Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 06, 1925, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1925
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON
auIS THREE
I
New York. Mar t The call of
far Inula whu-'i lured the late
rheodoru Kuueexclt Into the dark
est Africa and up the "river of
doubi", in Brazil, holds Iti enchant
ment for hit sens, T. R , Jr., and
Kern-it.
They Will Irave the United States
early in April to follow the trail
of Marco polo into one of the few
remaining parts of the earth &b
wild an.) mterlou8 aa those
wh i:li their father visited the
Himalayan region of nouthwest
Asia.
According t the Rooaevelts "no"
American exnedition and very few
others hea-Jod by white men have
penetratfl this rt-jioT slice Polo
latted through it.
Consequently there are few
spcci.tiend of the mammals and
birds of the country in the mus
eums here or abroad, and the ex
pedition will ende.'.vor to supply
this deficiency. All Its specimens
will go to thd Field museum In
Chicago.
The zoological prizes on which
the RooseveluV hopes are centered
are liie oves poli, said to be the
original type of the mountain
hecp. the Ions haired tiger, the
yarkand stay, the ma-kora, the
p-eat ibex of the Thian Shan
mountains an.l the ffoitred gazelle.
Golds first to India, the expedi
tion, which will include George K.
Cherry, scientist, will proceed by
rail from the mouth of the Indus
to Rawul Pint and by motor to the
rale of Kashmir, which will be Its
base. Krom this point ponies,
raks and bactrian camels will car
ry the party through the Himal
ayan passes into a lnnd which in
not even definitely charted on the
maps.
VICTIMS OF KORETZ TO
RECOVER PART OF MONEY
Chicago, March C. Victims
who sunk upwards of $2,000,000
in the late Leo Koretz mythica
Panama oil promotion schemed
will get about $400,000 in a die
tributioo of funds salvaged from
bis estate made possible by the
waiver of income tax claims by
the internal revenue bureau.
NEW BOOKS AT THE
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Mrs. A. E. F. Jameson, "The
Bingle Heart"; M. H. Larminie,
"Deep Meadows"; Compton Mac
kenzie. "Hich Hel. tivcs '; U J
Miln, "In a Shantung Garden";
M. 1'. Montague, "Deep Channel";
P. A. Swinneiton, "Shops and
Houses"; Jules Verne, "Around
the World In Eigmy Daye"; Julca
Verne, "Myuteriouu Island"; M. S.
Watts, "Nathan Bin Re ; New In
ternational Encyclopedia supple
ment; H. E. Kosdick. "Modern Use
ot the Bible"; C. F. Smith, "A
Book of Famous Ships"; H. L
Rietz and A. R. orathorne, "Col
lege Algebra"; Fernow, "Eco
nomics of Forestry"; Gifford
Pinchot, "The Training of a For
ester"; R. C. Bryant, "Logging
Principles and General Aletnoue ol
Operation in the United states
B. H. M. Cox, "Rhododendrons lor
Amateurs"; E. W. Hamilton, "Old
Days and Net"; James &Sanford.
"American History."
Vor rim Children.
R. H Barbour, "Infield Rivals";
8. L. Clemens, "The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn"; S. L. Clemen:
"The Adventures of Tom Sawyer"
h. E. Walter, "Mother Goose's
Nursery Rhymes."
New Corooratiorn.
The following articles of Incor
poration were filed yesterday at
the offices ot W. E. Crews, state
corporation commissioner:
Bear Creek Boom company,
Bandon; Incorporators, V. E,
Best. George P. Laird, W. H.
Pearce: capital $5000.
Klamath Valley Savings & Loan
association, Klamath Falls; incor
porators, A. W. Schaupp, H. M
Bwartwood. I. L. Olmsted, VelmA
Schaupp, B. H. Knapper; capital
J250.000.
Notice of an Increase in capital
om (50.000 to $90,000 was filed
the Samscn Towing company
Portland.
ft
fZ-
is
Be
proud
your
complexion
No matter bow beautiful your fea
tures are, you cannot be truly attractive
with a rough, clogged, blotchy or
f rimy skin, Reitnol Ointment, aided
by Kesinol Soap, it wflat you need to
overcome such troubles.
Thgntl,bittomwu4dlrdaMtnff QuafHIe
I Rcmot Soap, tofctbr tritb the too (hi of,
lMalifi( propcrtie of Rctinol Ointment lend to
mke the tio to dsV tad healthy tt cannot
kelp being beautiful. The Mal (TMUMOt tot
tH cenpleztont.
