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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1920)
.. a ., t 4 1 r.,.!,y. PAGE SIX. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Annual May Day Fete at Normal piand Jury to testify regarding the' strike, i Virtually nil traces or the striks! I now have disappeared, according to' suitemenu made by officials of the, varioux railroads. Continued from Page Five.) ; "" Portland Street .i Car Employes to Sign Agreement I'ortland, Or, April ii. 1'nibii! street car employes of the Portland Kallway Light and Power company early today voted to accept the pro-, poiaI of the corporation providing ' for a slight increase In wages for- a : tennis courts lately. At the regular meeting of the t.ic . ttfty club last Monday evening, turns ! were given by Mr. tliliuore and Mrs. j Collins. Mr. (illmore "poke on Coun try club work from a general stand point, while .Mrs. Collins treated It from the particular phase of the work phe has found most useful in her school, the Oak l'olnt rural cen ter. County Superintendent G. Ii. Lamb '" """P men and retaining the pres of Tillamook county spent Monday at j nt c8le of tne Platform men the normal Interviewing teachers for!,or another year. Acceptance by the the schools of his cunty. Mr. Lamb '. men. it was said, would avert a pos ia a, graduate of the normal, class of sible walkout. Negotiations have been 18. and finds things greatly chang- bo'" on ior several weens. ed since his schooldays. President Aekerman Is taking time this week to visit high schools in the various parts of the state. He spent the major part of lost week In much the same way and reports great in terest in the normal among high m-hool seniors throughout the state. A. O." Jackson, of the federal fo est service, gave an illustrated lecture, at the chapel hour last Friday, lie dwelt particularly upon the beauties of the national forests In Oregon, the pleasure they afford visitors, and the Kreat value they poxseiss from many standpoints and its preservation. Mrs. Ciller, critic from Mountain View, gave an entertaining talk ut the chapel hour last Wednesday. The Interest In the summer school is already very encouraging us .Miss Todd reports that every room Ir. the dormitory has already been engaged and many of tho houaes about town are filled. The normal will be In regular ses sion on Saturday, May t, to permit teachers In service to visit classes. Regular work will be given In the training school on that day. A cordial Invitation is extended to all neighbor ing teachers to visit on that day. The students will he recompensed by an extra holiday a little Inter In the month. Th president brings home the news that the mlllage bill is. beginning to be considered much more favorably car stands wtihout a rival In construc tion, production and low price. le my Journeying throurli Cali fornia I was particularly struck with the predominance of the closed cars, especially in a state where the cli matic conditions are considered ideal for iiotorlng yet in the Golden state the closed ears hold sway and I found it a fact, . that the demand was so great that, .while deliveries could be made on open cars, agents were book ing orders for closed cars or future deliveries. Closed cars cannot be turn ed out fart enough. The local body and upholstering shops are simply buried ii orders, changing bodies from the open to the closed type. This Is noticeable in all makes even the higher priced cars are facing the same conditions. -Thisi demand for the closed cars only emphasizes the greater comforts and conveniences tnese cars nave over tlie oi?n type and I firmly "believe the time is at hand when selling condi tions in Oregon will be the same as they now are in CaJlfornia-r-a general demand for the closed car." Socialists Rally . . To Support Of French Deputy Talis. April 29. Every unified so cialist member of the chamber of deputies has come forward in sup port of Deputy Vaillant-Couturier, who on April 2 J published in the newspaper Le Populate an article .addressed to the U- class of re cruits, which has been considered an effort to incite the troops to di?ofe dience. The article was re-published In L'Humanite and was subscribed to by the sixty five members of the par ty Removal of parliamentary Immu nity so that M. Vaillant-Couturier may be prosecuted has been demands ed. .. "Soldiers and comrades," says M. Vaillant-Couturier's article, "you nr to be powers of hatred and new war. - , -..til. .Inmil iKuins lire 'the sole hope of tne nurKeuisir. who feels the tide of revolutionary truth mounting. Sanguinary libations ui--ways attend the funerals of moribund regimes. It is not simply a case of I mutinying -at the hour of those fun erals. It is Incumbent upon you to understand now where lie the inter est of the country you love. It Is a lease of know now M you desire your country to be veritably yoMrs." The Hood River Apple Growers' as sociation is hastening the shipment of stored apples following lifting of the THURSDAY, ! C-J to Covert . """side,,,. boy. MVH1 iuaws to pjrr: week. "" i Ford Assembling Plant Convinces Watt Of Wonders Speaking of the automobile situa tion In California, Watt Shipp of the Valley Motor company, who has just returned from California, said today: "When I left Salem three weeks ago I was a sincere and conscientious en thusiast for Ford products, but after spending two solid days In the Ford assembly plant in San Francisco, I am more thoroughly convinced that Ford products stand without a rival In the automobile world. It Is simply marvel ous the wonderful efficiency that has been reached by the Ford Motor com pany. The San Francisco plant gives one some idea of the high condition of efficiency