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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1924)
PAGE TEN THE CAriTAt JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON - SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1924 KENYON TELLS REASON OF DEFEAT AT CLEVELAND Mason City, Iowa. June 21.- Expresslng a hope that "the time has not come when denunciation of the buying of seats In the seu atu will keep any one from being elected to office," Federal Jude William H. Kenyon told a group of farmers at a farm bureau pic nic hero yesterday that he was glad he bad not been called upon to lay down the judicial robes to enter tho arena of politics again. "After I resigned from the sen ate In order to accept this posi tion," he Bold, "I Bpoko to at: audlenco in' Missouri, and there I said something about Newberry. 1 denounced the buying of public oil ice. "The very next day before I had been sworn into tne office of judge there wore men who got up in the senute and demanded my imme diate impeachment. "And that, according to what 1 read and hear, was the reason for my defeat at Cleveland as a vice presidential possibility. For this I am truly thankful, but I hops that the time hae not come when denunciation of the buying of Beats will keep anyone from be ing elected to office." ELKS TO BUILD BETTER BUILDING A report which has been rapid ly gaining ground to the effect that Salem lodge of Elks had abandoned Ideas of going ahead with construction of their new temple at State and Cottage streets this year, was set at rent by state ments from members of the build ing committee that no such thought Is In mind. As a matter of fact It Is expect ed that excavation work will start in the very near future and a meeting Is expected to bo held within the next few days to make further plans for getting the work, under way. J The fact Is that not only will work go ahead this summer, but it Is highly probablo that a better building than was first figured on will be eroded because of receding construction costs. Bonds covering tho bond issue of 1100,000 floated by the lodge have been printed and issued tho holders and the whole stage is set to go ahead with the work as rapidly as doomed feasible. Acting upon Instructions from the state veterinarian an officer of tho traffic department Friday aft ernoon picked up It, N. Hyder a tourist from Hollywood, Cnl., nbout 10 miles south of Salem and clmrg cil hltn with violation of tho proc lamation of Governor Pierce clos ing the state of Orego nto animals troin California during tho present epidemic of the hoof and mouth disease in that state. Hyder, according to tho officera smuggled n bull dug Into the state past the quarantine station on the pacific highway. OpcnForiim Contributions to This Column must bo plainly written on one el ile of paper only, limited to 800 words In length and slgnod with the name of the wrltor. ArUclKit nut meeting theso spe cifications will bo rejected. To tho Editor: I seo an editor lal in a certain paper under th head hie of "Ura;;H TacUn," an J commenting on a paragraph of the republican platform that wns adopted at Cleveland. Well, it seems to inc that tho farmer and laboring man bavo already been on brans tacks or some other kind of tacks for almost four years.. Nevertheless. It Is. a a whole, a wonderful platform, as it stands for tho farmer and laboring man from etart to finish and Wall Htreet has not got a Bluglo plank in the platform, and thero Is Just enough tarilf In it to protect the iiirmnr and the laboring man. 1 Bliiccroly bellevo it will remula tho farmer's and laboring man's platform until alter tho elocilon, then I cauuot tell whose platform it will bo. Probably Wall Street's ronresentulive!, tho l)oheiiy Detective Hums can tell you whose platform It will bo. What a pny the u o. P. Is not In power today. "Well, I overheard two men talking In Slayton just after tho election in and one said to the other: "Wo Just got our man In time to save our country." "Yes," said the other, "Junt in time." 1 wondered what great calamity tho (I. O. P. was to Biivo our country from. 1 did not seo any storms clouds In Bight, but I will bavo to admit they have arisen since. President Harding has erossed the last river and Is renting from his labors. Many of our national represeuta tives havo stepped down and out ami did not servo their Ihno out, and 1 cannot see anything tlity have saved us from, unless It was from the great prosperity we were enjoying when tho U. O. P. vw swept Into power and won the greatest polilleal victory ever won. renter than lirover Cleveland In 1H02. "As a dog returiielli to hi vomit, so a fool roturncth to his folly" Proverbs 26-11, no tho C O. P. returned! to