KA(iK K1UHT THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1930 PACIFIC FLEET BIDS FOR SPEED CROWN OF WEST Vancouver, B. C. (LP) While steamship lines on the Atlantic are building feverishly for supremacy by construction of larger and faster liners a milder form of competition Is being enacted on the Pacific. The Canadian Pacific Steamship company Is bringing to this coast a new palatial liner which out shines anything In regular service on the trans-Pacific route. When the Empress of Japan, the modern version of the once proud clipper built liner of the same name, arrives here on August 19, a new race for trans-Pacific trade will be commenced. The largest and fastest liner en' gaged in regular traffic on the schedule of the company giving as frequent a service between the Far East and this continent as Is given by other lines with ft greater number of ships. The acquisition of the Empress of Japan will give the company a fleet of four liners on the trans- Pacific run. The fleet comprises the Empress of Russia, Asia, Canada and Japan. While the Bremen and Europa are speed champions on the Atlantic the Empress of Japan on this coast will bid for the blue ribbon of the Pacific. The Empress of Canada at pres ent hold the record of eight days 10 hours and 9 minutes from Yoko hama to Victoria. The nearest that any liner has come. to this is 10 days. The Canada and the Japan will pace each other for the speed crown as they both have the same type engines and are capable of 21 knots. The Empress of Japan is a twin screw oil-burner of 25,000 tons. It is 640 feet In length, 83 feet breadth and 56 feet deep. Passenger ac commodation will be 268 saloon, 164 second, 100 third and 640 steerage making a total of 10HO. In keeping with the war time tradition the liners are of a grey ish white color, ben;j they have been called the greyhounds of the Pacific, reminiscent of the time when these huge vessels carried guns fore and aft to give protec tion to the passengers and be ready for emergency If pressed Into ac tual wartime service. ON TRIAL IN NEW YORK ; W li I - A Nf fJ i r ex Iff Kr- it AtMociattd Preto Photo Mas Wtil went on trial In New York charged together with 67 other persons Including a producer, atage manager and actora, with having committed a misdemeanor in placing on Broadway in October. 1928, "Pleasure Man," which was raided as an Indecent play and eloied. BROAD YAWN Boston, IIP) Henry Brown re quired hospital treatment after he had yawned too enthusiastically. His jaw was dinlocated. Famous Passion Play is Given Every Decade to Fulfill Ancient Pledge Berlin (IP) Oberammergau's Pas sion Play, which Its sponsors hope will be viewed by some 160,000 pay ing guests during the coming sum mer, has not been the same mys tery play throughout the 300 years of its history. Albeit, despite its various changes, the 1930 presenta tion will be much closer in the sim plicity of Its form and the coher ence of its movement to the orig inal of the 17th century than was the elaborately allegorical Passion Play of the early 18th century. The oldest text of this religious drama Is found in a manuscript of the Augustine monastery of Saint Ulrich dated In the 15th century. As given at that time the drama was purely an ecclesiastical mystery play presented by the monks on certain holy days. It has been described as "a sort of secular and divine service and worship combined." Pat ently it was of necessity simple in form and In presentation, but when it was later taken up by the residents of various villages In Ba varia and Austria for production Its scope was enlarged. Even after its Initial production In Oberam mergau In 1634 the text of the play was materially altered. Again a century later extensive and fundamental changes were made In the play when it was vir tually rewritten by a priest of the Ettal Monastery. He set the spoken parts In verse of 12 -syllable lines, embroidered the theme with alle gorical figures and songs, changed the instrumental music and Intro- CENTENNIAL OF REAPER TO BE OBSERVED 1931 Raphlne, Va. VP) A little farm hop In the Virginia hllli wll have an Important pert In the celebration of the lOutb. am versa ry ol the reaper in 1931. It waa there that Cyrus H. Mc Cormlck constructed the 'contrap tion' that was to revoluuonlae ag riculture and give to the world cheap oread. The first reaper waa crude, but the principle remains the same In the efficient machines of today. Celebration of the 100th anniver sary will be national and possibly international In Its scope. Virginia, naturally, will be Inter ested In the 100th anniversary, al- though It has long since given place to the mid-west as a leader In grain production. . A model of the first crude ma chine Is preserved in the state mu seum at Richmond. Cyrus Mccormick was one of the many who toiled on farms, swinging the old-fashioned "cradle" through the wheat on his father's acres In Rockbridge county, Virginia. He profited by the mistakes of his father, who had sought unsuc cessfully to construct a harvesting machine. His father's plan of a machine to be pushed was aban doned. Instead AfcCormfok nHnntori a mtL ting blade on the side. Then fol lower! the flj,vir.A if mnaraU lh. StflllU to rtlftm them In iuHnn nn ltlon, and arms to gather the fallen sialics, me machine floundered along the field, a "joke" to some of the neighbors. But It worked. The McCormlplr hnmr law In th. Slienandoah vtllev u .m, ha known In alter years as the "gran- nary oi me coniederacy" because of its