THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON
FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1933
GapitalJjJournal
Salem, Oregon
Established March L INI
to ftHlependenf Newspaper Published Every Afternoon Except SundlJ
t 13 & Commercial Street Telephone 488L Newt 4882.
GEOEGS PUTNAM. Editor and. Publisher
FULL LEASED WIEB SRBVICE Or THE ASSOCIATED FRCS8
AND THE DNtTKD PBESS
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By carrier 10 centa week; 4& cents a month; 15.00 a year in advance.
By mail in Marlon, Polk. Unn and Yamhill counties, one month M
cents; 3 months $1.25; months 92.25; 1 year 14.00. Elsewhere SO cent
a month 6 months (3.75; 15,00 a year m advance.
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication
of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this
paper and also local news published herein.
'With or with.rut offering to friends or foe
I sketch your world exactly at it goes."
Byron
Recovery Plans
President Roosevelt has launched a national recovery
program such as has never before been undertaken in any
country, by calling upon every employer to raise wages
when they are below certain minimums and shorten hours
when above certain maximums, thus creating employment
Calling for "united action," the president asks all em
ployers to subscribed to a blanket code giving white-collar
workers a 40 hour week and a $12-15 minimum wage, and
Industrial labor a 35 hour week with a minimum wage of 40
cents an hour.
Voluntary cooperation is the basis of this unprecedented
social and economic experiment, this mass attack on de
pression." The emergency campaign intends putting the in
dustrial recovery program in full swing without waiting for
approval of individual codes. Sections of the national indus-
trial recovery act were invoked as authorization. Highlights
pi the proposal are:
Agreement become effective August 31, effective only until an in
austry code is approved.
Child labor banned, with certain exceptions.
Prices not to be increased over July 1 except when necessary by in
creased costs.
Flexibility provided to avoid working hardships where limitation at
lects production.
An extensive campaign of education to secure public
cooperation will be inaugurated. Employers supporting the
president s program will be given insignia, and people asked
to patronize stores and industries cooperating.
A national recovery organization is to be created, com
prised of district recovery boards appointed by the president,
each to consist of one person prominent in each of the fol
lowing activities manufacturing, retail trade, wholesale
trade, banking, farming, labor and social service. Each state
V'ill have a recovery board of nine members appointed by the
president, representing commercial, industrial, labor and
civic interests. Serving with the state boards will be state
lecovery councils whose function will be to recommend or
ganization activity to the boards and devise means of per
fecting and strengthening the N. R. A. organizations.
Defying Roosevelt
"The devil was sick, the devil a monk would be.
"The devil was well, the devil a monk was he."
Which illustrates the attitude of some industries and
businesses towards the Roosevelt "new deal" for national
recovery, their threat, of court appeal, their delay and reluc
tance in adopting fair trade codes, tor minimum pay and
maximum Hours to increase employment and restore pur
chasing power and thus enable consumption to keep pace
with production.
When Roosevelt took office and the country faced na
tional collapse, these same industries and businesses, came
humbly hat in hand begging federal assistance and accepting
gratuities, gladly scrapping their "rugged individualism" to
promise cooperation in any scheme for rehabilitation. Now
that recovery has apparently set in, and the tide seems to
have turned, sighing for the flesh pots, they would repudi
ate and defy the administration in repeating the cycle of mad
lunation and deflation for their own profit.
The president has, however, the whip hand, the mailed
fist under the velvet glove. His emergency powers are su
preme. By the time the supreme court could pass on the
constitutionality of the empowering legislation, its life would
have expired, Those who defy the administration will do so
at their own cost.
Despite warnings from the White House, the speculative
craze in Wall Street, and in commodity exchanges became a
frenzy and was on the way to repeat the folly of 1929, when
administration pressure caused yesterday's crash. It is evi
dent that Mr. Roosevelt does not intend that our recovery
will die a'bornin', but that it shall proceed in orderly and
logical sequence. Purchasing power is the real base of pros
perity not speculation.
The Columbia Project
President Roosevelt seems to have hit upon a happy so
lution of the problem of Columbia river improvement with
lie selection of a damsitc at Bonneville and the use of federal
arbor and river funds for the construction of a dam for de
velopment of navigation, power and flood control. The work
Would be done without cost to the states of Oregon and Wash
ington, and the federal government would own the project
ud repay investment from operating costs.
