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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1921)
iy,,ttBH! The Capital Journal, Salem, Oreg Wednesday, Army Engineers Supervise Work Of Clearing City Babes Locked In Closet Fou Days Rescued by Mere Chance Pueblo, Colo., June 8. Lieu- j tenant Colonel W. G. Caples. United States army corps of en gineers, arrived In Pueblo today to aid in restoring Sanitary con ditions and immediately tele graphed to Fort Sam Houston for trucks, wagons, mules and driv ers to remove dead animals and bodies In the flood district. He also requested apparatus for sterilizing water, cans for gar bage and food rations tor fifteen days for the men. Part of the trucks were aHked to be sent from Fort D. A. Rus sell at Cheyenne, Wyo.. and oth ers to be sent by train from the south, via Trinidad. The colonel praised the state authorities and national guard for their control of the situation nd also the Salvation Army, Tied Cross and American Legion for thelf relief efforts and policing of the city. The food supply of the city was estimated by Colonel Caples as enough for seven elys. with a 'ruck convoy to Colorado Springs. Train service into Pueblo ag 'ht as the state hospital has ben -entered and this Is exnected to nrovlde an adequate food trans portation the colonel said. from Jess Willard at Toledo two vouru ncn nomneey scaled 187 pounds. "I am growing a bit and I am governing my weight accordingly" Deinpsey said. "I think I will be at my best at 190 pounds and wiil , i ... i ton spaed. Car pen tier, I understand, will weigh With the match less than four weeks away Deinpsey today Is with in seven pounds of the weight he hopes to reach. The champions legs are as tbin aa lightweights. Advantage of Weight To Be With Deanpsey Atlantic City, N. J.. June 7. There will be a difference in weight of about 20 pounds when lack Demusey and George Car- pentier peel off their bath robes for the world's heavyweight cham pionship match July 2. Demspey said today ho planned to scale exactly 10 pounds in the ring. If he succeeds in keeping bis weight at that notch he will be three pounds heavier than he ever has weighed for a fight be fore. When he won the title To Plant Garden of 600,000 Trees Colorado Springs, Colo, June 7. Work will start soon on the planting of 600,000 trees on the north slope of Pike's Peak, and a bonus will be pard to the sixty odd workers who remain "on tht job" until the planting is coiu nlct ed. This eieantic olunting project is part of the reforestation r.ro gianime planned by the United States Forestry Service to conserve the water supply of the Pike's Peak region by reforesting tne water sheds that have been de nuded by numerous forest fires. Thousands of the trees to be planted have already been deliv ered to a nearby spot, where they are cached in crates in deep snow banks to prevent premature bud ding. The trees are four and five inches in height and were raised from seeds planted In Government nurseries. am HnpMK rafl Wk m BP" m - I-Hi B Ms, Stella KN ' m m ifr&mprei ve W " Pueblo Papers Publish Again Pueblo, Colo., June 7. Both the Pueblo Star Journal and the Pueblo Chieftain are publishing editions of their newspapers, but under difficulties. The papers until today were printed on bill poster paper on For four terror-filled days, two babies hungered and struggled for . l. . , foot i,,n nnH sixteen inches wide, and between ureain in a uiwnci. - - .... u..t,.hua f alaen cried the weary hours away. The tots were seven-lear-old Harry Farber and Stella Weiner four years old. They . . iu. -oir in ii noirhlmrhood of their home in liao seen piayiug inuB-auu-i.i ... -- - Peterson. N. J. Seeking a good place to hide they entered an empty apartment house and bid themselves in a ciosei id an iuj,t, .w ... ' ... . . . ... ..j.,, . I r. I no at Hn,r nn K;llnl!llO(l It. The little girl wno was n runncu mc ...uo... locking it automatically. The children were found four days later by two boys who retired to the apartment to play a quiet game u, ook r Hearing a strange noise in the closet one of the boys flung pw . 1 t. -H.hr. hort heen nroDoed UD aeulnst Z r..Tc..a"ta. i an effort to breathe, fel, out of the closet in an uneonscious neap - " "d that he cried lvine on tne tloor 01 i ne nuy tu'eu. , "a "ut? bit!" but that he mostly yelled and ed the door and tried to soothe the saddened little companion of his solitude. All Paterson bad been hunting for the missing children and now there Is peace once again in the housenoias. jhind p7esses. The Chieftain this I morning has a four page paper 'four columns wide. Uoth newspapers are getting J the full Associated Press leased i wire service from a wire eet up in a hallway of the First Baptist j church which aluo is temporary I headquarters for the telephone company. Several telephones are in operation now. The first tele phone wire was opened Sunday morning and Sunday afternoon the Associated Press had a wire operating Into the city from Den I ver. Parties returning from the mountains to La Grande say that prospects are excellent for a W huckleberry crop thi year. A military funeral was held at Springfield last Wednesday when the body of George F. Meats, who lost his life in France, was hurried. The Kelly mill at Warrento will resume operations within the next few days, employing approxima- tely 65 men. ' ' tell the world and the blend can 't be copied Resterfiek. CIGARETTES S r. -- of 30 rmtmmt4 cfffLM".- fa df Dodge Brothers announce a sub stantial reduction in the prices of their cars, effec tive June 8th. Bonesfeele Motor Company U. S. TUBES The same standard of quality built into U. S. Tires is put into U. S, Tubes. WW same me seem to have all the tire luck YOU probably know a man whose car is a hobby with him. He knows just- why its the best little old car there is of its class. And he'll stand up for that car against the world in any kind of an argument. Year by year an increasing number of men feel the same way about U. S. Tires. -For a while they may try "job lot" stuff "bargains," "big discounts" and "rebates. But usually it doesn't take long for a man sense the economy of the standard quality- For years U. S.Tire makers have been bufld ing quality tires for sane tire users --for W?m of medium or light weight no less than for the heavy car. The tire buyers of the land have resp with a mighty U. S. Tire following. The U. S. Tire makers meet th sponsibility for supplying wide following with characters energy. Ninety-two U.S.Factory are established, covering the en country. Find the U.S. Tire dealer has the intention of rvwgyo- sized lme or rres, . i tUo came cno" quality first, Jtts of size, tread and type as u- gest cities of the lano. FmJ the V. S. Tiwr ifeafer with the full. cvmpMefr mind hnm of AWt, irm V. S. TtM" United States Tires United States Rubber Company SALKM VULCANIZING WORKS, Salem, Oregon GINGRICH MOTOR CO. Salem, Oregon D. OWINGS. Liberty, Oregon IRA JORGENSEN. Salem, Oregon. Lilly Hardware Co. SUyton, Oregon MARION AUTOMOBILE CO. Salem. A. I. itoiMCS, iumer, Uregoa. cat fai AL TO LU. aaiam,