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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1921)
Page Two me Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon W - l ' J Albany Scouts Finish Outing Albany, Or., Sept. 5. Accom panied by Monslgnor Arthur Lane as scoutmaster, the Boy Scouts of St. Mary's church have returned from a three-day encumpiaent on the banks of the North Santinm one mile this side of Marion. Monfainor Lne said- today that the boya confirmed their repuU tlons as speedy hiKeri and as good fishermen, and enjiyed bathing general sports and hearty appe tites as '.veil. Baby Ciinx To Feature O.A.C. Exltibit Oregon Agricultural Collepe, Sept. 5. The Oregon Agricultur al college exhibit at the state fair t Salem this year has been plan ned with the object of giving the public an Insight into the work of the experiment station, the exten sion service, and the work of students In different divisions of the college. Such features as the "0. A. CI. information" booth, trrnsparencles, and the rest room, that were popular in previous years, will be retained. Decora tions will be much more elabo rate than In past years and the lighting system will be as com plete as the light and power de partment of the school of engin eers can make it. A space 22 by ,80 feet, Just In side the entrance of the educa tional building at the fair toe same space as occupied In previ ous years will be devoied to ex- I hlhfts which will Include a baby j clinic, the main part of the show put on by the school of home eco- mW to Insure the success of ,ven the Whitney boys' chor this feature, which will demon- at the 8tlte fir Grounds here strate clothing, feeding and care Sunday afternoon, October 2. A of the baby. j telegram received by Governor Dictaphonos. adding machines. olcott from 0eorge B christian, mimeograph machines, typewrit- - ... ., , r ... . 'Jr.. the nreslrlenr s nrlvalp serro- ers, other office appliances and a representative of the school to op- tary- conveys the thanks of the erate them, will be In the booth j nation's executive for the Invi of the school of commerce, accord-i tation contained in the governor's ing to the announcement of R- V. 'letter but "regrets that it will be Qunn, chairman of the committee impossible to meet your wishes appointed to arrange the college ;llB he does ..... eXD(!ct to be In New Jordan Church To Be Dedicated Scio, Or., Sept. 6. The new church at Jordan will be dedicated with appropriate ceremonies Sun day September 11. The dedicatory nervices will be conducted by the Most Rev. Alexander Christie of Portland, beginning promptly at 10 a. m. Dinner will be served ai noon by the ladles of the parish. The regular services scheduled for Scio on the seme date will therefor be postponed until a later date, announcement of which will be given In due seaBon. President Not To Hear Whitney Boys President Harding will not "listen in" on the concert to be Now Showing at The Oregon Canby District To Join Growers Growers of the Canby district are organizing for the purpose of gaining admission to the Oregon Growers' association. At a meet ing Friday night in Canby nearly 50 growers met to discuss the problems they must meet bctore they ask the association to estab lish a warehouse for their district. At present their acreage of fruit is not large enough to warrant the establishment of a permanent warehouse in that locality but the growers of that district are plan ning to increase the acreage of some of the fruits already grown there so that they can reach a large enough volume of business to permit a permanent warehouse in the district. Loganberries, prunes and straw berries are the fruits having the largest acr?.ge near Canby at the present time. Broccoli grows well in that locality and it is p. able that it will be grown more exten sively during the next season. . in.ii.ant in the'nrlces for cotton and ranch nrnri-lJuat u.. T pico muit;iLe iiuiin.w"v... , r "cueived A 1 ... . .. ,,l i., ,,(,, txrtA Mia Klnr .... 