Paee Four
The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon
The
Capital
Journal
Salem, Oregon
An Independent Newspaper
Every evening except Sunday
Telephone 81; new
George l'utnam,
Editor and Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By carrier, 65 cents a month
By mail, in Marion and Polk
counties, CO cents a month.
Klsewhere $7 a year.
Entered as second cla mail
Matter at Saiem, Oregon.
Member
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is ex
clusively entitled to the use tor
publication of all news dis
patches credited to It or not
otherwise credited in this pa
per and also local news pub
Ished herein.
ALICIA HAMMERSLEY
A Woman Who Wouldn't Remarry
By ID AH McGLONE GIBSON
The Noted Writer
An Invitation to Dinner Bi?it "1 , ,
r -i.a i.m T..rn.r had Tonight I was in hopes, Mrs.
With 30 or 40 pullers already
beginning the task of harvesting
Hammersly, that you would dine i flax from the largest acreage ever
Japans Objection
Japan has expressed a willingness to attend the disarma
ment conference proposed by President Harding, but balks
over settling the far eastern problem at the same time, hold
ing that the Shantung and Yap questions were settled by the
peace conference.
Japan cannot be blamed for taking this stand for Japan
more than any other nation is concerned with this nrohlpm
indeed it is Japan's problem, and to leave the settlement of written me that particular letter,
ner destinies to tne nations Ot the West IS asking a good deal, for it showed me that men as a many things i ghoul(i llke t0. the crest ot the year's flax season
The president made a mistake in coupling two seperate! class, whether cultured or other- talk over with you," he added' will be reached by next week,
propositions together, for disarmament is nn thino- anrl t hJ wise, -were apt to have the same: hurriedly as he saw that I was! While this year will be a record
Asiatic oiiest.ion annthpr ami Hitirw.f -w t,s. . I Impulses. .. about to refuse.
tZ . Z w..v. .u.o! sfv a. Qtitm a woman I could hardly try to take each one of my staff
time is a very good rule and disarmament is a big enough' conceive myself writing such a'f0r a conference of this kind. I
thing to tackle at one time. Coupling the two together is! revealing letter about myself as' had Miss Belcher with me last
likely to defeat both. " Judge Turner had written to me night."
As a matter of fact if the nrpirlpnt line fnllnivoI trio RnmV, : "bout himself. Intuitively I understood that according to Robert Crawford, su-
1Z V t A P refTen 1 "as followed the Borah; e Turner ia a verjr differ- Miss Belcher had told him not'perintendent of the penitentiary
resolution and confined the conference to the limitation of , a mn from noiand ni m fh. ff.t h, fr,v' .., ,iiei,.r nt the n production
naval armament, tnere would have been a better chance of Early. He is less personally sei- but she had given him an
success, for all the nations are agreed upon this, and follow- f,sn- ,,ut ite as egotistical. lot the personal affairs of most of able growing
He writes that ne is mucn in- us. However, as he had put the been experienced
Harvest of Big
Flax Crop Now
Begun In State
Office Cat
I ing the reduction of the navies, the reduction of armies would
i naturally follow. The problems of the Pacific cannot be
definately settled without Russia, but the reduction in arma
ment would permit progress in the settlement of diplomatic
questions.
Wireless Phone
News for Farmers
Washington, . July 21. A wire
less telephone news servtce for
farmers and business organizations
made up of government Infonna
tion, including market reports was
proposed today by members of the
national radio service commission
in session here. The commission
was appointed by Postmaster Gen
eral Hays and Secretary of Agrl-
irtenif,,,- ih tnf dwe In the unfavor-1 L lul "auuea. ,
season which has ue ra.uo stations cross
The total crop U1B oonuneni at aDout 400-mire
with me at the Seaside Inn. There, planted in the history of the state,
I am going to one for flax production In Oregon,
conditions on the eve ot the nar
vest indicate that the returns to
growers will be little more than
half of the earliest anticipations,
(Copyright 1921 by Edgar
Allan Moss.)
Stop, Look and Listen
I do not fear a sire
With a mass of midnight hair,
With wicked drooping eyelids
And a blase wordly air;
But, Oh, I cross my fingers
In
Sell the Ships
"I'lf bring him back," I pro-1 the idea of combining business
mised my vanity. with pleasure.