the high pro tective tariff to catch the voters. S. B. MILLS. Aumsvtlto, Or, All signatures to tho Pec la ra tion of Independence wore not af fixed until August 2, 177tt. Dee Monies. Iowa. June 21 Opposition of grain speculators and tho pack i ng in terests was largely responsible for defeat of tho McNary-Haugen farm relief measure, Congressman Gilbert K. Haugen told Polk county farmeis In an address here. Mr. Haugen was co-author of tne bill. Congressman Haugen said he held little hope for passage of the measure by the next congress. Discussing the condition of agri culture, Mr. Haugen said per cent of the farmers of the north are bankrupt. Thousands of farm ers, he emid, aro abandoning their lauds and going to cities to seek more remunerative employment. The only cure for present condi tions, he said, is enactment of or..-iliti.r a ni rl.w.I ! n rr nnt-nnrn. ' tion which will nriiiiKt m-iccm mi n' more favorable basis to agricul ture. Presidents of the Beven women' clubs of Salem will be speakers at the chamber of commerce lunch con next Monday noon. It will be the jofc, of Ora V. Mc- In tyre, former president of the Sa lem Business and Professional Women's club to keep the talks down to four minutes each. The women who will epcak are as follows: Mrs. "William Everett Anderson, president of the Salem Floral So ciety. Dr. Mary Purvlne, president of the Business and Professional Wo man's club. Mrs. George J. Wenderoth, preS' idont of tho Highland Parent Teachers' association. Mrs. Cbas. K. Spaulding, pres ident of the Salem Woman's club. Mrs. Richard Cartwrfght, pres ident of the Woman's Civio Lea gue club of Salem. Mrs. Paul H. Hauser, president Lincoln-McKinley Parent Teach ers' association. Mrs. John H. Carson, president Salem Chapter of American War Mothers. Harley O. White, president of the chamber of commerco, will be the presiding officer. The women will talk on what the men can do to make Salem bigger and bettor city. PARKING SPACES BEING PIED EMERGENCY BOARD TO MEET JUNE 30 A deficiency In funds appropri ated for administration of the state Income tax has necessitated a special meeting of tho state emergency board which will con veno hero Monday, June 30. nt the call Issued today by Secretary of Stato Kozcr. Of the appropriation of $25,000 for the administration of the tax. only $575.20 remains on hand, and it wns estimated that an ad ditional $21,000 will be re ulred to completo the remaining seven months of tho year, according to a report of Earl L. Fisher, tax commissioner. "Tho expenses of tho depart ment during the first few months," the report declares, ''do not reflect ordinary administra tive costs. Drafting nnd printing tho regulations, remodeling and equipping the oTfices nnd litiga tion costs are largely primary necessities, the useful life of which extends over a period of years. "On (his date (Juno 10)," the report continues, "wo havo filed Cfi.021 Individual returns; 4770 corporation returns, 3991 partner ship returns, 163 fiduciary Carrying out the provisions of the ordinance enacted several months ago relative of one-hour parking in the business district of the city tho street department Is touay uusy marking off parking spaces along the north side of State street between High and Liberty. The lines dividing the parkin;' spaces aro being painted in white on tho pavement nt a 45-dcgree angle with the curbs, and aro 9 feet apart, allowing ample space ior a parked car to open the doom on both sides. Tho parking stalls are to be marked off on all of the down town streets where the one-hour parking rule applies, nnd automo bile drivers nre to bo required to park between the painted lines. Chicago, June 21. Grain grow ers would own, finance and con trol five large Chicago grain firms and 6,000 cooperative elevators under a plan submitted to the executive committee of the Amer ican Farm Bureau, which will shortly name a committee, headed by President O. W. Bradfute for Its study. The plan Includes the Armour Grain company, Hosenbaum Grain corporation, Bartlett, Frazler and company, Rosenbaum Brothers, and J. C. Schatfer and company, handling more than a billion dol lars worth of cash grain transac tions annually, according to esti mates of the aggregatae business of the last few years. The proposal contemplates turn ing over to the farmers tho firm's forty country elevators, terminal elevators, offices and fixtures and all other mechanical equipment, along with managerial facilities. The five firms involved control virtually the entire elevator ca pacity at the Chicago terminal and their elevators alone are valued at $15,000,000 with other property at about $S,000,000. Cooperative grain marketing organizations eventually