He reports that Mr. and Mrs. L. B. McClendon have been rehired as principal and teacher, respective ly, of the school there. Senator George W. Joseph will address the citizens of Salem in the armory at 8 p. m. next Tues day, April 22. Senator Joseph will be IntrodMced by Hon. Thomas B. Kay. j Chief Goes South Chief Minto ot the local police force, left Sat urday for Medford to bring back R. J. Williams, who had been ar rested there the night before on a Salem warrant charging forgery. "Williams is said to have patron ized service stations principally In Ills alleged bad check campaign. Easter is here Salem Bulb Co. Pacific highway, four miles north. New Arrivals GUen Two ba bies, both boys, were born yester- day morning at the Bungalow Ma ternity home. A nine pound boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Gill of Woodburn and a seven and a fourth pound boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ben Harris of Sub limity. ' Baby chicks. Special sale today on Barred Rocks and Reds.' Open eveninps. Salem Chickerles. 264 North Cottage. Breakfast at V. W. The En clnltla club will have an Easter breakfast at 8:30 o'clock this morning in the Y. W. C. A. dining rooms. The event was originally scheduled for Bush's pasture, but due to uncertain weather condi tions was recalled to the Indoors. For sale, modern 9 room house, 8 baths. Inquire 7.60 N. Winter. Sons of Veterans Meet Joshua Smith camp, Sons of Union veter ans of the Civil War, will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 In the Women's clubhouse. Plans tor observing Memorial day with the G. A. H. will bo worked out, an nounces Commander U. G. Boyer. Dollar dinner every night 1:48 to 8 at the Marlon hotel. Realtors to Meet The .regular monthly meeting of the Salem Realty board will be held Monday evening, beginning at 6:15 'dock, at the Marion. Only a routine meeting is scheduled. Special Turkey aad Chicken Din ners today The Spa. Gray Belle Special 60c dinner. 7I Gray Belle dinner and . Easter $1.00 dinner de luxe Roast Spring Lamb, Oregon Turkey, Grilled Spring Chtck- . en, Prime Rib Steak. , Vr Dinner This Evening Special Sunday dinner $1.00 at the Marion Hotel today. Hotel Argo Dinlag Rooaa .- ; Special chicken dianer I0e, erred from 11:30 to Sstt and to Where To DINE Today Looking Vp Proposition A number of Marion eounty teach ers bare apparently been taken in on a proposition which may. and may not be all that It is said to be. William W. Fox, rural school supervisor, has been Informed by several of the rural teachers that a woman claiming to be manager in Oregon for the Marshall Hughes company, has collected 1S from each as evidence of good faith that they will sell the book. "Pictured Knowledge" put out by the Company. The woman has left mimeographed contracts In the county stating that all teach ers who work as salesmen 78 days during the summer will make at least $260, whether they sell the book or not. Want used furniture. Tel. til, Clinics for Moadaj- Although school children will have a holiday Monaay, tne usual pre-school clin ics will be held Monday morning at the Salem health center. The regular corrective dental clinic will be held at the center here in the afternoon. Clinics scheduled for Tuesday Include one at the Monitor school and also, a pre school at Monitor and the regular, chest and mllkhandlers' and cor rective at the Salem health center. New varieties of tulips at Sa lem Bulb field, Paeific highway. four mile north Many Beck Job Many teach ers and would-be teachers called yesterday at the office of the county school superintendent to learn if there are any vacancies in teaching positions in this county. According to present indications, there will be many teachers with out positions after schools open this fall. A number of the callers here have been students who are finishing school this year. Benefit Junior Guild dance. Castillian hall. Tues. 22nd. 55c. Kilties in Picture An unusual photograph in colors, ot the Sa lem Kiltie band will appear In the display window of the Gunnell and Robb studio this morning, an nounces Mrs. William Calder, manager. Musicians in