November 24, 1920 If Capital Journal, Salem, Oreft Pag Hint Annual Polk County Corn Show Indicates Possibilities of Industry In Wi 1 1 a m ette Va 1 1 ey Nov. 24. met with oflnaep he eol.., 01 tS"c- - ,,..!,, anire usts of polk and .i.rday and today, i vestenw if,h Annual being nl tneir welcome u the rday " ..... ,nment , tne u 0 . ...uintr yest K ,h onc.usion of the (hl3 evening , j town the k.a been pity heidiui ha iln .'.i,.!. .lisnnsal. . Benefit uenv. rnublic. spirited standpoint of Promo" iKtreby o.u.h jf Utant subject to men cash . fVS. CUUil'"" -1 .viwrk-ncos. Grow- auu .hi,h was lows I w be oui " - Willamette valley nave . v.- m?rz:z,7 of tat, ana i f. .iursuetl more imv,.,-. 1 ' i.i, wich vear. No LVes are charged upon the sT.- .amission charpe is ,ad. in no way . t attempt to " - filiation. SnDstamm ..-a-" lom? have been u"f" , .vhibits of corn ui i" ..uii. and in addition mire,.-, Impendence, ousinew. cl '. ..,ll fnt mchandise to of , products. Entries Are Many. jho w opened yeuw v.- i'L.iuhttaal-Pr llllllfHnff kin street, tne use ui . Itadly donated by Mr. hmith. Iture wnicn - teneas of the room wnere wie I held is a most oeauuiui ti ll potted flowers and plants I the greenhouse of Arthur it Satan. Mr. Plant has been lyeral days arranging we l and decorations, Many of M exhibits were placed dur- ( latter part of last week ana hour came tor opening lew every detail had been ar ty the officials and com- , Farmers and particularly toners of this county and 1 Marion county which lies Ent to Independence on the le of the river, seem to have into the spirit of the af- I the end that this event will n in local history as the liuccessful and eventful under- r yet made in this county. is. Moore, Calbraith and Cock- lunty officials of th( show, worked hard to make the ng asuccess, and it is with rce of gratification that they able to behold their achieve- , They have made the show ant and profitable. ens Explain Mt-iluxls. ! of the. outstanding features i show is the knowledge it I by means o asking and ans- ff questions, and the instruc- prought by men of understand 11 the corn industry. This af- W at 2:30 Prof. V. S. Car- Of the Oregon Agricultural ! of Corvallis will deliver an using for his sublect. and its culture." Mr. Carnen- 'Jn. eminent speaker, well W this subject and it is ex I that he will bring a message Kp and abiding interest to all I Of Polk and .Marion coun- oens who are interested In its culture as annlierl tn Wlamette valley. .Miss Minnie Ptn, now state aeent! with era at Portland .is in at- ana Paul Carpenter of county agent, whn is res- iur much of the work nf MS for the exhihiHn.. v.. litre tor several days and will i. attendance throughout the "ion. utners inn. n.u.. vnt parts of the or.nntv ve been prominentlv Llenti- f! corn industry of Oregon "iong vnIJm is Sp,,atnr mm oi tola who h!10 o,,..,.,! i vue oest H 1 nl ,,f .V, til. th. Iik ' iJ-v has not most favorable f,. "'On, good corn ha h,. !M - , -" a.- is pvidini , . . . i i 16 exhibits on display at ! and the tore ( no have visited t "tendance th:it they approve a'7n ' copied by the saga 1,111 far-sichto,i J. . I made this great event tossi Her. A , . Slth wit . et?K ai falls for the lease of 12. uf reclaimed land In he iSTi. The hiehest rice ,n IS said to he t n WANT ADS PA AT a pretty home wedding Tues day, November 23, Miss Geor gia Fern Re'eveV daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reeves of this jjty, became the bride of Delbert D. Forgey 01 AiDany. ine cere niftnv took place at the home of the bride s parents, at iuiu Les lie street, Reverend F. W. Laun er officiating. Miss Anna Ward at tended the bride and Lester San dy acted as groomsman The house was beautifully decorated, pink and white being used as an artistic color scheme. Following the well appointed wedding din ner the young people left on a short wedding trip to Asotin, Wash ington, the home of the groom's parents. Th hHrte Is i native of Marlon county. She was born In Jefferson I and was graduated from the Com mence high school in Portland. She '.later attended the Capital Business college here and has a host of friends in this city. Mr. Forgey Is a son of John Forgey of Asotin, an ex-service man and formerly a student at the Ore gon Agricultural college. He is an employe of the railroad company and resides in Albany. The numerous Salem friends of Mrs. Leland R. Waters (Hazel Blake) will be pleased to learn that she is enoying a brief visit in the capital city after an absence of several months. Mrs. Waters has been spending the summer in California, making her home in San Francisco, end visiting the many pleasure resorts of the southern state. She arrived Tues day evening from Pasadena, where she was the guest of friends, and joined ' her husband who has been on1 an extended business trip in Washington flnd Oregon. Today Mr. and Mrs. Waters motored to Corvallis and tomorrow they plan to go to Portland. They will leave the first of December for Phila delphia for a visit of indefinite length and upon their return will make their home in PortHand. At a meeting held in Portland SuncViy, it was decided that Mon day evening, December 6, would be the date of the Cherrian-Pru-narian dance. It will be held in the Multnomah hotel and will be one of the bright spots in the sea son's social gayeties. The regular meeting of the Salem Arts league, which wjis to ( have been held last evening, was indefinitely postponed. Announce ment of the date will be made later. Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Schunc man will motor to Portland Thanks giving dav to attend the presenti- tion of Chu Chin Chow Heilig thenter. Mrtls Gertrude Hartnvin i among the many Salem sock' folk who will attend the perfr.rr. o if rhii Chin Chow 31 the Heilig theater in Portland tomorrow. Mrs. Harry Rowe and small im,,rv,i fYitherlne. and Mrs. Elbert Thompson and daughter, -Pnv T.nnie. are visiting relatives in Corvallis and Philomath the Thanksgiving holiday. Police Force Is Inadequate, Says Alderman Giesy That he believed Salem's police protection is at present inadequate, and that he favors the addition rather than a reduction of patrol men, were statements made at the special council meeting Tuesday by Alderman J. B. Giesy in reply to a talk made by Alderman James McClelland in which Mr. McClel land declared that the best policing Salem ever had was several years ago under five men. There are at present six men in the department. Mr. McClelland, however, did not urge a reduction of the present force. "We haven't proper police pro tection at the present time," Mr. Giesy insisted. "Everybody knows it. I am absolutely against limit ing our police force to six men. I believe, in fact, we need more officers." i A crrri pc Tn Trim For Battle With Multnomah Squad Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis, Nov. 24. The Oregon Aggie players are somewhat stiff after their strenuous effort against the Unlvergtiy of Oregon are now work ing out the kinks in preparation for the Thanksgiving day game in Portland against the Multrlomah squad. Practice is being conducted in the big armory. Varsity men do not expect to run up against "easy pickings" with Multnomah. They recognize that the Potrland organization has a hard fighting -group and has mule a good record this season. The or- (ange and black lineup will be some what the same as was used in the vniverstiy game Saturday, it is ex pected. Coach Rutherford expects ot try oit some of his'second string men, who he is sizing up for next year. Jackson Club To Hold Its Annual Meet In Portland The Jackson club of Oregon will hold its annual meeting at Central Library auditorium, Portland, Ore gon, Friday evening, November 26, at 8Vclock. The time for election of officers has been changed from the last Friday in December to he last Friday in November in order to give more time to prepare for the annual Jackson Day banquet which is held each year on the 8th day of January, the birthday of Andrew Jackson. The Jackson banquet ha become a fixed institution, demo crats, not only of Oregon but of most states make pilgrimages each year to meet and do honor to the great democrat, Andrew Jackson. Plans are under way to make the banquet this year the largest gath ering of democrats ever held in this state. Fifty men are now employed on road work on the McKenzle high way, and despite the rains, good progress is being made. Surcharge For Pullmans Acts thought nothing of reserving a "lower" in a standard sleeper arc now sitting it out in the day coach ir ti-jiveHno- hv dnv and snendine Like BOOmerang 1 the night in some hotel along the lie, v.uiry uevmin, Portland, Nov. 24. The body .a hnthof Mayor G. K. Percival of Van- The surcharge imposed upon per sons of the Pullman company is proving the Pullman people and the rail roads according to H. H. Corey, public service commissioner, who has returned from a confer ence at St. Louis, Mo. According to Corey travel on the railroads has decreased very noticeably and pa tronage of the steeping cars has de clined to a very marked degree. Many people who heretofore couver. Wash., who disappeared October 17, was found hanging to U tree in a clump of heavy woods near the Oregon approach of the North Ponk railroad bridge near here Monday afternoon. He had been in ill health before his disappearance. A GREAT There are many mother, nervous and rundown in vitality, to whom Scott's Emulsion would be a great boon. It's the very genius ot Scott'a Emulaion to build strength. Harvard Coach Suggests Change in Passing Rul Boston, Mass., Nov. 24. A sug gestion for curbing forward pass, to prevent development of present day football into a game more nearly resembling basketball, has. been advanced by Percy D. Haugh ton, founder of Harvard's gridiron coaching system. "Instead of having an incom pleted forward pass revert to the team which started the