would be accorded trading privileges of the Chicago board of trade, under the proposal. Details of financing to hun dreds of millions of dollars, are to be cared for with funds which ordinarily make tho ''rebate" to the producer under cooperative marketing systems. SUES FOR $75,000 FOR BEING HORSEWHIPPED Alexandria, La., June 21. Charging that she was taken from nor home by three women anil horsewhipped, Mrs. Lillian Bon notte has (lied suit (or (75,000 In dlBtrlct court against Mrs. Ger trude Bull, Mrs. Amelia Jordan and MrB. Tcssle Hatchett, whom she named as her alleged assail ants. YESTERDAY'S SCORES At Salt Lake 10; Portland 7. At San Francisco 15; Oakland 2. At Los Angeles 1; Vernon 6. At Sacramento 3; Seattle 8. Owing to flro danger, gas filled toy ballons are prohibited by tho London county council. Flvern Reach India Rangoon, British India, June 21. (By Associated Press.) The three American army planes ar rived here Friday from Bangkok Siam, on their flight around the world. REVOLVER ONLY CLEW TO DOUBLE MURDER San Pedro, Cal., Juno 21. A .38 calibre revolver discovered among the weeds nnd cast us under a cliff near which two Japanese were yesterday found slain, their bodies riddled with bullets, was the principal clews in the hand of detectives investigating the case. One of the men was Identified as G. Igaruski, said to have been well known ns a gambler In the Japanese quarter or Los Angeles; the identity of the second victim remained n mystery. Investigation of Jgaraski's octivlties during the past several weeks Inclined police to the belief that the Japanese1 met death In a gambling feud, their slayers then making an un successful attempt to hurl the bodies and other evidence of the murder off tho cliff Into the sea. Journal Want AtTs Pay turns nnd 457 amended nnd mip- frrfl 'ff'rJ'K' HTA plementary returns, making a B " total of 75.492 returns, of which M 44,25 are taxable nnd 31.177 nre t33 non-taxable. It Is est imated that 1 aiAA tho tolal yield for the year will (Jp iw reach $2,250,000. If this estimate H j ff New York. Johnny Dooly comedian, was married to Con-'' stance Madison, musical corned v, actress. In Newark, N. J., yester day. It was Dooley's third marriage. MBS. YOUNS ENTHUSIASTIC Cannot Praise Lydia E.Pinkham's VegetaMeCompound Enough.SicIi Women Read This Letter Charleston, S. C. "I was com pletely run-down and not able to do my nouseworK. 1 iust dragged mv- self around and III did not have en- ergyenoughtoget up when I sat down, i read ad vertisements of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound in your books and learned about it. I pot uenefit from the very first bottle. I continued to take it for some time, and now I am doing all my own work, even washing and ironing, and never felt better in my life. 1 tell all my friends that the change in my health is due to but one thing and that is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I cannot praiao it enough." Mrs. Annie Young, 16 Amherst St., Charleston, S.C. The reason for Buch a letter from Mrs. Young is nppnront. She got well and is grateful. Recently a nation wide canvapg of women purchasers of Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was made, and 98 out of 100 reported that they received ben efit from taking it. Because the Vegetable Compound una ut-eu ncimnK uuier women la rea son why it should help you. IllllliUllillllillllllll IfJt v; I Is correct, tho total administrative costs will be about 2 per cent." Subscribe for the Journal CONSTIPATION OVERCOME The use of FOLKY CATHARTIC TAHLKTS will bring speedy relief from ronstipation if taken prompt ly. They are purely vegetable and net on tho liver. Mr. John I. McComb, Lucas, Co. Home, To ledo, Ohio, write: "Have lined Foley CAT11AUT1C TABLETS in severe rased of constipation to which I nm subject nnd found them beneficial." FOLKY CATH ARTIC TABLETS are easy to take, leave no unpleasant nfter cfofotB. Try them. Adv. How's This for Sv Unto Arnptnl ''AumettniM U' a lofif walk to ft bat terv atttiori. buy m WllUnl fid Ur thf walking to Battery Value? A real Wlllard for $ 17.55 And who con give hotter varue in storage batterlea for the rtioney than the largost bnttery mnkor? These Wlllard Wood-insulated Bntterien originally cutnb liahed Willnrd reputation, and are today the finest moderately priced batteries. Joe Williams Co. 831 Court Street Phone 103 ''Automotive Electricians'1 id 1 LEI Men and women both enthuse over its beauty and fine ap- f ointments; the comfort of its isher body; the reserve power in its smooth, silent 40 norse power engine; the remarkable mileage it gives on fuel and oil. And the price is hundreds or dollars lower than will buy its equal. log ifilll Wl Tli O. M. A. fl. rrnf.