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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1916)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOI RNAL. SALEM. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. DEC. 20. 1916 FIVE x 1 NEW WMIFIED A-DVEKTI8INQ KATES - . , r Rite per word New Today: Each jMM.il. per word lc One week (u laaertions) per word ac One month (20 insertions) per word 17c The Capital Journal will not 1m i - - pana.ble for more thai i one insertion for errors in lassified Advertisements. I Xead -our advertisement the first day I it appears and notify us immediately. ; Minimum charge, 15c. I FOR RENT 81UN8 For aale at Cap ital Journal office, tf JONES' NURSERY State and 24th. janT FOR SAI.K Niee Thone HNJ1. apples. delivered. dcc21 HOU.SE FOR RENT 383 Belvicw St. jan2 TWO PIGS Fur sale. I.ivrsley Station. 11. L. Tavlor. dec21 APPLES WANTED At Commercial Cider Works. dec23 WANTED Copies of Sept. 14th, 1916. 1'hone It. FOR SALK 2 fresh cows and a heifer calf. 771 N. Corn'!. , dce21 FOR SAI.K 2 heifer calves. Call 31.1 N. 20th St. dec22 CHOICE Goat meat for gale cheap at 1230 crry street. tl j GUT PRICES On farm sale bills at! The Journal office. GET YOUR Tresspass notices, new nupply of cloth ones at Capital Jour-1 na1. tf I TRESPASS Not i nal office. es for sale at Jour-1 tf ! FOR SALE Baled grain hay and vetch ! hay. George Swegte. tf j n j OLD FIR 2nd growth, oak, ash, maple ad vine maple wood for sale. W. F. Proctor, phone UW, janl WANTED To buy a second hand stump puller. 1005 N. 17th St. Phone 82TW. dec20 FOR- SALE Or trade, cheap, good gen tle driving horse, buggv and cart. 980 S. Hth St. dec20 AN XMAS BARGAIN records lor $9.00. Church Apt. 11. -Victrola with Call at 152 S. dcc20 OLD FIR Wood for sale, dry or green. $5.00 per cord. E. D. Johnston Phone 334. dec-25 WHITE Leghorn and White Plymouth Hock pullets for sale. Phone 2030W. dec20 FOE BENT Nicely furnished house keeping rooms, reasonable, 855 N. Commercial St. dec21 FOR RENT A neat 5 room house with bath, hot and cold water, electric ligh'.s, close in, $11.50 per month. See J.-A. Mills. dee2! FORCED TO SELL Absolute pickup for some one in two houses and two extra lots here in Salem. For infor mation call Mr. Wells at the Marion hotel thin evening. dec20 FOR SALE Stock hogs from 60 to 80 lbs., registered, Poland China boar; large Shorthorn registered Durharii bull, 2 yrs old. Horses, registered and grades. Address W. H. Egan, Gei vais, Rt. 2,. Phone 3F11. dcc2(i E Governor Points Out Some Features That Look Bad on Their Face Governor Witliycombe and Jesse J Stearns, attorney for the Central Trri-1 gation company, which is asking the state desert land board to recommend ,. ., , to congress an extension ot their con- tract with the state and government f or the reclamation of 120,000 acres of -des- ert land near Bend clashed this morn-j intr at the meetine'of the board when the matter came up for consideration. The meeting was for the purpose of giving the. water users a chance to be beard. JNone of them appeared in per-, son but numerous itelegams stating their position were received. The board decided to ask congress to extend the contra, t between the state and the government for ten years, which time the company says is neeessary to de velop the project. Accordingly, resolu tions will be forwarded to the Oregon delegation in congress and to the de Irtment of the interior, recommend ing that such extension be granted. The action was taken by unanimous ote as it was believed the only thing to do in the present situation to pre serve the water rights. The action ill in no way prevent the project from beine turned'into an irrigation district if it is so desired. "With all due respect to Mr. Stearns and his enterprise," said Governor win,. ...,,,!,., -I t!i close of the meet-' ing "I want to make protest against the company I find from the report f tin. nnhfie service commission that k . kL, ,.irol,ie The renort shows ! that Koseoc Howard, manager, drew 500 a month salary but this was fin ally reduced to $300 a month. Also it shows that he received a commission for the sale of the lands and that he was a member of the Howard company W hmlt the nroiect. He thus caught the comoanv in three ways. I regard. the company as having brought on it- elf the present agitation against it and believe the time is coming when Uh , project should be turned into a general I TODAY - roR RENT Good farm, ISO acres. Ad- dreaa owner. 