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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1920)
August 31, 1920 I BUOI M MARVIN. I cop"" -: Mis8 f meeting o the" North la meeiHiB which Uiirary aT " 'the meet.n. II Mrs Isaac Lee Patter- Mr i.h their son, I a I- Lthe,-n Oregon t his home Leanord Lewis os Seattle I """her Barents. Mr. and IT , Bean Mrs. Lewis, .n""-- dpi will re- (r" godparent, for etinite stay. .... !.-co-it TJonev. tUVrWea A. Lef e L pleasant family reunion PL. .i,. home of Mrs. Lu- E5 1 North Twenty freet Sunday wir.- v. "gathered for the day to KLL whn were present lMr, Lucinda Randall, the V Mr. and Mr. "m. ionroe; Mr. au - K galem; Mr. ana i .,i noHnnd. CVil: Mr. Ilr. and Mrs. h. 1. ,.-o.h- Miss F.va Randall, d' Randall, Burton Randall, land C. Z- Kantian or two children were unable -irate in the reunion, uun- Lndall with the forestry ser Edltrs. C. Z. Randall of Pen- who was ill. Additional .... n . llntliara wpre MISS cun.iu fceorge Sutherland and daugh ters and niece or Mrs. iu- I Randall. I and Mrs. William McGll C Miss Bllena Clancey of la and C. B. Clancey returti- " Salem Tuesday morning Lr trio to Crater Lake and frn Oregon. They planned to Monday, but spent anotner Cutting- friends in southern In. Miss TSlIena Clancey Is 11- In the public library at Tacoma and will attend th mot inr in Portland this Northwestern Library association. Miss Bulalia Liridsnv nnd ui Helen Harrington provided a charm ing hospitality Sunday evening at Miss Lindsay's home when thv asked Miss Amelia Babcock and Miss Maud McCoy for dinner. The appointments were daintily done in pink and green and a pink art basket filled with pink roses and maidenhair fern, added its beau ty to the table. Miss Opal Crawford and her sis ter, Mrs. Harry L. Newcombe of Buffalo, New York, who Is her house guest, have returned to Sa lem from spending the week end in Hood River as the guests of Miss Margaret Alexander. Miss Victoria Cohill of Portland left Monday afternoon for Phoe nix, Arizona, after spending the week end in Salem as the guest of Miss Mary Elizabeth Bayne. Miss Hallle Hinges returned Monday from Seattle where sho visited relatives for two weeks. Miss Edna Sterling and Miss Helen Willet returned Monday night from Cannon Beach where they vacationed for two weeks. George Nelson returned Monday from a, two weeks vacation spent in San Francisco and Seattle. The Misses Gladys and Constance Cartwright will return Wednesday from Rockaway and Portland where they passed a lew weeks. Mrs. Richard Cartwright and Miss Florence Cartwright returned Sun day from Rockaway. Miss Pearl George left Monday afternoon for Jefferson to visit friends fora week. Mrs. D. Neal Littler left Satur day night for a visit with her par ents in St. Marys, Idaho, planning to be away three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. E. Cooke Patton and Miss Luella Patton motored to Hood River this morning to be the guests for several days of Mr. Patton's brother-in-law (and sis ter, Mr. and Mrs. J. ts. McCulley. Mrs. J. C. Miles of Portland is Schlitz-At Noon! BIG business men who work hard, yet have little or no time for physical ' exercise, need Schlitz. A glass of Schlitz at mid-day will stimu late, refresh and satisfy without contrib uting to nervous indigestion, and without burdening the system with waste. Schlitz is food as well as drink it con tains every element necessary to the hu man body, for the building up of tissue broken down by nervous energy and for the replacement of body fuel. Srhlify is niire nmnerlv aered will not ferment in the stomach and will not cause biliousness. The Brown bottle protects the purity of .Schlitz until it reaches your glass. Salem, Orefon. jhink That Made Milwaukee Famous visiting at the home of her son- jn-mw ana aaugnter, Mr. and Mrs. I Lawrence Blaisdale on Division ! street . Miss Genevieve Junk of Chetek, Wis., who has been vlsltine her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Junk, for five weeks, has left for her home in the east. Tolles Olson of Puget Sound, Wash., is visiting at the home &t his daughter, Mrs. W. W. Fisher. Mr. Olson was formerly a resident of Salem and is now employed in the Puget Sound navy yard. He Is here on a ten day furlough. Mrs. F. M. Harding Is spending a month In Cottage Grove visiting with friends. Dr. and Mrs. D. C. Burton and daughter, Lois, are spending week at Newport enjoying a vaca tion. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Asl-.er re turned Tuesday to their home in Portland after a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. I). Smith. Miss Grace Smith left Monday for Newport to be the guest for a week of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Ku ney. From there she will go to Lebanon and Halsey to visit friends planning to return to Sa lem In three weeks. He Has Hard Luck; Man Arrested, Car Struck, Fined $10 Fred R. Burch, route 2, Is posi tive that it seldom rains without pouring, and that hard luck com monly comes In bunches, like ba nanas. Saturday night at 8:20 Mr. Burch was arrested by Officer White for passing a streetcar on Liberty street while It was receiving and discharging passengers. He had to part with $10 bond for his appear ance Monday. i Two hours later while his ma chine was standing on Church street near Fifth, an automobile said to have been driven by Thomas Crom ley, also of route 2, crashed into Mr. Burch's car, splitting one of his rear tires. Monday morning Mr. Burch ap peared before Judge Race, charged with violating a city traffic ordi nance. "You're fined $10," he was told. Mr. Burch siged and paid his assess ment. State Insurance Cemmissioner Barber will go to southern Califor nia to spend two weeks of his an nual vacation. Ira fa Brown Bottles On aale wherever drinks are sold. Order a case for your home from Phonei 424 and 425 Gile Mercantile Company, Inc. Cor. Trade nmi High Street Capital Stranded Dutch Ship Breaking To Pieces Today San Francisco, Aug. 31. 06 Dutch steamer Arakan, which went ashore In a fog Sunday night off Point Reyes, north of here, was buckling under the stoke hold and In "a bad way" according to a message sent from the vessel o the marine department of the charber of commerce. The vessel signalled for more purfips and the tug Sea Wolf was sent from here with pumps and other wrecking gear. Two power ful tugs tried during the night to clear the Arakan from the sand spit. Captain Samuel Van Ronkel and his crew of approximately 70 men were standing by the ship, but the United States life saving station crew at Point Reyes had equip ment ready for action. Arrange ments were being made Monday to lighter the cargo. The Arakan is owned by the Java-Pacific Steamship company and was bound from Batavla to this port with a cargo of sugar and rubber. The Arakan is a steel screw steam of of 5106 tons gross register. Two Cars Damaged In Head On Crash On State Street Radius rods were smashed, fend ers were damaged and lights were crashed out near midnight Satur day when a car driven by W. D. Al bright, and a machine piloted by Percy Thomas, met in a head-on colision on State stret, between 24th and 25th streets. Nobody was in jured. . Albright, according to police rec ords, who was driving east on State, had turned toward the center of the street to avoid a parked car, and Thomas was passing a moving ma chine when, the acicdent occurred. Both men claim to have been driv ing slow. Albright, it was said, blamed Thomas for the accident, while Thomas is said to have declared that the crash was unavoidable. Shook 'Km Down. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 31. Varney Ferris, eighteen years old, discov ered that an easy way to make money was to visit houses which were being built and go through the street colthes of carpenters who dis carded them while at work. Fer ris is visiting here from Los An geles. He will be sent to the state reformatory at Kearney. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY SPECIALS FOR 5 lb. Pail Lard 5 lb. Pail Compound Good Salmon, tall can No. 10 White Red Karo Syrup Best Hard Wheat Flour Peanut Butter, per pound 6 cans Sugar Corn 50c High Grade Coffee, per pound 65c Silver King Coffee, per pound Large Cans Tomatoes, each 5 pounds Fancy Rice 2 cans Sugar Peas : WE SAVE YOU MONEY Farmers' Cash Store C. BURTON DURD ALL 247 North Commercial Street Two Big Stores Salem and Silverton Journal Brooklyn Tied Up Thru Strike Of Transit Men New York, Aug. 31. More than 1,000,000 residents of Brooklyn who depend upon the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company to take them to business were reduced Monday to improvised and even primitive methods of conveyance by the strike of that company's employes which virtually shut down the entire transit system subways, elevated roads and trol leys. The strike went into effect early Sunday morning after fail ure to adjust wage demands. Notwithstanding the use of au tomobiles, from limousine to jit ney, large trucks and horse drawn wagons, many thousands had to walk to their distant