Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1933)
PAGE TEN The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon, Thursday Mornlnfr, November 23, 1933 1 - . j 1 ' F0HTIH) LODGERS EXErilPLIFi DEGREES For. Maccabees at Mill City; V, Accident Occura Due ? To Heavy Fog MXLLi CITT, Not. 22. -enty - fits members of tents Xo. 1 and No. 101, and ths Rosarian Ire of tha Maccabees - of Port land drore toMill CMy Saturday gt and exemplified the work th order for the members of . Saatfam tent and hire, a well a a 4 large Bomber ' of fTitei friends.' An S o'clock turkey din ner with- all the -fixin'a was erred' to 160 visitors; Two eararof the Portland visi tor! featured In an accident near Woodbonir - delaying . th Port- landers' arrival. The accident was caysed by ' the - dense fox but luckily-no one was , In Ju i-ed ser- usly. The lady commander oT the Rbsariana was the most ser iously Injured, one of topr hands being hurt. - ' ! The championsbJp .drill teams of ; teat ' No. 1 and -the ladies' Rosarlan patrol team of hite No. 101, pnt oa ; sereral fancy drills and a class of seven was Initiat ed Into the order by the drill team and officers" of . tent No.' X' for the Srntlaar tent No. 1. - Addresses were made by state commander, D. V. Chapman, as well as several others' of the Portland visitors. August Young berg, commander of Santlam teat also made a short talk. Follow ing the .close of the meeting dancing was enjoyed for a couple of hears. Varieties Success ' The Tariety show presented. by the students of the high school was greeted with a full house at Hammond hall Friday night. This Is the first of a series of entertainments by the students. The show took the same of "Scenes from the History of Mill .City,? with scenes being adopted from "The First Settlers," show ing Indians and their homes; "Two Tears Later" which de picted the growing community, "Six Months Later.' with scenes portraying a wedding, new wares and a battery dance, "Prosperous and Progressive Mill City," "School Days In the Nineties," and "A Photograph Gallery." The cast included Freda La benz, 11a Terter, Ruth Moe, Nancy Jane Faust, Helen Mason, Jennie VanDahl, Dorothean Duni Tan, Helen Elliott, Roherta Cline, Frank Merrill, Homer Thacker, Garth' Harlan, Lawrence Kanoff, Merritt Smith, Beatrice Jepsen, " Bill Henderson, Walter Lyon, Dwight Catherwood, Pat Mc Auley and George Gillenwater. North Howell Harvest Fair Friday Night NORTH HOWELL, Not. 22. The annual corn , club exhibit for the 4-H club boys and the harvest"" home 'fair which is an nually sponsored by the North Howeil granger will - be - held jointly next Friday night at the North Howell grange . ball. : ' The Salem chamber ot com merce will provide the evening's l rogram with the . Haywire ; or chestra, and dinner will be serv ed cafeteria style from 6 to S o'clock. - An antiqne display will be fea tured, Miss Ellen Vinton will have charge of the flower booth. Miss Caroline Bump, the fruit, and Miss Ida May Summers, the grain. Raymond Jefferson, - as leader of tfit 4-H corn club, will arrange that special exhibit. Dinner, is ' under directfOa: -fit the . home economics committee, Daisy Bump, Mattie iVnton, Loin Wlesner, x Josephine Stevens and Jessie Coomler. i Proceeds from - the entertain ment will be applied on the piano recently purchased. Everyone is urged to . attend and bring; exhibits. direclfdn - Realty Men Will Talk Legislature At Meet Tonight , Real estate men and women from all over the Willamette val ley will gather at the chamber of commerce here tonight at 7:3 0 o'clock to discuss proposed legis lation of Interest to their business. E. A. Miller, president of the Sa lem Realtors, will preside. Some consideration will also be given the Oregon association, of Real Estate boards, a new organ ization. All real estate agents in terested are being urged to at tend. . US TO mop HMD IliSTITOTE ' An Institute for all workers of the United Brethren church board of Christian education will be held this afternoon and tonight at the Englewood United." Brethren church; here. Among important speakers will be Bishop Ira D. Warner of Portland, Rev. F. C. Roscoe of Portland," superintend" ent of