"Be careful! Do you" want, to Tomorrow Miss Belcher
bring him back?" asked common trudes.
sense. "He has been frank with!
you. You must be quite as f ran i
Operation of the United States Shipping board cost the ni Wait and work." was my
people some ?650,000,000 the past year, that beinrr the conclusion.
expenditure according to Chairman Lasker. The board's And truly the next montns were
books only showed some $99,518,000 estimated loss whereat ! r U"' SkZr
the actual deficiency was $380,000,000. Some $300,000,000 trvtng to settle my house and
terested in me and yet, because invitation in the light of a bus)-! of Oregon will probably be be
lie does not want to give up the ' uess conference, I could hardly! tween 1U00 and 1200 tons,
independence and the bachelor refuse. I did remark, though.1 Based on the yield and prices of
habits of years, he has run away. 'that I hardly agreed with him In ! v.ar riu raisers eoected the
And I breathe a little prayer
When I meet a blond-haired cutle, more is required to carry on the operations the coming year.! write my first story at the same
With a blue-eyed baby stares The receipts were : from operation of shim. SHOO 000.000 1 time and when my story was
from treasury appropriation, $100,000,000; balance ni treat- JJJ Turner"? .when1'
ury first of year, $80,000,000 ; from sale of ships, $200,00,000. !t ,t it to him and ne wrote!
You reach a man's heart
through his stomach, a woman's
through her pocketbook.
Now, Jimmie
iimml Munirnv. It says In
book that a baby fed on elephant's
milk gained twenty pounds In
one day.
Mother Nonsense, Jtmmle!
Does it say whole baby It was?
Jlmmle The elephant's.
Independent
Italian Ions Salesman.- I'll have
you understand 1 take orders from
no one.
Manager -- Quite correct, your
daily reports show it.
. .. In on the Clean-Up
Kirst launch Hound Well, old
strawberry, howsa boy? I just
had a plate of oxtail soup and
fell bully.
Second Counter Fiend. No-
thin to It. old watermelon.
Just had a plate of hash and feel
like everything.
Open Forum
Contributions to This Column
.must be plainly written on one
side uf payer only, limited to
300 words in length and signed
with the name of the writer.
Articles not meeting these spe
cifications will be rejected.
To the Editor For many
The expenditures were: operation of ships, $409,000,000; back to me that had I been satis-j years, througk the kindly offices
cost of new ships, $160,000,000; miscellaneous disburse- tied w,t" 14 he would consi,ler0f the press, we have been able
ments, $111,000,000. Of the $409,000,000 advanced to the lgM, " mtt read' to make an appeal to the public
operators of the government owned ships, $307,000,000 is yet j ' to be fully satisfied with the for canned fruit and vegetables
to be accounted for, reports being lacking on 6,000 Voyages. ! thing one has created means at0 be sent t0 the Louise Home for
Some of the ships were made over as many as seven times, !turninK point ,r"m Wpejg0natii')? sirls. and for the older children
costing two and three times their actual value, and much of ,ra'1 ulWn ywr story, at the Aluertina Ke" nursery.
tv, tiennnn nnn anant r,.., aV,ir,a thic TW:. . . .. , We have now 144 mouths to
ill'. p 1 uui JJJ,J jv n ii 1 iui n v y oniMn r i i iy un.i e y . i in. ia mflgl 1 1 I U 111 1 II it i i h ta - it i cav-n
loss in operation of the fleet totals $220,000,000, and is
bound to increase annually.
feed three times a day. It is
A man Is llahle to mn'te a mis
take, and any woman H glad to
point it out to him.
Easy Answer.
Replying to an ad that asked:
"Why continue to stutter?" Mr.
BtutterfusH wrote: "Because gen
tlemen, I have to go on talking
a little now and Ihen.
Name it and You Coo Have It.
We picked this one out of a
Portland paper of recent date.
We'll say that employment agency
Is some versatile firm and we'd
like to order 1,000 of those white
Dlno rubber tires, the .10 cent
grade please.
