Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, April 21, 1934, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON
SATURDAY. APRIL 21, 10.14
ipitalJournal
Salem,
Established
hdrpfndmt Newspaper Published
at 1M 8. Commercial Street
GEO HOB PUTNAM,
FULL LEASED WIRE HER VICE OF THE ASSOCIATED FKESS
AND TUB UNITED PRESS
6UBNCIUPTION KATES
By earner 10 cent a week; 45 cert a month; 5 a year la advance
By mall In atrkn, polfc. Linn and Yamhill counttea, one month 60
cents; S month I1.2&; month 22b; 1 year $4 00. Elsewhere M oeotki
a month: 0 month S3 74: l&oo a year In advance.
The Associated pre U exciuively enutled to the uae for publication
of all new dUpatche credited to It or not oikerwla credlU-d In thli
paper and also local uew published herein.
"With or without offenst to frxend$ or foe
I iketch your world exactly as it goes."
Bron
Heroizing Crime
The reason John DilliiiKi'r, siipcr-KiiiiKter and multi
murderer is enabled to continue his career of crime and his
phantom-like flitting around the country between bank hold
ups is because he is regarded as a hero by silly sentimental
ists whose sense of justice is so strangely perverted and
anti-social that they afford him refuge and asylum and
maintain a conspiracy of silence to prevent his apprehen
sion. Dillinper's escape from the Indiana jail was through the
sympathy and convivance of officials employed to guard him.
His recovery from wounds received in a battle with police
at St. Paul wag due to the aid and assistance of a surgeon
and nurse. He attended a family reunion at Mooreville, In
diana, visited his sister in Indianapolis and was recognized
by neighbors who safeguarded him.
It is not surprising to learn that home town friends of
Dillinger are circulating a petition asking the governor to
pardon him, which has been largely signed. It urges par
don on the condition that the outlaw surrenders to the near
est local authority and agrees to be good and discontinue
association with criminals about the most absurd proposal
possible.
Probably similar maudlin sympathy for notorious
gangsters exists among the clannish hill-billies of Oklahoma
and Kansas as well as the Ozarks, which is the main reason
why the man hunts fail. Cooperation of the country-side is
refused the authorities, and the fugitives kept informed of
the movements of peace-officers and so are always ahead of
them or hidden from them.
Grange Resolutions
In the series of resolutions adopted by the Marion coun
ty grange is one demanding legislation to compel public
office holders to resign on becoming candidates for other
offices than they hold, because the practise of retaining the
occupied office deprives the people of opportunity to elect a
successor, who must be appointed. The candidacy of Kufus
Holman, state treasurer is probably the inspiration of the
resolution, for if he should be nominated and elected gover
nor, he could appoint his own successor as treasurer and
thus dominate the board of control.
Another measure which the grange favors, is a curb on
the power of the legislature to pass bills that have just been
voted down by the people, limiting legislative action to pass
age of such bills only if resubmitted to the people. The
grange itself has been responsible for the re-passage of many
measures after their rejection by popular vote, recent in
stances being the income tax bills, Rogue river fish bill, the
oleomargarine bill, etc.
One resolution of the grange will receive universal ap
proval, that requesting that in Marion county tax statements
be mailed all taxpayers as a matter of information. Many
counties do this and it is only fair to the taxpayers that they
be notified in advance of the amount they owe, as other
debtors are notified, instead of having to stand in line for
hours to find out.
Crowding the Platform
A glance at the slogans and platforms of a majority of
the candidates for state office shows that approval of the
Bonneville dam is almost universal, and this dispite the fact
that Bonneville is a federal project and its power under fed
eral control, which will be along similur lines to that of the
Tennessee valley (Muscle Shoals) and other government pro
jects. Neither the state officials nor the legislature will have
anything to do with the sale or distribution of this power,
save as local districts may organize for its purchase and re
sale along lines set forth by the government. To claim re
sponsibility for Bonneville is merely political ballyhoo, but
each of the self-starters has to invent an excuse for his
candidacy even if it is one of bunk.