115 Sooth Twelfth. U HARRV Window cleaner. Phone 70S. ianlS J qoAX MEAT First class only, at O. K Gr0ierv ,tore Uth fc Ht,tJ,.'. janU ' FURNISHED Apartments, also barn suitable for garage. 491 N. Cottage DRY 4 ft. slab wood for sale. Call 'Richardson Grocery. Phone 494. dt'"J SECOND GROWTH Fir and mi.edi wood for sale. E. I. Nelson. Phone 1357. deel'2 FOR SALE This week, hind quarter of young beef, 8c; front 7c, deliver ed. Peoples Mkt. Phone 994. deo23 W A NT ED Girl to work for board and w.orR 1 , T .,,Zt room and go M school. Call IM7 State ' and tbe s,ate fore,ltr V" St. Phone lit, ask for V. DvkatWjl winnifred VclMkt. deputy ' ' I county clerk, is coriiiued to her home by LOST Packages on river road about 5 miles from Salem, finder please no tify L. Townsend, Gervais, Rt. 2. Phone 6F3. - dec20 WANTED For cash, stocks of goods, anv kind, from 1000.00 to $25,000. 00. See Col. A. J. Baldwin, Salem, Or. dec22 CALENDAR For 1917 Large f iguros for practical nse. Call or phone Horn- er, H. Smith, the insurance man. Me - CornacK building. Phone 96. tf WANTED TO RENT By married man i place furnished, dairying or farm nig, shares. References. Phone 314M, Salem, Oregon. dec23 WANTED House keeper to assist twelve year old girl, mother gone to hospital. M. J. Gillenberg, Turner, Ore. dee21 WANTED Potatoes and hay. I'm in the market for a few cars of potatoes. Will acept at once. Fred Brentano, 1'hone 900, Argo hotel, for SALE A 5 room house and two lots, two blocks to school, 3 bloeks to store, place has a small barn and good well. Price $850. See J. A. Mills. dec22 MONEY LOANED On furniture, hors es, vehicles, merchandise, etc. Trans actions private. Possession retained. Union Loan Agency, 217 South High St. jenlO MONEY TO LOAN On second hand jewelry, men's clothing, musical in struments, tools, guns, bicycles etc. Also bought, sold and traded. Capital Exchange, 337 Court St. Phone 493. ja19 FOR RENT Jan. 1st, 7 room house on south 16th, near State, bath, light and water, 2 large lots all kinds of fruit. Also household furniture. phono-2021 or call at 257 S. 16th. declS I The monthly membership meeting of INVESTORS OPPORTUNITY-Acre-1 lhf; Commercial club has been postponed age with modern improvements, New-1 until Wednesday evening, January 17. ton county Kansas, for acreage nearjThere scems be s0 much Christmas Salem, or farm in the valley. 10 Ln- ;f ; , oir fuat ,. . ,im,, ,. iitica i icai uiu j'luues, acres, good buildings, goo piunes, ruuu. Dd land, it taken soon, $1800, The improvements are worth the price asked tor all. . 1 j i . --a e..m ZZrZEZZrTKZA. high school alumni Saturday " ' . ..- . - ' I acres cleared, 40 tillable, balance tim- V TT . JJL , , , "r ber pasture fair improvements, all-and 11 . " ' thcre that.t,,'e 1)askc,,ba" ien.-eu; special bargin. $1700 if taken I Eanus of the season will be played by soon. Wood & Soeolofskv, Room 8,!the hlRn hooI. Jiavne bldg. Salem, Or. . dec23 1 m 0 . , ' Carpenters are working today in the i i preparing everything for the AT VERDUN ARE STEADY BUT LITTLE FIGHTING Berlin, via Sayville wireless, Dee. 20. -The so-called "Lusitania medal" which London reports have indicated was extensively circulated in Germany, was pnvatelv executed and hardly a hundred people in Germany knew of it. ti,e nress bureau asserted" today. The i ! medal was coined in a private house ' ln Munich and its makers report that !up to December I, only 180 copies have go,d nd of ' thi n,1 75 went , , t0 forejgn countries. j The statement was evoked by London j reports claiming that coining of such i a medal was "characteristic of the merman nation. London reports recently charged that unmm '-' wa3 a ;.. memoratiug and glorifying the sinking ; of the Lusitania, Famine in Russia Berlin, via Sayville wireless, Dec. 20. -Three large Russian towns are on the verge ot iamme, an article in tne .