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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1930)
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1930 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM, OREGON PAGE THREE CHURCH WOMEN TURN DOWN AN OFFER OF PLAY West Salem The Ladies Aid of Ford Memorial church met for a buslnes ssession Wednesday after noon with Mrs. J. I. Miller at her home on Second street. Meeting with them as guests for a short time were Rev. and Mrs. P. L. Can nell of Bay City. - Mrs. Applewhite presided and Mrs. Ralph Gebern read a scripture lea con. A short report of the Red Bird tea was given. The president an nounced that a group of young peo ple from Salem would like to present a play in West Salem on a 60-50 basis. It was concluded not to spon sor It at the present time, as there were already a number of activities claiming attention. Thj society de cided to pay $10 more than then pledge on the church budget, which was already paid up for the confer ence year. The next silver tea was announced lor March 19 to be held at the home of Mrs. E. Breckenridge. Mrs. George St swart, Mrs. M, A. Groves, and Mrs. J. R. Brown will be hostesses. Mrs. Bedford, Mrs. Al bert Beckman and Mrs. J. Austin were appointed as the entertainment committee. The president announced that the next uslness meeting would be held the first Wednesday in April with Mrs. Ed Brock at her heme on Sec ond street. JAPANESE PRINCE IS PLANNING TOUR Toyko, (LP) Prince Tnkamassu, second brother of Emperior Hiroh ito, will visit Spain during his com ing European tour and will bestow the order of the Chrysanthemum upon King Alfonso Household Min istry announces. The Princff. who ttrs married early last month to Miss Kikuko Tokugawa, will depart with his wile and suite April 21 ana wm go lirst to England, as the primary purpose of his tour is to repay th3 visit of the Duke of Gloue?ster to apan last spring. He will tour Europe before arriving in Madrid In November. In will be the third time the Im perial family has sent a special en voy to tlia Spanish court. The first envoy was Prince Arisugawa who presented the Grand Cordon of the Chrysanthemum to the Span ish ruler in th; 30th year of the reign of the late Emperor Meijl. The second was the late Prince Kuni in the 4!st year of Meijl. He presented the queen of Spain with the First Order of the crown. DUNN1GANS ARE BACK Hazel Green Mr. and Mrs. Ed ward Dunnigan Sr., who have been In California for the past month, have returned to their hon e In this community. Mr. and Mrs. Dunnigan -visited with Mr. Dunnlgan's sister, Mrs. Charles Stitely of Los Angeles and also spent some time with var ious friends who were formerly resi dents of this community, among them being Mr. and Mrs. Hal Shel ton, (Eva Woods), Mr. and Mrs. Merle Chapman, Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Black, (.Freda Chapman), and Rev. Francis Fisher of Puente. FRIEND IS BETTER Eroa da cres Howard Friend who underwent a eecond operation re cently at the Oregon City hospital is convalescing. His parents Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Friend and their daugh ter Naomi visited him Sunday. His brother, Clarence who is employed in Portland, also visited hm. These New Salts Are Wonderful That's Just What She Said . Just What He Said SOCIETY STAGES COPS AND CONVICTS BALL GAME fec2r JtitifMh ft-4 AsMOClfltcU J'l'CM tiivttt A bit of action when New York and Philadelphia society leaders played ball at Palm Beach dressed aa cops and convicts. Graver Whalen, who had shed hit police coat fa shown taking a healthy awing at tha ball. Edward F. Hut ton, Philadelphia social leader, la the catcher and Connie Lewis the umpire. W ha ten's team won 8 to 3. Ben Franklin, Emissary Of America in France is , Subject for New Book Paris OP The fact that wise old Ben Franklin might have been one ol the leaders of pious and practical thinking in colonial Philadelphia did not prevent that same Ben from being one of the gayest bloods of pre-revolutlonary Paris, according to material now being gathered for a historical work on Poor Richard by tha American novelist Polan Banks. In an ase when much of the oM red school house veneer and politi cal and patriotic vamlsh is being stripped off our American heroes It does not seem unlikely that some one should delve into the rich past of America's first ambassador to France and give him credit for be- TYPEWRITER SYMBOL OF FRENCH PROGRESS Paris (A3) The typewriter and the vertical file, indespensable de vices in any modern office, have just won places in the French Pal ace of Justice. Hitherto judges and clerks have been content to wield steel pens and the files, as in nearly all other administrative offices, hve been cardboard boxes or big pigeon holes built of unpanited boards. The change started when some one in the department of justice borrowed a typewriter which had been seized by the police. Now Par liament has authorized purchase of four machines, the hiring of four young women to run them and the Installation of one vertical file. ing a regular fellow, such as he un-1 doubted y was, even at the ripe old age of 80. Banks Is here, after a success In America