"AIM tmUhrRttkKT
Resinol
Sculptor in Memorial Squabble
Vjr -criza. c
$9 a
IT-
A
li - rl
Gutzon Borglum, famoas scuiptor of the Confederate Memorial on
the face of Stone Mountain, near Atlanta, Ga., was summarily dismissed
by the committee in charge of the construction of the atatne. It la
charged tna Borglum Uien destroyed the precious models and plana of
the memorial and suit for 500,000 was begun against him for alleged
randalism.
OPEN FORUI
Contributions to This Column must b: plainly written on one
side of paper only limited to 300 words In length and signed
wttb the name ot the writer. Articles not meeting these specifi
cations wilt be rejected.
To the Editor: I was glad to
learn that the Washington school
property was not given away, at
least not today.
With me, there is quite a bit of
sentiment connected with thai
place, having attended school
there when it was known as East
Salem school, then teaching two
years previous to tne building ol
Washington, and later sending our
children there, I feel it should
never he used for any other pur
pose but for a school.
In fact, I understand ft cannot
he used for any other purpose,
having been donated to the city
for a ochool by Dr. Wilson and can
not be e -J Id without permission
from the Wilson heirs.
It the building Is unsafe, make
it safe or wreck it. If unsanitary,
ji i lace can always be made sani
tary. Right now ft Is needed for a
primary school.
Keep the grounds and bui.d
there some day instead of giving I
away and in a year or two buy
property at a higher prices and
not so favorably situated.
As to accidents from a train,
there never woe nut one, and that
as "Old Timer" says, was 38 years
ago.
Children are educated now to
never get hurt by anything as
slow as a train. It may be the
voice of the school board to sell
this property for a paltry sum, bat
it left to the people, it never would
happen.
MRS. HETTIE E. FRY.
February 26, 1925.
To the Editor: Replying to
Mr, Purdy's letter of Femhruary
26, I wish to call attention to a
few facts. Numbers never have
been an infallible sign of right
eousness! Jesu6, Paul, Luther
Hush, Wyclif, Wesley, Fox, Galleo,
Columbus, and a host of others
were In the minority, but the
truths they held were unconquer
able. "If all the world," says John
Stuart MIHb, "minus one man.
were of one opinion, they would
no more be justified in silencing
that one mun than he, it he had
the power, would be justified in
silencing mankind." This is a
profound truth.
The truth of Mr. Purdy's argu
ment for his mission to the legiti
lature is not augmented by a mil
lion coleagues. ne offers no rea
son for such a measure other than
the prominence ot his supporters
and the interests of our Father
.vho art in heaven.' "
Briefly, I maintain he was not
there In His interests at all. No
.nan led by thu Spirit ot God ever
yet asked for a law to make men
religious. The minute a man does
ask such a law he acknowledges
he no longer has the power that is
promised to those led by that
Spirit. If he was led by that all
powerful Spirit he would not need
the power of the law and the very
request proves he knows of the
lack of power to consumate hie
purpose. When he asks this aid
he says: "I consider the law to
have more power than th spirit
that actuates me and without Its
help I will fail!" Therein he turn;
away from the God he professes to
worship and asks the state to do
for him what God either cannot or
will not do.
Benjamin Franklin said: "When
religion Is good t will take care
of itself; when It is not able to
take care ot itself, and God does
not see fit to take of it, so that ft
has to appeal to the state for aid,
it Is evidence to my mind that Us
cause is a bad one."
Any man Is morally justified In
disregarding such a law as well as
constitutionally justified. Moral
ly, because of Ufhlical precedent
For
CHRONIC
COUGHS WntiP.
J. C. Perry Drutr Store
To-wit: The three Hebrew chil
dren were Tindlcated in their re
fusal .to obey the law to bow down
to the Image by being brought
forth uninjured from the-flame.
Constitutionally, because the
flrit amendment to our great con
stitution says "that congress (that
is where Mr. Purdy was) shal
make no law respecting an estab
lishment of reliigon, or prohibit
ing the free exercise thereof.
Such a law would be in respsct to
an establishment ot the Christian
religion.
The proposed measure is sulcid
al. For the same power that ciu
compel men to put up signs re
specting religion can compel them
to take them down for the same
reason. Suppose Mr. Purdy and
bis esteemed colleagues succeeded
In establishing: ts precedent in
our legislature. Then they could
compel me or bira to wear tne
jame prayer, or any other religious
emblem they saw fit. They couui
also say we could not wear them.
