THURSDAY, SKP'IKMBER 4, 19:Q THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON PAGE SEVEN DAYS NUMBERED Pails, (U The days of beautiful vomen ore numbered. Modern life, with its cigarettes, cocktails, cosme tics, and late hours. Is slowly ex termininating feminine beauty, ac cording to Dr. Marcelle Peillon, one of the foremost women beauty doc tors and specialists of Prance. Madame Peillon says, "Unless there is an immediate reaction to all tht-sj tendencies which destroy not only beauty but health In general, women who have beautiful skin, bri?ht eyes, red lips and vivacious temperament, will live only in nov el!. The beauties of histories were real. France was a nation of hand some women, the most beautiful be ing In the Franklkh and Gallic tri bes when cosmetics were unknown, but when the salutary effect of bathing springs were known even to the animals. Medicinal baths, hot springs, and the natural curative waters are the best aids to beauty, long with the simple regime of living that goes with the so-called cure." Women are rarely deceived about their beauty, says Madame Peillon. They apply paint and powder and have their faces lifted: they mas sage and bind and pull themselves .. nr chan when t.hev really know th'jt the only aid to beauty Is good bloou circulation, wiiitu Mntrns nlnn. elfin unit Rltin is the natural Indicator and mirror of health ens beauty. No cosmetic, no cream ? ill ever do what the sun can .in Ar1 nn fnn lifting IlhvSician will ever provide pliant muscles like physlclal exercise, eariy sircp, Ji-In- n-ill An ValllnW featurPS. swollen veins, saggy cheeks, ore cTue mainly to the lllc thai was uvea ;ur 30 or 40 years away from the air, an frnm enrtners nnd sunlight. The greatest enemy to beauty, says Madame ri-uion, is ramui. After alcohol comes the cigarette. Arts tho r.i0flrii.ij comes cosmetics, The greatest aid to beauty, on the other hand is exercLse, which in duces a good appetite, then comes bathing, and Madame Peillon as serts, like most physicians, that it is all Important for women to hav .i,;uMn i7on. nrent hpftiltie in his tory hive been chlldl-es. Woman's beauty increases ar, she bears chil dren, providing adequate care Is taken. The w omen of today, painted and powdered, sauow cycz. uuncu u3 Innlriro in cnif- tll'tA dC- ficient in 'bloc:!, can overtake her beautiful sisters of the past 11 snv commences now, but Muaame i-m-Ion fears that moa'srn life will pre. . .n.y,i Trnm wrnwlnP in til' natural way that the women of the past de-veiopcu. if an,, n-fimon are skmtical. as serts Madame Peillon, let them not . - HAf-tni- hut let them for the r,ake of their own curiousity and dfflro to be oeautnui, suniJij ..... u..-. notiirniiv for two weeks. slop unoking, drinking. In ease they Co drink, rise early, want Darcueou ed in the open air. being to love aHtne Ppitlon adds. ueepo. - . ' tince beauty is more essential than anything, let them embrace mother hood, and their mirrors will soon show a different face, a keener eye, brighter tresses, a brow mat is s" tnc, respected and loved. DEER PAY CALL - r ........ rviln. IIP) Threp unSX iiUllll"r. -w - - pec-ted visitors at the Torrey Broth ers ranch on California mesa during the recent heat wave were three ' deer, a buck and two does. It is very infrequent that deer come down from the mountains in midsummer. ncT r;i'V riRFn Rochester, N. Y. (LP) Thirty-five jears ago. belore tne ouiuvan m-i became law, tne late umei 01 i-u- : t,.-Y. nloai. nro-pntPft Ml'G Eva oarrett. 70. with a revolver. Recently Mrs. Garrett fired the m,n tn frfehtf n awav two men. she mid nolire. when arrested on charge of unlawful possession of fi,Hrmi o,p vac rpifwri im mediately on her own recognizance. BIG LARD EXPORT Lincoln. Neb. (LP) Lard fating forth humbly In tin cans and buck ets was the product that brought the largest revenue to Nebraska in the list of products exported from the state last year in commercial quantities. Lard exported from the state last year was vaiuea at 192. The total revenue from exports last year was $12,406,248, or a gain of $1,638,017. according to figures compiled by the federal department of commerce. Bl'RGLAR CHASE FATAL Buuanest. (LP) While chasing a kxrnlar (mm fit .Tnhnn'ft hOSDital Paul Kacskoviczky, porter, dropped dead Just as the burglar, jonn ior. ma, ran Into the arms of a ponce nan. SEED BUYERS We boy all kinds of Clover Seeds, Vetches, Etc Abo. first elan Gray Oats Suitable for Seed SEED CLEANING Tbe very latest type of machinery that saves all the food seed Tea will always rind we pay the bltheM market prices Phone loll ICI Stale SL Sah-nt. Ore. "SAFETY" PLANE CARRIES DESIGNER TO DEATH jamiaKKMaaMi w - . lur i 1 1 mil George Fernlc perfected what ha believed waa "af" airplane. In sight of national air racs crowd at Chicago It plunged to ths ground, crushing Fernlc, and damaging other plants snttrtd In ths races. Ilsrs, crowd around wreck. London's Social Elite Solve Play Murders for Diversion at Functions London (LP) Most of London's fashionable society these days Is hunting the murderer. But there isn't a killer or a corpse anywhere. It's all a game and used to "pep up" dinner parties. Unlike most "murders," the guests are advised there will be one, when they receive thir invi tations. Some are stamped with a hoary hand clutching a dagger that GOAL OF THOSE Los Anscles. (IP) A new motion picture process which, according to its inventor, will give tne sterescopic effect of natural Tision, is to be shown here for the first time next Sept. 15. George K. Spoorc. a pioneer In the motion picture industry and in ventor oi the "depth' Iilm, nas devoted 14 years to the develop ment of the process in which an effect of natural vision is achieved. Radical changes in cinema pro duction are involved in Spoor's in vention, he said. The new technique starts with an improved type of camera and leads through all stages of production. Nearly at7.000.000 has been spent in the development, it was said. . The camera evolved by Spoor con- : tains two lenses which record the photographic image through a sin gle opening. These are so placed as to give a "staggered" effect to the image as it appears on the film. This in turn is projected in a man- : ner which lends the subject depth ( when it shows on the screen. ; The new nrocess is said to include ' a change in the time allowed each image in the film as it appears be hind the lens. With this projection principle, the single Images are al lowed to dissolve into succeeding images, eliminating wavering on the screen. The Inventor also announced that by the first of the year he will have completed a camera for mak ing natural vision pictures in full color uuder radically different methods. is dripping blood, or at least red ink. Others may portray a man shoot ing; another set a casket and many more eerie scenes. Lady Chaytor chose Friday, June 13, to her party. The "murder" was committed in tne dungeons oi wit- ton Castle, Lady Chaytor's seat in Durham. Every clue was followed, the mur der was solved when the "Sherlock Holmes" legions finished the'ir trek at a nearby inn where sausages and beer awaited them. There are, according to reports, many ways to play the "murder" game. At one party recently slips were placed in a hat. They bore the names "murder," "detective," "body" and many- others, each guest playing a role. In all instances, however, every one must tell the truth except the merderer, who is permitted to tell as many lies as he feels necessary to escape punishment. Rhind lander, Wis., (IP) Stephan Heimer, Detroit, caught the largest fish of the year in Oneida county waters when he landed a 12-pound wall-eyed pike while trolling in In dian lake near here. BRITISH PLANE BEHIND RUDDER London (LP) Great Britain's new est and fastest night-bombing air plane has a machine gunners' cock pit built into the tail behind tne rudder. This is a new departure for British war machines and it is be lieved the position will afford the machine an unusually fine defense against attack from the rear. Inci dentally, according to the viewpoint of machine-gunners, their position makes them an excellent target for the attacking machine. The new bomber which is a bi plane, is driven by two Rolls-Royce engines of 6ome 860 horsepower each and with a full military load of machine guns, bombs and a crew of four, has a top speed of 137 miles an hour-at an altitude of 10,000-feet Fully loaded the machine weighs eight tons. It Is now being tested by Royal Air Force pilots, and if approved one or more squadrons of this type will probably be ordered constructed. NEW FAMINE IN SOVIET RUSSIA IS PREDICTED Grand Island Mr. and Mrs. Law rencs,. McKee and son, Wallace, of Perrydale were guests at the Ernest Douglas home Sunday. The women are sisters. That the Soviet domain will ex perience another and more terrible (amine Is the opinion oi Kev. ixnns R. Patmont. recently returned to his nulDit in Santa Rosa, Cal. after sev eral weeks' tour among the Soviets. Rev. Patmont's adventures in so viet Russia finally tended him, pen niless and hungry on the Chinese border, whence he made his way to Shanghai. Interviewed by a unitea rress special correspondent on board the steamer Siberia Maru en route from Shanghai to Seattle, Rev. Patmont said: The Soviet, without a doubt, arc heading for another famine, and here are the reasons: collective farming with very few exceptions has proved a failure. Another drougnt is lneviiaoie Be cause of the sparing snowfall during the past winter. Because of this lat ter circumstance tne mosco gov ernment was unable to exploit its forests and therefore will be unable to adequately finance its vast In dustrial schemes. Its bureaucracy and its red army. Because of the intimidation of the peasants and the adherents of religious faiths, pri vate farming has been reduced to a minimum. A very large percentage of the population has been thrown into turmoil and confusion. The masses are disorganized. "I was able