4 1 " oil situation tnere wnere new ycio have been brought in. BEBE DANIELS Washington on the date in ques tion." The plans whereby the presi dent was to have "listened iu" on the program to be staged In Sa lem contemplated the installa tion of telephone amplifiers in exhibits at the fair this year. Machinery and models In mo tion will probably be used by the engineering interests of the col lege. Including the school of en gineering, the school of mines and the school of forestry, while the School of education will probably ;the wllte nouae at Washington put on someining along tne line if Smlth-HnpheR work. "Jlmmle" Richardson hns prom ised to dlsplny some of the pen mts. silver cups and other tro phies won bv students of tho col lege and the exhibit committee plans to Include a military dis play and some sort of musical en tertalnment. Portland Machine Works Incorportes The Supple & Walker Machine Works of Portland, capitalized nt $20,000, filed articles of incorpor ation with the state corporation Nine Drivers of Trucks Arrested In Coos Nine arrests were made for overloading trucks in Coos coun ty Tuesday and Wednesday by members of the itate traffic squad In cooperation with the coos county court, according to reports made to T. A. Raffety, chief of the state squad here. Three of the nine trucks ciught up for overloading were county trucks. The state squad Is now at work Diversified Trade City Feels Pinch Syracuse, N. Y Sept. 5. Syra cuse, with its numerous and var ied industries, for nearly a year has been undergoing a gradual de cline in production. Its great cnemical, plow, automobile, type writer, steel and other' Industries have, and still are, seriously feel ing the curtailment of demand for their products. The steel and allied industiles have suffered the most, r.un . V. - . . J vay capacity, and bevond thut of their plants during the world war, these fields of activity are now comparatively at a standstill. The number of men employed In these Drills and factories number well Into the thousands. In wartimes, those workers pushed to endurance, received wages which soared high above their fondest dreams. Now they oui or work. Their liberty ed is grow bonds, bunk savings have been drawn upon until, in most cases, there is remaining but a small bal ance. Grocers, the butcher, the landlord and other merchants are trying to "carry" them until the tide of depression turns. The last to feel the reaction In business In this city are the auto mobile pottery and typewriter industries. Outlook In Mexico Is Not Encouraging Portland to Help Jobless In Winter Portland, Or., Sept. 5. tjueni nloyment in Oregon approaches the 15,000 mark, according to A. W. Jones, director of the Portland municipal employment bureau, who bases his estimate on reports from all sections of the state. The normal unemployment in Oregon is about 5600. The greater part of the army of jobless men is composed of un skilled workers. However, all the building trades report unemploy ment which averages 40 per cent, Jones reports, and in the miscel laneous trades 20 per cent are without work. The harvesting of the hop crop in Oregon, beginning September 1 and lasting four, weeks, will pro vide temporary relief for a few thousand who are now without work. The city of Potrland, anticipat ing an unusually "hard winter," Is already making tentative plans for creating work for unemployed men who are citizens. ucts and the big decrease in cop per mines are working, and there is but little activity in any of the largert owns. Posse of Citizens and Police Hunt . Bear in Chicago Chicago, Sept. 6. A patrol wagon load ot policemen, a citl zen's posse with torches and shot guns and a score of -hounds last night were pressed Into service to run down a big brown bear found wandering through Chicago's resi dential district. The bear, thought to have detrained from a carload of lumber from Wisconsin, eluded all pursuers and was still at lib erty today. eAO- Bar u western at your servl N. Blrt Idle List Grows. Oklahoma City, Okla, Sept. 5. Three thousand men are out of employment in Oklahoma City, ac coraing to Claude E. Connelly, state labor commissioner. The unemployment situation has hit the unskilled laborer particularly hard, but skilled labor is also af fectod. The conditions at this time are worse than usual for the rea son that the summer harvest has