The only candidate for governor on either ticket who
has had anything to do with Bonneville is General Martin,
who led the battle for its construction, and along with Senator
McNary, is chiefly responsible for the materialization of the
project. He, better than anyone knows what effective co
operation the state can extend. Yet most of the others ire
claiming the credit and promising "free power without cost,"
which is one of those pleasing political myths that appeal
to the unthinking.
The Fireside Pulpit
KEV. E. S. HAMMOND
Then went in also that
A hundred years aco lloinre
Bushnell was arknowlfdpcd to be
the Rrrtttcst preacher of America
and our text wns the oite he med
lor his greatest wrmon. the dis
course upon Uncon lotLs Influence.
Peter nnd John had heard the news
that the Lord's tomb was found to
be empty. Tlwy ran to the sepulcher
but John was youniter and arrived
first. He looked into the vault but
did not enter. Then Peter came and
eatfer only to aolve the mystery,
nulled Into the sepulcher. Then
John went In also. Peter had no
thought of Influent In John's ac
tion, but hi action Induced John to
follow him.
In our relation with our leHow
we do uot care to reveal our unniost
elves, so we wear a mask We guard
our ieech and our aetlmu. lest
these betray our real wives This is
not because we arc villains, and de
sire to pose as aalnts, but there is
a reserve we all feel uiuM be main
tained. We do not care to 'wear our
hearts upon out uleevea "
But sometime our real M'lve re
veal tlwmwlves without intention
on our part. It may be by a look, a
gesture, a tone of voice. And this
aelf-revelatlon mean more to the
obarmnf than poaalbly anon t ha of
conventional lnlcroour ,A lew
Oregon
March t IBM
Every Aftemoon Exrept Sunday
Telephont 4681. News 4882.
Editor and Publisher
othw disciple. Jno. 20:8
weak words backed by a revealed
noble character may make nn over
whelming tmpre.s.Mun; while the
most eloquent address may leave
the hearers unmoved of they have
.seen an Inner hie not In aecoidancc
with the words. So Dr. BustuieU
taught that the nunhtie.st lnlluence
of a man's life is the unco unions
Influence of his real personality,
rather thun the Influence he seeks
to exert.
The btotraplier of Francis of As
Msi tells us that once the nuu-ua
said to one of hi. disciples, ' Let us
(?o and preach today." So they start
ed from the monastery, and walked
around through the town until they
came once more to lle monastery
ij.ite. Then the disciple aid: "Mas
ter, you said we were to preach to
dav, and we have not preached "
' Nay," St. Francis replied, "we
preached as we walked."
Cleveland (IP Buslncaa upturn ta
bemn reflected in Cleveland postal
revenues, which have been steadily
tncreftMiift during lKtt. wccordinf;
to Ironmaster .chael F. O'Oinnell.
Revenue durum March ran 23 per
cent above those in March of 1933
he said, though thone of February
and January over their correaportd
tii months of laat year were only
even per oent up.
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mai Ion
Wah i n g t o n ,
Apnl ai The
:.pnn? breeze are
whispering that
Frank Walker 1
going t o leave
around July 1.
Walker has been
President Roose
velt' inside trou
ble - shooter.
Whenever there
wa a particularly
ticklish job of rein PAI'L MAIXON
p;illii:?. coor'J mat
in t? or paf-ifvirut to be done. th
pre.Hlvr.t has called on hi good
inend.
The latr-st Job altered to Walker
was coordination of about 115 new
federal nqencles, orsamration oi a
icral bureau of new deal lnior-
ir.ation and (a'ttuifi the new home
financing campaign Btarted.
Walker's friends sav he will have
that job in shape In about ten
weeks and then will go back to ins
iwlvote business.
Reason Walker came down here
orieinally for six weeks. Those els
weeks have stretched out Into a
year. The only way he has been
able to handle his bufiine affairs
lately In to commute to New York
over week-ends.