to ascertain these facte after an extensvle trip in Rus sia. It was a difficult matter to ob tain the U. S. S. R. visa. In Berlin, Riga and Warsaw my applications for a permit to travel In the Soviet union were declined because of the fact that I filled out the question naires i nthe Russian language. discovered that press agents who understand and speak Russian arc classed as undesirables. When I reached Helsingfors, Finland, I de cided to change my method of ap proach to the Soviet legation. For some years past I have been inter ested in paleontology. Since finding some dinosaur bones in Mexico- a year ago, I have been called upon to lecture on the subject. Fortunately I was in possession of a few letters of appreciation from schools and colleges. The photographs which. I had with me, together wi(h a few fossils and petrified reptile egss which I had picked up in Latvia and Sweden, together with some other rather artificial material, suf ficed to convince the Soviet consul at Heteinsfors that I was interested in the science of paleontology. The application blank was tilled out in German, I stated that I was inter ested in the Russian collections, of prehistoric animals and that I de sired to visit museums in Lenin grad, Moscow and Siberia. I again Daid mv visa fee. telgeram charges, etc. The much heralded check up system at Moscow evidently did not function. Alter waiting for three days a telegram arrived from the central executive committee grant- big me permission to visit Russia. When I arrived at the border station of Belo-Ostroff I was asked to leave the train. In the customs house my baggage was searched. A O. p. V. (political police officers) beckoned me into his office. He ad dressed me in the Russian language asking that I produce my papers, passport and money. Instead I brought in my baggage and looked puzzled The ruse worked. The man evidently was convinced of my ignorance of the Russian language. He promptly addressed me in Ger man. He carefully examined my letter and U. S. passport, then counted my money. I was given Rb. 1.94 per U. S. dollar. A subor dinate was told to keep me under observation until reaching Lenin grad. Because of my resemblance to another passenger I made the trip unmolested. The other man became the victim. On the Trans-Siberian trains I noticed I was forever being watched by O P. U. spies; however I expert enced little difficulty in evading them. There was no marked difference of living conditions in many of the large cities I visited, namely, hwer- low.sk. Perm. Tomsk, Krasnoyarsk and Yeniseisk. People everywhere suffered from the oppression of bolshevik regime. The day of my arrival In Moscow the ban was lilted on private trad ing and peasants were selling food, much of which had been buried for months; In Siberia days at a Ume elapsed without a chance to buy food. On arriving at railroad stations, the red soldiers aboard tne train naa first choice to buy supplies, and passengers bought what was ieit. when anv was lelt. I stODued at many important cities along the Trans-Siberian rail road, but it was only alter l reacn ed Chita, on the China border, that I was able to procure what icod I required. At the border station 1 encoun tered strict questioning for nearly three hours at the hands of the O. P. U. otficers, but at last was permitted to pass into China. In that countrv. pitiful as existing conditions were, it could not equal the conditions prevailing in soviet Russia." WOMAN SHERIFF Akron. Colo. (IP) Mrs. Mae Jus- lire widow of the late W. B. Justice, has been appointed sheriff of Wash ington county. She will serve until a new sheriff is elected this fall. MAIL HAZARD porterville (IP) The hazards of mail carrying are greater than they mav seem, according to w. iv Starns, rural route carrier In the Woodlake district. Starns is recovering from the Due of a 'black window," California black wntrler. Starns was stung oy tne piu:i while slttini In a barber chair here, hut he en d he believed it naa crept up his sleeve when he placed his hand In a mall box. fROP HARVESTED Txvhester. Ind.. (IP) Crops hav to be harvested no matter what hannens. decided Henry Linn, year old farmer. When his binder broke while gathering in his wheat ho went to his barn, dug out n old cradle and scythe and finished the Job. Residents say it is 50 years since a cradle and scyinc nas orcn used in harvesting here. FIRM EXHIBITS supercharged, weighs 62. . pounds -and develops 300 horsepower., As a result of reportedly success ful tests, it is understood that ths Napier firm will shortly put this engine Into production and at the same time commence experimental work on other engines of the samo type but of lighter and leaver horse power. London, (LP) D. Napier and Son, long known as producers of one of the best known water-cooled aero engines In the world, have sprung a surprise on British aviation by pro ducing a really new form of air- cooled engine lor wnicn important claims of low power-weight ratio and