V
Lumberman's Employment Agency
240 Ankcnv St. Cor. 2d.
2 sets of while pine rubber
tires, 30 and 40c per thousand
Must be experienced -fare ad-yanced.
pulses which form my character. ; U'B 1U"'-
o ci.ndld delineator of' Inasmuch as we answer calls
For these conditions, the "system" is blamed and not the individuals as well as the type. from girls and babies iii distress
individuals. As a matter of fact it is impossible to organize I am satisfied with it and I am from every part of the state, it
, . , . , . , . ., ,f ' I . .,j ,hnt von are not" calls for statewide interest. The
such a gigantic undertaking as the emergency shipping; s' J tl i h'ye written ! allowance made us by state aid
board with its expenditures running into billions, its em- many arUcles about men and provision does not begin to meet
ployes numbering hundreds of thousands, its operations ex- events. I have written many the expenses of the upkeep of the
tending around the globe, and secure efficiency over night fiction stories and I have learned homes in our car.
Other great corporations are the development of years of JJ?lZ$ .J u.ZZ tVlr
. ! J il 1 a li.' ii II j j i int! CIt'itUVS yYUin..i .v,f n-.i . units tv no
expt-nence anu growin, out mis, ine worlds greatest uncier-imay coriceive a work ot great in a run down and under noui
taKlllg, was tne rnustiroom creation ol tne war, and despite beauty and when It is aceomplisn- ished condition, wholesome food
the fact that the Country's greatest business brains CO-oper-'ed know that it has failed to come 0f which fruit and vegetables
.-.IpiI in nro-jiniznlion nnri nrwratinn. thp chflotif wnnntnie anrl up to tne stanuaiu m, .iorrn a large part
" - , :.... I Tl'tl 1 l, ; .1 1 . . ,
I I !!...., I H u i ' ' . i . M ill uu nuimj lll llve a sirong
industrial conditions of the world assured a gigantic loss, for
such an undertaking includes a vast army of incompetents,
profiteers and grafters
I huw verv few people at this ar,De,il thrnneh vnnr n.mer m fho
period of my life. My motner nau women of church organizations
been quite an Invalid for a long women's clubs, canning clubs
Chairman Lasker has already dPiorminwl i.mn Allir oil un,e l a . . ?JZ. )un,or "ea Lross M"e"es. P
- .7 " ""r mft I.liriP nl Wiin uy
of Hannah's at
t tu . j u: e l ... 7 , -7T i 're Kins, as wen as interested in
. ... " m w-eww sh anu iwem " 1 ..J. i "ividuals. to get together and
ueuvy cost aunng tne war. mis win leave only the ateel temuon to surpiy u. '"-', send us a shipment Fruit vege
-u: i i i il. j.-i r . .i . . 1 - i tried to be with him .... . '
miijjn, hiiu uc nee rftiuiu int.' expenditures. ione oi tne snips , - u,c ; lames, potatoes ana eggs are
are apparently operated at a profit. Americans nrpfor to V'ery . ...... .... m needed. We use fourteen dozen
trvnl in fWoi.rn va.-plo na.a Amo..,Vo., oV,; 'o UAi ". V t-. .t,nlH a week for the babies alone
t ! ....-i.t i.i j ... I ' ,. ... r.i,i nd """"' -oasi rtescue
sHsn K'lcigii nni).i wci . tim uiui v lutiuny owned snips are unm uo i - an,) protective Society 195 Burn
, n.n. mm "T.-T Streets Pnrtl.nd tW.
l.u lif.. nnri vou cannot counter- ' -.-o-..
hotter business rustlers than Unci Sam's, an rrpt thr trmnno-A ' 'u may have him an
I T ..... 1 . . : . . ( . i. :.... fll t ...V. . r
11 1. inn 1 m ui nmyia ic ura uj; si vvu.tiis, mie iui jai's. vi uc, my influence."
Cargoes. Looking back to this time
We will gladly pay the freight
and will also send jars, rubbers
Mk. 1 4 a:.. .1. .... ... . .... I wri 1 wM not unhappy '"l"- c- "pou request.