the pic ture are John Charge, Andrew Henderson, James McGilchrist, Kenneth McWHliams and Arthur Hutcheon. Senator George W. Joseph will address the citizens of Salem in the armory at 8 p. n. next Tues day, April 22. Senator Joseph will be introduced by Hon. Thomas B. Kay. Returns From Walla Walla Mrs. Martha J. Scbmuck, 1496 Court, returned to her home here, from Walla Walla where she had gone to spend April. While there she slipped and fell, suffering bad fracture of the upper arm. Her daughter, Mrs. C. A. Sprague, went to Walla Walla and accom panied her home Friday. Get your S4 permanent wave at the Marinello Shop, 245 N. High. Phone 1690. Like Oregon Country William and Ben Limpo, of Yankton, S. D., are In Salem for a few days. They were through this section a year ago, and liked the country so well that they are back with a view to ,,,' KM locat,ne here- See the tulips today-Salem n . . - l m buid vo. t-acmc mgnway, lour i miles north. Youth. Arreted Albert 1. I wland. aged 15. 2196 Turner Ro Road, was arrested Saturday by I local police on a charge of using - . . ,i . l ja; ine wrong iii-eose piaies uu a ui- lapidated automobile. He was turned over to the juvenile court. Plan Wait Ing Room The Hoi lywood community club is plan iT u""'.; reg,n0te?ion TnSs Road and North Capitol street, for the accommodation pf street bus passengers. Introductory price on "Salem Special" hog fuel and sawdust burner, SbO. Short time only. C. n Dnnpn Phnno "nSfi.l On Way Home Now Word from Mrs. Mary L. Fulkerson, county school superintendent, says that be left Hutchinson, Minn., Ia9t Friday noon for Oregon. Ac cording to figuring here, she will reach Salem some time Tuesday. Here Over Easter Mr. and Mrs. John Bagley, Jr., and Mrs. J H. Bagley. Sr., of Portland will be here today to spend the boll - day with Mrs. Cora E. Reid. Mrs. Baslev. Jr.. was before her mar - riage Miss Rita Reid. Easter Flowers Lutz Flower onop, itio ana jaarnci. raone '1-4. We deliver. Open bat. eve. and Sunday. Goee to Rosrborg Mrs. J. B UnafAFil lafcf Catnrsv wr iv i t v for Roseburg where she will be- mm annorlntontlant f ho krwant- tsl at the veterans' home. Her son Jack remained to finish the m.! t Parri.h Mrs'. George Grabenhorst and! three sons, Richard, Coburn and George, Jr., are spending the weekend at their cottage at Nes- kowin. Breakfast Planned The Zoata club has been Invited by Miss Kathryn Gunnell, a member of the club, for an Easter breakfast this morning at her country home. Mrs. Edwin Going te Glendal L. Baker of 215 E. Lincoln street. will leave today for a trip to Glen- dale, Calif. HCRIBNER PASSES NEW YORK, April 19. (AP) iiXr i Tki the directors of the publishing Pk.al.. r Z 1 - A bouse ef Charles Scrlbner'a sons. died suddenly, at bis home here today. He was 7 years old. EXTRADITION ASKED Governor Norblad Saturday re- aueated the return to Oregon of Charles Taylor, who is under ar rest at Shelton, Wash., charged with larceny at Ttuamooav M CENSUS Coupons to Be Published to Obtain Any Names Not Yet Listed Every effort will be made by 1 census headquarters here to see that every person entitled to be I enumerated la Salem and In ether towns in this district is included!01 in the count before the 1130 cen-1 sus is completed, the district su- per visor said yesterday. About the first of May. when all Salem enumerators report tbeir niA - ... .1. i.i.i.t vu VI ac"J uiiuiiM, a coupon will be published for 1 five days in both city newspapers. At ' x i iJStSltn & probabby V. E. Mclntyre will be put on to run down such case, and assist In the wiplng-up Job A aim- liar procedure will be followed! Ut me larger uwn i me In the preliminary report the populatlon of Turner waa given as Vv88 f "T. 22 " March 22 or as late as 1920. There was yesterday added a-seedule bringing en more. name Easter was taken On six more are needed to put that of tn. anelent Anglo Turner dty on the man a i having M B f r, 08tem, not lost any ground hi 9 .years. whoM fe.tiTai wts celebrated saw na Hppcsi towns. Tor Instance; a man work- tag or a state department has Hd commemorating the res his home In Salem. The ennmer- n A11 . tft . ator finds no one at that home: an absent family schedule Is sent co u.. Hi, - " ous time when all of God s beau Then the lam ly is counted as a L,f , world ,8 buddlng wlta part of Salem's population. nMn.M nf . ... . ostern.so An absent family schedule was a couple of days ago received from a family ln Saskatchewan, Canada, belonging in ML Angel, The family im enumerated in Mt. Angel. All members of families lived happily with him at the end away in the government service, of the earth until his body be like the army, navy, marines and came dry and shriveled and his revenue service, and not at some T0lce disappeared, then she trans permanent post are given ln formed him Into a cricket. She where the families are. Salem has then locked him ln her chamber a lot of these. so that she might always have Two new cities for the second him near her. The next time you Oregon district were turned over hear the song of the cricket, recall as tentatively completed vester- his connection with the Greek day, Amity, with 434 for 1S30, against (22 In 1920, and 407 for 1910. and 192 ln 1900. And Carl ton, 748 this year, 552, 10 years ago, 386, 20 years ago, and 145 30 years ago. A number more are nearly ready. Miss Merlle Gilliam, enumer ator foT Bridgeport precinct, five miles from Dallas, turned in her portfolio yesterday. The estimate for her precinct was 70 farms and 275 population. She found 99 farms and 319 people. TAKE TRIP ABROAD William E. Kirk, professor of Latin and Greek at Willamette university, has asked leave of ab I sence next year to continue his studies in Europe and New Tori. It will be his first trip to Europe and his first leave of absence tZL l niTiTfJirt Z Er? S wiS l . here in 1906. With the excep- tion of two years he has spent tin., in, tn. -t wiii.niedA p5?.? Voin rheeneid cruise - w,u leave Nasies. Italy about August 1. and which will cover . Bas hero of Virgil's epic noem F!8.' lS' A- vi..u in..n i. WBint4iiv mtm run nil i u ii a i an th O(:raalon for tn, cruise T this - Besides the places visited on the Aeneld cruise, Prof, and Mrs. Kirk plan to spend some time in Naples. Greece, Rome. Constan- tinople, and Oberammergan, Gen- hr - - production of the Passion play. After the return to the United ; States some time next fall, Kirk will begin study at Columbia uni ! versity. New YoTk City. He will return to Salem in the summer Of 1931. Rabbit Group Planning Table i OI 4-1 lj20W iIlOTXly Plans for a table show in May provided that the expert judge desired is available at that time, 1 were made at last week's regular I meeting of the Salem Rabbit as- 1 soclation. Attendance at the I meeting was large and an inter- testing chart of meat food values I w. displayed. i This chart shows that the rab- ku has a food value of 41 ner cent ns compared to chicken 32, pork 28, beef and veal 25. A White Flemish buck of un-! !"ujdvalue was exhibited by I KODert AUStln. I a880ciat ,ofl mets ?n n? ""ra J U"B, " " P- m. in the Y. M. C. A. building. I Anyone Interested ln rabbit raw ing is invited "to attend, these I meetings. Representative RetUrnS MOneV aV Walter W nnflll f UeVtinn. vllle Saturday returned to the state department $235, which he received under a resolution 'L.12?,, JffL",1?"!! bcdbivd winui tw a" ivgwiaiuis expense money at the rate of $5 .per day. Rassell was a member of the lower bouse of tne legisla ture. A similar resolutioiuadonted by the 1929 legislature was declar- A tA Ka MMDATlltttnllbBtl h tllO t0 be aneonstitutlonal by the ! ,urt . FINEST TOUIO . J AC READING LENSES VD Eyeglass Insurance and thor ough examination Included. THOMPSON-GLTJTSCH optical ca no if. RESURRECTION IS AGAIN RECALLED Christ's Rise From Death Is Celebrated in Churches Here This Morning By MRS. C. H. GLENN Salem, Oregon The days ot penitence are over. Today Is the most joyous day In the calendar of the Christian for it marks the anniversary of the . , . ,v. -t- vl lu" ,,uu"1 wnicn man una dm any recoru victory or ure over aeatn gwg to the world a nope oi nre aner tne grave, a iaei upon wnicu nn""" ,Le" '! ""l. ,VrbrUtVanaM the resurrection of Christ caused -, u.mTT.Mv anil t r ' V a " ' wT- " "lt?Z r-hX twYn. after the death nf Christ that the n Nice A. D. 325 settled B n okto-that now unlT obBerwd. Easter is now the flm gjy that eomM after the futtint01l after 21st of March. If the full moon happens on Sun- fn11ft, RnI1d.V i. Km- . Ha -a v. jj,,,, this time of the year. It ti.i hertmfter Bhouid ln harmony wltb M cf at thl. glorl. the Greek legend goes. Is the daughter of Hyperion. She loved Tythonus for whom she asked and obtained immortality but she for- jgot to ask perpetnal youth she F. Puttaert, one of the organ- Irsra nf tha Wmtern Panpi Rngrd Products Co of Salem, stated nrriav that "h emert'eri tn he the financing of the enterprise advanced sufficiently far Tuesday night that the directors could pro- ceed with a contract for construct- inr the hniidtne He will then tro to San Francisco to arrange with his son for the removal of bis pa- per board making machine from thai Uv tn the new nlant here. He and his son will locate ln Sa- Sabbath. The seventh day of the lent and take personal charge of week, the Hebrew sabbath, Satur the factory which employs a pro- ay was never adopted by any cess of which Mr. Puttaert, Sr., Is ge number of people except the Inventor. The board to be turned out will use as raw materials the flax shlves and waste from the flax and linen plants, and waste screen- the local paper mill, , . . . , l"B ""J1" i counted on to leave a substan- tlal profit margin In the manufac- of the board. The flax fibre t jkAVk AVftW iriv An lA lA A l t WA I e . d-i-..-, r WitJ to n commands a ready I market Tnr hnnk nark Trunk ina BU" e board. l The site selected Is a five-acre tract alone the railroad in the i w re across the track from the i . . . . . . . . i i Miles Linen nlant. Many local nrnnla are intfrentfd in the en- ternrise and are serving as dlrec- tors. Presentation oi Easter Cantata Scheduled Today The Ea.ster cantata, "Life Eter- nal," by Fred Holton, will be pre- Bented tonight at 7:30 o clock as the special Easter feature at the First Evangelical church. Soloists f or the program will be: Kathleen frneips, soprano; i!.iva auii, auo; I Laurence Maves and Lewton acnmaiie, leuors; eiuuicy ira and Reuben HHiiker, bass. The personnel of the church chorus Includes: sopranos Kath lleen Phelps, Olive Schurtz, Helen Rex, Ruth Stover, Verna Haver- land, Wilhelmina Hilfiker and Sa- villa Phelns: altos Elva Anit, Effie Grimes, Anna Miles, Gladys I Hilfiker, Joyce Phelps and Doro- thv Badertscher: tenors Lewton Schmalle and Laurence Maves: bun Hnhn HtlftkAr W M. Me ICauley and Stanley Maves. Mrs. Ethel Poling Phelps is pianist. Obituary! Johnson Mrs, Isabel Johnson, age 41,1 died In this city, April 19. Sur vived by her widower, J. u. jonn- soa. of Portland, a daughter, Mrs. Arlene Parker and a son, John Johnson: also a sister, all of I Portland. Announcement ot fu- I ..,.1 .(., f mm flona-h-Tavlor Ineral later at j. View Cemetery Establish 1803 Tel. 12M Conveniently Accessible Perpetual care provided for Prices Reasonable If l JSiUvtsst filzmovial A Park Cemetery with perpetual care laws tea asinates from, t a heart ef tesarm goddess of spring. Ostern, the maid for whom Easter Is named. The customs In connection with this celebration are numerous and varied. In the early Christian era those who professed the faith would meet with, a kiss and a greeting, "Christ Is risen." The response would be "He is risen indeed." This is the form of greet ing in Rnssia to this day. Easter is a feast governed by a lunar period and in many coun tries and religions the hare is the symbol of the moon. The hare, not the rabbit, is a nocturnal an imal, and comes out at night to feed, causing that association of ideas of the, moon and the hare. It was formerly a popular belief that the hare never slept. It. is a fact that it Is born with Its eyes open, unlike the rabbit, which is I bom blind, and It was supposed I never to close them. For this, by a homeopathic system of reason ing, the brains and eyes of the hare were used as a euro for sleeplessness. Easter being dependent en the-; changes of the moon, soon gained the bare as its symbol. Of all the blossoms that