the Oregon conference who recently came from Montana, Rev. M. Werty of Seattle, in charge of all young people's work; and Rev. Cleveland Sharp of Everett. Wash., director of Christian edu cation for the conference. Bishop. Warner will speak both afternoon and night, and Rev. R. V. Wilson, Englewood pastor, will give reports, on the national adult convention at Dayton,. Ohio, from which he returned yesterday. General sessions will be held at 1 : S 0 x and 7 :S6 , 'clock, and three workers' sessions will be held at mldafternoon, these to be for the hrsnjn's Missionary society, the children's aeparttajnt ana aauits. The insUt supper wI3 be irj. ed by women of thp Englewood church In the church basement at 1:30 o'clock. : . - s Workers and ministers will at tend from Tillamook, Hopewell, Hazel Green and Salem. . Dairy Co-opmil Meet Here Friday A special meeting of the Dairy Cooperative association will; be held at the chamber of commerce Friday night at t o'clock. Man ager R. W. Clark announced yes terday. Cornel A. E. Clarke of Portland and W. W. Henry, man ager of the Portland offices of the Dairy Co-op, will be the speakers. BIT TO TEST IB' The city will spend S2SI for the laying of a test sexier of discs of a metallie alloy on downtown Intersections to, test out use of the devices to mark off pe destrian lanes In place of painted lines, Alderman ;V: E. Kuhn, street committee chairman for the city council, stated yesterday. The first of the plates were set In the pavements on two sides of the Commercial-State street intersec tion. Other intersections to be lined off in this manner for the present will be Court and Com mercial, Court and, Liberty, State and Liberty. v While the first cost is consid erable, the devices will pay for themselves Inside of three years in the paint and labor, saved. Kuhn declared. In the past the city has had the pedestrian lines painted twice and sometimes three times a year at a cost of f 1S.4S0 per job per intersection tor two coats of paint. ; . Manufacturers of the discs hays promised to Install larger markers for parkins spaces on one city block free of charge to demon strate their usefulness, Kuhn added. ---... -v"-' . '. : MssasiMaBeawiMBMSMBMaiBSMaiBHB ' Series of Mild Whooping Cough Cases Reported Evidences of a ware of whoop ing cough running through South Salem and the Hayesvllle district are being reported daily by Mar ion county health nurses, accord ing to Dr. Vernon A. Douglas, eounty health officer. The cases nnoear to be of such mildness. however, that they are cot recog nized: br parents in time to vre- v Tent such a sjpread of the disease. - Dr." Douglas warned parents to , keep ihelrjchfldren homo when the latter, suffered - from 'coughs which: resisted ordinary treat ment.' The disease spreads rapid ly because it is difficult to diag nose, he said, and makes head way KiMvii it fa not Isolated from other school children in particu lar. ; v sXorrected Cannot cheat you. Be fair to; yourself and your na ture. Arrange now for an examination. Thompson - Glutsch OPTOMETRISTS 833 SUte Street CHRISTMAS SEAL IS ' TALK TOPIC TODAY Today . the first speakers ex plaining the Christmas seal cam paign will talk at meetings of various clubs during the after noon and evening. The sale opens December 1 and continues until Christmas. - These talks will be an effort on the part of the publicity and education chairmen to give an understanding to theh public of the local, state and national pro grams financed by Christmas seals, and a general appreciation of the increasing need for health conservation- and prevention of tuberculosis. . Rev. S. Darlow Johnson, presi dent of the Marion County. Publie Health association; will speak be fore the Lions club this noon. Mrs. Belle NUes Brown will be a Zonta clnb speaker and Mrs. Wil liam Jones will appear at the meeting of Town and Gown club on the university campus-Rer. Johnson also will speak- af the dinner meeting of the Fraternis club tonight. ' ' JJits for. Breakfast ; (Continued from page 4) of theVfn'the United States .One - of . the major experiments was by -Henry Ford, near Detroit. ' - ' V V -,' However warm water retting,, as we have it. cuts down