... ......0 Ku.,c.,ct ,. uu is 10 Kei out 01 tne interested in my I wlth much appreciation for
Shipping business and sell all its ships. The new tariff will Each .lay melted Into an-y kindness and Interest, I am,
cum. nnie me neeu 01 a mercnani marine and the government other so smoothly, o rapidiy, iiv i'
can not com not p with nWwaita nmsMkiii 1 sMlh. j.i..,i 1 hnrtiv realized the oassage. W. 0. MaeLARSN
I 1 - 1 ( , , 1 1 1..UVICI11J rtliu 1 .. . . .. ,
nr,.n ,rvi A.. 1. ...... .... il... mukI. i . .1 J.i.J : nt time One dav as I was sitting
, , t ' r y-. lnere: ; my own HUM reading, Portland, July
., ...vv .'. .. I . H,C 1 I ID 111 L . Illl lll
General superintendent.
0.
... i-.feKf atsupv: which
devolves" upon lame-duck politicians captained by an adver- i feit was the best thing I had To the Editor: i write to tell
Using writer whose qualification is that he was publicity done, i heard the words from you of a clock 121 years old. still
1 1.. "11 ., ,. nlnnlnir nn ..... I .1 ,
One look at the bathing suits
and you know why the wm are
wlM.
Dobbin Is Dead;
Nobody Wants Him
Springfield, III . July 11 Tired
and exhausted from hauling a dray
wagon for many a day, Old Dobbin
dropped bis weary bones In a heap
across, a public pat h drive here and
refused to breathe any more,
fctretrbed In full length across the
drive, he blocked traffic rla the
road he had selected for hla de
mise. Pelng outside the city llmltt. lo
cal authorities refused to remove
the carcass and II remained there
three days. Then spurred by the
decomposition of the quadruped's
body, eltliens in the vicinity pre
vailed -upon the owner of the dray
age concern to remove the ilisti u.
tion utnl give It proper burial.
Tr.iffic has been resumed as usual
in the park.
for me.
man for the Harding campaign, none of whom know anything! r,M Dehiml my r,halr:,
! about ships or their operation.
The shipping board and emergency fleet were the war
creations and their necessity passed with the war Thev
.1 u i i i f " , ... ..
annum oe cnargea on along with other war emergency
institutions to profit and loss, saving as much in salvage as
possmie. Ann tne sooner, the better.
'Have
busy
you no welcome
lady?"
1 turned to find Roland Early
standing behind me
running on good time and strik
ing like the mischief. If you don't
have your wits about you when it
begins to strike you can't keep up
and von get lost ir. the count. It
I stumbled to my feet, and al- wonderful to think it has been on
Tabloid Sermons
For Busy People by
Parson Abiel Haile
ror thou shall have a perfect and a ust weight." Deut. 25-1S.
Short-weight artists belong lo an anelent profession. We have a
though I knew that I had
extended them I found both
hands clasped in his.
As I raised my eyea I saw
not such rapid duty for 121 years. It
belongs to Mrs. Sarah A. Ellis, of
1893 North Church street, Salem
hlie is 87, a woman of wonderful
subtle change in htm. He hadj Intelligence, although her eyesight
grown heavier, his face was fuller. has been injured by a cataract
there was a slight pufflness under
his eyes. He seemed to have lost
something." Although as yet I
could not tell what It was. I knew
ia my heart that Roland Early
had lost the thing that I liked
most in him
Her life Is kept bright by the con
tlnual visits ot the many bright
ladies In her neighborhood. On
her table is an album and it con
tains the portraits of the friends
of long ago. It is a musical album
and seems to play to them, and to
'What have yon heea doing, her. In the sofest bell tones, two
government bureau of standards ud municipal sealers of weights and ln0 1 narB bu wa ?" ne ask- old pieces. "The Mocking Bird,"
measure and If they were not necessary in this day and generation,"1 T'"' h'0 1 cou,d enawer.jand "The Last Rose of Summer."
we would not have them. The book of tables savs that four n. sa,a 1 nea nm ,oml m xbt p,Uit- while
make one gallon, but uutll the government fore the admission. 6''0" 1 .SfaS utSl!LJ2" ane'eDt mWody'
oeen uoiuk- i uu u - t..:....i.. scene.
ELLA A. FINNEY.