Friendship Walker has been one
of the main manipulators of the
new deal, although always rn the
bac.keround. He Is the kind of man
every successful presidents needs at
his side, a Rood inenn wno siay.s
out of the limelicht and la ready
to sr-rciiice himself for the boas..
He wa the center of a censor
ship uproar when he set up the
central statistical ancwy. The up
roar died brnuse the board appears
to have been fair in its figures.
More lately, some of the political
critics have taken a few mud shots
at htm for failure to harmonize
the varvlne new federal agencies.
Those shots apparently were aimed
over Walker's shoulder at the fact
that anyone who can Ret harmony
out of that US piece band is not
a bandmaster, but a Houdint.
His standing is shown by the gen
eral circulation emu untruthful
stories that he micht take Louis
Hnw'i place Inside the White
House. There 1 nothing in it, of
course, except a rnther embarraseing
tribute to Walker.
rnt Howe is active around the
White House and want to be more
so. in disrespect of his health.
His doctors have found a way of
fcreDinir him down. They refuse
to give him his trousers every day
until after lunch. They were forced
to that extreme when he promised
to remain at the office only three
hours on several occasions and then
remained aix.
He Is a good bit of a philosopher
and a humorist, and he has fooled
the doctors again by .transacting
half of hi day's work from his
bedroom in a lounging robe. Said
hp to a recent caller:
"I consider it an outrage for doc
tors to make such a handsome man
as I receive visitors before I get
my makeup on.
Hmlth Miss Perkins has man
aged to keep it more or less a sec
ret that she has been working for
several weeks on a survey of the
possibilities of general federal price
fixing.
She Is the mast active member
of an inner cabinet committee ap
ixiinted to recommend a policy on
that issue.
She is justified In proceeding tin
der cover, not only b"caue It Is a
touchy subject, but because noth
ing probably will ever come of It
The difficulties of federal price-
fixing are amply illustrated by
what has happened In milk during
the past aix montlis.
The differences in production
methods, casts and capitalization in
htv Vernon, nnd In evrv firm
CORN-HOG CONTRACT STATEMENTS OF MEMBER8 OF THE
CORN-HOG CONTROL ASSOCIATION
erf Marion County, Stale of Oregon
Any person may make a confidential report, oral or written, to the
comity allotment committee or to the community committee if he finds
any statement here which he believes
The following is a statement of the baic information on corn acre
age and hog production subm'ttod by individual producers of St. Paul
District, including prermets Cham porn, St. Paul and Fairfield, who
have signed conuacts under tlie lfi;)4 Corn-Hog Production Adjustment
Program of the Agricultural Adjustment Admumtrauon.
Signed: CA':S A. f'.CHOLS. Chairman. Count v Allotment Committee;
P. R. tOlEirt.Mr. OHCAR JOHNSON.
ST. PAUL, OREGON
Community Ccmniitlep: F. R. Coli'nian, t'lmirmnn, Henry Zorn. and
T. A. Uiinvirs.
Arrr.
111
I-i::n-'
Ine 1 Arr.s Corn
Name of Producer Utm i IVJ3
Andres, Earnest . . . ' 80
Bullwpber. Dur. V. ti2
Ucrliorst, John ... llMi t yo, 'A)
Brcntano Brr. . . . 2"2 2i 1
BunnuK, L. H. ... I 95 I o"
Buyserir, Jos P.
Coleman. PR....
Coleman. Btrpli. HV:0
Coiuior, Ambrcr B tiO
Connor, Gcruld P. 68
Connor Leo
i3tv.it.son, taw. rTin
Davidson, KtifteneC. 101
Uitmars, Tlioiu. A.
UuRetteTDonaltTBr 175"
Porcier. L. P. ,10j
CiooduiK. James ,'.0
&odingrJ.N.cX 1 lo"
Gooding. L'w'oe P. 1 lO'.l
Hall. B. C.
