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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1933)
" - The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Sunday TVforning. October 1. 1933 - i ' . . T ' ,'- Dirt, PIU- d- " 1 - . , - : . nuu 11 u ---:.! 1,1 - . ' " 1 " r " 1 - ' ' : ;hra ' Npwc Kr P c M UtH UHUiWUI Tax Collector Out Following , 1 an auto accident Trhich caused a broken hip seven months - ago, Paul. Marnarch, Collector of do- . unguent dog licenses, made his first , appearance at -the - court : uvuiw fesveraay.'.'., unaer- a special arrangement l&armarch. will .take . can- of,, his. work ia . one-halt o( : thd county while Mike Kepplnger collects, the delinquent license tee In the other half . It la es timated that, there are at least a thousand dog-owner - la the . -county who have- yet to pay the lax; 33Z;iuTe palO.-- ," -' , Plan to attend contract b r 1 d g e hotel, beginning October Zs be- f tnnerii ; 2 rp; m.v advanced stui - dents 3:30 n. Mrs. WlUIam H. -,. Qulnn. . Instructor; - highly - recom- ? mended by Culhertson; Joint auV r pices of The; Oregon. Statesman. - I Fire Service C JPt Cost to the city tor .fire nrotection .at th1 - year' state fair - amounted-- to 1239.28 in salaries.' according to ,-. the monthly payroll made out yes-. terday by City Recorder Mark i Poulsen. Four extra firemen vers . stationed at the grounds 24 hoars .. daily .for nine and one-half days and ; two. others, part; time daring that, period, , The ' four received 157 each, and the two S35.62 each , ror the nearly ten days, duty.; Thomas, Gilbert 1 Involved A ;V single minor automobileaccident was reported tocity police gatur day despite heavy downtown traf fic. Cars invftlTtxt In nnlllslnTi e, oecnrrinsr rn T.fhrt - hctvun - Commercial and " Court streets , were driven; by ' Dana Thomas, " route one. and Gilbert Davis. 40S t "Marloastreet, both reported. No injuries or damage to cars were " listed. W.. R. C. cooked food and rum mage sale- Wed., Oct. 4, 154 S. , : Commercial ' ' , - Prune Record Made-Wbat Is v considered a notable record crop .has been -harvested by a rancher named Johnson, tenant on the ;- Jack Imlah place at Fairfield, ac- coruiusg Louniy inspector van ' -Tramp. Johnson harvested 32 tons of assorted prunes acceptable for . ' canning stock from six and one- -. half acres of land. The record Is 'enhanced by the fact that trees . . are young. . liknsanne' Women Frolih Fri t day night residents of Lausanne a hall, women's dormitory on the viiiameue .university campus, held their annual "cabbage the- atre" InltlaUng into' their fellow ship more than SO first-year wo men. : Included among the Initl r ates were said to ba two women " faculty members living at the ,-.,u4u iur me unit uiuo iuia jcar. ; BI Buck Shot Sam Berry of; Smith & watkins and Jay Duncan . L - . 1. iiv.t.- A. ': pany '"returned home late last ia 250-pound mule, taken out of f wee ' with the larrest hurt deer. i sonthwestern Grant county' this season.' ''They reported n Joying ; i good Vekther" during ctheir four i' i day .trip.-' r Speeders ' Arrested City police . yesterday bore down on motorists. ? arresting four on charges of s speeding: F. ' Holt, Indepen- I dence; Owen R. - Gilstrap, route c Hwo; William Brown,, Hubbard . ..a.r-. n ft- -- route unef auu - Jiurc u. irujer, - Portland. Brown appeared in mn ; nioipal court, pleaded guilty and i. paid a 5 fine.