Man Loses Pants
at Snake's Prance
Dea Arc. Mo. July 21. Boy.
page the water moocMlna! And if
you find one of them wearing a
pair of trousers that seem too
large, page H C Powell Not that
Mr. Powell will redeem them, but
Just to ease hla mind.
Powell wen i fishing. He stood
In ahallow water. A anake danre
began when a moeraaia crawled up
bis lee. With simultaneous
thinifht ISit Si-tton fnwll rtrf
erf lb I routers wmrm Inn m.l fnr anything,
Ulull, .,f lh.ua ..- I, . . ,..!, I . . ....
" ! mmumm 10 nave live to the gal- , . narn ,nd ghows
Ion. The table says that JDOi) nounds mil. .,. h . ' . '' ! , " k. a...
- sr B your wruing. io mmw
often a coal dealer s itMkeil to nov Mnaiii. r... !....-..... j ..... ... ,..
. . - ......... hnviauir auo Felling contrlOUieO lO mis mubsmic
the beam at say 1850. The gentlemen who discovered that five quarta I have been Its editor has develop
made one gallon no longer are correcting the measurement table. ! ed so rapidly. 'The Man Did
The coal short-weigbtens have been pained too. to learn that a ton la Not Marry.' uhls waa my last
a ton But thav r m.i iha ,,.,u - - - it-. . . starv) was a masterpiece. As I
in mis worm
Steamer Sinks
In the Columbia
We sell our time and uur saw Th f ............ read it I felt that il mirrorru ...r
- as,aa-wuaiiau . n a 1 I
the gallon sink. Into petit larceny class compared with the man who ""..m "dlW id find outl Portland. Or . July 21 Th
aells eight hours labor and delivers six: or to the man who buys eight who .at man was. Ineldentally.l "'earner Effingham, of the Euro-
nour work and doctors his money weigher so that he delivers only ,h .tnrv insnired In me an un- Pesn-Facif.r line, which struck
pay for six hours. The woman who sells love, honor and reepr-ct to a accountable fear to come back to 'he rocky bank of the Columbia
husband who deserves li and fails to deliver any of the agreed items, you and be put under the micro- r'ver Stella. Wash . 56 miles
la a short-weighler. The husband who undertake to love, therish ecope of your analysts. 2?a??S 'if' n'ght' ,e,rinK
and keen, and cheata with his meaaure l a. i-r...,i....i .. .w- Now -that I hava ronae back. no, '"her bow. arrived here to-
quarter or the I860 pounder. Of course. Moses in his specific advice-Mrs.
waa talking to atmlght waighla and measure and prescribing pen-!uk "U,e
111.11 I UM. . w . . . -
Alit. I hope that yOU win " "earn wun 15
recreation Tou are ner torward hold
waa talking to straight weights and measures and prescribing pen- " ' ,. ' The Effingham ran ., , J
'jaltlee. But ho liberty is take, wtih his comm.ndmeat quoted when to ,0,u,nK' Sui Z b"k the Washing
U 1. amplified and applied to ever, phaa. of our Uvea. When you sell , ,fc.t work "hen her ste.rmg geir
time, service or merchandise, deliver the goods:
bnth himself and the snake. Worn -'P" "hat be paid for: have a perfect and a juat weight
en nearby didn't understand the
may be to you. It
Then part ot a good editor to insure
will be the eordtng to men on board
'"'' "ei wnen sne arrived here
there will be no awkard puMU-iiy and the penalties provided for the! vou long rides in the open, dainty ' '' ,0 s,Dk rapidly
details and acrearaed l.rste rtcallv cheater With falae -veijthta. dinr.rn sl.mr the shore, glimpse . "lls were ent out by
paiivivaw jar. rvwru an pani
Ing by.
Former Aide to
Montana Governor
Called by Death
Helena. Mo .i , July 21 A h
Trgs , ftmner 1 lent savant gov i
oc est Voslana. died early Tuee I
r alter a brir illnesa. II wa
htrra rn Wlareetftn H year egw
f the roof garden and erhapa , ' - -- "e went
aasj r..u.i lo Montana in 1 lie ' li.i' . - A i..i!i.n. an employe an art exhibition or two. wfh ' ' n'Na- ;! the engine
i s)l ana alter s
lurvey of the damage was made
fflren decided to proceed to
Put land Her arrival here ir
eo snipping men. who had
served In the state leglsletare lHof the Booth Kiahers. Ut his life visits to the theatre now and
anen his boat capsixed on Pan-j then.'
tenant governor on the dees or rati,
tlrket. For the past Mine years ho
had been chairman of the state
-eapaxaiatiaa board. A widow sur
cock spit at the mouth et the Co
lumbia river
That sounds very alluring. Mr.
