Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, June 21, 1929, Page 9, Image 9

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    FK1UAY, JUNK 21, 1929
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL SALEM. OREGON
PAGE NINE
14 1 I
i minim a
MANY TOURISTS
Paris. (IP Any waiter In the so
called American restaurants around
town, the mall clerks In the tourist
offices, the Anglicised drink dis
pensers in the cocktail bars will tell
you that the melancholy days have
come. Melancholy days for melan
choly tourists. .
The boats no sooner start to
dump their cargoes of vacationists
at Cherbourg and Havre, man Hun
dreds of them begin to count the
days until they sail again. Many
are the tourists who never sur
mount the obstacle of tuning in an
American ear on a French tongue.
Take any group of 100 tourists
and more than half of them are
ready to go back home, and the
sooner the better. Muny of them
have dreamed for years of a trip to
Surooe. have digested hundreds oi
pounds of travel literature, or have
skimped to meet the fare. But the
minute they get away from home,
they find that there was something
In the slogan, and mat, aner an,
there's no place like It.
You can see dozens of tourists
standing like lost sheep outside the
American Express company, Just
behind the Opera, before the doors
of the steamshio companies and in
the lobbies of the American banks.
Thev have een Paris and its sub
urbs by autocar in three days and
are ready to go home.
They have their troubles, as fol
lows: Inability to make the language
grade;
Can't get used to currencies:
Don't like their foreign cooking;
Can't get good American coffee;
Pure ennui; nothing to do;
Homesick.
The chief complaint in the res
taurants is about the coffee. Sev
eral restaurant owners have gone
so far as to import the popular
brands of American coffee, but even
then the cooks spoil It before It gets
into the cud.
The French menu is a stumbling
block to many who never get any
farther than hors d'oevres which
thev find to contain a meal in Itself.
French chicken, somehow, just
doesn t taste like Maryland tried,
and even the French fried potatoes
in France dont taste like the
French frleds do at home. Any of
the melancholy tQurlsts wiO tell
you that there Is not a single cook
between tne cnannei ana me aieai-
teranean who can fry ham and
eggs.
II EAT IE OS VISIT
Silverton Alfred Beatle, who
has bcon teaching at the Puyallup
schools this year is visiting menus
here. He was a teacher in the Sil
verton schools under Principal Ed
win Tinglestad last year.
"OLD OAKEN BUCKET"
OBSOLETE AS SURREY
Urbana, 111. (LP) If the Illinois
Home Bureau federation has its
way the next few years will make
the "old oaken bucket as hard to
find as a fancy fringe rimmed sur
rey limousine of the horse and
buggy ays.
A campaign is under way to put
running water in every farm and
small town home. It will cover four
or five years with awards for the
best Installations or Improvements
of water and fewage systems.
The state has been divided into
eight sections on the basis cf types
of farming and these districts will
be further divided into five classes.
In each class the expenditure is
limited to $100, not Including labor.
IN EGG PRICES
STATES CATTLE
Petaluma, Cal., (JFi When it's
cold In New York, hot In Venezuela
and fositv in the Petaluma valley.
egg men are happy. It is a cli
matic combination that builds bank
accounts.
Particulary in the spring or early
summer is the connection between
New York's tempature and the
Petaluma egg producer's pocket-
ook a tangible factor measurable!
in dollars and cents.
Marketing figures of the Poultry
Producers of Central California
the state's largest egg cooperative:
show that New York consumed
21,000 more cases of eggs during
the first two weeks in May than
during the same fortnight a year
ago.
Growth in population, it is ex
plained, may account for some of
the increase, but the bulk of it is
attributed to the cool weather.
When the temperature is low. New
Yorkers eat more eggs than, they
do when it is warm.
Heat in the South American
countries the west coast's newly
found egg market helps material
ly. It keeps down production there
and creates a market for the sur
plus eggs in this country. Fogs,
which keep temperatures down,
also Influence Pacific coast hens to
lay well into the summer months.
The first large shipment of eggs
to the . southern hemisphere was
made last spring when 50.000 cases
went to Argentina from California
and Washington in an especially
chartered ship. Approximately six
car loads monthly now are exported
to the Canal Zone, and regular
shipments go to Peru, Chile and
Venezula. The new market helps
Immensely in preventing a break in
market prices due to overproduction.