- v' ' - Subscribe now," ReneWinow. -The Oregon statesman 900, iuit year -by mail for less than 1c a day. 13.00 per year by mail on!y, to f any Oregon address. ; K Order Served Clyde E. Hill ; aad Blanche M. Hill 'were ordered , by circuit court to tarn over to i' tiffs, furniture, furnishings and ', 'state street apartment . Club to-Breakfast The Aetna rlub otJeortlan4. including repre- ives ol the Aetna Life In surance company, are coming to Salem -Monday .morning lorK breakfast, according to Frank jLilburn, local agent. They will - e served at the Spa. . . Out Aa$ Pat Whaley was re leased from the county jail yes terday "laying out" a $25 fine Imposed in Woodburn court for stealing a blanket. Visit Salem Volna J. Clark of Harmony and Edna Fery and Vir ginia Magnus of Stayton were vis itors at the county school super intendent's office here yesterday. . .V - uary Obit Sullivan Saturday, September 30, Law rence Patrick Sullivan, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence P. Sullivan, 1180 North 16th street. Anouncement of funeral later from W T. Rigdon & Son mortu ary . ; V Coming Events ' : O c t o b e r 3 Statesman sponsored bridge classes and - tournaiuent beginning fall season at Marion hotel. . October 4 Ir. Norman P. Coleman, president Rcd college, Methodist chnrcn, 8 p. tn. O e t o b e r Federated Rural ciab Instltcte at Klckreall. 1 " . October i Brush College grange Booster nigh. October 7 Statesman Pet parade," :3D a. m t Weather permitting.) October David Hasten, Ortrgonian eon espondent, speak on European condl- lions, chamber of commerce,; noon. ' - ' " October 13-1 County Christian Endeavor conven tion, South Salem Friends rbtrrcb., ' 3. Xicgion Installs Monday Newly elected officers of CapiUi Post No 9, American Legion, will be lnr stalled at the regular meeting to be held at Fraternal temple Mqn day sights Claude McKenney is the incoming-commander, succeeding-Allan G. Carson, Drv B. F.. Pound, head of the Marlon voiture of the 40 et I. is chairman of the Installation' committee and O. S. 'Mose"Palmateer, district legion commander, installing. officer. : Tou'U have a fine time and im prove your contract bridge game by playing in as man y . of - the bridge .tournaments ." as : possible. First tournament - starts Jiext ITueaday, 8',p.; Marion "hotel, joint auspices Airs. Qulnn - and Bette Harrlld, associates, and The Oregon Statesman. Make reserva tions now it Marion hotel or Ore-' gon. Statesman. Liberal prises. . - Blaze at Incinerator Two fire trucks were "dispatched to the city incinerator, east of the city .limits, early, last ' night when a fire was reported there.' Air they found was a pile of burning rubbish and boards from which - no property damage resulted. Another alarm yesterday was tot' a - small - chim ney blaze at 183&. Jleservoir street..- - ; . Stanford Friend Visits -Donald C..G. Mackay of Ottawa, Canada, was a guest of Wendell Keck in Salem yesterday on his way to Palo Alio. Keck will leave today for the California college city where both he and Mr. Mackay are -graduate students at -Leland Stanford university. Those big black grapes now ripe at Fiala vineyards. . Juniors Name Scott Willam ette university Juniors have named Joe Scott as their repre sentative on the. interclass. rivalry committee. Herbert Hardy will represent the seniors in this ca pacity while Joe Hershberger will represent this class On the exec utlve council. Building Congress Meet 8 A routine meeting of the directors of Salem chapter, Oregon Building congress, will be held in the di rectors' room of the U. S. National bank building Monday night, ac cording to L. R. Scboettler, sec retary. Drinks "Dehorn" Singing away in city Jail last night as though pleased with his forced berth there was H. G. Campbell, transient whom city police arrest ed on a charge of being drunk Officers said Campbell tad been drinking denatured alcohol. Opens Office F. O. Repine, known locally as a painting con tractor and James S. Davis will Monday open a new real estate office at 142 South j High street, they announced yesterday. j ! Annual Bargain Period. For a limited time The Oregon States man by mail to any address in Oregon Only $3.00 per year. E CHICAGO, Sept. 30. (AP) -. Tlie federal government, vigilant in its war upon kidnapers, dug; down today into the mystery of; the disappearance-of four mem bers of the George M. Cox family. Four men. held because of over night telephone calls to the ship owner at New Orleans and beeause he suspected