IlaVleTT
J
lliUrr, Joseph
iltnslinw. VnuUT
Homing, A. P.
KMUlnutnn, Ai.naM. 284
Kerr. S. R. 210
Kociv-annuel C ' llio'
LaJtaimky. Ivan l II) 20 1
Letuery, Luke
make the task so tremendous as to
. be, impossible.
I B t Ing Somethin; win oome.
i however, from another secret survey
being conducted by the administra
tion into obsolescence in the cap
ital good market.
Who 1 making tha Investigation
1 not definitely known, but it may
be Walker outfit.
The Idea Is to learn all poasfcle
replacement which could be mad
for capital good and then to have
the government do something about
stimulating replacement by encour
aging easy financing of them.
It 1 the thing most needed now.
The capital goods market la lag
ging woefully while consumer goods
have been recovering.
Note Weighty Brooking Insti
tute researchers are responsible lor
this ditty on the AA A.: "Six mil
lion pm;s went to market; thirty
million pig stayed home: one mil
lion pi? s made relief meat : five
million pigs made foam."
Treasury Secretary Morgenthau
took to heart the talk that he
mmht some day leave the treasury
to be ambassador to France. Pri
vately and ardent ly, he informed
friends that nothing like that was
in tlie wind now. Some of Mor
itenthau's associates went so far as
to Misw.st the talk was started by
inflationists who wanted to get him
out, although tliat is not correct
Best newshound in the senate U.
Senator J. Ham Lewis, who not
only knows everytliing going on in
the aennte, but everything going
on back home in Illinois.
Tom Corcoran, the young Anth
ony advocate, never wears a hat.
His vocabulary resembles that of
former Justice Holme.
Speaking of the backwoods vore-
gettinfr ability of Mississippi's Bilbo,
a politician recently awierted: "Boy.
he shakes the bushes."
OLD GIESY HOTEL
AURORA, DOOMED
County Commissioner Smith and
County Engineer Swart went to
Aurora yesterday afternoon to in
spect an entirely new survey made
there by state highway engineer?
for the location of the new bridce
to be constructed there this summer
on the market road leading to the
Boone ferry road.
Under the new survev the tele-
!hone building, which was cause of
so much contxoversv under the old
survey, will be misvd completely
but the new survey will cause de
struction of the historic old Giesy
hotel, a landmark in Aurora fro
many yars. The survey will take
tm roaa to The south or tne tele
phone butloinR and leave that in
tact, but the road will hit the hotel
squarely in the center and require
it to be wrecked. A restaurant and
drink stand are now in the hotel but
it Is understood the building is not
Detnjr used Tor hotel purposes.
Official stated that the new strr
vey will give a much easier and bet
ter alitrnment than the former one.
New Machine Age
For Man Forecast
Cleveland (LP) Walter B. Pitkin.
whose two books of the past year
stayed simultaneously for months
in the best seller division, sees a new
machine ape, through the rosiest of
mse-colored glasses.
The Columbia University profes
sor, speaking here, predicted a new
machine age. no farther than just
around the comer, which will re
lieve man of tlrintj, exhausting work
thus increasing the span of life.
Instead of try-ing to fit ourselves
Into jobs, jobs will be created to
f.t ourselves, Pitkin further ven
tured. Forty new streamline trains are
to be put into service on the Neth
erlands railways. They will have
a round nose at each end. and from
an airplane will look like speeding
worms. Each train will have three
coaches with the engine in the
middle.
to be tnarcurate.