-il Nn-vtit l k'ton made foxing Cat Price . o, b, Lningt Tux nrwt ; "r ertra. SAFE mmmim Improved Train Schedules On and after Sunday. Juno 22. , , NOBTHBOUND Local Train No. 6 will leave 8:00 a. m. Instead of 7:10, ar rive Portland, Jefferson Btreet, 9:50 a. m. Instead ot 9 00 Hoyt street 10:05 a. m. Instead of 9:15. Express Train No. 10 will leave 10:00 a. m. Instead of 9:48, arrive Portland ten minutes later than heretofore. Local Train No. 14 at 1:30 p. m., Limited No. 10 at 4:00 p. m., and Local No. 20 at 5:30 p. m., unchanged at Salem and Portland. Local Train No. 22 will leave' Eugene 0:05 p. m. instead of 5:30 p. m., Salem 8:20 p. m. instead of 7:50, arrivo Portland, Jefferson Street 10:05 p. m. instead of 9:35; Hoyt street 10:20 p. m. instead of 9:50. T , SOUTHBOUND Local Train No. 1 will arrive 8:25 a. m. instead ot 8:30, leave 8:30 a. m. instead of 8:3B. Limited Train No. 6 will leave Portland, Hoyt street 8:05 a. m. Instead of 8:15, Jefferson street 8:20 a. m. instead of 8:30, arrive Salem 9:45 a. m. instead of 10:00, leave 9:45 a. m. instead of 10:05, arrive Eugene 11:50 a. m. instead of 12:10 p. m. Express Train No. 17, on the old time of No. 13, will leave Portland 4:45 p. ni., and terminate at Salem on arrival at 6:40 p. in. Express Train No. 13. will leave Portland on the old time of No. 17, Hoyt street 6:05 p. m., Jefferson street 0:20 p. m arrive Salem 8:05 p. m., leave 8:10, arrive Albany 9:00 p. m., Corvallis 9:25, Eugene 10:15 p. m. EEDUCED ROUND TRIP FARES Every day Portland ?2.50, Albany $1.30, Corvallis $2.00, Eugene $3. SO, with 15 days return limit, and stop-overs. Fri day, Saturday and Sunday $2.20, Portland, return limit Tues day. Tickets sold to all points east and north of Portland. De tails furnished at the Oregon Electric station or by telephone, Main 727. J. W. RITCHIE, Marion Hotel SALEM, OREGON OFFICIAL AAA An Hotel worthy of its reputation as the larg est and most complete in Oregon out of Portland. Special attention given to Luncheon and Dinner parties. Journal Want Ads Pay Let Us Plan Your Vacation Trip Wo will lio rIikI lo outline trips, nrrnnito UeVotn nnd nleopinfr cur nerom modal. ions check bugKimo, lurninh travel pubik'iitionaiiadf till iiitormutioti.byciJlortuluplioiie. 1 Tho Oregon Electric llnii way will edl tickets to thcKaatcrn pomtaslinwn In-low, nnd miiny otlicrn, inul return, at tho uiiuauully low (urea quolwl, daily May 22 to Sl-)L 15th, good reluming until October 31, Uuo way via CalUoruia slightly lnfilier. A witlo choice of routes and utop-ovcra arc available in both directions, ROUND TItlJP FARIAS Atlanta $110. GO UcsMulnos 79-70 Montreal 134.80 Baltimore 143.61 Detroit 107.65 Now York .... 149.45 Boston . IfiES.GO DuHtth 74.05 Omaha . 74.05 Buffalo 122. 07 Indianapolis 101.29 Philadelphia 146.97 Chicago 88.05 Kansas City 74.05 Pittsburgh 121.81 Cincinnati... 108.35 Memphis 9G.10 St. I,onla 83.55 Cleveland .... 110.01 MihvauUeo 80.90 St. Paul . 74.05 Denver (JC.Oii Minneapolis 74.05 Washington 143.61 Trains of Fame to the East North Coast Limited Oriental Limited .P. & S. Northern Pac C. B. & Q. B.P. & S., Qraat Northern, G.B. & Q, For any details desired please call at our office, write or telephone .1. W. RITCillK, Agent, Salem Oregon Electric Stution, Telephone Main 727. State and High Streets Agent. T'AiJ K n m m n mQMRBtMA. Hot Means a Change of Routine I Weather We are equipped to take care of all your needs that your living will be made more comfortable. smmmm mm How You Can Pay the Butcher Less Pay the Grocer Less Pay the Iceman Less You need to pay the grocer and the butcher less be cause your foods are always kept cold, always kept sweet and wholesome, in an Automatic Refrigerator, J? ood3 do not spoil there is no food waste. The scientific system of air circulation prevents foods from becoming "soft," or from "sweating," or from be coming mildewed or tainted. You need to pay the ice man less because the Auto matic has eight (8) walls of Insulation. Cold air cannot get OUT of the Automatic. Warm air cannot get IN. We are demonstrating the Automatic and the AUTO MATIC WATER COOLING SYSTEM at the store and invite you to call. See the refrigerator which costs no more, but does much more. Camping Outfits We feature the Hansen camping outfits (made in Salem). Tent and beds for four peo ple folds in a neat, compact bundle. AWNINGS If its made of canvas we make it, any thing from laundry bags to circus tents. Fancy awnings for residents our specialty. Aerolux Torch Shades Keep the porch cool and secluded. Can be lowered and raised at will. Very reasonably priced. EASY JtoL& NO INTEREST .W. PETTY JOHN CO. TERMS STORAGE -p) BATTinuES M 1. 1 .1 4 1 219 NOKTH COMMERCIAL ST JEET J f