Bonneville site is selected by the army engineers be
ause it affords a solid rock foundation, lacking at other
ites, and the estimated cost of the development, $-13,000,000
iielucling navigation locks and power generating equipment
s $17,000,000 less than the cost of similar construction at
IVarrendale.
Because of the navigation feature, the president believes
the entire cost may be pro))erly advanced by the government.
He does not contemplate that contracts for sale of power to
return the cost shall be made in advance, because of lack of
market at the present time. Ultimately the power proceeds
win aeiray part ot tlie cost.
Cash for the work will be available as soon as the nrmy
board approves the project, therefore the president need not
call on congress for an appropriKtion, so dam building will
soon be underway. The Oregon delegation in congress has
vorked unremittingly in behalf of the Columbia and deserves
Treat credit for their presentation of facts to the president.
The best tiling about the Bonneville dam is that it will
ibviate the necessity of the state of Oregon plunging into
.eavy indebtedness for unneeded power projects, for it will
upply 550,000 additional horse power, more than will be
ieeded in the next decade. It will give us besides a navigable
,'olumbia, the cheap power we have sought, without the
ilanket mortgage indebtedness of the Grange bill.
. CALLED TO FUNERAL
Bethany Attending the funeral
services of Mrs. Eva Eiswlck at
Brownsville Thursday were a group
of Sllverton relatives, Including Mr.
and Mrs. Alvln Krug, Miss Helen
Elton, Mrs. Ora Egnn, Mrs. Dan
Oeiser. Mrs. George Elton and Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Krug.
DAKOTAS ARE HOT
Sllverton Friends of Albert Her
reld have received word from him
at his home in Summit, S. Dak , that
the weather through June was very
hot and dry, registering from 100 to
110 degrees. He also stated the crops
are very short In general, with a fair
stand ot corn.
BEAVERS WIN
3RD STRAIGHT
OVER MISSIONS
(By the United Prm)
The San Francisco Seals defeated
the leauge leading Sacramento team
Thursday In a game marked by two
notable happenings, the displace
ment of Seattle by the Seals as cel
lar warmer, and the single Joe
Demagglo hit in his 56th consecu
tive game.
Demagglo, San Francisco's boy
wonder, hit on his third time at
bat, maintaining his march toward
tlie world s record of 69 consecutive
games in which Joe Wilhoit of the
western league hit in 1019.
The Seals won, 3 to 2. with Curt
Davis holding tlie Senators to seven
hits. Hart wig yielded 10 safeties
to Demagglo and his mates.
Jim Oglesby, Los Angeles bat-
wlelder, hit in his 42nd consecu
tive game as tlie Angels dropped
an s to 6 decision to Oakland. The
Oaks overwhelmed the Angels hi
the first inning, scoring six runs.
A three-run rally in the seventh
was insufficient for Los Angeles,
which used Ward, Ballou, Miller
and Stttzel in a vain effort to halt
the Oaks. Mie Satinsen went the
distance for Oakland.
Portland tallied its third straight
victory over the Mission club by
a 5 to 2 score. The Reds were
able to get 8 scattered hits from
Rudy Kalllo, leading league twir
ler. PUlette and Osborne were In
the box for the Missions.
Frank Shellenback, Hollywood
pitcher, won a ball game from
Seattle with a startling pinch hit
In the ninth. With the Indians
lending, 3 to 1, and Jacobs, Page
and Arbclbide on bases, Shellen
back stepped up and slapped the
first pitched ball for a home run,
giving Hollywood a 5 to 3 win, j
of those movie star press ageuU for
Baruch.
The first thing this press agent
should dig up Is the story about
Baruch paying off the mortgage oa
ina Dome or a widow of a democra
ts official so she would have a
proper place to live.
Yes, It i true.
Peace The publicity troubles In
the Johnson outfit may be settled
by selection of a contact man who
will function between the industrial
recovery boss and the press. Under
that program, the existing public
ity setup would be retained.
That executive order recently Is
sued by the White House gives
Johnson the right to fix salaries of
high employes. Those $3,000 Jobs
will get a raise.
Excusepr6f. Berles friends claim
the new bank bill he is working on
is largely nis own atratr. it an
pears he once had a tiff with Prof,
Moley and his standing in the brain
crust is not certain.
Nevertheless, there will be an ad
ministration bank bill put forward
this winter and it probably will be
Beries.
Notes The first day of the pro
cessing tax was not very profitable,
The treasury books showed receipts
of 45 cents and expenditures of $11,
000. The money will start rolling in
later.