-wea - , , . , . .v, ;.k o.r.o,,.. tK,. ift,.r,r.r..t!ay passed the urgent deficiency bHl says, according to an official press bu reau report today. There is grain in Russia, but it cannot be bought, the ar ticle says, in I'etrograd, Moscow and other large cities the ministry has been obliged to provide the population from the military stocks. irrigation district with the settlers in .control. In defense of the company, Jesse Stearns declared: "We put more than a million and a half dollars into the project and had to have a man of abil- ity to do the constructive work and 1 make the sales. While it has cost oth- er iiroieets 2o per cent or more to sell j the lands, it has cost us only 15 peT I cent. .Not a dollar has come out ot tne maintenanee fund lor we have put i more money into it than we have re- i ceived from the settlers." been considerable sentiment in favor of changing it into an irrigation uis- tnct. ,.,,,,, nAII V fAPTTAT 101 RNAI WAIL I UUlliiL JUUai.lL CITY NEWS J (Continued from page eight.) chassis is 1,800 pounds and on account of not being crated, or knocked down, it carries a rate of double first class in its travels. In addition to the heavy expreaa charges, a special premium of 25,000 insurance was paid amountiug to $25 for the premium in shipping from Albany to Salem. A special representa tive of Studebaker Bros, travels with the chassis. o Norman G. Jacobson, forest exarnin- er of the United States forest service, was in the Oregon state forestry de partment this morning to get figures on fire protection work on the Oregon and California line. The figures will go in to the report to the forestry depart ment at Washington in connection with a serious case of blood poisoning. The fuueral of Myrtle White will be held at 10:30 o'cloek Thursday morning from the chapel of Webb t Clough. Burial will be in the City Yiew ceme- Ittry. Another luxury for the Christmas table is the golden date which has just i e received. This date comes direct jfrom Arabia and the shipment received j today is the first of the season. o unristmas visitors wuu nope to advantage of holiday rates may buy as late as Christmas day or as early as tomorrow. The return date on all holi day rates is placed at Wednesday, Jan uary 3. o The Salem navy recruiting station re ports the enlistment of Charles C. Over man. His age. is 19, and he lived ou rural route one. He has been sent to the naval training station near San Francisco. The Christinas exercises of the First Methodist church Sunday school will be held in the Sunday school room Friday evening of this week, beginning at 7:30 o'clock. Class features will constitute the program. o Tne Salem Social Service Center is of fering for sale their Christmas stamps for the benefit of their charity fund. These stamps are on sale at many of the stores. The sale is in charge of Mrs. W. E. Anderson. A five acre tract, three and one-half miles south of Salem on the Jefferson road, was bought this week by Geo. W. Johnson. The consideration was $1,200. There is a small house on the tract and it is all under cultivation. Teachers of Marion county are tak ing examinations today in the First Christian church under the supervision cf County Superintendent W. M. Smith. About 60 teachers are in attendance. a examination covers three days. uiv;Bni,p o nostnone the nieetimr -. The high school basketball team will eveniug at the old armory. The room nvoii t Vi aj fiitY- ViqII j Ii. ..- rn.Dsronrriirl 'opening of the three days' carnival to begin tomorrow evening. The great mys tery will be made known, answering the question, "Are you lucky?" Five tur- jkeys will be given away. There will be no admission charge. Turkey for the Christmas dinner will cost about the same as the turkey for the Thanksgiving. A few days after Thanksgiving there was a general slump in the turkey market but today is the opening day of the Christmas turkey trade and the chances are the price will stiffen to from 26 to 30 cents retail. The .I'nrtlflnil market is sti'mio- with a nricp 'today of 25 and 26 cents wholesale for pressed. cnieht the Y. W. C. A. chorus under the direction of Miss Lucile Barton will give a concert at the First Methodist church. The chorus will be assisted by Miss Jov Turner, violin; Wallace Mac Murray." organist ; R. O. Williams, cello: T. B. Roberts, organ soloist, and F. S. Barton, baritone. The ushers will be Christie Jewttt, Gertrude Eakin. l.ela McCaddam, Gladys Luthry, Dollie Smith and Irene Kuntz. The concert w begin at 8 o'clock and there will be a silver offering. B JU I I IT . 