ended, and the fall harvest has not begun. The number of unemnlnv- r ing. Mining is still stagnant. Som of the mines which resumed opera tlons at the time President Obre gon issu.d his decrees to stimulate the mining industry and give em ployment to the Idle miners have shut down. Closing of mines is reported from the states of Coahulla, Chi huahua, Durango, San Luis. Po- tosi, Aguascalientes and other sec tions. Most of the properties closed are silver mines, the owners de claring that they have been unable to operate at a profit. Crop shortage and actual crop failure reported in some places have added to the gravity of the situation. While gloomy reports are com ing from many mining and agri- Mexico City, Mexico, Sept. 6.- Mexico is facing the prospect ol anotner dreary, workless winter! jss ror tne masses. V., ti,ot .m.tk.r. riifnrni iK i i a. J 1 9 One Ol me oesi mvmuu Beuuuiia ul Los-Angeles Area Not Feeling Pinch 1-J.sLos Angeles, Cal., Sept. 5. Leaders in all lines of activity in Angeles and vicinity agreed New Army Officer Attached to Guard Captain Paul -away of the 47th Infantry of the Fourth divis ion, stationed at Camp Lewis, has been attached to the Oregon na tional guard, as instructor, ac cording to an announcement is sued from the office of the adju tant general this morping. Captain Hathaway was with the guard in 1913 and 19 1U and will take up his new duties here alter he has returned from a three, months' leave ii Washington, D. C. AUTO Thdo TOP DRR9,, CURTAINS -SPECIAL WORK HULL'S TOP SHOP U A. Rl. --e a f 4 1 I l Hi 9 M a Betted II Ear l and se. Easier and HARTMAN RDAfi Phone 1255 lVl the nation in the matter of unem ployment. In Los Angeles county, with a population of 1,000,000, the total of unemployment la 12,000, and in southern California, comprising seven counties, it Is said the total of unemployed will run from 22, 000 to 25,000. In Los Angeles the unemploy ment situation is due in part to a serious slump in production in the large motion-picture studios. The southern California labor surplus is due in part to a crop shortage. Many farmers did not harvest crops in some localities because of the high freight rates. In Arizona there has been ai general business slump for the last The Standard Blood Purifier What Causes Skin Troubles? Many of t' le fiery, itching skin troubles aro Sue solely to dis orders of tho blood. Don't let these impurities torture you. Thousands have gotten relief from such troubles by taking S. S. S., the blood medicine that drives out the Impuriti- and helps put la the healthy red blood corpuscles. L- M. HUM Care of Yick So Tom Chinese Medicine and Zr Ilaa meuiune whin, n cur. any knoa "d Open Sunday, rromd;; until 8 D. m Salem For Special Booklet or or inoj vidual advice, without chare write Chief Medical Advisor, S S.S.Co.,Dep't 433, Atlanta, Ga. Cat S. S. S. at your druggist. feS Ei i B3 South Hii. o.. Oregon, pk!!' . J . - , j department here Friday. The in iln Benton and Linn counties with .the state loadometers In an efrort to put a stop to overloading. "We ltural sections, news from Tain- eieht or nine months, due to lov GET THAT mr corporators are Joseph Supple, C T. Walker and L. E. Crouch. Articles were also filed by the 'expect to cover the entire state Pacific Consl ruction company of as rapidly aa is possible," Raffety Portland, capltallied at J6000. stated. Tho Incorporators are Charles Burton, lCdward JenkinH and L. B. Sandblast. Clackamas county has alresdy purchased a set of the weighing Jack and coos county Intends to Certificates filed Friday show secure a pair for exclusive use increases in capital riy tne follow ing corporations: Blake-McFall company, Portland, $2-60,000 to $760,000 ; Ituutledge Sued A Florai company. Portland, $26,000 to $75,000; Deer Island Logging company, a Washington corpora tion, $10,000 to $200,000. The Alblna Rnglne & Marhlne Works, Inc., filed a certificate showing a decrease In capitalisa tion from $100,000 to $1000. A supplemental article filed bv within the county, Raffety states. School of Fire Fighting Methods at Fair Planned Arrangements for a firemen's school to be conducted lu connec tion with the state fair here the week of