with his best seller, Black Ivory, collecting material for a rol licking book about the great sage of Philadelphia. Any reading of Frank lin's autobiography would clearly in timate that Ben was a good liver, a fast thinker and not entirely given over to rising early, and being so painfully healthy, wealthy and wise, as the school-boys were told he was. Ben did some outstanding bits of American diplomacy which far out shine his small town accomplish ments In the one time American caplUL Franklin lived In the suburb of Passy. He was known, according to various French records as a wit, as a drinker par excellence, and as a bon bieveur, that only the clergy of the landed gentry could hope to equaL In fact, Ben was such good company ta those convivial affairs preceding the fall of the monarchy, that one respected old Abbe wrote a laudatory poem about the way our Monsieur Franklin could go Into his cups. Poor Richard, according to Banks, really considered Paris as his home town, and although the future book on Franklin will not atempt to stress the gay side of Franklin's character, it Is intimated that it may discreet ly point out that it was not consid ered "un-American" or at all irregu lar for the father of the American fire department, postoffice, kitchen stove, electric bell, and household philosophy, to have one or two or several fascinating girl friends, from whom he probably learned some of his more Irregular French verbs. The outstanding fact of Franklin's ministry in Paris was that he was the only successful one out of three American emissaries who got what he came for; that is, France as an ally of America in the war against England. Moreover, he was the only of those who returned with Euro pean credits. Germany and Spain turned down the Americans, but un der Franklin's magical personality, and probably over many a rare gob let of Burgundy or sparkling Cham pagne, he convinced the government of his puissant Maesty, Louis Six teenth, that the American colonies was a good investment, whereafter Monsieur le Marquis de LaFayette paid a memorable visit to Philadel phia. SOCIETY IS GUEST Clear Lake The W. M. S. recently met at the home of Mrs. J. C. Mc Farland for the regular monthly meeting. Those in charge of the dif ferent topics of the lesson were Mrs. Bruce Jones, Mrs. V. B. Boyd, Mrs. Stolk. After lesson study a lunch was served by the hostess. AUTOCRACY OF SOCIALIZATION AGAIN TO FORE Moscow (United Press) With every day tha struggle In the Sov iet Union for the speedy suppres sion of all private trade and work Including the private farms of over 100,000,000 peasants Is be coming more desperate anL em bittered. , The Bolshevik leaders In the Kremlin are In a fighting mood. Faced by almost superhuman tasks and enormous resistance, they have swung back to the tlghtllpped un flinching mood of 1917-ltttO, when they successfully fought, off civil uprisings. White armies and foreign Invaders. Now, as then, the end Justified all means and the resul tant spectacle is not for squea mish natures. In the urban centers the struggle is comparatively easy. The Nep men (private tradesmen) offer al most no resistance. By the hun dreds and the thousands their shops are closing down. They are taxed out of existance, simply told to move, or made so uncomfortable tthat they are happy to clear out as quickly and as unobtrusively as possible. Even the tiny lmprover ished private stalls In the markets are being taken over by government and co-operative organizations. The process of socialization has already engulfed the lawyers, who are practically forbidden to engage in private practice. Physicians, too, are being effectively barred from nrivate nratlef. nth- sr-c!lert HEALTHIEST BOY AND GIRL VISIT VV, .. 7'.-.! '-"J III MY a SP. j l WiwrtftaWaWaaiian nmnw?t, TtT. T . ht",t,j! Aitovlattd i'rc I'ltoto Haretd Deatllne of Martinsville, lnd and Florence Smock ef Eustls, Fta adjudged the nation's healthiest boy and girl In national -H club contest In Chicago, met when Deatllne attended community celebration .at Eustia. free professions will have their free dom strictly regulated by the gov ernment. At the sameJlme a re gistration of engineers and other technical specialists is under way as the first step toward what will amount to a quasi-military droft for work wherever their specialized ability may be needed. Thus the entire urban population, in one way or another, .Is being placed under the direct control and at the disposal of the State. But an even more startlinj pro gram is being put into effect in ra- latlon to the great Russian peaaaa try. The original plana for the fire year term beginning in Octotacr, 1028, called for 39 percent ef -MX- lallzed tannine by the end ef 1133. The revised plans now being poah ed to a finish call for almost 1M percent. In simpler terms, the Soviet tor ernment in the next three years propose to obluh private famine Just as it has abolished' private trading. Huge grain-growing dis tricts like Northern Caucasus and Lower Volga must be entirely soc ialized by next autumn; the whole grain producing acreage of the Sov iet Union by autumn 193L The pea cant and all he possesses In land or livestock or machinery is being