disgrunteled former employes had abducted his wife, son and parents-in-law, were han ded over to the TJ. S. bureau of in vestigation by the police. A fifth, from whom Chief of Detectives" William H. Schoemak er said he thought whereabouts of Mrs. Cox 'Could be learned, was hunted. Over -the telephone from New Orleans Cox whose Great Lakes passengefships encountered wreck and .mutiny )ast summer, asserted to Chicago newspapers his wife and Child were kidnaped Wednes dayr He professed to believe that- disgruntled members of the crew of the S. S, Isle Royale, harboring a grudge because pay envelopes were temporarily held np at the season's end. had kidnaped his family. "I have no other enemies in the world," he was quoted. "I knew those men would try to harm me. They chose the best way." . BOOSTERS SIGHT PLANNED BRUSH COLLEGE, Sept. 30. Pok county Pomona grange mas ter Glen Adams and Mrs. Adams are in charge of all program ar rangements: for the coming "Booster Night? at Brush College grange, Friday night, Oct. 6. Members of the home economics committee including Mrs,- W. D. Hgary, chairman, Mrs. Hettie Simkins, Mrs. Charles McCafter, Mrs, Jesse Worthington and Mrs. A. E. Utley, will serve as recep tion committee,, and Mrs. U. J. Lehman, Mrs. H. M. Buell, Mrs. C. L, Biodgett and Mrs. A. E. Ut ley are supper committee. SILO FILLING STAkSS SWEGLE, Sept. 30. The prune harvest Is over and silo filling started here. o I ( o Birth: I o -: .niert To Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Hlert of 657 North 20th street, a 7 pound girl, born Saturday, Sep tember 30, at the Bungalow Ma tt rnity home. . Sparkling Health for Ygi Tel. 9613 We Delirer mi J AHE held COX KIDNAP SEARCH OBSERVED BY JEVVS Yom Kippur, Atonement day, Service Held Saturday in Nelson to -. nastiiian hall was made into a Hebrew synagogue. Saturday, and Jewish residents of the city gath ered there to celebrate Yom Kin- pur, the day of. atonement, ine mnt Barred Sabbath on the He brew calendar; which terminates the holy days, about the. J ewisn new yar. Th service lasted all day, 1 though worshippers were pririleged to come ana go. . In front was a small altar wltn a canaiesiicK wnoae vwi "' not wax candles bat eiecinc l-il. . ..inMliltiiir rQTIfllpfl. A wooden cupboard whose ; upperq portion was covered with a Dine veltet cloth bearing the sign of the shield of David for orna ment, stood near" the altar. On occasion one of the congregation wan privileged to come forward and draw back the velvet cur tain. Inside, under another bro-j caded clotn was me scrou parchment on which the Hebrew bible is written in long-nana. in a place of honor alBO was 1 he American flag; and two tiny American flags were fastened to the top of the cupboard. All the while a Hebrew scholar recited the ancient prayers of the religion, and chanted the ancient songs. He was clad in a long white robe with a covering for the head. Twice during the ser vice the scroll of sacred scrip ture was taken from the cup board and read by the scholar. The exercises were all conducted in the Hebrew tongue, although not all the worshippers under stood 1L Yiddish, which uses the Hebrew characters, is a different language. A few of the elders were seat ed about the front; but the body of the congregation sat as do Christians; and followed the ser vice from prayer books. Men and women both wore their hats in the synagogue; and the men wore long white prayer shawls about their necks. The wearing of hats and prayer shawls by the men Is a mark of an orthodox service. The local congregation, not meeting regularly, is neither orthodox nor reformed, but ad heres to the ancient customs. - The service was more of a prayer-meeting than a formal temple service, because the group was small and the meeting-place merely a public hall. Children did , not have to sit through the cantor's recitative, but played in the corridor outside. They are permitted to eat; but for the or thodox 'Hebrew