Friends of Wall Street Prosecutor
Pecora are trying to get him into
the race for the attorney general
ship of New. York state. They really
nave tneir eye on the governorship.
Business men who think this in
dustrial recovery set up Is a tern
porary thing should not plan on
that. The duration of the act is
fixed at two years but no one in
side here believes the scheme will
be dropped then. The indications-
arc clear that the control is lnten
ded to be permanent if it works.
Congress can continue if by a sim
ple resolution.
Zane Grey Book Filmed
NEWS
Behind the News
-By-
Paul Mallon
Copyright, 1033, by Paul Mallon
Washington, July 21 President
Roosevelt has a neat way of side.
stepping troubles.
He began working it out in the
first days of his administration,
He has developed it now to the
point of a new decentralized gov
ernmental system.
Sometimes the system fails to
work. He is always prepared for that
eventuality. Usually he catches a
slight cold or some other minor in
disposition. It confines him to his
room for a day or two. It gets him
away from callers and agitated ad
visers. He lias tune to think things
out casually.
Meanwhile he lets the advisers
fight out the burning issues among
themselves,
When they have finished he emer
ges fit and fresh for the final de
cision.
That appears to be at least one
angle of what happened the past
lew days.
The advisers were worrying him
and themselves about how far to
go in coercing industry under the
new recovery setup. There were
more plans than there were advis
ers. Everyone was hot under the
collar. Tempers were lost, Rumors
were started that so-and-so would
resign.
Mr. Roosevelt decided to have
something hLs physician chose to
call a cold. The White House at
taches whisiwred it was NOT suf
ficient to keep him away from his
oifice, but it did.
It was probably the same cold he
caught when he went off the aold
standard. At that time it gave him
two days for private thinking.
Bjit that is only a little variation
oi his basic decentralization setup.
Trie root of It lies m obscure lobs
m trie various governmental bu
renus. He has Installed hi these
pinces men in whom he bos
much confidence or more than in
his cabinet members. To their
shoulders he has shifted responsi
bilities winch nave made his we
decessors gray before their time.
Some of the outstanding exam
ples are known to the public. There
is Prof. Moley In the state de
pnrtment. Regardless of what you
hear to the contrary he still sits on
the light presidential knee. Also
there is Budget Director Douglas;
Morganthau and Tugwell.
Ail outrank the average run of
cabinet members in the inside setup.
Unknowns Some others who do
not get their names in the news
paiicrs often are: Leo Frank hi
agriculture: Dickson in commerce:
Slattery and Mnrgold in interior;
Arhe.son and Cochran in treasury;
Warburg, Taussig and Bullitt in
state.
The group is far more important
than tlie crowd holding front office
joos.
Justice Bernard Baruch is prob
ably more maligned by gossipers out
in the country than any other man
except Hoover.
Every time he shows his head In
Washington, some citizens write in
to the administration protesting.
Apparently they figure Baruch is
Wall Street.
Tlie truth is Baruch's unselfish
ness is generally accepted by those
on the inside here. They know he
has done as much for the demo
cratic cause as any other man. He
paid General Johnson (23.000 a year
to do nothing but keep track of re
publican statistics during the Hoov
er administration. It was through
this arrangement that Baruch
planted figures with democratic
senators and congressmen which
over Ui re w the Mills treasury estimates.
That changed the whole fiscal
picture of the government.
Baruch's practical advise has been
valuable in balancing the theories
of the college professors. The ad
ministration has not intention of
dropping tlie connection. ;
What the situation needs is one
Continuation Of
Essential Points
From Page One
third for all hours over the maximum.
Sets minimum pay levels for cler
ical and similar workers at $15
week in cities over 500,000; $14.50 in
those over 250,000; $14 in those from
2500 up; in communities under 2500
a 20 percent raise provided the min
imum need not exceed $12.
Provides 40 cents an hour for fac
tory and mechanical worker mini-
mums unless they made less than
that on July 15, 1929. In that case
the level on that would prevail so
long as It was not below 30 cents.
Piece-workers are guaranteed the
resulting minimum wage.
Prohibits reduction of wages now
above the minimum despite reduc
tion in the hours of employment and
calls for increased pay for all 'by
an equitable readjustment of all pay
schedules."
Bans use of subterfuges to frus
trate the agreement's spirit and intent.
Prohibits profiteering, limits price
increases over July 1 levels to those
made necessary by actual lncrcsaes
in production or invoice costs, tak
ing full account of prospects of in
creased volume.