mer ged with his neighbors In co-oper ative or government farms. In effect the Soviet regime Is turning the whole peasantry, here tofore a class of small private own ers, into proletarians. Just as the urban wrokers are employed in State or co-operative factories, or mines and offices, so the agri culture workers will be employed by State or co-opgrative farms. DANDRUFF GOES -ITCHING ENDS when Zemo touches , tha scalp Dus cooling, healing, cleansing ZEMO on the scalp and rub vigor ously. If you're like thousands of others the way dandruff vanishes and Itching stops will be ft sm prise and delight. Use this remarkable, clean, family antiseptic liquid free ly. It's the sensible way to get rid of Dandruff and Itching Scalp. Ksep ZEMO handy. Safe and de pendable for all forms of itching irritations of the akin and scalp. 35c. 60c and $1.00. adr. Stop Stomach Gas Quick With Simple Mixture Simple glycerin, buckthorn bark, saline, etc., as mixed with Adlerika. stops GAS bloating in 10 minutes! Unlike other medicine, Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, removing poisons you never thought i(;re there and which caused gas, sour stomach and sick headache. Relieves constipation in 2 hours. Let Adlerika give stomach and bowels a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel I It will as tonish you! Perry's Drug Store. adv. Friday and Saturday Only! p on Wash mm Dresses And a Million Fat Folks Can't Be Wrong When you take vitalizing Krus ehtn Salts for a few days that old indolent armchair feeling deserts I you it doesn't matter how lat you j arc tne urge lor activity nas got you end you're stepping lively. And best of all you like this ac tivityyou valk a couple of mls and enjoy it you thought youd never dance again but you find 1 you're getting as spry as ever the j old tingling active feeling reaches even your feet. Knutchen It a comblnntlon of the ! six iilti Nature has already put Into your body to keep you alive If It 1 were not for the& Tltal salts you could not live. Why not try one 85 cent botil cf theae rejuvenating Mills a bottle i )asU 4 weeks and on? bottle is enough ( to prove to you tliet Kruschen wilt j make you feel younger tprycr more ( energetic you'U enjoy life every minute of it, I As one it out woman wrote: TCrm chen Salts are worth their weight in gold to mf," A half tenKpoonful In a glass of , not water every morning Is all you , need to keep healthy keep your : stomach, liver, bowels and kidneys i in ip I end id condition free your ystem from harmful toxins and i acid. I Perry's Drug store sells lots of Krftftcrien Salts so do good dmgftlnt ev-vTvlrre. -adv. i Ycry new styles in Prints, Batistes, Dimities, .Voiles, Organdies, Percales, Soisettes. All guaranteed fast colors. These dresses were priced from $1.79 to $2.98. Some are slightly soiled, others are just one or two of a style left. But all are new styles. Dresses run in size from 14 to 48 AT $1.13 SPRING LINE OF "Arch-maker" SHOES has just arrived in tan, beige, brown, black kid and patent Very good styles for aching feet A sure cure for bad feet Why pay more when "Archmaker" Shoes sell AT Don't Throw Tour Watch Away I GUARANTEED Watch Repairing Or Money Back THE JEWEL BOX 173 N. Liberty Opposite J. C. reuney Co. and up 'Not a chain store THOSE WHO TRADE AT PILES Ct'RED WITHOUT OPERA TION OR LOSS Ol TIME DR. MARSHAL!. J2J OREGON DLOQ. Boch's Golden Rule Store Salem, Oregon Phone 1606 220 N. Liberty SAVE A SUBSTANTIAL DIFFERENCE V SHADOW '''",'1W, t " l aWi events V I ( VM V 1 1W " their . ill mIIhW rm $hadow5 before" 3I AVOID THAT FUTURE SHADOW By refraining from indulgence Men who would keep that trim, proper form, women who prize the modern figure with its subtle, seductive curves eat healthfully but not immoderately. Banish ex ccssivencss eliminate abuses. Be moderate be moderate in all things, even in smoking. When tempted to excess, when your eyes are bigger than your stomach, reach for a lucky instead. Com ing events cast their shadows be fore. Avoid that future shadow by avoiding over-indulgence if you would maintain that lithe, youthful figure. lucky Strike, the finest Cigarette a man ever smoked, made of the finest tobacco The Cream of the Crop "IT'S TOASTED." Every one knows that heat purifies and so "TOASTING" not only re moves impurities but adds to the flavor and improves the taste. fs toasted.' Your Throot Protection against Irritation against cough Be Moderate! . . . Don't jeopardize the modern form by drastic diets, harmful reducing girdles, fake reducing tab lets or other quack "anti-fat" remedies condemned by the Medical profession! Millions of dollars each year are wasted on these ridiculous and dangerous nostrums. Be Sensible! Be Moderate! We do not represent that amok- ,ing lucky Strlka Cigarettes will bring modern figures or cause the reduction of flesh. We do declare that when tempted to do yourself too well, if you will "Reach for a lucky" instead, you will thus avoid over-indulgence in things that cause excess weight and, by avoiding over-indulgence, maintain a modern, graceful form. TUNE IN The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coist-to-coast network of the N. B. Ci tt.TlMAaMrkTc Centra.