rvrdrr
UOTl-
tr Cfd
Acre. I
, 134
.:id 8tu k'r
Prndui
tints
tor NUi
l33
W2t 1U33
1J3J ; li33 ;
! 3- 7i oi e; 7: 39' 37' s 0
fa- oi 5; i m" Ic o7 0
0 10 10 5i: 48 0; 0
1.2 1 8 3lT3i!"li38. 0",
1 13' 01 ' 7 9 34 65 0i 0
l:u) i 8 8 0 2 6 4 SI 0 0
b;ito 9 2 22 83"TS- tj, 0
i 3i 2H 0 8 C ;. 63 48 0; 0
0 0 0 2 2 11 16, 0 0
10 0 2, 2 10 19 6 0
fli: 15 0 3 if Uf 56 0 0
j 14 26 8 li 40 T;6; 0, 0
I ai- 3 i io tiii 7S, t) o
I 58 20 8Ts 12 Tii64T tV 28
f 41, 33 7.6. 10 9 " 6166 0 0
5 12 Of 5 5 29 34 0 0
25 26 VJi U 20 6 1 "T28 30 1 0
823 4 1 "Uj 13 29 59 ; Of 0
2228 5 12 12 "92 4'; 0 0
18 16 0! 2l 3 14: 11 0 "5
1 36 j 15 10 0', 2 : 6 1 6 , S"7T0 0
80 J 0 0 0 53, ii"5jrji: 0, 0
"il!8 i 1620 0 71 2 "M" i 0 6
, 98 12; 17- 3 2 4 6 33 0 0
I 33 35 7; 14 181 98 122 0 6
12; 13) 0, 51 13 1 22; 83, 0 0
i 8 0 0, 51 22, 24 0 0
0 0: 2, 0 10: 0' 0 0
.; , 20, 23, . i 7 i 51 1 311 0,
Manegre, Fre'm'n E.
Manege, Jess
M Cor thy, Jerry
McDondd. C.
McKay. Albert J.
Men en, Maurice H.
Merteu, S. J.
160 10, 30
61 f 0!
MUler. B. J. J.
357
Mullen. C. a.
:334 321 311
Murphy, J. C.
1400 301 40
PohUchneider Bros. 697 j &i 28
184 35 24'
Raymond. Ilrnry
1 110 231 25
Ruben. Joseph
SialitldTPriliik-"
1101 14
12
"20
"12
Sdiomus, Jasepn A- 100
.Schui-U. J. T.
H9JJ
15,
"C8
Smith. Maurice J.
2M
Smith. P. C.
Smith. S. J.
Smith. W. M
Sl,iru;, P.-UT M.
bliromtJi-IA-Au'i:.
Stuplel. BllflliUiP.C
Van Dyke. f. M
Wolf, J. B
Znm, Henry
M. I 4 ) 12 15 4 S 35 34 176) 0 0
s. L. J. 127 8 8 0 3 6 16, 33 0 0
.C. 125 24.5; 2ir 0; 13 14 70 ( 85 1 0 8
CORN-HOG CON'fHACT STATEMENTS OF MEMBERS OF THE
COKN-HOG C'ONTKOL ASSOCIATION
of Marion Catis'.y, Ctate of Oregon
Any person may make a confidential report, oral or written, to the
county allotment csmmrUea or to the community committee if he finds
any statement here which he believos to be Inaccurate.
The following Is a statement of the baric information on corn acre
age and hog production submitted by individual producers of Hubbard
District, including precincts Butteviil?, Aurora, Donald, West Hubbard,
East Hubbard, Scollard, McKee, East Gervats and West Gervais, who
have signed contracts under the 1934 Corn-Hog Production Adjustment
Program of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration.
Signed: CAS3 A. NICHOLS. Chairman. County Allotment Committee;
P. R. COLEMAN. OSCAR JOHNSON.
HUBBARD, OREGON
Community Committee: George Crimps, Waldo Brown and Otto Bernlng.