grow, I there -are few about which there and ar the Klamath Falls Ma are so many legends told as about chine and Locomotive Works, all the lily; the blossom that surpas- of which are enterprises con troll Beth "Solomon In all his glory." ed by Carl T. Gerlinger of Dal One legend tells us that at one las, the inventor of the carriers, time all lilies were white and all The new nnlt Is a sixwheeled held their fair heads proudly erect machine, with pneumatic tires, but on the night in which Christ The carriers will be built ln three suffered in the garden of Gethse- sizes: five tons, seven tons and mane some fell from grace. When nine tons In sizes that will handle the other flowers became aware loads from 42 Inches ide by 48 jof His agony, they withered away. with pity and sorrow. Only once 1 the lily was indifferent, and when those three bitter lrtmrs had pass- ed she still displayed her spotless beauty ln the light of the moon, The soldiers came and Jesus was led eut from the garden of olives. He paused for a moment beside the tall stem covered with the white flowers; for a moment he gazed at them in pitying reproach for their blindness and their hard ness of heart, and touched by the love and mercy In His eyes they hung their heads and blushed; so to this hour, the descendants of this proud, hard-hearted blossom look down and shame dyes their petals. Then we have the most popular ot all the customs the use of eggs on this day. Eggs were at one time barred from the list of things, which Sat-im,nt De eaten during Lent. This caused an unusually large stock on hand hen Easter. arrived and removea mat restriction. iney must be disposed of In some way and then Deln8 t0 manT t0 eat the surplus was given to the chll dren with which to play, and so "rose the custom of coloring the e-ggs. Easter gave to the world the inai particular nationality, it naa in 't ueb an exclusive idea of rest from physical labor that It never commended Itself to people of other nations. Our Sunday, the first day of the week, the day wih rhri. v dead combined the r.Vt idpa of aeaa comoined the rest idea or Saturday with a more positive Me. of a day set. aside for I TV til .IlilU un ItUU. - Wide variations are found In t"" vuonuco vi the day from w Hebraism of Scotland to the holiday Idea which prevails throughout continental Europe r . . . H - . . . an.a tne unuea btates but all aiiKe go oaca to tne first Easter a ica rrn naivv T n rnv n r morning Tor US Seea IDTOUgnout Tne setting aside of one day ln seven for relief from drudgery of ordinary occupation, was a powerful factor in the betterment of the masses. The workaday world may well Join in the Easter gladness, for ever since the Christian religion became general, and In conse quence of its adoption, the first day of the week has been an oasis In the desert of toil. It is as if the Arab could always see the palms of some spring before him beck- oning him on, encouraging him to endure the sun and sand a 1 It tie longer with the hope of enjoy- I ing the luxury of an oasis one- eevenin oi tne time. Be tne jour- ney long or short the desert nar- iw ur wiue, one otj in eeven is to be spent under those palms. The one message of Easter to all may be summed op in one word Life. A dead Christ might have been a teacher and a wonder worker and remembered and loved as sucn. ui only a risen ana living unnst could be the savior, tne life and the life give to all men. Fm:ily Thrills What, another drees? What happened to that pretty red one? Oh, a moth ate it! ' - An appetizing mena awaits yon here daily morning, noon aad Bight. Dishes prepared which will tempt even the meet back ward appetite. Chicken Dinner 50c New Affgolo 222 ft N. Conrl - CARRIER HERE iSpaulding Logging Company Receives New Equipment For Operations The first of the newly designed Gerlinger carriers mounted on pneumatic tires has been received by the Spaulding Logging com pany at Salem from the Dallas Machine and Locomotive Works, where it was built. Gerlinger car riers are built especially for heavy duty work about lumber yards, the frame ot the machine straddling the load, picking II up and moving