Binds signers to patronize estab
lishments which also have signed,
and to help obtain a code of fair
competition for the signer's Industry
quickly, and in any event before
September 1.
Provides adjustment of contracts
for fixed price delivery of goods, to
meet increased costs to the seller
who has signed the agreement or is
bound by a wage-lifting code.
The agreement ceases upon ap
proval of a code to which the signer
is subject, or if the recovery admin
istration elects, upon submission of
such a code by substitution of its
provisions.
It provides further that those
wishing to cooperate but who feel
circumstances will cause the agree
ment to work hardship upon them
may sign, put its terms into effect,
file a petition approved by a repre
sentative organization of their in
dustry, and obtain a stay until the
situation is investigated, nrovided
they agree to abide by the decision
of a summary investigation.
Each signer must report the num
ber of employes in his establishment
at the date of signing.
Junior Kitball Team
Sends Out Challenge
Tlie newly formed Square Deal
Hardware junior kitball team, spon
sored by W. Cohen, is looking for
games with any other teams with
players 15 years old and under.
The players on tlie Square Deal
Hardware team are Abe Stein-
bock p. Percy Meyers c, Warren
Lama lb, Roger Miller 2b. Law-
ence LeBuff 3b, Dan Kiadotz ss,
and Jack Causey, Don Slubber-
field, Mendel Shusterowita, Max
Kenyon and George Davis, outfield
ers.
Two Albany Golfers
Shoot Eagle Scores
Albany Two Albany golfers shot
eagle scores on the same hole dur
ing a recent tournament at the
Bridgcway club here. Ralph Jeide,
manager of the Woolworth store,
and Glendon McCrary, former Al
bany high school athlete, made
twos' on the seventh, a four-par
hole. Jeide won the match on the
eighth, ,
Randolph Scott and Kathlene Burke are seen here in
"Sunset Pass", western thriller from the pen of Zane Grey,
which will be shown at the Elsinore theater Friday and Saturday.
CffljjpOES
CALVARY BAPTIST Hlnrti and
ferry streets, w. can tjoenran, pas
tor. Church school 9:40 a.m. Mrs. W,
BarKus. suot. Mornlnti worsmn at
iu:au. aneciai music oy cnoir ur. w.
Q. Everson of the First Baptist church
of Portland will speak at the morning
and evening services. Two BY. 'a at
7. Frayer meeting 7:4o Wednesday.
FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZA-
rene 13th and center. Rev. Fletch
er Galloway, pastor. Sunday subjects:
11 a.m. "An Emuowered Church." No.
3 of a series on the Holy Ghost. 7:30
p.m. "The Compassion of God for
Men." Sunday school at 9:4o. F. M.
Lltwiller, supt, N.Y.P.3. and Juniors
at 6:30.
CHURCH OF CHRIST Cottage and
Shipping. C. T. Springs, minister. Bi-
oie study iu a.m. rreacmug arm com
munion at 11 Evening service at 7:30,
Young people's training class Wed
nesday 7:30 p.m.
SPIRITUAL CHURCH OF DIVINE
TRUTH 201 North 25th St. 8 p.m.,
lecture oy Gordon Flemmir. "The
Birth of Christ," followed by messag
es. Mid-week lecture and messages
Wednesday 8 p.m.
PRESBYTERIAN Winter and Che-
meketa Sts. Grover C. Blrtchet pastor
Special anniversary Sunday. Church
school 9:30 ajii. Ralph H. Scott, supt.
Homecoming and special program at
11. Anthem: "Build The More State
ly Mansions." C. E. at 6:30 p.m. Me
morial service at 7:45 under nusnlces
of United Spanish War Veterans. An
them: "coin' Home." Address by Rev.
William A. El kins, pastor of Christian
church at Monmouth.
BROOKS Q. H. Quiirlev. minister.
Sunday school 10 a.m. Leo Reed supt..
Worship at 11. Sermon: "The God ot
Comfort." At 7:30, song and testi
mony, an hour of Christian fellowship.
ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN Missouri
synod. 16th and A. Rev. H. W. Gross,
pastor, special mission festival at
10:30 a.m. In German and English.
Prof. E. H. Brandt of Portland, speak
er In German; Rev. Gross in English.
At 2:30 English services with Rev. E.
Elckman, deaf mute missionary of
Oregon. Special music for both ser
vices. Services at Wendland'a grove.