I Acrn I I
I In I
Parm-
I ln ) Acres Corn1
Nam Of Producer Unit 1WJ ISal
Adams. Jess (120 121 151 2.7 7 0' 46 0 10 1 0
Andres, Georue jl 1 2 i T6 12 22 5 U 47 fl5j Oj 0
Avin. Harney o7 j 8 7.5; 0- 4J 4 25j 32 0) 0
Ballweber. James 55 j 131 7j 0 ; 4 1 8 30 62 0 0
Bauman, Steplien 12C 7j 7, Oj 2 2, 8; 14 0 0
Bernlng, Otto H j 6; G 0 lj l & 4 0 0
B it tier, Otto G5.3 16 1 16 Tfl ! S 6 50 j " 48j Oj 0
Bizon, John 388( 4 3 0 4 ; 4 j23j 15 Oj 0
Brack, John&rHenn 175 j T2 10 0 ioi 7 , 647 39; Oj 0
Bromely, Prank A. 39 j lj 0 6 6j Zl 32; Oj 0
Brixey, C. T. TgI 45. 5t) 1( lb"; 38) 78j Oj 0
Bronec. Mike j 63 95 8 6 T 4 T 2fl Oj 0
Brown, W. B. 1124 25 j 65, 13-5, 7j 14; 41 75j 14 0
Brown. Waldo
) 160 10 10;
Colyer, A. J.
Croisant. H. W.
0 I
Cuulorth, Ross
Dentel, Fred
'I
Dentel, Wm. C. 100 10 1
Diinlck, Amanda R. 9.96 1.5 1
Dunlck, J. A.
I 8
Donaliue, R. E. 41.13; 0 0
Doran, Joe
173 14 1 20
Doubrava, John P. 60.5 lO.o 11
Eckliout, Pranlt 50.82 S 5;
Eder. Henry
U5 10 131
Eder, George
97
Eder, John
82
EdeT, Wenzel
59 7
Epperly, K. S.
60 0, 3.5,
FauUiu'icr, M'sn'.sJ.
12 12
f'cratdi Keller, L. G. 138
10
1 195 20
Porcier. Wm. C.
62 68 10 It
Fiek, John H.
155 63; 27,
Flkan, Jolm
1206
Gagner, Willie
67
Galbler. J. G.
I 97 12, 16
Gilles. Hank
18
Grim, Earl M.
Grim. W. C.
Orlmps, Georee 56 4; 0 Oj 7 9; 4.7 1 83 0 0
Grimps. Frank jlU j 19 151 3.4! 6j 7j 50 54 Oj 0
HaTler, John L. 70 0, T; Oj 4j 4 48, 48, Oj 0
Halter, Alois 50 ( 4 4 U 2; 3, 13, 131 Oi 0 !
Halvorscn, Chas. j 36 5 5.5 0 6 5 42, 311 0 0
Hanna. Walter O. i 25 3j 4 0, t 4 17) 25 Oj 0 i
Harper. John S. fil2 0; 0 0: 0, 4: 0, 27; 11 16
Harper. Robert M. 1177 ) 2; 0 0, T, 5; 32j 4dj 91 0 j
Harrison. Rlehard 387 80 56 , 20.4, io 17 , 64, 130 , 0 , 0 I
Hatcher. Wlllrcd , 36 0 0 0, 3 S, 16, 37j 0t 0 j
Hauptman. Anton I 66 20 20 6j 2j 3 Hf 18 0 15 j
Herman. Ben H. j35 j 0, 0 6 sj 5, 34 44, Oj 0 !
Hersliberger, J. J. j 51 ! 4.5, 0 10j loj 32, 34; Oi 6 j
Hess. N. H. 55 4.25! 15 0 1, 3, 7; 24, Oj 0 !