Yom Kippur is a fast day; and from Friday night at Sunset until Saturday (Sab bath) night at sunset neither food nor water may pass his lips. Washing is limited to dipping the fingers in water. Fires are not built, save where there are sick. The cantor who served the lo cal congregation Saturday is named Solomon; he came from California. Some of the local Jews went to Portland to attend the synagogue services there con ducted by rabbis. E CO 11.8 MILES iH MOSCOW. Sept. 30. (AP) Three men in an aluminum ball hooked to a balloon ascended 11.8 miles today,, the greatest height ever reached by man. and enjoyed themselves so much that when they landed the, first thing they said was they would do it again as soon as they could. "None of us seems to be any the worse for the experience and we could go up again tomorrow," said Ernest Birnbaum, the leader of the expedition, into the st rato aphere. . t - He was accompanied on the rec ord breaking flight by two other air service veterans, Georgi Pro kofiev and Konstantlne Gudenoff. " Their balloon, the "Stratostat." landed near Kolomna; 71 miles from Moscow, after they had been aloft eight hours, 19 minutes, . There are' 65,000 persons in Kolomna, and almost every one took part In the welcome to the aeronauts, who started from Mos cow. A welcome of even greater proportions awaited them here. Instruments carried by the. bal loon indicated it had reached a height of 19,000 meters, compar ed with thie record of 16,700 set by Professor Auguste Piccard in August, l932. 'Piccard's record equaled 10 miles and 117 yards. Parent-Teachers to Start Fall Program SILVERTON, Setp. '30 The Silverton Parent-Teachers' asso ciation .will begin its 1 autumn work Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Ear J. Adams, president, has been ill and has turned the opening-of the work over..to-Mrs Martin Hanan, vice president , CHARLIE CHAN Chinese Medicine Company. .HEALTH HERBS for kidney bladder. S. B. Fongst0fncn catarrh,. constipation, glands. Every Ailment Disorder j 122 N. Commercimal St Over Salem Hardware Store Daily 9 to 6: Sunday 9 to 12 Consultation Free Dr. B. H. White No Charge for Consultation Night and Day Calls Osteopathic -Physician and Surgeon , . ) Office: 355 North Capitol St Telephone 5036, Salem, Oregon 1 funis A Visit to Filipino Patriot , - 1 j I ". .-. v. :- i- r- . ' t I V;s- v ; W -' , V. rf- v ; it fc rr- I , r ; ; S - Vf Governor General Frank Murphy . picvurea wiui saanuei Quezon tngn, presiaenc ox u rmuppine sen- ate, when they paid a visit to General Emilio Aruinaldo fleftl at his home in Cavite. Genera) Aguinaldo 1L l1 J 1 i OrMY DOES YOUR 1 1W vv Recently I heard a land scape architect say that a new tendency was arising to g e t away from shrubbery plan ting close about tne nouse. per haps, this ten dency arose as an outcropping of the over planting of a Lini U4ts few years ago. before the word depression" be came a living thing. This was a time when promoters' erected house after house, each exactly alike, and close around each were planted exactly the same varieties of shrubs and trees. These houses were built for the "right now," and not as homes to grow into. Shrubbery of considerable size and rapid growth, irrespective of suitability, was planted. Those were the days of the "big show." There was no thought for the fu ture. And now when people are again getting their breath with time to look about, they 6ee homes smothered in a stiflying surplus. Naturally the pendulum swings backward toward the more sim ple. But let .us hope that it does not swing so far back that we are left with the cold, austere set tings of our "homes which were customary in one period of our history. Even If Douglas fir. Norway spruce and sycamore trees have gone "out" as foundation planting let's still retain sufficient shrub bery about- the house to tie it to the ground' and to soften its edg es. Leland's Firethorn (Crataegus Pyracanta Lalaadii) Is still