The time may come when legis
lators will be committed to such a
course for there are many stron?
organitations lobbying for It, but
they are establishing a precedent
that will permit any other success
ful clique to do to them as they
are doing to others. Mr. Purdy
would not for a minute consent to
have congress dictato to him that
he must hang images of Buddha
on the walls of his home, yet, in
the name of Him who said "all
things whatsoever ye would that
men should do unto you, do ye
even bo unto them," he asks con
greas 'o do it to someone else.
JAY RODERICK HE SPAIN.
789 Locust Ave., Salem.
To the Editor: lieing a business
man of the city of Salem a-nd feel
ing that it is a duty and a common
rlfjht to raise my voice in protest
when the conduct of our civic at
fairs is contrary to my honest be
llefs, I wish at this time to enter
vehement opposition to the pres
ent one-hour parking limit on our
down town thoroughfares.
Your contention, Mr. Editor,
that 'few farmers have been guil
ty and farmers generally favor the
hour limit," doesn't hold goou
when you consider the following,
Statistics will show that the farm
ers aro wi the minority insofar as
traffic violations are concerned in
cities that havo traffic problems
to contend with. The reason for
this is that the average farmer Is
"law-shy". In other worda our
farmer friend so thoroly protests
the idea of appearing in petty
courts to answer to traffic viola
tlona of any kind that he doesn't
run chances like the calloused
city man who takes traffic repri
mands as a daily course and thinks
nothing of it.
J uft allow the farmer visitor
two hours In which to transact his
buisncss while his "Lizzie" is hold
Ing down a very small space on
our amply wldo streets and said
farmer will not be scared to death
every time he ventures to town.
And again, do you support that a
farmer drives ten, twenty or per
haps thirty miles for the privilege
of parking his car sixty minutes?
Suppose for instance that the farm
or (or other visitor) must neces
ftarily be detained In a dentist's of
Cice; or with tho doctor or engage
in that long and wearisome busi
ncss of interviewing his lawyer or
favorite abstractor? It would seem
to me that instead of allowing htm
more parking space for an hour's
time, he would far more appre
elate less parking space and more
time to do business.
The two hour limit would hit
the clerks and business who arc
In habit of making a garage of the
streets as effectively aa the hour
limit.
Here In Salem ne have practi
cally all out of doors to run
around in, insofar aa streets are
concerned, and it la surely stretch
ing matters to compare our bread
avenues with the dinkey alleys that
Portland calls "streets." About the
only Inconvenience that Is met
with hers in Salem Is in the case
of a pedestrian crossing the street
he has so far to run, even then the
auto 1st finds plenty of room to miss
And Sttrtttkt
Ht tfte Foot-Bam 3--
ALLEYS foot-ease
The AntUeptlo, Healing Powder for
Urtd, fwolien, smarting, sweating
feet. It ttkM the friction from the
hoe, prevents butters and tore spots
and Uutu the itlns out of corns and
bunions. Always oie AUWFoot-E
to break In new shoes. Sold every- ;
where. Trial package Fr. Address !
ALLEN'S POOT-EA8E. L Bar. N. Y. ;
course
SUndard fall tlf
JT might ptcksm
Mjdiam: lt pound,;
Lrge: 1 pounds, 7 oz.
But, too, that wonderful Quaker
. flavor. Get QUICK QUAKER
Cooks in 3 to 5 minutes
FLAVOR! that's what nukes a dish worth whfle.
And that's what made Quaker the world's preferred
brand of oats.
Rich and wonderful, there is no other flavor quite like
Quaker.
So now get Quick Quaker, and get quick cooking
besides. It cooks in 3 to S minutes; makes the richest
. breakfast now the quickest
It's a new delight that's making hot breakfasts
troubleless joy no mussing, no nnnecesssrj cooking
fuss and bother.
Lock for the Quaker on the label
That means Quaker flavor tho "hot oats and milk"
breakfasts doctors are urging In I to S minutes.
That means the superfine oats jrou want the finest
grown, the most delicious in alt the world.
Your grocer now has two kinds of Quaker Oats the
kind oa bar siwsjs known and Quick Quaker.
him by a few yards.
In conclusion I want to say ftfr.
F.di-or, that you hay dmr one ol
tli hottest champions of less law
and more common sense whose
wiittncs I have had tha mnnA in.
tune to read, and I am surpriaed
to noie tne stand you have taken
In regard te this parking nrooosi-
tlon.