it to the destina tion. Putting the chassis on pneu matics will make possible he use of the 'machine for deliveries about town on paved streets toi construction Jobs. The advantage lies ln doing away with handling individual pieces of lumber in loading and unloading. The orig inal Gerlinger carriers are now standard equipment in lumber yards and docks; and It Is ex pected that the pneumatic-shod machines will receive ready de mand for retail lumbermen. The machine will be manufactured In Dallas, at the Salem Iron Works Inches in height, of any length to 57 by 60 inches. The maximum I width Is limited by the law gov- I ernlng width of motor vehicles, The design of the machine bal- ances the load evenly on all six I wheels regardless of the contour of the road. The steering mechan ism is designed so mere is no side slipping In turning corners, The speed range Is 40 to 45 miles per hour, The carriers axe powered by a Blx-cylinder gas engine. The transmission Is arranged for four speeds forward and four reverse. Four-wheel hydraulic brakes and an emergency, brake are pro vided on all machines. The device for lifting and lowering the load Is almost Instantaneous. Mr Gerlinger has been perfecting the machine for some time, and the machine received by Spauldlng's yesterday promises to attract a great deal of attention both from the public and from lumber op- erators ASSIH HIRED TO I E Dr. Charles M. King, of Calca go, has been hired to assist In raising approximately $200,000 to complete the endowment fund of Willamette university, an nounced Dr. Carl G. Doney just before leaving for a ten day trip to Los Angeles and San Francisco Saturday, night, ing ""cuea1 r yersity a year ago last February ftnd a8 Julte successful. It Is Dr. King solicited for the uni- probable that he will have an as sociate to assist him this year, said Dr. Doney. The time for the completion of the endowment expires October 1, 1930, and unless the solicitors are able to raise the remaining 1200,000 the university will fail to benefit by the offer of the Rockefeller foundation, whereby 1650,000 raised by Willamette is to be Increased by a $350,000 gift from the foundation to make i total endowment of a million dol lars. PALLANZA, Italy (AP) A great mausoleum for the body of Marshal Cadorna, commander of the Italian forces ln 1915-17, is to be erected here in time for dedication November 4, the 12tb anniversary of Italy's vktory over Austria. BERLIN (AP) Traffic statl clans have figured out that one hour a day ot the average Ber liner's time Is consumed riding on omnibuses, street cars or elevated or underground trains. This amounts to 13 full" days a year YES- We Rent Invalid Chairs )titaief& JaU 2108, - Usedl Farattwiw OepawtascRt -451 N. High THE HOME OF SMILING SERVICE Service with a smile! Ser vice that yonU admire at this popular drug; store! Come in and try us on we're certain that yonU re tain again and become one of our many patrons. Schaef er's DRUG STORE The Original Yellow Freat a- Cady Special Store of Salem Phone 107 185 N. Commercial Quality Pins CVmrtesy .. MONEY Hawley Holds Cutting Out Joker From Cherry Tariff Provisions A telegram received yesterday afternoon by Max Geblar, who is leading the fight of the cherry growers for an adequate tariff on cherries, from Congressman Hawley gives hopes that the tar iff measure may be corrected by eliminating the joker on cherries frozen If not sweetened' which threatened to rob the measure ot practical value for the cherry growers. Mr. Hawley's telegram, which was also received by Ron ald C. Glower, is as follows: "In the cherry paragraph ol the tariff bill the senate, ln the first section added the words "or frozen if not sweetened." which. if It remained in the bill would enable importers to bring Into; the United States cherries frozen at two cents per pound which has been held to be a natural state at rates lower than was intended by either the House or Senate. In the conference today it was agreed at my request that the bill should be amended In any way that the rules governing a conference permit to impose an adequate rate of duty on frozen cherries whether sweetened ot At the Library The Central Book Chamber ot Russia exchanged 78,399 books with 120 foreign libraries last year. The Congressional library of the united States was the re cipient ot 20,906 volumes. Fran Hedwig Textor-Vargas, the only living descendant of Jo- hann Wolfgang Goethe, the Ger man poet, has been commissioned by American publishers to trans late various books which she thinks would interest readers ln the United States. 