II Hi II l -riiiti" io , ., Juno i LOW THIS YEAR No Deficit but no Money to Make. Improvements, is Indication now Receipts oi tlx 1MO Oregon state fair aggregated $4x,Slf. as against tSS.547.50 last year, ac cording to figure giren out nere Monday by J.-E. McCUntock, vet eraa auditor ioit-the. .state., fair board. -The attendance lor the seven Aaya pt the recent state fair was 11,70. The decrease in revenue at the Oregon fair was in line wKh the experience of all other exposi tions on Ch eircaiti which in cludes 14 fairs. Three ot these fairs ere la Canada. Members of the fait board said that the attendance at Ttrtually all fairs in the northwest this rear d dropped from IS to ?2 per cent. wnen cwmparea wita the attend ance records last year. Weather CUvan Most of Blame The marked redaction in the 'attendance at the Oregon state fair this year was due largely to weather conditions. Rain fell part of three days, while the other days were cloudy and un settled. The largest attendance at the Oregon state fair this year was on Wednesday, Salem day, when a total of 25,500 persons paid their way onto the grounds. The receipts on Wednesday totalled $13,670.75. as against 117, 669.75 on Wednesday' at the 192Jatate fair. The shrinkage in receipts at this year's state fair was not confined to paid admissions, but also to the horse 'show, grand stand and concessions. Members of. the fair board indicated that the receipts would cover the ex penses, but that there would be Tittle money left for improve-meats. Ttrtually all of the exhibits had been moved from the grounds Monday. i OF LAKE GOIIKIYSQUIBBLE The Northern Lake county chamber of commerce has sent a resolution to the public service commission protesting against a resolution approved by the Lake county chamber ot commerce urg ing that the cross-state line be extended from Klamath Falls to Lakeview. "We protest such resolution as not being to the best interest of the state ot Oregon and Lake county," read the Northern Lake county chamber of commerce reso lution. "The railroad proposed in thi3 resolution would not greatly benefit Lake county in that it -would not develop aay part of the 14,000,000,000 feet of timber, the greater part of the best agricult ural sections and other resources of the county." The Northern Lake county chamber of commerce has in dorsed the action of the Oregon public service commission and in terstate commerce commission in the order to build the cross state line. The chamber further urges a southward extension from Odell via Silver Lake to Lakeview. "Such an extension," read the resolution of the Northern Lake county chamber o f commerce, would be contiguous to the great er part of the timber lands of Lake county. The proposed southward exten sion would touch Silver Lake, Summer Lake and Chewaucan val leys, which were said to be cap able of providing heavy tonnage. The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, September 30, 1939 PAGE SEVEN FLY ACROSS ATLANTIC TO GREET RELATIVES ? Rockne Becomes A Stock4 Broker CINCINNATI, Sept. 29. (AP) Knute Rockne, the foot ball coach, hag decided to em bark In the stock brokerage business, it was announced here today. He has not planned to give up his athletic directorship at Notre Dame university, how ever. Effective October 1, Rockne will become associated with R. Gibson .and Co., of this city as a special partner. STUNG BY HORNETS ROSEDALE, Sept. 29. Six year old Irwin Tucker was badly stung by hornets Sunday and was quite alck Sunday evening, but it is hoped it will not prove very serious. He began his first year of school fast Monday. "DANDERINE" Dissolves Crust of Dandruff Soothes Scalp; Gives New Life and Lustre to Hair! There's no use allowing un sightly dandruff to steal the life from your hair; make it dull, brittle and scraggy; turn it gray or start it to falling out. "Danderlne" will dissolve the worst crust of dandruff in a hurry. It will bring the glow ef health back to your scalp. Its consistent use will encourage the hair to grow long, thick, more youthful-looking. Ton will bo delighted by the effects ot "Danderine's" first application. Excess oil is 're moved from the hair; its natu ral color is brought out mar-, velously; it sparklet with, new life and lustre. Five million bottle of Daav. derlne used a year shows 1 popularity; And yon won't won