September 2(-October 1, are announced by A. C. Barber, state ftre marshal. The school will PHONOGRAPH NOW! the Pence Motor company of Sa-'De held uuder the auspices of the lent shows a change of name to Bartlett Motur company. North Canal Co. Incorporated attending slate fire marshal department with Captain George W. Stokes in direct charge as drill master. Among those who will contribute to the Instruction of fire fighters ng the school are B. F. The North Canal company, or- Dowell. ex-chief of the Portland Mnlsed for the purpose of re- department; Thos. R. Qraham, claiming 27,000 acres In the csn- chief of the Corvallls department; tral Oregon Irrigation district, F. A. Zellner, captain in the filed articles of Incorgoratlon Portland department; Lee Hold wlth the state corporation depart- en, battalion chief. Portland; J. ment here Saturday. The Inrnr- W. Davis, chief of the Marshfleld poratlon which will maintain department, and W. P. Cooper, headquarters In Portland Is capl- secretary of the Portland fire tallied at $260,000. The Incorpo- marshal department. ..Of the ninety instruments advertised for Sale at Reduced Prices and special terms of payment, 71 remain unsold. You should hurry and make your selection if you want all the different styles to choose from. .The .remaining instruments will go quickly at the prices and terms of payment we are now offering them. Tons of or Seattle L. Orutse rators sre Samuel Hill nd J. C. Potter and A, of Portland. The Electric Service Auto com pany of Portland filed supple mental articles showing a change of nam to the Westlnghouse Ser vice company. Resolutions of dissolution were filed by the Oscar B. Gingrich Motor It Tire company of Salem. The FUher Flouring Mill com pany, a Washington corporation, filed a certificate showing an In crease In capital ition from $1. fOO.000 to $3,000 000. i Urn GENUINE Scio's Electric 6 Plant Opened Scio. Or, Sept. 6 The Scio municipal electrical plant built on Thomas creek nine mile east of Seto has been officially opened and Is a big success. The plant has been built or the eltisens of Scio to take the place of the old plant on whlth the fraa ehise had expired. The ton has been bonded for more than $ 0. 000 to pay the expense of ron- atructlon which ha been sub acriDed uy local nutans. It U re ported. In time the farmers . 1 ng the line are to be supplied with tight and power. Bull DURHAM tobacco makes 50 flood cigartttaa for 10c We want you t Mv the hat paper (or "WILL." enow you earn rhre WeliMllui ssi 4 Hmtm 1IIU-V -AM wwy Ikm) sMjuriHs raewr am Mm rM. 0 3' fiSN ttrt. Rffil;! mm Either COLUMBIA 59c BRAND NEW CABINET SIZE PHONOGRAPHS $45. and $57.50 Pay $5 Down Salem-Dallas otage Iave Salem 0. . Depat 7:10 A. M m ll-lO A. M 5 .10 P. m. Leave Dallas 8:30 A. M. 1-00 P. M. :30 P. M. fare G5 cents n.Qay MPt car Sunday Round Trip jl.oo Portland & Salem Stage Line Every Hour on the Hour ai ! uotn ends Leaves 10th and Alder it Seward Hotel evprv linn. Leaves Salem Bligh HoUl First Stage 7 a. m. Last Stage 7 p. a &ALEM S1LVKRTON STAGE i-eaves i, OBlem Silyerlon O. E. Depot Newi itul 7:00 a. m. 8:15 a. u I) :00 a. m. 1:00 p. a (:00 p. m. mi p. a. BAliKftl -INDEPENDENCE MONMOUTH STAGE Leav Salem O. E. depot 7:0) a. m. 11:0m a. m. S:ll p. m. Leave Monmouth Hrtel 1:11 1 ra. 1:00 p. m. 6:15 p. m. Leave Independence Bcirt l:M ft. m. 1:15 p. m. 6:30 p. m. Special trips by appointment. Seven passenger ear for Mr J. W. PARKER, Prop. Res. phone 616. Business phras I Home Bidders Take Notice We can save you money on P" Plumbing Supplies; It will t you to come ana set u tlMt prices. We always hsvs i MJrv of all kinds. Tents, all sizes, prlcti ret? CAPITAL Bargain House j W buy and sell ererytWU Phone 398 215 Cea Hamman Auto Stage Throe Stages Dally ii rv tnlem 1U:!9 am. CO""" k,. ,,-.in M:il City: l:S" Leave Mill City J P"n: " Leave O. K. depot Sale" . T.VtM Leave at 11:30 and isav. at 1 p. n- . k IMS Vysldo rops St iruov- Mehama. SUyton. AumsvUe. Turner. piuJ. Cottage larm. iwa, it. Jtiamman, Fbone 3" jaW YOU DON'T BU? A Flag or ADron or Scissors or a Pony With The Capital Journal But You But A Newspaper JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT .OLKNAL WASTES