HIGHLAND FRIENDS Highland
and Church Sts. Glen Rinard. nas tor-
Bible school at 10, E, M. Beckett, supt
Morning worship at 11, missionary -Christian
Endeavor at 7 p.m. services
at 8. Prayer meeting Thursday 8 p.m.
JASON LEE MEMORIAL Method
ist Episcopal. Winter and Jefferson
Sts. H. G. Humphrey, pastor. Sunday
school at 9:45. Church services at 11,
Dr. Louis Magln. speaker. Special mu-
oy riora rietriier HeadrlcK. Ep-
worth Leagues at 7 At 8 Margaret
Stevenson will speak on "Youth Looks
at Religion."
FIRST CHRISTIAN. TURNER R.
L. Putnam, pastor. Church school at
10 a.m. Mrs. R. Titus, supt. Worship
at 11, sermon "Living Unto the Lord."
Christian Endeavor at 7, worship at 8
Song service assisted by young people.
Sermon: "Modern Evil Spirits." Mid
week service Thurs. 8 p.m.
CHRIST LUTHERAN State at 18th
at. Hev. Amos k. Minneman. pastor.
German services at 9:30 a.m English
at 11. Sunday school 9:30. Luther
League 7 p.m.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Cen
ter and Liberty. J. R. Simonds, minis
ter. Sunday school 10 a.m. Worship at
ii. sermon: wuyr
IMMANUEL BAPTIST Hazel and
Academy Sis. Bible school at 10. Marc
Saucy, supt. Prenching at 11 a.m. and
7:30 P.m. Mid-week nraver and oralae
service xnursany a p.m.
KNIGHT MEMORIAL Ferry
19th St. H. C. Stover, minister. Sim-
day scnooi at iu a.m. u. u, Harris,
supt. worship at 11. "I Love a River."
Anthem by choir. No evening service.
FIRST BAPTIST Marion and No.
Liberty Sts. Brit ton Ross, minister.
Bible school at 9:45 a.m. Fred Broer.
supt. Worship at 11, "Volunteers
Wanted." Jr.. Int. and Sr. B.YJ.U.'s at
p.m., prayer meeting at i. organ
prtuuae at y:-u, services at u. sermon:
"The City of the Great King." Special
music at both services by choir.
REFORMED N. CaDitol and Mar
ion Sts. W. G. Llenkaemper, minister.
suncrny scnooi iu a.m. jonn Denny,
supt. German services at 10, "The
True Characteristics of Charity": Eng
lish at 11. Subject "Following the Vi
sion Splendid." Special music, solo by
F. E. Kruse.
FORD MEMORIAL. West Salem
K. K. Clark, pastor, subject for 8 p.m.
wut i tie Missed?" services at sum
mit at 11 a.m.
HOUSE OF PRAYER Interdenomi
national. Chemeketa and 17th. Pray
er and praise services 2:45 p.m. Pray
er meetings each night 7:45 except
Thursday and Saturday. A. J Smith,
minister.
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL
State at Church Sts. Church school
3:4 j. worship at 11. "Famine in
the Land of Plenty." Dr. R. M. Gatke
Union services at Willson park 3:30.
Young people's Forum at 7 p.m.
ROSEDALE FRIENDS MllO Clifton
3ss. Dastor. Sunday school 10: 11.
morning worship. Special music. Mes
sage by the pastor: "A Pure Religion."
Bolivian prayer eirel :. 7, Chris
tian Endeavor discission led by Vir
gil Trick. Skit: "Twin Hocks School"
will be presented by members of the
society at 7:4&. Evening praUe. 8;
message: "The Bible's Only Sermon
Outline." No Bible study on Friday
evening. ,
fMnPDPMnPNT SPIRITUAL 381
Chmketa, St. Services at 8 pjn.
Speaker Dr. M. a. wneeier. luyiw
Trinity." Special music and solo. Rev.
Ruth Price and J. Burke. Messages
by accredited mediums. Mid-week
meetings Tuesday and Thursday; class
Wednesday, Friday Trumpet. All
meetings 8 p.m. 445 Hood St.
FIRST GERMAN BAPTIST N. Cot
tage and D Sts. G, W. Rutsch, minis
ter. Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Services
at 11. "A Glance of Faith." Evening
service at 8. "A Lesson of Instruction."
Special music at each servic Mid
week prayer services 8 p.m. Wed.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST LAT
TER DAY SAINTS 460 North Cottage
street. Sunday school at 10 o'clock.
Church Immediately afterwards.