der at this one yon tears lis easy use and see. how- quickly K gives health to the scalp and vi gor and youthful appearance to the hair! Every 4i ffg tnt toilet conntsr In the land hat Danderina le bottles. CAdtJf . t??wrw,.,,i"'"jITr ( A " ;M hC. 4'f5-- At A. " T V H..u ouiut .sua -v-Ja- A i ' f - ' v fa " '" i 1 i r f air r One Of the reasens Diendonne Coste and Maori ee Bellonto ! flew acroM the Atlantic was to visit rela tives to San Francisco. They did it last Friday. Maybe tkat's why they couldn't find time to to greet the state fair crowd fa Salem. Here they are Cost in the center and Belloate om the right; Mrs. camuie Kejraai, a. cousin of Coste, on the left and below, two younger coosina, Laden Ceete (left) and Slmone Dolle. II. W. H TROPHIES WM Inter-collegiate cooperation and good will in addition to a work for the Interest of all colleges in the Northwest conference is be ing planned and directed by Wil lamette's "W" clufc The "W club is an organisation made np of lettermen. W wight Adams is this year's president. The plan iato get the coopera tion of the mentioned colleges in an effort to raise money for two cops to go to champions of the conference in football and basket ball. Money will bo donated or raised by members of the various colleges' lettermea's groups. Last year, work was done by the local organization to raise money for a trophy case for Wil lamette's balls. The case cost $T0 and will be presented this year by the club members. Commissioners Oppose Delay in Freight Rates . The cooperative committee ot the national association of rail road and utility commissioners at a meeting held recently at Kansas City, went on record against any tuther delay In r lacing in effect reduced freight rates under the grain rate order issued by the in terstate commerce commission last July. The railroads affected by the .order recently filed with the In- EVEN ROYALTY COOKS re e e e Queen Mary is Expert; Local Women Aided at STATESMAN'S SCHOOL Did yon know that Queen Mary of Great Britain has ber own kitchen, where she enjoys v.-.v.v - '. :v: . r'j 'S- r- V 2L MISS GOODWIN herself by trying eat new recipes for King George and the royal family? And that the Prince of Wales refuses to marry because he can not find a mate able to cook Welsh rarebit even half as well as his royal mother? Whether or not the latter rumor is based terstate commerce commission a petition for rehearing of the case. H: H. Corey, member of the Oregon public service commission, returned here Monday from Kans as City, where he attended a meet ing of the committee. on fsct it remains that the an cient art of cooking has been dignified by royal hands. Queen Mary believes that every wife should be, first ot all, a good cook and she carries out her be liefs by preparing many ot the dishes which appear on the Brit ish royal table. "It a oueen takes pride in her cooking, is It any wonder that every housewife should take a keen interest in KT It's no won der that the housewife Is ao an xious to keep up to the minute in household methods!" says Miss Goodwin, of the Ella Lear Cooking schools, who comes to Salem soon to conduct a three day program of the "Cooking School That's Differ- nt" tor The Statesman. "Perhaps you won't be able to live In a palace and cook in a queen's kitchen, bnt every woman's heme is her 'cas tle' and it's really easy to cook meals fit for a king In the small est kitchenette' says Miss Good win. This newspaper extends a cordial invitation to all women of Salem and vicinity to attend Miss Goodwin's programs and benefit by her advice on house hold topics. Noted for her en tertaining style, she brings valu able information as well as a new viewpoint on the art of cookery. The Cooking School sessions will be I to 4 p. m. Thursday, Friday and Citurday, October 2, I and 4, of this week, at the armory. BEGINNING OCT. 1ST. 5KB LOS ANGELES Cja ROUND TRIP tU Sm DSeoe (Round Trip) $45.00 Every day in the wool Lioy ke celorM Antes hlkwyt at ttie wcaiy Wee icrioa fares. Rapid Exfrtu rWAtfge Strrtct T AB torn HOTEL- SENATOR Phone 696 PACIFIC LINKS lu'i 1 I 1 " r-mri Mrs. Wilson has New Scheme but It Doesn't Work Mrs. Myrtle Purviance Wilson of Portland, whose nominating petitions for governor were re jected y the secretary of state. Monday sent a letter to the state department urging that a nota tion be