play, make a forward pass blocked behind the thrower's line of scrimmage sub ject to 'recovery by opponents un der the Bame conditions as a blocked kick," is Haughton's idea. Wilhelm Needs Allies Consent To Visit Corfu FOST TOASTIES after a hike makes us all good scouts ' JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT ' JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT AjfiPChe Chocolates -with WS A STIRRING TALE OF fffllaK tMukvful Centers K THE TIMBER LANDS H was elicited as a .esuit ot an in-III Y J W&fV ftjalrtM J. C. PERRY'S DRUG STORE tLorrw!,' II , ulfflH M Every women in this condition should pront Dy tne experience ui ra y m I Nil tKpce timimmr-n whose letters follow. If J I H kSBHBfiBflHHHBiH - , in a qmnrffiiaHMiiHi rm -n a ijuaiuy ir mwff The Hague, Nov. 24. Former Emperor William of Germany could go to Corfu only with the consent of the allied powers, the Associated Press was informed at the foreign office. This information was elicited as a esuH of an in quiry as to reports U'tt the for mer emperor's villa on the Island of Corfu was beiig.riiw.red and that he was expected to go there soon. says WW IP RiGGER AND WIFE !TH GIVE TESTIMONY d Mrs. Paul Say Tanlac Restored TLpir 'After Years of '""' I have both tried u rmmend it because 1 We are telling .ufferiruj medicine that will ton " D: j ... ' aui jonn- Timer- j. so' weak and worn out that I could hardly keep going. I suffered so from rheuma tism that it Just kept me miser able nearly all the time. I was living in Aberdeen, Washington, when began taking Tanlac. Be fore I finished the first bottle I could tell that I was improving j and now I am feeling fine. My stom ach Is in perfect order, the rheu-, mat ism is all cone, I never have a pain of any kind land am alway readv for a rood day's WOrk. I "My wife got in a weaK ana run down condition and felt miser able nearly all the time from ca tarrh of the bead end stomach. Well. Tanlac had done me so or eieht vear. . jt .h heran taking. 'Ohr.son, "I ,Mffrt it anH h imorovement was eveni "e of stomach trou- more noticeable than mine The ordinary every-day life of most women is a ceaseless treadmill of work. How much harder the tasks become when some derange ment peculiar to her sex makes every movement painful, and keeps the nervous system all unstrung until life seems hardly worth living. Every women in this condition should profit by the experience of these two women whose letters follow. Read the Experience of These Two Women Gainesville, lex. "for tnree years Hiiffered untold agony eaon monin Twiitiar. Pa. UI had ortranic inflam mation, pains in the side and back which were so sharp that they pulled me to my knees, and I could not walk. I had an operation and 6till I failed, and in the eight years I suffered I had four doctor" and none helped me. My mother-in-law advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I was then in bed, and after the first bottle I could be out of bed, then I took Vegetable Compound Tablets and Lydia K Pinkham's Blood Medicine and also used the Sanative Wash. I still take the medicine and ain able now to do my own housework. My friends say, My! but you look well what do you do? Who is your doctor?' And there is only one answer, 'Lydia E. Pink ham's medicines which I gladly recom mend.' "Mrs. Wm. Stkix, 660 Douglas Street, Reading; Pa. T with pains in my side. I found only temporary relief in doctor's medicine or anytning eise i xamk uiuu uij uus band and I saw an advertisement of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I mentioned it to a neighbor and she told me she had taken it with food results, and advised me to try it. was then in bed part of the time, and my doctor said I would have to be oper ated on,hut we decided to try the Vege table Compound, and I also used Lydia E Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I am a dressmaker and am now able to go about my work, and do my housework besides. You are welcome to use this letter as a testimonial as I am always glad to speak a word for your medicine." Mrs. W. M. Stephms,202 Harvey St, Gainesville. Texas. Ailing Women Should Not Experiment-But Insist Upon S.e If ate .L-r.,i witk i.-. Minu tw.kiv nounds anl s atlr ttaa -I.UL i a , yomt af tlrtllll ' . until t felt iik. ii mlA in Kalem by Ty I 1 Hjl is sold was constippt- ler'a drug store and all other towns' i ui -ii. s rwHsFSail 1 IkLi r.-na.n ni-Thiri wmm a w TO PROSPECTIVE PIANO PURCHASERS We are pleased to again remind you that we have secured the local sales agenc.. for the entire line of Pianos and Player Pianos of mm i Sherman,pay&Co. The Most r,eJKtfK for selling only goods of men at a J JJJg- fin for one dow not buy an in ercise the same care m '"-JJ SSVpSSS, and Player Pianos has bee. strument of this k JlU each in its grade, the very best in th Piann or Orean taken in part payment. C. S. HAMILTON Complete House Furnisher. 340 Court Stree' restless, and was by leading druggists. (adv)