productiveness. the first to present a play per formance of th Passion Play. In th year 1133 when a pestilence. Drougni in oy tne armies partici pating In the 30 Years' War, swept over Central Europe it reduced th population of Oberammergau by half or mora. Survivor in the village made a solemn vow that if Ood would spare them from fur ther ravages of th plague, they would present the Passion Play every 10 years. This they have oone wim unfailing fidelity since 1634. In the first 50 years the play was produced In the fourth vear of each decade, but since 1880, with one or two unavaidable exceptions, it has been performed in the tenth year or every decade. MAN IN THE MOON HAS PUMICE CHEEKS MEARS STUDIES FLYING TO SPEED GLOBE CIRCLING duced many devices then slmlllaar to tne Italian operatic stage. All this, however, was cut bodily out of the play at the beginning of the 19th century when another Ettal priest, Father Ottmar Weiss, wrote a new text, restoring the Dlav to a strict agreement with the biblical account of the life of Christ, thereby maxing iuii use or the dramatic ele ments fundamental to the story of Christ, which Father Weiss believ ed needed no artificial aid or adorn ment. There have been many changes since the time of Weiss, but these have all been of a minor na ture and have not substantially al tered the text as he wrote It. The Oherammergauers were among jSnf Mrff"wfc CM Would you know the (rend of the C , . : I U L v 5fXlJW Ml season's fashions the Smart Shop "sAw s p t mJlW EA&lTA! V jfQf otttn a complete collection of coats, JiSJ t.. 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These fashions iMInltrlr Sprint 1930. ar Nrprtalniry low priced. MAKK Vol R Stilt TION NOW The Tailored Suit Has won the hearts of all. for their smartness Is un equalled. Tweeds of course are the fa v. orrd fabric' We ahow a splendid as aortment from $29-75 vr Delaware Clhln 3 rw.tin the differences In the quality of heat reflM.tj.fi fmn , . huk.. blondes and brunettes has not been oone yet. out It seems possible, Judging by astronomers' heat meas uring accompnsnments. The kind of stone that makes the eheplrft nf Fh man In ,1.- has been detected by measuring the "quality" of the heat this fttnna radiates. It has the same quality," says Dr. Harlan T. Stetson, director of Perkins ohservAtirv nf r,hin x, i yan university, "as the heat radi ated from pumice stone on earth exposed to the rays of heat from ma sun. STEAL THE PATROL Saurnis. Mass. ip whn tni authorities were conducting a liquor raid, somebody stole the po lice patrol wagon which had been parked outside the house. Camden. N. J. (IP No one Is watching the return voyage of Rear Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd from bis An tart Ic adventures with more expectancy than John Henry Mean, America's famous round-the-world racer, Mears, whose greatest aim In life apparently, is to circumnavigate th globe faster than, any other hu man being. Is hard at work here mastering the art of flying in prep aration for his next attempt to bring back to the United States the record for globe circumnavigation, Ee wants to be a capable pilot before next June when he and Bernt Balchen, Rear Admoral Byrd's famous co-pilot, will attempt to lower the record of 21 days made last year by the Graf Zeppelin for a round-the-world flight. Balchen is at present with Byrd but Mears expects him here about the end of May to complete plans lor the flight. Bill Day, operations manager here for Ludlngton Plying Service, who I teaching Mears to fly, said the New Yorker is going to make a "corking good pilot." Day is a war time flier and has been an Instruct or most of the time since. He has been with the Ludlngton people" for the past year as operations man ager at their Camden field. Mears, who has made two pre vious round-the-world records, knows full well the strain on a pilot in such an undertaking and he Is determined to be fully capable of taking over the controls from Bal chen periodically during the pro posed flight which will Include considerable transoceanic flying. The next attempt by Mears and Balchen will be made in a Lock heed Vega monoplane. This plane is capable of exceeding 176 miles per hour with a cruising speed of 140 miles per hour. Among Mears' accomplishments In circumnavigating the globe in the record time are his 35-day rec ord in 1913. In that speed test he employed trains, steamships and a short hop in an airplane which end ed In a forced langlng in Puget Sound. In 1921 Mears and the late Cap-round-the-world time to 23 days, tain C. B. D. Collyer lowered the They used the "City of New York," a Falrchlld monoplane, for the ma jor portion of the trip. Collyer was killed In a crash Id Arizona some months after while attempting to establish a new transcontinental record. specially picked German troupe. Knowing the usual excellence of Reinhardt productions, and his In sistence on methodical as well as artistic preparation, the theater goers will have the opportunity of making an interesting comparison between French and German atage productions. . Medford, WU. U Leon Blom berg and Neil Vetter, Medford trappers, have collected state boun ty on their 14th wolf killed this winter in Taylor county. AWAIT REINHARDT Paris, (LP) French theater circles the forthcoming visit of Max Rein are looking forwafd with interest to hardt. billed here to appear with a TRUCK BARGAIN - New Ili Ton REO TRUCK Driven only 250 mile SUBSTANTIAL DISCOUNT Alfred S. 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