placed on the ballot advis ing voters that they have author ity to write In her name. Mrs. Wilson said such a plan would eliminate all present diffi culties. Secretary of State Hoss advised Mrs. Wilson that the election laws prevented him from granting her request. Mrs. Wilson'a nominating peti tions were rejected for the reason that they did not contain a suffi cient number ot signatures, and the names were not properly veri fied. She sought to enter the cam paign as an independent candidate. SPEEDER GOES SO AN HOUR INDEPENDENCE, Sept. 29. Leon Fish Jr.,. of Albany, Ore., paid a 110.00 fine here in Justice Mcintosh court for speeding at the rate of SO miles on the highway. Ha was arrested by Constable Shrunk. SILVERTON, Sept. 29. Selmer Lee returned fro mthe hospital where he underwent an operation for sinus trouble. Mr. Lee Is get ting along very well now. He is an employee with the Sliver Falls Timber company mill, o o Bits For Breakfast j o o (Continued from page 4) I was out of place and a nobody, . . . married my first cousin. Miss Martha Cable, of Aldborough, and sailed for Cowes, Isle ot .Wight; . . . arrived at the (Sandwich) Islands, where we took in Rev. George Gary, who was coming to settle up the Methodist mission business after the death of Jason Lee. We arrived safely at Van couver In May. 1844." (Lee did not die until March 12, 1845.) Was that a "call ot the wild?" Roberts was like many men of his time. A taste ot the wilder ness life made them unfit for the refinements of civilisation. They yearned for the great open spa ces." j It He had grown up with the Hudson's Bay company; came as a youngster; learned French, In dian and Chinook; knew every thing there was to knew about his work, and everybody He was somebody there, and at! the var ious stations of the great com pany throughout the wilderness. And, after a trial, he liked Ore gon better than Loudon. Though the Oregon country he knew was at the end of the earth, and dur ing a large part of his long ser vice the vast empire in point of extent was inhabited only by In dians, governed by one man. Dr. McLoughlln, assisted by; a few Scotch, English and French fac tors and clerks and a few hundred Canadian-French voyageiirs and trappers, and the menial tasks done by some 600 Sandwich Isl anders. And not a white woman in all the great territory.! But his headquarters, old Fort Vancouv er, was the metropolis and capi tal, more so than London was the capital and metropolis ; of the British empire, and he was some body there, and felt at home. Senator McNary' report ot pro gress, to the Salem Chamber ot Commerce yesterday, on the pro posed improvement ot the Wil lamette and Columbia rivers, and the project for a new group of state buildings, ought to be enough to make not only every Salem voter and every Willamette valley voter, but every voter in Oregon, of whatever party, see the Importance of keeping Charles L. McNary on his job at Washington. CHICIlfSMSiPS for Chi thm t BrMftPlUala Metallic botes. RtbtMo. Taka MfilM. PILU.IraikM M Bat. Saint. RelithU. Bar Ural SOU IT PKOGCUTS ETniW&U! VflMV MMed via KM VV Tem DiiaMia Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia In 80 mlnntee, checks a Cold th first day, and checks Malaria In three days. 666 also in Tablets - i k 1 if Plan to tke CIooldLog Sckool Be Shte to set aside timt tHb week to attend the Cnoiring School. Easier, better meth ods in the home are alwayt worth learning. You wifl see a demonstration, among othet worthy products, of Ghita delk's Ground Chccolate,oo WHEN CHILDREN f" !" fP THERE are times IT it 1 when a child is too fretful or feverish to be sung 'to sleep. There are some pains a mother cannot pat away. But there's quick comfort fit Castoriat For .diarrhea, and ether: infantile Ola, give this part egetable piepara tioiL Whenever eoated tongues tell oicoastrpatkHU whenever1 there's any lira of ,i1niihnfi Gaatatia has a good tastes chfldrea love to tax it. Bey the gtnuiae--wi Cfcas. H Fletcher's saaiara oa wrapper ; of theXfcst's great convenience V foods. Ghirardelli'si Ground Chocolate has all of cocoa's convenience of formj with all of chocolate's full fine flavor. YoawOllaiso SiateenRPNo Dcwooflectionoiptiia winning chocolate scope oa s6 cant sltpferyoorritffleoryotar' cook-boolL (Fees, of iomsel) . i . - GH1 RAEIB E 3L LI'S CHOCOLATE 6 BEGIN