Hill. F. M. I 73 17 1 14 0: lj 2, 8, 17; 0, 0
Hit. John D. :100 8 151 15 3 6j if 48 50 0 6
Hopkins, James L. U) j Bh 0 Oj 2 6; 10, SI) 0, 0
fiTiglies, B. H. 62 lQi 10 0, 7 5T6g 0, 0
Hunt, Henry L. W5 2o 20 4 12 ITj 60 67 15 0
inkails. Frank Tb2 22) 1 ij 14 24 78 105 1 ij 0
Jackson. Jerome R. 107 j 7 7, 5; ij iT 27; 172; 6 6
Jemou, P. E. fso 13 10 3 6j Sj 24, 35 1 6 0
Johnson. Elmer fiO I 2 i 0 3 i 2533j 35 21
Jonea. Gordon 300 j J3 0 0 10, 8 B7. 34 2, 6
Kahut. Frank T66 6 t 6 i 13 18 Ho 0 0
kiilint. Josejjh Im j io ! 1T sj 3 45"" "ll 0 0
KaiTut, W. I 84 j 14 19 49 r 1 8 8 2 6
Keines. Enimett ; 22 i 6, 7 0 2, 2 4; 0, T
Kern. Waitfr"s! JM5 0 3t 3S 5 30 50 6 32
koetne Louu j SO j l" 4 6, 3 1 20 S, 8 0
Kiisriinirk, John 225 25 35 9 IS TT 996 0 0
lBrun, Mrs. Drda 60 j 0 12 0 36 2b 215 173; 0 0
Lorth. William T27 j 7 10 0 4 7 23 56 0 , 0
Lettenmaier, CarlF. 106 j 4 7 5 5 , S 45i 35, 0 0
Matthieu. F. L. TTi j 0 16 0 12 U 90 63 i 0
Martin. Kay j Hi I 0 0 6 6 8 0 . 43 dj 0
Marron, Mrs. Mary j 45 7, 4 0 6. 11 49: 40 0 0
McCarty. Jr., C. W. 11 1 0 t) 0, 12, 0 lj 0, 0
MfCorinict, J A. ,118 I 23! 23 7, 16, 16 74 T 0 0
MrGonecal. Z. j18 i 6 2 0 T 0 53 0 0
McKay, Jsmes T. ,112.18 14i 1! 45 10 14 45 79 0 9
Miller Brci 1232 23 S ff 22 66 127 0 0
Miller, B-'rnard N. '13 I 15 11 tj it 81 143' 0 0
Miller, Fxl ; 25 0 0 7, 10 47; 96 5
I Miller, J. H. 100 I loj it 2 10 44 43 0 0
j NlTlieT7MaHll A ; 68 i T(T 10 0 $ ti 32 33 0
Milier Val .390 I 33, 37 1 7a5 l. 12 , 73 , 79 , 0 0
1M 16; 30 S r T' 53! ' 0' 0
M 14; 12 0 ; 1 ft ; 3 30 j 0, 0
rMT" 7 6- 6 4; f 3S 46 o; 0
57 60 75; 14 25, 15, IX j 98J 0j 0
u; fli;
0j 0
0 0
ft; 2b 41 1
11 43 07 f
1 IB S3! 1501
IS:
71 13, 17, 1 17 j 102, 16, 30
26 1521 1481
I
11
9
10
39
47
T
Ji
221
0
uiT
16 75 S3,
38 43 : 2831
I
I Con-
'trefd- LittPti
I Teedfr
1 Hni f and Sto'fc'r
Produced I Hni
Acre I Farrowrd for Market! Bouiht
1M4 1933 1912 1933 1W3J 1937
4 117, 27 j 0 0
6 18, 0 0
I
2 2 18 18j
l l
12! 391
431
I
4 10 18 1 0 0
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To the Ladies.
of Willamette Valley!
Attention!
I've tasted it be
fore, Mary, and I'm
going to attend the
school all 3 days
next week.
Don's Miss A Session!
It Will Mean Many
Dollars Saved To
Your Food Budget!
And If You Can't
Be Present....
Send In Your Subscription To
The Capital Journal
for authentic news and recipes
from tlie
Cooking School
Wednesday Thursday Friday
April 25 April 26 April 27
at the
Salem Armory
2 TO 4 P M.
Yes Grace,
this is
from the
same reci
pe I copied
at the last
Capital
Journal
cooking
school.
from any day in April
to the corresponding
day in October.