places of work Steamboats and police boats were pressed into East river service. Officials of the company an nounced that strikebreakers will be employed. Application has been made for protection of trains. Louis M. Fri dlger attorney for the strikers, in sisted the only vital question now was that of arbitration. Arbitra tion was refused by Judge May er, legal custodian of the system, who retained the right to reduce any award in accordance with the bankrupt company's ability to pay. Bureaus for Legal 'Aid 'Are 'Advanced St. Louis. There is a demand in all the great cities of the United States for the establishment of mu nicipal legal aid bureau, Ernest L. Tustin, of Philadelphia told the American Bar association at its an nual oenvention here. Mr. Tustin is director of public works in Phila delphia. He said the purpose of such a bureau or department would be to enable the poor to obtain Jus tice and the foreigner to be re lieved from imposition, to estab lish a place where the weak, help less and Ignorant would have their wrong righted. Local bar associations should take on the burden of cultivating public sentiment so as to prevent the legal aid bureaus from becom ing tainted with political partisan ship and should appoint a commit tee to advise and cooperate with the legal aid bureaus. Such a bureau. he said, had been authorized m i Philadelphia. The body of the man who was found in an abandoned mining vju nel near Pleasant Valley, Baker couty, has been Identified as that of Ira Hartley of Richland, Or. He had been missing several months. THIS WEEK Beach Season Continues Late Twin Rocks, Or., Aug. 31. Al though in normal years the beach reason is expected to close with ! They are building granaries of lum Labor day and the opening of'ber and of woven wire linen with school, this year it is expected that i straw and are purchasing iron there will be a large number of va-1 granaries. This is being done es catlonists who will spend their out- pecially by the small farmers who ings here during September. The providing of housing facilities at the various Tillamook beaches has not been rapid enough to keep pace with the gain of these resorts in popularity, the result being that many who have come during the past six weeks and have been un able to obtain cottages or camps, have decldcd to try again during the autumn. A large number of reservations have already been made at Rockaway, and at Twin Rocks practically every cottage has been engaged for at least the first .wo weeks of September. The same conditions obtain at ail the outer five beaches. These beautiful resorts are win ning a well deserved popular?-;-with Salem people and it is expect ed that a much greater representa tion of Capital City vacationists will spend their outings here next season. H. L. Stiff and S. Brltenstein ar rived last week to occupy Just Once cottage at Villa Camp, Bar View. Mrs.. Elsie-B. Sirneral spent the past week established in Lane i Camp, Manzanita beach. Hiss Edith B. Jones with a par ty of friends is domiciled for a fortnight in one of the Wise y cottages, Bar View. Mr. and Mrs. Walch and Mr. and Mrs. McElnae arc among the cot tagers at Rockaway. The Misses Alice Lockard and Gladys Page are spending a pleas ant vacation at the Brownie cot tage, Bar View, Frank B. Ward was among the campers on the ridge at Rockaway beach last -week. Mrs. R. Cartwright and daugh ters, Miss Constance and Miss Flor ence Cartwright, are spending a week at the Elmore hotel, Elmore. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Maurer and i Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Pllklngton re cently spent a week's outing at Oh How Different cottage. Villa Camp, Bar View Mrs. Delia Jeffrey was another visitor from the Captial city who registered at Bar View during the past week. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Moore with their daughters, the Misses Luclle and Dorothy Moore, are taking a short outing at Hotel Elmore, El more beach. Mrs. Charles Hunlock and Mrs. W J. Page were among the vaca tionists who arrived at Bar View last week. Molalla suffered a shortage of water while repairs were being i made to the city pumping plant. 