8he is cow working on Emll Alboldt's "Trag edy of the German Navy." A prize of 1300 for the best poetry manuscript submitted by writers who have not yet pub lished ln book form, is offered by the Harbor Press, 142 East 52nd street, New York City. The con test, which closes May 12, 1930, will be Judged by William Allan Neilson, president of Smith col lege; Carolyn Ruttz-Rees, Alice Lerch, John Hyde Preston and Louts How. A Shakespearian library of In ternationa significance is to take the place of "Grand Row"-old landmark on Capitol Hill In Wash ington. It Is made possible by a foundation established by Henry C. Folger, former presideat of the Standard Oil company of New York and author of many mono graphs on Shakespeare. In It will be housed his 20,000-volume of Shakespeare. In addition to a huge reading room there will be a large exhibition gallery and a re production of an Elizabethan the atre. Long sought newspaper files containing the first published writings of Mark Twain, repre sented ln his autobiography as "my first literary venture,' have been discovered in Hannibal. They reveal young Clemens, still In the teens, substituting as edi tor on his brother's newspaper, and striving to enliven the col umns with bis wit. His methods reveal him at his beginning as possessing the Ingenuity he later instilled In his famous characters, Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. The newspapers were found by Rev. C. J. Armstrong, Hannibal's pastor, and long a stu dent of Mark Twain. The return of Orion Clemens to discover that his younger brother had been tak ing liberties with his paper is In dicated In an editorial by the edi tor May 13, 1853, calling a halt. This editorial edict seems to have temporarily ended Mark Twain's journalistic career. Expert Motor Reconditioning: Cars, Tracks and Tractors, with the most modern and np to date Equipment G. A. Raymond Machine Shop 425 Cbcm. St. Phone S A. M. Clough CLOUGH COMPANY Funeral Lady 205 S. Out Hope of . unsweetened." This wire discloses that th Joker was inserted in the senau and the foul deed was done In tb conference committee, which va presumed here and made th basie of criticism of Congressman Hawley. The original house bil specified that cherries prepared ln any manner would have a tar iff of 6 He per pound plus 40 per cent ad valorem, which was sat isfactory to the growers. The sen ate finance committee reduce' this provision but after a fight by Senator McXary the rate war raised to 9e. However the Joker about frozen cherries was Insert ed which left the gate open for importing cherries fer maraschino purposes at the low rate of two cents per pound. Just what the conference rule will allow Is not certain here: but It Is thought that the original text of the house bill may be In sisted on, which . would provr adequate safeguard for the cherry, growers. Mr. Geblar attributes the "dirty, work at the crossroads" to lobby ists for importer who performed a similar stint la 1922, Tirtaally nullifying the tariff protection through an apparently harmles clause. Mr. Geblar also defend Congressman Hawley for hb steadfast work for the cherry tar iff. Last Monday he wired Genial asking it the senate amendments were okay. When the text of th met sure came la the local men go: busy to secure - a modification, which the Hawley telegram seemn to promise. hand tailored You want smart style, fine fab ric, fine tailorj ing, perfect fit, long service You get them It ail here at a 11 moderate price! VGtn Mills CLOTHES In Kalcm Exclusively At Inc. Tailor Furnisher Clothier 426 State St. $UQ down Balance la 10 Payment. J. Dale Taylor -TAYIOR Diiectors Assisant CKurch v uimiom lephone 120