COTTON FIELDS
Moultrie, Ga. (P. Thousands of
sleek fat cattle grazing upon farm
lands where cotton formerly bloomed
and stockyard centers to rival
Chicago and Kansas City that is
the picture of the southeast of the
future visualized by Gov. Franklin
D. Roosevelt.
The New York executive, who Is
known to his friend, as a "part
time Georgian" through his occa
sional sojourns at Warm Springs,
benves the southeast might be
come the greatest cattle raising
section in the United States.
Not only in words, but action.
Governor Roosevelt has expressed
his faith in the revolutionary trend
in the agricultural situation in the
south. He recently completed the
destruction of a vast orchard of
14.000 peach trees. There cattle be-
ins fattened for market will forage
for food, and the transition of Mr,
Roosevelt from a fruit grower to ft
cattle raiser will be complete.
"Nature has Imposed no barriers
to cattle raising here, and I hope
to see the day when Georgia will
be dotted with cattle farms," Mf.
Roosevelt recently said in giving
his views on the agricultural situa
tion. He believes cotton is losing its
prestige in the heart of the old
south and that for the southeast, at
least, cattle will be the salvation
of the farmer. '
There are 10.000.(Kt0 acres of idle
Georgia farm land and many thou
sand more acres thoughout the
southeast which wight be used for
leeding cattle.
The foundation of the Georgia
cattle Industry is a reality now, and
each year has seen an Increase in
the number of head sent to market,
and the monetary return to the
raisers. The industry has grown
from 3,000 head in 1917 to 30.000
marketed last year.
Fatter cows and better beet have
brought better prices and the an
nual return in 1928 was $1,500,000
as compared with $G0,000 in 1927.
SUBLIMITY
Alva Schmitt had his right hand
bruised when loading strawberries
at his heme.
Mr. and Mrs. Casper Gerhard
and son, Raymond, and Mrs. Mary
Childs are here from Oakland, Cal.,
visiting with relatives making their
home at Phil Steffes. Mrs. Steffes
and these ladies are sisters.
Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Keidel and Mrs
Adam Silbcrnagel of Perham, Min
nesota, visited with Mrs. John Kintz
Tuesday. These women were school
mates in Minnesota.
ment, shouted at Policeman Burger.
Burger didn't bet, but if lie did he
would have wen.
COLLECTS PIPES
Pittsburgh, Pa. (LP) Another!
paradox a pipe collector who does
not smoke. He is S. L. Lang, Pitts
burgh manufacturer, and collector!
of pipes for the past 35 years.
Exhibiting his collection of more
than 70 meerschaum pipes, Lang
said that a pipe collector gets no
considerable enlovment from smok
ing his pipe because as soon as one
pipe is secured and colored to the
proper shade by smoking, he is
ready to put it away and search for
another one.
"It's been more than seven years
since I've smoked any of my pipes,
but I guess I did enough smoking
in my earlier years as a collector,"
he went on.
A cod caught in Massachusetts
bay was 54 feet long, and weighed
im nnunrls. His head was the size
of the top of a quarter barrel.
EAGER FOR EDUCATION
Uxbridge, Mass. (LP) Cassie Rich
ardson, 17-year-old high school sen
ior, walks more than 2,500 miks a
year to get her education. She walks
six miles to school and six miles
home, rain or shine, and has so
impressed local educators that the
tardiness rule is suspended in her
case.
COP WOULD HAVE WON
Spokane, Wash. tLP "Betccha $100
you can't arrest me Charles Hut
chinson, a farmer who was showing
utter disregard for ttie 18th amend-
JBiidweiseir
Barley-Malt Syrup
Budweiser
spells satisfaction
BM-137
Saterday
Special
Medium Milk Fed Hens Dressed
and drawn
34 lb.
Creamed Cottage Cheese "J K
Pound Ols
Whipping Cream 1
Vi Pint AtJ
Whipping Cream 30 C
Whipping Oream
Quarts : UO
Table Cream l(n
Va Pint Iwt
Table Cream 20 C
Sweet, Wholesome Buttermilk . 1 Kr
Per" Gallon
Andr esen & Son Inc.