lovely on a corner of the house,, partic ularly on the south wall. Spirea VonHouttei (Bridal Wreath) is still beautiful tn front of the house beneath windows, and Spi rea Thunbergii in front of the Von Houttei Is still a rather fine ar rangement. Even the double white spirea Prunifolia is lovely in foun dation planting. Another Spirea which may be used where a shrub six feet tall is pot too much, is the S. Arguta. This resembles the very early Thunbergii but, as I have said, is taller, and the bush itself is more dense. I have seen weigelia used ef fectively in foundation borders, al though I think it comes more into its own if used as a specimen on the edge of the" lawn or in the shrubbery border. Abelia is still another flowering shrub which is beautiful in Xoundation planting. The abeiia is In bloom now a $10 FREE Present this ad .to either the Salem or P.o r 1 1 a n d store Monday or Tuesday and it , will be accepted as first payment on any new or ased piano including grands as complete first payment. You may have your choice of over 200 new and nsed pianos at f35, 45, f 63, 975, $85, 105, f 125, 9160, 9187 up. Terms on balance, 91 week and up. CLINE PIANO Co. 512 State CROQUINOLE PUSH WAVE Ringlet Ends Complete $1,00 Castle Permanent Wavers Co. 307 Est Natl Bank Bid., 8068 PILES CURED Without Opcrttloa r Lota at Tine DR. MARSHALL K9 Oretn Bids. Fboa SSOS Invalid Chairs To Rent Call CO to, Used Furaltaru Department - 151. North High j i 1 I 1 (center) of the Philippine Islands, is one of the most beloved figures in J l liim. W - . an GARDEN GROW? rather low shrub, but three or four feet high, with pale pink blossoms along the stems. Neither should evergreens be discarded from foundation plant ing. They give a finish to the building that nothing else can give. But care should be experi enced in their selection. There are over 80 varieties of the Lawson Cypress, and among- these are some very lovely low growing forms which are suitable to foun dation planting. There seems to be considerable confusion in their names. Different nurseries call the same things by different names. However, one most fre quently hears the cypress most often used in foundation planting called the Alumil. It is of a pyra midal shape, and blue-green in color. A similar one, except that it is a very deep green, is the Erecta. Dr. Ernest H. Wilson, the late "plant king", mentions as among his favorites for foundation plant ing, forms of the Siberian Arbor vitae and the Mugho pine. Although many of the shrubs suitable for foundation planting will have to be passed over at this time, I cannot leave the subject without at least mentioning the barbery. The barbery comes in scores of varieties, and many of these do very well for planting about the house. They can be kept in hand by severe pruning as soon as they have finished blooming. Mapy of them are evergreen. No matter with what you are afflicted, , our wonderful herb treatment will positively relieve influenza, diseases of the throat, heart, kidneys, liver, stomach, piles, asthma, chronic cough, weakness, constipation, dizziness, neuralgia, headache, appendicitis, rheumatism, arthritis, neuritis, blood poison, catarrh, diphtheria, eczema, swollen glands, tonsilitis, ear trouble, lumbago, tumor, dropsy, female complaints, ner vousness; all disorders disappear without operation. CONSULTATION FREE THE SING HERB CO. H. S. LOW, Directing Herbalist 473 S. Commercial St. Salem, Oregon Phone 5738 Lady Attendant Honrs 9 to 6 p.m. Week Days; O to 12 Sundays. Main Office, Oakland, Calif. 