COURT ST CHURCH OF CHRIST
17th and Court Sts. Hugh N. McCal
luin. pastor Bible school at 9:45 a.
m. Mrs. Irene Woller. supt. Worship
and Lord's Supper at 11 a.m. Chris
tian Endeavor societies at 6:15. Wil
liam Norrls of Newbcig will bring an
Illustrated chalk talk at 7:30, and
Mrs. Morris will slug some special
songs. Mid-week service at 7:45 p.m.
Wednesday.
AMERICAN LUTHERAN Church
St. between Chemeketa and Center.
Rev. P, W. Erlkseu, pastor. Morning
worship at 10. "Which Creation Domi
nates Your Life, the Old or the New?"
Solo by Miss Lougcnc Brlctzke. Young
peoples League at 7 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD Hood and N.
Cottaue streets. G. T. Ncal. Dastor.
Owing to the annua! state camp meet
ing at woouourn mere win oe no
shurch services here the next two
Sundays. All are expected to go to
the camp meeting.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCI
ENTIST Chemeketa and Liberty Sts. ,
Continuation Of
Grain Exchange
From Pge One
newly arrived shipments.
Traders gathered in knots to talk
the situation over, but the shouting
and gestlculaing was absent. Most
of them were glad of the holiday.
The tense worried expressions of
yesterday gave way to smiles and
jokes and the enforced holiday was
taken as "good medicine" lor the
speculative fever which had infect
ed the pits practically all the time
since the lifting of the National
bank holiday.
The Winnipeg market was open
as usual, as was Liverpool, and the
chief activity of those who "talked
shop" was in watching ticker quo
tations from these market centers.
Sunday school at 9:45. Sunday serv
ice 11a. m.. subject of lesson sermon,
"Truth." Sunday evening services are
discontinued during July and August.
Testimony meeting Wednesday nigh
8 p. m. Reading room in M outc tem
ple, open H a. m. to 5:30 p. m. ex
cept Sundays and holidays.
FREE METHODIST Market and N.
Winter streets, J. R. Stewart, pastor,
Sunday school 9 :45, Emory Goode,
Supt. Morning worship 11. subject,
"God's Presence With His People."
Evening worship 8. subject. "The
Coming of tlie King of Zlon." Young
people's meeting 7
EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE
13th and Ferry streets. Chas. G. Wes
ton, pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a.
m.. Ollle W. Schetidel. Supt. Church
service at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m.
Mld-wcek services on mursaay ana
Friday at 7:45 p. m. Suturday. young
DeonUVs service and orchestra re
hearsal at 7 p. m.
fjS God's
k j Gift
Nature's Kerbs (or Every 111
Consultation Free
THE SING HERB COMPANY
H. S. Low, Dlrertinic Herbalist
473 South Commercial Street,
Salem, Oretoa
Established In. Oaktaad. Calif,
since 1912. Phone ilSS
"SHORT CUT METHOD'
4 I one HOUR
U(Q) Lessons
To Be Popular Play Popular Mask
Modern
Harmony
Waterman
Method
1
Fex Trots
Waltzes
Waterman
Method
"IT'S EASY TO PLAY THE WATERMAN WAY"
Enroll at once, as enrollments close In a lew days. Mail your
check and application at once. Classes given morning, afternoon and
evening of every Friday and Saturday starting July 28th. Not an ear
method. It is not necessary that you play the piano now. If you
can read notes and will practice one hour a day. that is all that Is
required. Lessons will be given In the Nelson Bldg. Auditorium.
NEXT FREE DEMONSTRATION
Friday, July 21st, a to 6 P. M. and 7 to 8 P. M., Nelson Bldg. Au
ditorium; Saturday, July 22nd, 1 to 5 P. M., Nelson Bldg. Auditorium
NOTICE!
I have had 18 years experience teaching the "Short Cut Method."
Have taught in Salem for the past 3 years and in Portland for U
yeari.
REFERENCE
T. H. Galloway Ladd A Bush Bank Geo. C. Will of the Geo. C.
Will Music House Ralph Cooley Bishop's Clothing Store Harry
8. Weljner Salem Elks Club A. A. Goeffroy Commercial Book
Store Frank Doolltlle Doollttle's service statkm.
Mail your Check and Application at Once
ROY J. WHITE
Box 403, Capital Journal, Salem, Ore.
TUNE IN KOAC SATURDAY 7:15 P. M.
l V J . 1 I L I 1 J 1 I . U IS I
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