Early, but I am much afraid that
I will not be able to do so much
Vou see I am also tplaa la train
Want am pat
want aos pat
I eo Henry Blake, a confectiotMr
at Seaatde. has bean m!tng for I up " wo" M n houM be trained
tevaral day A he had (! o,L how " ,n ' M,iMr
" Early, apparently as an after
hts raeraoa when last . hi wife' Uought
He b vary well I a dead To-
flraed report that the Teasel had
ink.
The srtident nappe whll
the Teasel was oa the way t0 a.-
tona from Port Una. where ah.
hsl loaded part ol her eararo for
! baited Kisgdom.
;rop of 1921 to he worth iu the
neighborhood of 175,000, but lat
est conservative estimates now
place the value of the crop in the
neighborhood of $40,000. With a
warm, moist growing season, a
yield of between two and three
tons to the acre was not uncom
mon last year, but only the best
fields will reach that amount thi
harvest.
790 Acres Planted.
A total of 7 DO acres have been
planted this season, ail but 40 be
iug covered by the state contract
whereby growers will receive $55
a ton for the pulled product, $40 ;i
ion for flax cut with a bindery,
and $25 for the loose flax cut with
a mower. Stipulations of the state
contract call for pulled flax 30
inches in length and bound 24
inches in length. It has been esti
mated that only 50 per cent of the
crop will be long enough to pull, it
being necessary to mow the re
mainder. Practically none of the
crop will be bound because flax
too short to be pulled could not be
cut low enough with the bindery
to make the required length of 24
inches.
Between 150 and 200 workers
will be needed next week to pull
the crop, according to Mr. Craw
ford. Pullps receive $20 per aeit
for their work, and it is estimated
that their payroll for the state
will be in the neighborhood of
$7000. net considering the cost of
harvesting the flax which will be
mowed.
New Tank Designed.
A new 20-ton retting tank, de
signed by Mr. Crawford following
his return from a three-month
tour of America, Ireland and
Scotland, where he examined pro
cess systems of the leading houses,
is being installed at present at the
penitentiary plant which will be
able to complete the process in five
days that took between 15 and 25
days in former years. Mr. Craw
ford experimented with his new j
scheme, which Involves artificial!
heating of the retting tank, on a1
small scale with a one-ton tank,1
and three different batches of the
flax processed under different con-'
ditlons have come from this tank
In as good if not better condition
than that produced by the former
method. ,
The function of the artifieinl1
heat is to hasten the work of the
bacteria in retting, but nil devices
to accomplish this have heretofore
been unsuccessful, due to the un-
n heating of the tank, that
could not be avoided. Mr. Craw-1
toru has successfully overcome
thia difficulty, he says, although
he will not divulge the details of
his method, which he arltl nrrth.
ably seek to patent.
Although two other sta 'is in rha
Union are ahead of Oregon in flax
production, after his return from
his Inspection of the various flai
raising sections of the Mimir. s.
Crawford is prepared to say that
me climate of Oregon elves It
i,c..oriiy over other states as a
uruuucmg locality. The eli
mate here, he says, is much like
urn oi Ireland and other ..,.. i...
uiuou ior tlax growing.
-ri'?,dultT7 m Young.
..a, mnusirv. him i-
at its tntancy in the United
State, and Canada. In 120 a to
tal of 60S0 acre were planted to
flax in this countrr whii ! t
and alone, with an area much less
than that of Oregon, an enormous
crop was gathered from approxi
mately 125.000 acres there. Last
year Michigan and Minnesota
with 3500 and 1000 acres respec
tively, were the only states that
lead over the acreage of Oregon
HoweTer. ,he f,ax industry of
Minnesota Is but two years old
making Oregon sacotd . '.