1 IXe.'lCl IS TVlCU For Soldiers' Families Washington, Dec. 20.- carrying an appropriation of $4,578,250. Included is an item of $4,250,000 for the relief of dependent families of guardsmen ou the border. Other items cover contingent expens es and wages at the Philadelphia, Den ver and San Franeis"o mints, the New York assay office and miscellaneous expenses for the supreme court of the District of Columbia. GERMAN IS RELEASED Berlin, via wireless to Sayville, Dec. 20. Thanks to the intervention of President W ilson, Prince Ferdinand Radzivill, a member of the German reit-hstag who has lieen a prisoner in Kussia tor twentv eight months has been released. The press bureau sa'd' today he was in Stockholm and would continue to Berlin shortly. Bears Raid Market and Knock Prices New York, Dec. A raid by bears For Winter Colds fl III You as) oatn-; It may sin nine chronic. Chronic catarrh tr ourattr Ibiraiss arMrtnic. involving the atoaurh and the intes tinal tract as wall as the bom or throat It naaana stagnation. PERUNA IS IN VIGORATION It clean away the waste matter, dispels the Inflammation and tones ap the eyatem. For forty-five years it has been used in catarrh by thousands of grateful sufferers, who willinely tell the work) of their LITTLE WOMAN TELLS OF Because She Tried to Kiss Husband Was Made to Sit Up All Night Chicago, Dee. 20. Because she tried to kiss him, James H. Barnes made his wife get out led and sit up all night, while he slept, the wife, Mrs. lva Barnes testified today in her trial for the killing of Barnes here last Septem ber. In a small, trembling voice that could scarcely be heard by the jurors, the slight, haggard woman piled np in cident after incident in which she said her husband cursed and struck her. Frequently she refused to repeat the profanity she said he had used, saying, 'well, he just swore," and once when her attorney insisted upon a repetition, she burst into tears and seemed near a breakdown. Mrs. Barnes testified she met Barnes when she was a milliner, through a card thrust into her hand ou leaving a cafe where he had evinced interest in her. He was 43 and she was 21 when they married in UKIS. Soon after the wedding she said, he began to display what she ealleo. " temperament " and within a few months struck her and knocked her down. Such episodes were frequent thereafter, she said, the occasion being some times money af fairs and some times her desire to ac company him on trips out of town. on the stock market shortly after 2 o'clock this afternoon drove prices off 2 to nearly twelve points from the high quotations of the day. United States Steel broke to 108V4 under an avalanche of selling orders, as compared with high today of 113. The. drive, continued until at 2:30 Atlantic Gulf had dropped dropped to 108; Marine pommmi sold at 27, off six 3-8; Central Leather was down 4 at 88 4 and Utah Copper four at 100. Bethlehem Steel broke 72 to 500. The market continued weak to the close. Atlantic Gulf and Vst Indies steam ship company closed at 1 00, off U; Baldwin Locomotive at 03 84, ntf 4 1-8 Reading was down 1 at 106 5-8. During the last hour 540,000 shares were dumped into the exchange, mak ing total sales for the day 1,580,000 shares. Weak avvounts were wiped out by the hundreds, while many profes sional traders were reported selling heavily and reapini; profits as prices crumbled. It was 3:08 before the stock exchange ticker cleared all the reports of sales. See Roth First We' are giving Salem Consumers the Best Table Service to be had, here or anywhere in Oregon. SAVE TIME-SEE US FIRST. 50 BOXES FOR A STARTER Fine colored, large juicy Oranges, at regular wholesale prices 1-2 BOXES $1.40. WHOLE BOXES $2.75. Extra Fancy Oranges 35c Dozen the Best go at 40c Candies for the Kiddies 10 lb. Lots Per Lb. or Over- Xmas Mixed 15c 13 l-2c Broken Mixed .. 15c 13 l-2fi Gem Mixed 20e 15c French Mixed . . 25c 21c Chocolates . 25c ISe Jelly Beans 20c 10c Xmas Nuts Fancy Mixed Nuts, No. 1 lb. . Mixed Nuts, No. 2, per Oregon, No. 1, Walnuts lb Oregon, No. 2, Walnuts, lb- . Brazil Nuts, No. 1, per Filberts. No. 1, per lb. . . per ... 