21 Years of Service Reliable Prescriptions Registered pharma cists. . . the most de pendable medical ma terials available . . . assure you of faultless prescription filling here. Schaefer's Drag Store : Prescriptions 135 H. Commercial Dial 519? The - Original Yellow . Front Candy Special Store of Salem When O Others -k) Fail rw a a Many are brhliantly flowered, and f e ware aqueamish as to toil re quirements. Darwin's barbery with ftg. beautiful! yellow flowers and its tiny, glossy hoUy-shaped leaves is among my! favorites of the bar bery family.: B. Bargentlana, B. Venae, B. Buxif olla, and, B. Chi nesls are all Tery. lovely and use-" - put whether shrubs are grown asVa finish ta the honA etr an Individual specimen, or even )n tne shrubbery btrder, they should be planted. Iioftin think that with the; wealth, jot flowering shrubs which we are 'able to grow here in the - valley, our gardens are still poor because ttt lack of them. Often times flowering shrubs give much more beauty to the country lawn than dd;es a perennial border which Is apt to have a withered look where water: for irrigation is scarce. ' f , r ' . - 1 .. .. . - And remember falltime is shrub-planting time. CAN PRUNES MT. ANGEL " .The . Mt- Angel Producers Packing company is now canning prnnes at the rate of 1000 cases a day. Prunes this . year are of excellent quality i though the crop Is light The wet weather caused little damage. The prune nack will probably be finished by the lirsi pan 01 next week. Smith qJJMVJI and BILL WE BAVE Eiyil?L7EW) K1UE MEN We Believe in and are Complying with the The GENERAL (There Are No Othert last as REMEMBER Pressur.e cooking: is one of the important contributions of the age to the: science of food preparation. Mr. CJS. Alexander, noted dietitian and home economics spe cialist, will conduct the demonstration. SEE a meal cooked in one-third the time and with. i one-third. the fuel ordinarily consumed. SEE even the cheaper derness and delicacy rivaling the most expensive. SEI3 a meal cooked by the method that Is approved by Good Housekeeping and other ; health institutes, SEE the most modern methods of economizing in cooking, giving at the same time more healthful, nourishing food values. ( h 275 N. Liberty 1; Japanese wheat and flour mar kets are weak, with stocks on hand above normal, .according . to cabeled information from the D. Sv agricultural commissioner. Mill activity la below earlier expecta tions as a result of light local in quiry and only a fair, export flour demand. .... Japanese wheat Imports during July -totaled 1,320,500 bushels. Including 6400 bushels of Ameri can wheat, 2 $3,250 bushels from Canada, 949,690 bushels from Australia and -109S bushels. from other countries. Imports of flour totaled 203,250 barrels. Relatively high prices for Unit ed States wheat ia restricting im port takings. At the first of Sep tember, quotations- at mills were as follows No: 2 western white, Jl.09; Canadian No. 1 Manito ba. $1.05; Canadian No.. 5 Manito ba 92 Uc; Australian F. A. Q. StMc; and white wheat, from Portland, C. 1. F. Yokohama 78c per bushel, duty and . landing charges included. Wholesale flour prices at Tokyo mills were quoted at 88 3-4c per bag of 49 pounds. FLOUR IK tAEfl ONE AND ONLY LOCATION Chemeketa at Liberty Phone 341 the Number; It is Not A Complete Meal Cooked in 10 Minutes See Fruit Canned in 5 Minutes Retaining Natural Color and Flavor Starting Tuesday and Continuing Wednesday. Thursday , Friday and Saturday Twice Daily at 10:30 A . M. and 2:30 P. M. COME BRING YOUR FRIENDS! DON'T MISS IT! i JVIi. C. S. Alexander Demonstrating the W U 3 0 Ei cuts of meats cooked to a ten- Phone 8774 Late Demand oh Wnnl Market JY : Less Than Early i BOSTON; Sept. so. (aWwj Early In the " week some fairly ! t good sized sales closed in the wool - yiw uui inker uctuauu vti ijui quite so keen. Some housee, how- i everv continued 1 to transact a fair 1 ' volume of business especially on grease ' combing domestic Wool, f Prices were very tirm to slightly stronger although the rising ten-' dency. was checked somewhat as k the demand slackened. Education is largely based on sight and visual memory. Are your children fitted for it? Arrange now for an ex amination. Thompson-Glutscli OPTOMETRISTS 833 State St. f Watkins TIRE Good) in the Directory Reduced Price Sale This Week Only feK Salem. Ore. I