Xti-V,!- .- ' "
" " a coasioten: pro
ducer.
i T, V, nitTT J? 1" tMs state
n IMS Mr. Crawford. ,t , J
u. one or tne leading flax ex
Iierta nf 1 , . .
-. iu, wnere he became learn
ed in the trade in the great linen
center of Belfast He came to Sa-
rVlH.ViXh thP"n of
a period of about ia -
'retched over different Interval,.!
hi, ability
STJ "!" lo upbuilding'
of the Udustrr here
rJZI' ri " WJ he
" . mat bOL-b; a car
load of fibre from the sut of Ore
ron. the only coxamercial carload
Tha ,he local pro
m we. found to be eeual
y ay ,o the flax of lreIlod
no defects h.a w,
W 'he enalHy ot Ue tcr!j "
iontNAL want am pt
JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT
intervals and each would serve
123,000 square miles of territory.
Canal Traffic
Lowest In Months
Washington, July 21 Commer
cial traffic through the Panama
canal during June was the lowest
for any month in the last fiscal
year in tonnage, number of ves
sels and tolls collected, according
Thursday,
WW 4 IC II I f .
canal offio, . ' l
mercial vessel
Tifir? Txr.'el. . 'Hi. ha
while tolls colleetes
against luu."1
i7n,Zfi8 in th.Z::i
Despite the falli ;
the fiscal vn. v.. c
...... "uew ii..
or tne year aninunt.- .' Z
bif'.l. ae-ninu o... u IL
year preceding. ' (l
The Portland hi-.,
bouthern Paclfie .,"
a" 'he Pacific , ,71'
company for ih "i
accidents during it
months of 1921 uu.. w
. -, uere 2
.vaniljj
ArhvA anJ U.
With CuticuM
, , ,mmr
Just Received 4
m, (
cord and fabric extra wJ
Greaf WprA fLJ
at your service. Phone 44
Keep Your
Money Turning
Over
This is interest paying
time on most of your
bonds, but don't allow it
to remain idle.
We have a splendid list
of high yielding bonds
which will furnish prof
itable employment, many
of them exempt from
Federal Income Taxes.
Write or call for information
Wm. McGILCHRIST, Jr.
Resident Representative
Clark, Kendall & Co. Inc.
U. S. Nat'l Bank Bldg.
I!
iglr a
What a new top 1
TisVi- iiif q irnni t j.. .
" line new aoesn t t I
, An automobile top, like
pair of shoes needs attentioJ
a tudi m uressmg presertsj
!the fabric and gives a M
new appearance.
Let ua dress the top J
your car and see the difM
ence it makes.
All Kinds of Top Work
HULL'S TOP SHOP
I. C. Wood, Mgr.
Phone 809 1
Y. M. C. A. Bldg.
271 ChemeketaS!
BS3SSEiSl Ml
Your Summer Outing
Is a matter of importanca-to YOU- Where
you will spend it is a nmtteo?nterest to us.
ROUND TRIP
SUMMER EXCUBSI0N FARES
are now in effect to the following delightful place
for Rest. Recreation and Amusement.
i!'!?1RT- 0n the Pacific Ocean and Yaquiaa
turn tlll8,CDarn'ng old place where thousands rs-
year ,ter yr to epend their vacations.
rWeTEx? LAv.KE A wor,d wonder in the Caed
nange. More than a mile above the sea U this beautiful
azure blue lake, set In the crater of a huge mountain. .
StLR005 C0UNTY BEACHES. Beyond th.
nuC. Si Se Muntalns are these new and unspoiled
Places where the ocean and forest meet.
OTHZB KESOETS. Detroit (Breitcnbush Hot Spring.
ine ofUn0nCOUntry)' McC Hot Springs Josepk
!fe Count Cavea, Shaata Mountain Resorts, Yosemita
National Prk.
hS0.n Outdoors" Is the title of our new summer
oo!et which describes the different resorts in western
1!? "nd '"Eludes hotel
vi tree on request.
and camp
Informatloa.
For further information inquire of ticket agent.
Southern Pacific Lines
JOHN M SCOTT.
General Passenger Af
LADD & BUSH
BANKERS
ESTABLISHED 18GS
C eral Banking Business
Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p