98c 89c 19c $1.12 $3.45 16c 98c 29c 49c 6 14c 50c i 32c Hold Wheat For Boom In Market Fargo, N. D, Many North Da - kota farmers are preparing to store their wheat on their farms after threshing to await better prices. raise livestock and diversified crops and whole Individual wheat acreage Is comparatively small. In pursuing this course the farmers are taking the advice of J. A. McGovern, chief deputy state grain inspector and manager of the North Dakota Mill and Eleva tor company. "Hold your wheat on the farm" says Mr. McGovern in a statement issued to the farmers. "Don't put it in a public elevator. As soon as you put it in a public elevator It Is placed on the market and Its sale will not help prices. North Da kota farmers can fix the price of their own wheat as well as the government fixed It for them. Yon can build or buy small granaries cheaply. But whatever you do, don't let the tinhorn gambler In grain to rob you of what you are justly entitled to.' "When the crop Is threshed you will find you have not raised any I more than last year, and it looks as if the weight would be lighter. Rust has hurt spring wheat all ov er the northwest. But If you han dle the marketing of your wheat in a sane and wise way, you should receive a "better price than last year." 24 of Religious Sect Awaiting Coming of Christ Bangor, Me., Aug. si. Six men and eighteen women, founders of a new religious sect, are In camp on the outskirts of this city awaiting the second coming of Christ. They resemble the famous Milerite, ex cept that they set no exact date for the advent of the millenlum. The party told the police they came to Maine from Pennsylvania. Neighbors have christened them the "Allenbyites, ' because the new sect believes that General Allenby, when he captured Jerusalem, ful filled a prophecy In the gospel ac cording to St. Luke and hold that The scientific blendintr of of benefit to persons who Nervousness SleepBessness Dc.Tcssion lonti ol Appelate Drain Fag Digests ve Troubles Slow Recovery from Influenza and Kindred A ilinri.ui; Are vou run down? Are you irritable? Ar e you overworked? Then try tl:3 approved remedy and satisfy yourself of its beneficial ingredients. Briacca it told in original 10-oz. bottles on'.;). Refute ENTIRELY apart from the beautiful lines which give it grace and harmony, the BlG SlX is far out of the ordinary from a mechanical standpoint. The more of. a mechanical ex pert you are, the more you will appreciate this fact. 60-H. P. detachable-head motor, intermediate) tranamiuion; 126-inch wheelbate, providing ample room for seven adult.. All Studcbalier car. at. awppd with Cord Til eft another Stud.bakcr pr.c.dent "This is a Studebaker Year' MARION AUTOMOBILE CO alalem. Ore. We Want Your Evergreen Blackberries Page Three the time has come for the children of Israel to return to Palestine. They include as children of Israel not only the Jews but also other test ' I "lel,ls ot lne nuca states, vttnajjp'.i ua, jiniisn isies, camrinivaa.aja Peninsula and other Europeans countries. They declare they lira,, unconm vtctl with any other sect. Couple Re-marry T Get Lonesome Miami, Okla. Thirty years l&ijpy Scott and Emma Jane McOolliJiBr"! were divorced, following their mar riage, because they could not agreei'" The other day they were re-marJ!' rled. "I got kinda lonesome for Emma Jane," Scott confided to the J. P., who remarried them. T.hev couple have several children. Jtiaf gave his age as 55 and she as Wwi in applying for the second license. - Reduce Weight ; I Easily Novo Do you wish to become slender, jraceful, healthier, happier? Eat Ml 1 you need, dux cnew yuuj food thoroughly, and be happy while following asy Korein system ob tainable in box at drug store. Purposed to aid n reducing fat in any part of the body. Reduce whatever you need (10 to 60 lbs.) under $100.00 money-refund guarantee or no cost to you. Reduce pursy abdo men, double chin, large limri. nhpsf". hlUS and other oveistout pat9 of , the body. ttterc i Pun a fw rlavs of Knrein svstem ( pro iMMt nounced korttn basji been reported to sikw , , a noticeable reduction in weight No thyroid, no:, exhausting exercise. Bio ; starvation dieting, no humbuK-agenuipcreductttiB methotfiipproved by obviKt-. an. Footsww become llgnt. Hie skin firmer and smooth' er In appearance, ork aeejw easier, and a buovanl n'" takes possession of the whole being a upeiflou. un healthy fat disappears. Bei(ta, reducing now. Get Korera. Buy a amall bon of Korein t any busy drug. wore. Show, others this advtrtimton. . JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY. reliable vegetable remedifa suiter Irom Sofa Manufavtunn BRIACEA UUVQ COMPANY , Kansus City, Mo. Jm We are also in the mar ket for green prunes ;iv'iiKiKe ami Ouriison plums Pears and Quince We furnish boxes and crates MANGIS BROS. Plant Hlsh and Trade Bta. Phene 111 Office 541 State St. Salem, Or.