low head resistance are made. The new product '. known as l "H" engine because its 16 cylin ders are arranged in "H" formation B common crank-case. It has four banks of four cylinders verti cally opposed, and from the front looks like a capital 'H." Thus only the area of four cylinders is ex posed to the air and its frontal area is claimed to be approximately only half that of a conventional radial air-cooled einnine of the same power. The new engine has two crank-shafts geared to a single air-screw shaft. It was designed by Major F. B. Halford who designed the Gypsy and Cirrus engines, with the assistance of the Napier Iirms engineering staff. Together with the new Intercep tor Fighter D.H. 77 which has been especially designed for it, the new H" engine was publicly shown first at the Royal Air Force Pageant at Hendon Airdrome June 28. Al though of only 300 horsepower this new machine by reason of its low frontal resistance put up a per formance practically equal to that of other Interceptor Fighters fitted with engines of between 600 and 700 horsepower and with Known speeds of 200 miles an hour and better. The "H" engine, which is Phoenix, Aria. (IP) The race In Arizona between Dr. John Stork and the Grim Reaper was not even close during 1929, the annual report of the stat? board of health revealed. The international known "physi cian delivered 240 more babies in the state last year than his oppon ent claimed the lives of- Ariaonana. Births totaled 9251. -I s LEARNING USES I! RELIEF FROM CURSE OF CONSTIPATION -A Battle Creek physician says. 'Constipation Is responsible for more misery than any other cause.1 But Immediate relief has been Found. A tablet called Rexall Or derlies has been discovered. This tablet attracts water from the sys tem Into the lazy, dry, evacuating bowel called the colon. The water loosens the dry food waste and causes a gentle, thorough, natural movement without forming a habit or ever increasing the dose. Stop suiierlng from constipation. Chew a Rexall Ordcrlie at night. Next day bright. Get 24 lor 25c today at the nearest Rexall Drug Store. Perry's Drug Store. adv Prom the beginning of expectancy until baby is weaned. That's the time Phillips Milk of Magnesia per forms the greatest service for many women. It relieves the expectant mother a nausea, heartburn, "morning sick ness," inclination to vomit; helps her digestion. Its mild but ellective laxative action assures regular bowel movement. PhilliDs Milk of Magnesia Is bet ter than lime water for neutralizing cow s milk for Infant feeding. A tea spoonful of it does the work of a half pint of- lime water. It is a mild laxative; harmless, almost tasteless. All drug stores have Phillips Milk of Magnesia in generous 25c and 500 bottles. Always insist on the genu ine, endorsed by physicians tor 50 years. "Milk of Magnesia" has been the U. S. Registeied Trade Mark of th Chas. H. Phillips Chemical Co., and its predecesor, Chas. H. Phillips, since 1875. ' FREE: to young mothers and prospective mothers; "Useful Infor mation," an Invaluable little book on the health of mothei and child. Write the Phillips Co., no Varies: St., New York, N. Y. It will be sent absolutely free of charge. adv. PILES' CURril WITHOUT OPERA TION OK LOSS Ot TIME I)K. MARSHALL 529 OREC.ON BUIl.DINO ON all this w eek ClottlHest I I.I III I The Finer Grades Ladie's UK EI(S)SE Ranging in Price from $2.00 to $2.50 CHILDREN CRY FOR IT CHILDREN hate to take medicine m a nil., but everv child loves the taste of Castoria. And this pure vegetable preparation is just as gooa as it tastes; just as bland and just as harmless as the recipe reads. When Baby's cry warns of colic, . i drom of Castoria has him ! soothed, asleep again in a jUTy. Noth- 'ing is more valuable in diarrhea. i When coated tongue or bad breath tell of constipation, invoke its gentle aid to cleanse and regulate a child's bowels. In colds or children's diseases. ! you should use it to keep the system j from clogging. Castoria is sold in every drugstore; ; the genuine always bears Chas. H. : Fletcher's sigr-alure. jl lu of5Q w pail? 3 pairs for $4,00 All Ladies Hand Bags At Close Out Prices M - Mot! The P rice oeoe 135 North Liberty Street Co 1 Travel Prints Fashion the smartest frocks imagin- able, many sport the Jaunty bolero or ! jncket, you i!l simply fall for one of -these. $10.95 to $16.75 Jacket Frocks Establish new clnims to lame this Fall especially In the flat and canton rrcpss in black, brown, new green, or bhie. Lingerie touches add to their fcmartness. $12.50 to $19.75 Knitted Sports Suits Are the fashion of the hour, because ttomen have found comfort and style combined. See our wonderful assort mentof new weaves, nothing like them In the city. $9.85 to $39.50 Sports Coats That are New SQUIRRELA1NE ALPACATEX -LEPARD PUR WEAVE 100T. PURE ALPACA PILE POLO COATS Nifty fashions that set the smart Miss apart from the crowd See them. $29.50 to $39.50 m) r v i -v. n ii i '-mero :nusf: i MERIT " 'GEO. mohga:!. M' I.