that exists in the parent plant at Detroit. "The Ford assembly plant at Sun Francisco completey assembles ready for the rond 160 automobiles every day. It Is impossible for anyone to understand the meaning of 'efficiency' until they had an experience similar to mine, and enjoyed tho privilege of seeing every lost motion, or waste of effort eliminated, and workmanship brought up to a point where it might be cailed an art. I wish I hud the t .lnu....llLA what T now fill T In many localities and high hopes of , wonderful and its passage on .May 21 are entertain- J ftm yn) BururlRed lhe Ford Miss Todd spent last Thursday and Friday in I'ortland. Government Opens Court Action To Punish Strikers New York, Apr. 29. Federal action to punish Inuders of the strike of rail road workers In the New York-New Jersey district v begun In Newark, N. J., today when United States Dis trict Attorney ,Tnn " "' i d a number Of VltneSs6 PSIorJ I Shipley's AITKll MAY 1ST WILL BK KNOWN AS Till YOU GO STOKE. PAY AS i Another Royal Suggestion MUFFINS and POPOVERS From the New Royal Cook Book BREAKFAST is too often eaten as a duty rather than a joy. The suc cess of the day may depend upon the spirit of break fast The Royal Education al Department presents some breakfast dishes that will send the children to school with a hip hip hur rah and his majesty man to his daily duties with the "up and doing" feeling which knows no discour agement. Muffin 1 cups flour 3 tpsfpoona Royal Baking Powder 1 tablespoon sugar i teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 2e(TRS 1 tablespoon shortening Sift together flour, baking powder, sugar and salt; add milk, well-beaten eggs and melted shortening; mix well. Grease muffin tins and put two tablespoons of batter in to each. Bake in hot oven SO to 25 minutes. Eg-gless Muffins t enps flour 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 2 tnblenpoons sugar 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons shortening Mix and sift dry ingredients, add milk and melted shorten- BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure ing and beat until smooth. Bake in greased muffin tins in hot oven 20 to 23 minutes. Com Muffins cup com meal 1 cups flour 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 'i teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup milk 1 tablespoons shortening leg Sift together corn meal, flour, baking powder, salt and su par; add milk, melted short ening and well-beaten egg; mix well. Grease muffin tins and drop two tablespoons of mixture into each. Bake about 35 minutes in hot oven. Popoverg ! curs dour ') teaspoon salt 2 cups milk Sift together flour and salt. Hakei a well in' flour, break eggs into well, add milk and stir until smooth. Pour into hot greased gem pans and bake 25 to 35 minutes in a very hot oven. If taken out of oven too soon they will fall. SENT FREE Kew Royal Cook Book con taining scores of delightful, economical recipes, many of them the most famous In use today. Address BOVAL BAKING POWDER CO. lit Fulton Btrcat Kew York City "Bake with Royal and be Sure" OUR BXzl bread Uinf Just A i w prove to ,w i. to ,Cr - i our B.Urp. electric oren, Once tried i. , (hi 1 I 457 State St II Ii MSSBBBBBSEBE11BMSB J1.IM.HJ mum im tun! I 1 tie lo IIPORTAN NEWS You Will Fit fin rage i Apply Your Dollars to the Wheels of Citizenship by Supporting the Boy Sco Thoughts by Those Who Know! "I am most heartily in favor of the Boy Scout Movement. T find that in nearly every instance the Boy Scouts rank high in scholarship and character." LA MOINE R. CLARK, Principal Lincoln Junior High. . "The Boy Scouts of America prove to be the great est asset that the Churches of America have today." REV. II. N. ALDRICH, ' ' Leslie Methodist Church. "We are going to put the Boy Scout movement 'Over The Top' because we appreciate their training for service." AMERICAN WAR MOTHERS. "The Boy Scouts of America is one of the greatest organizations for the conservation of Boyhood that America has. It should receive the, earnest support of every real American." JOHN W.TODD, Superintendent Of Schools. "Character development is the real objective of the Boy Scouts. Every step in Scouting is but a means to this end. This character development manifests it self in health, efficiency, chivalry, loyalty, patriotism and good citizenship. I believe that Salem's future cit izenry will be leavened by the Salem Boy Scouts." T. E. McCROSKEY, Mgr. Salem Commercial Club. r- t . . ; IS, Accused os Auto Baniti MoSlewFlaJ ,7 " i "Twang nit ftus-gir. II IAT 40 THUTS HB1I1 tophus uwMaiunra BmMya DtUcthstf H SMOO Watt wt last MntllaittlFiHtta. ilftta!. 1 . :.""" hl - WW" Ltcap in Mail rrucltl HW.M. iMt I Vll.,f .. w. ... II v,-. H " sr.., - 'form Greeting to Boy Scouts lltrt 5oy Scouts Asked by President to Aid Loan ,IU W Utmtri Tctuvrt tlra MMt m It Kit-, t ot'liri Htfw-WW lr M ln 4 Uim, Hkwtw m W M .-vl' HER 5fe n cub PolictSmtkCi' Ik Bniafa 1 rM Wkt "v'r( t V sag. 1 got Scoot I I Htrt'tDeslhhftwj II ... AIJI 6)ik,t'0hf5it" Vtu. CM- VekHClWV,,nV "aUwwVOOOl.fit,; Boy Scouts Of Salem Financial Pledge Card , Amt....... 'ame Adtlress i r a foA in Month !Amt Signature v n r .t i 4w 4 i mm Help the War Moihers Help (he Boy Scouts April.. May... June... July.... August..!. ' Sept I. Oct ( Nov I Dec. Jan Feb Mar April... Scout 3aB868 Troop.. Wntrh fnr the solicit yw 'Vlf vi ; 1 1 j and make your mom vledzefor the support) your boys. The same effect m be had by' Ming VH same to the Scout Exec five. 21, !nvrtinr vwmx aun.mu'-.i w f a- it ii .1 s-'inu t i'lt plllm l!, i 1 !uwA "1 w':"1'' hot hmf. i-'''- y,;y;.' i BU i tot 1 Cfc 1 tin Cos BODS te e Sai ell I sol lft K tn. Bt Di 114 K fcw knii 1 C. 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