Very trulv yours,
HARltV M. LEW.
Editor Journal: I notice an ar
tide in the Journal from Percy A.
Clipper stating that we people
who so bitterly fought the drain
age district plan would not be
flooded if we had adopted the
drainage district plan. I would
like to dleagree with Mr. Cupper
on these points. "First." We
are not complaining about the
water that happens to be in our
yard.
"Second," That mill creek does
not affect our basements In the
leant.
Third. We people who are com
plaining are not living on a grav
el soil as etated by Mr. Cupper
but a good heavy clay soil snd
none of our basements have been
dug deep enough to reach the
gravel, which proves that no wat
er reaches our basements, except
which la caused by seepage from
our yards, which comes In very
slow, and if the sewers were In
good working condition It would
amply take care of all the seepage
water euch as fallen this winter.
1 would like to ask Mr. Cupper
why there has been no floods In
the low-lands to speak of thie
winter where the drainage dis
trict would be mostly affected,
and we on the high lands are
flooded. According to Mr. Cup
pers article we would be led to
believe that all our basements
would be connected up to this
open ditch drainage district,
which W3 all know would not be
the case.
I have a well 4 ft. from the
hank of the creek and 20fcet
deep and Is not affected by the
creek in the least which proves
that our basements are not af
fected by creek water, the creek
has been this high many times
before and no water came In to
our basements which also' proves
that the creek has nothing to do
with it.
When the low lands aro not
flooded and the high lands are,
a ditch from a halt to a mile
from our basements would do us
no good unless storm sewers were
put in at least below our base
ments, and thie drainage district
plan provides for no such relief.
Yours truly.
B. P. TAYLOR
HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS
Be Better Looking-Take
Olive Tablets
If vour skin is vcllow complexion
oallid tongue coated appetite poor
iou have a bad taste in vour mouth
a lazy, no-good feeling you should
ttkeUlive laolets. N
Dr. hdwards Olive Tablets a sub
stitute for calomel were prepared by
Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study.
Dr.Edwards'OliveTabletsareapurely
vcgetablecompound mixed witholiveoil.
Vou will know them by their olive color.
Tohaveaclear. Dink skin, brichteves.
no Dimples, a feeling of buoyancy like
cnildAood days you must get at tnecause.
ur. towards uuve lameis act on
the liver and bowels like calomel yet
nave no dangerous after effects.
I ney start tne Due ana overcome con
stipation. Take one or two nightly and
note the pleasing results. Millions ol
boxes are sold annually at 15c and 30c
Watch Your Coffee!
loMPAREy our coffee
this morning with
the coffee you served
several weeks ago.
Does it taste-auite thp same?
Schilling Coffee does. The tradi
tional blend stands " untouched.
There is but one Schilling quality tins only "for there is no other way to
nottwo"or threcor four. properly preserve those rare and easily-
U is brought to you sealed in vacuum losl flavors of fine coffee.
Ideal for Washing Machines
CITRUS GRANULATED SOAP
dissolves completely and makes in
stant and lasting suds.
No undissolved particles left to spot
the clothing.
TJ, crtor-t rrra nillatfiH fnr votir con- .
a. u&v oww1. - J
venience and economy in using in
tub, washing machine
or kitchen.
. gMade by
the manufacturers of the
famous CITRUS
WASHING POWDER
O
O II
In cake making Snowdrift lends its purity and lightness to the cake
itself. Cakes made with Snowdrift are light and delicious and will
keep fresh for a considerably longer time than cakes made with
other good fats. Using Snowdrift in your own favorite recipe is the best
way to find out how good Snowdrift is, but if you haven't a favorite
recipe try Kate Brew Vaughn's "California Cake:"
yi Cupfuli Sugtr
yi Cupful Smu Jrift
4 (.sefarati)
H Cupful Straintd Oronii Juia
fi Cupful Wattr
I TMfyenful GrttiOraif SJml
3 Cupful, FUm
3 Tufoonuli Baking ftmUr
I Tuspocnful Salt
I Tiaipttujul Orany Extract
ALL MEASUREMENTS
ARB LfcVtL
CALIFORNIA CAKECrczm the Snowdrift and
sugar thoroughly, adding a little water. When very
light add the well-beaten yolks of eggs and as
quickly as possible add the dry ingredients which
have been sifted together and then the liquid.
Beat the whites of eggs and add the rind of orange
as well as the extract Bake in two or three layers,
and ice. Orange icing recommended.