MUSIC LESSONS EARLV Musical Kindergarten Mrs. F. Lllburn announces the reopening ef her kindergar ten. Special work in ear training and sight reading as well as piano work, hand and table work, stories, dramatisation, all kinds of rhythmic work, including orchestra, games and dancing. Congregational Church Rooms liberty and Center streets. Monday, Wednesday, Friday mornings Opening date, Sept. 29, 1930 Telephone 682W Car Service If Desired Melody Way Studio DOROTHY PEARCE Teacher of Piano Beginners and advanced studentsa The Melody Way Class Instruction for Children Studiot Chambers Building, 383 N. High St. Tel. 541-R for information Moore Fundamental Teachers Applied Piano Group Instruction or Private work and Fundamentals in Class Jessie Bush Telephone 2572R 116: So. Com'l St. Laura Grant Churchill 806 N. Winter Tel. 1429J Mrs. Walter Denton Studios, Nelson Bldg., 1336 Court St. Tel. 184 Lena May Dotson 110 Union St. Tel. C43J Bertha Junk Darby 7 N. Cottage Tel. 1950W Lela Lee 735 Stewart Tel. 1037J Ethel Poling Phelps 1220 Chemeketa St Phone 2924J Studio No. 4 Steusloff Bldg. Lena Waters 1658 Court St. Tel. 1160W MINETTA MAGERS will resume her vocal work in Salem Fri day and Saturday, September 1 9 and 20. Nelson Bldg. Tel. 540 Portland Studio, 918 Studio Bid. Elizabeth Levy, Violinist TEACHER DIRECTOR SOLOIST Pupil Cesar Thomson, of Royal Conservatory of Music, Brussels, Belgium. Bachelor of Music degree granted by authority, Regents of University of New York. Prixa winning atudenta presented la recital last season bjr Miai Levy were: Misses Hortansa Taylor, Beryl Ottaway, Yvonne Piekell. solo violin contest. State High School Mu lls Tournament, 1930. Nathan Stelnbock, State High School Music tournament, 19$, ( and Junior National Federation ot Music clubs. 110. Mis Fay Irvine, aololat, Willamette University Glee club. HIGH SCHOOL CREDITS ORCHESTRA TRAINING Studio 254 North Church St. Telephone 1194 Mary Talmadge Hedrick Violinist and Teacher Telephoae 1021R Class beginning October 1. 570 N. Winter St. ELMA WELLER PIANIST and TEACHER Specializing la Artistic Piano Playing. Grovp teaching Ja Dunning Improved Music Stady for Beginners High School Credits Givea Studio 95 N. Liberty Telephone 1851 William Wallace Graham "Maker of Artists" Coaoert Violinist and Teacher - Head ot the Violin Depart ment, Willamette University. Mr. Graham, in Alaska on concert tour, announces opening ot his studio in Salem about October 1st. For Information address 600 Holly St., Portland, Ore. Studios In Nelson Building Oar. Liberty aad Chemeketa SU. Tel. 640 KINDERGARTEN, AGES 3-6 Pre-echool work Eurhythmies Nature Study Dancing Hand work Music Car servioe TERM OPENS SEPT. 23 MRS. MARION MULKEY Studio: Nelson Bldg. Telephone 129 8M JOY TURNER MOSES PIANIST DUNNING TEACHER VIOLINIST Ondnst Kw Zeg. Cos Boston; ftoldt Koratml Dunning Diploma naior Osrr Louis Dunning, K. T. City. For flvs rrs. was Hs4 et Vlolla Dept. snd PUbo Iutraetor. Willsawtts Caiv. Orsdusts work la East, itamer of 1030. FrivsU a4 Clan Lessons. Fm Orokastrs sad UssomMs Glasses Hlca Bekool Orsaita Otvsa Studio 835 N. Capitol SC. Telephone 4S8-&I W. W. FUEGY Teacher of Violin; Saxophone, Clarinet Private and Class Instruction Studio- 158 S. Liberty Frank E. Churchill Teacher of Piano and Pips Organ HIGH SCHOOL CREDITS Authorized teacher of the Progressive series ot piano lessons Residence studio 8fr5 N. Winter Tel. 14Z9-J T. S. and Ethel H. Accredited Teacher Piano and Pipe Organ Dunning System of Im proved Music Study (or beginners. Res. SOB N. Summer Telephone 1370 Prof. E. W. Hobson TEACHER OF SINGING Director ot Apollo Club. Portland and Salem CI vie ' Mala Chorus 8tadio: Nelson Bldg. TeL 540 Res: 1550 State St. Salem Junior Band t Starting Friday, September 1 2 Meet at Prof. FueyB Studio, 158 S. liberfr St. , lietwem I and 8 PJM, without instnrmenta VIOLIN AND PIANO STUDIO P. F. THOMAS ZENA THOMAS High School Credits Given Phone 1518J Stringed and Brass Instruments tamght. Oxeheetra Training Free. Private or elass instruction. Lena Belle Tartar CotttraIt Soloist Yocsl Teacher - Chorus Director fitadlo: lf4 Nerth Liberty Si. Phone SS4, Baa. Phona 14STB RUTH BEDFORD - Teacher of Piano. Profeeaional Aeeompanlst . ORADUATW 09 80&a C0N3EETATOHT e' Hlth School Creflltl ftvaa. CTastoa now SUrtlax ; f Nelsea Bid. ? ; : ! : Telepoenf 8