the time from two or three weeks to. about four days. That is a big advan- - tage; m great economy in cost of equipment and operation, r .. Bat there is no substitute, yet, for drying the retted straw In the sun. This is not saying there may not be. .Sunshine is required, so far, for 'retaining the resiliency, the splnabllity, of the fiber what men In the Industry call the life." Dried artificially, the fiber Is brasb, unsuitable for manufacturing the finer fabrics. : S S ' This series might be indefinite ly extended, with , items that should and will be of Increasing interest in this flax and linen cen ter. . Belfast has an ' Institute ( an : educational institution) devoted to the study of the flax and linen industries, with a large student body. Salem will one day have such a school. , . - . :s v . I As compared with other Indus v : tries, workers with flax fiber re ceive a good average of wages. In. the higher departments, they get large salaries. The Barbours, for generations - engaged in the industry, make up ob of the wealthiest f amillos In the world. T,hey control our Miles liaea"" mUl in . Salem, : miking thread and twine, and fish nets from the twine. - - ; ' - -1 The higher reaches Of th in dustry, fashioning laces and wall cover In gv etc, run into values that are fabulous Again, why not double the population of Salem In five years NOW! GOMES BISHOP'S i w m r ys-J Starting Thursday We Are Launching the Greatest Shirt Event in Salem's History ! If GORDON A New Shirt We believe the Arrow Gordon is one of the SL neatest oxford shirts you ever buttoned around your neck. It's tailored by Arrow. It has the famous Arrow Collar. And it will not shrink out of size! If it does a new shirt free. The reason: Ifs Sanfor ized! Plain or button down collar. Try one. Now $1.95 Think of it . . . this great stock, one of the largest on the Pacific coast, of finest Arrow Shirts, offered you now still at the low prices. In the face of advances and an announcement from Ar row factory that they are compelled to raise prices Dec. 1st. ... So now we are cooperating with our customers by giving them the opportunity of these low prices. Now is your chance. For one week only. Buy Now and Bay Plenty At These Savings. Remember! These Famous "Arrow" Shirts Are Featured in Salem Exclusively at Bishop's Nowhere Can You Find Such Vast Assortments and SucK Fine Values! BUY NOW! EVERY MAN SHOULD HAVE AT LEAST SIX OF THESE Now for FANCY Shirts We present Arrow MITOGA A tip TRUMP We say it's the smart est shirt you can buy for the money Arrow Trump! It has the style the tailoring. Made of specially woven fabric V And it's Sanforized' Shrunk. Holds its one true size ... forever. Come in and look die Trump over. It's America's greatest shirt value. White and colors Now $1.95 .Want a change from is a patterned version of ' white and plain-colored Arrow's famous Trump, shirts! Allow us to Hempstead comes in a suggest the Arrow variety of patterns with' HENLEY and the Ar- two matching unat- row HEMPSTEAD tached collars and French' two smart shirts always cuffs. Both are Sanf or- in good taste. Henley, ized Shrunk. Sl.95toS3.50 A shirt that fits as though tailored to your figure! 11? yes . . here is a shirt actually shaped to fit. It follows the lines of your body, drapes in at the waist con forms to the shoulders. It tapers .with' the arms. No bulging no bunching anywhere. No folds of extra dbtK to twist around. The Mttoca's perfect fit is made possible by, r,Arrows Sanforizing process which makes this shirt staf form-fitting makes it keep its right size through s life-time of launder-. . . , . mgs. Come in and look the Arrow MrrocX over. It comes in a wide variety of Arrow styles, patterns and colors. $2 and $25 Arrow" The Season's I Finest & Smartest Neckpear Is Here In One Great Assortment These are ties that look -smarter and wear better. See Oar Large Showing $j 00 one $J 50 hi LADIES. . Don't forget that Xmas is just around the corner, and nothing makes a more pleasing gift than "ArrowShirts and Ties Now Is the Time to Buy ana Save During this Great Event J 1 See Our Windows ' See (hir Windows' 136 : North ' Commercial Street- f r T 4 t -A fit jessr - .