475 FERRY STREET
The Home of the Cherro Valley Butter
idget Market
Originators of Low Prices
351 State St.
IN PREP AIRING MEATS
The thifty housewife of today realizes that it is economy
to buy only the best meats such as are sold at the Mid
get. Our meats are of the highest quality and reason
ably priced.
For Saturday We Offer
Young Pig Fresh
Pork Roasts LOIN CHOPS
SSc lb. 25c lb.
Pure Pork Pure Pork
Link Sausage Bulk Sausage
25c lb. 20c lb.
Useless to pay more Risky to pay less
Sugar Cured Sliced Bacon 35c lb.
We are selling more of this delicious bacon every day
Prime : Tender
Beef Roasts Beef Steak
24c lb. 25c lb.
CUT FROM GRAIN FED QUALITY BEEF
Best OLEOMARGARINE
15c pound
p j. Home Rendered .
(Beef or Pig)
Pure Lard
10c lb. 15c lb.
Out of consideration t our employes, we close Satnr
day at 1:00 I. L Harry M. ly. Mgr.
It is the daily task of men in posts of responsibility to
turn uncertainties into certainties
CERTAINTY that the bread you
cat the bread you give to your
children is fine bread, sanitary and
nutritious, is a certainty worth
something.
Every time you buy your loaf of
Ilillman's Butter-Nut or Hillman's
Snowflake, you get not only your
fine loaf of bread, but you get also
a certainty a gratifying certainty.
sanitation and scientific svstem bui
You know that our plant is a model of
It especially for the business of pro
ducing the finest bread that can be
made and that it is open for your
inspection at any time.
The flour and other ingredients
used are carefully selected; a skilled
organization, taking a pride in its
work, supervises every part of our
finely adjusted baking processes so
that we can deliver to you, not just
bread, but a CERTAINTY that you
are getting in Ilillman's Butter-Nut
and Ilillman's Snowflake, the finest
bread that can be made.
Nut
BREAD
1411 II Ml
Ifultar-Jfi
r
CHERRY CITY BAKERY
Market at Broadway Salem, Oregon
245 N. Commercial Streei
FREE CAPITOL THEATER TICKETS ASK US
Substantial Qualities
Everyday Savings
More Satisfaction
Makes Happy Homes for our Customers
Y!) V T'a'l L'19 Chosen the best by
every customer, lb.
45c
Fresh quality and made by
MKF.AiI master bakers they D
MftsUftaw know how Twins Ol
Try a Loaf of White Health Bread. Regular size 9c
White Wonder Soap
For all washing and laundry
Two 5c Bars (limit) . . 5c
With other items not advertised Saturday
Vegetable Nut Margarine
3 lbs. 49c 10 lbs. $1.59
Quality that has een tested and liked by thousands,
spreads better Try it in baking, too.
Best Foods Mayonnaise, Pints 39c
Best Foods Bread and Butter Pickles
A Flavor uncomparable
2 Large Dottles ... 39c
Mineral Oil, Quart 33c
Makes non-fattening mayonnaise. Take it, as it is for
medicinal purposes
lanEHnanaaaaaHBaaBaaBBaaanaBai
NEW STOCK
Ball Mason or Kerr Mason Jars
Guaranteed Sound
Pints, doz. 79c Quarts, doz. 89c
With fitted lids and heavy lubbers
Jar Rubbers That Fit The Jar
4 doz. 25c 12 doz. 69c
Made from new heavy red rubber, with double lips.
You take no chances of losing the contents
CERTO, Sure Jell for any fruit juice
3 Bottles, New Stock 79c
Never waste any extra juice. Makes jelly or fine
jams
Dozen $2.99 Case, 2 doz $3.93
Cheese lb. ...
29c
Genuine whole milk used. Made to satisfy the most
delicate taste. Toast some on a sandwich
Piggly Wiggly Delicious Ice Cream
Quart, always 39c
Fresh Milk, Grade A, Pasteurized qt...9c
PIGGLY WIGCLY
Market Features
Sinclair's Fiastern Sugar Cured
By the Piece
BACON 27c lb.
Open Kettle Rendered VeRetable
Pure Lard Shortening
u lbs 29c 2 Pounds . 29c
Small Lean Sugar Cured
8 to 10 Lb. AveraKe
ii or Whole
31c
JuhI the Sixe for Your Vacation Trip and Something
That Will Please You