25c lb. 20C per . . 25C per r 20C fb 25c 25C Fresh lb. . Roasted Peanuts, per r 15c Send In Your Order For a good Turkey we always have them. WHY BUY STALE COFFEE You do, if you buy from our town peddlers. Trv Our Blends We Roast It Fresh Everyday Gem 35c; Imperial 40c; Economy 25c; Special 30c Roth Grocery Co. to otTfomf K cold valuabl. In coM. A cold is rehVf. Pernna'a hm history of helpful- aaas is the beat evidence that it is hat yon ahonld take. Liquid or tablet form tor your con venience. Manalin Is the Ideal laxative and liver tonic. In tablet form it ia deli cious to take, saild and effective, with out unpleasant effects, and will not form a habit. Liquid, 35c and 11. Ou ; tablets, 10c and Me. THE PERUNA CO.. Columbu., O. BATTLESHIPS WILL BE GREATEST AFLOAT; TO Mount Twelve 16-Inch Guns Engines of 180, 000 Horsepower Washington, Dec. 20. America 's now giant battleships will cost $24,000,000 each and will mount 12 10 inch guns,, naval chiefs told the house naval com mittee today. They will be. so far as is known, the largest afloat, and the r.iost powerful, with 180,000 horsepower elec trie engines Read Admiral Joseph Strauss, chief of the orduance bureau, told the com mittee he himself would have selected 14-inch guns for the ships. Bearing out the testimony of Captain W. S. Simnifl yesterday. Admiral Strauss declared his belief that in a "fight " the range of battle would be below 12. 000 yards within the fighting range of 14-inch guns. In sueh a case, he said, the fleet with the greater number of guns, other things being equal, would be superior. On the new battleships, he said, from 16 to 18 14-ineh guus could be mount - el as against I; 10-ineh guns. :j jje -je ; ;c : : : BORN WHEELER-To Mr and Mrs. Ambrose Wheeler, at their home, northeast of Hayesville, Monday, December 18, 1916, a daughter. She has been named Louisa Anna Wheeler. MeDOl'GAl. To Mr. and Mrs. W. L. MeDougal at the Salem hospital Tues day, December 19, 1916. a son. : - E".F5 i mwwwww, WALKER In the city, Mondav. De 1 cember 18, 1916, John H. Walker, in . his 74th venr i and son liv - The funeral He is survived by n wif mg on the darden road. Ihe tiiuoml services will be he!d at 2 o'clock Thurs-! iluv aftan man XA tl.n ..VinTinl nf U'.Mi! & Clough. Burial services will be held ' under the auspii'es of the G. A. H. Bur ial will be in the O. A. R. cin-le, and will be conducted by the Rev. R. N. Avians. See Our Assortment Dromedary Dates, per lb. . . 15c Fard Dates, per lb 25c Layer Figs, per lb 25c Loccum Figs, Jars, .. 40 and 60c Stuffed Dates, Jars 80c California Glac'e Fruit 75c, mi.&o Glac'e Cherries, 1-2 box 20c, boxes 66c Cresca Preserved Ginger 35c, 50c Riches Preserved Ginger . . 36c California Layer Baisins, lb. 26c Walnuts and Almonds, shell ed , 65c Peacon Meats 90c Jordan Almonds 86c Atmores Plum .Pudding . .35, 66c Ehinan' Ripe Olives, jar 65, 85c F TO REGAIN HER CHILD Mrs. Ina Anderson Brings Suit Against Child's Grand Parents A fight for the possession of 6-year-old Cecil Anderson, son of Ina Ander son, who has come from Hill City, Kansa., to claim him, was begun in the circuit court here today when she asked the court for u writ or habeas corpus against William and Nancy i Anderson, grand rents of the. child. ! who live one mile from Aurora. Mrs. Anderson, the mother, declare : I that the grand parents are wrongfully i I and unlawfully holding the child Amu her and illegally restraining it of its liberty. In her petition she says she was mar- i I ried to D. L. Anderson, son of Willium land Nancy Anderson, and two children were born -( ecu and Kenneth. She says she and her husband liM(ed togeth-1 er until September 1, 1913, at HilU City, Graham county, Kansas. Then he j kidnaped Cecil, deserted her and came to Oregon. When he arrived here he: placed Cecil with his grand-parents at Aurora. Ijitcr she says she secured a divorce from her husband and was awarded the possession of the child. She declares she has visited lite grand parents nnd demanded the iiossession of Cecil but thai they refuse to give him up. She alleges they are holding the child for the payment of a debt alleged to be due for his support and care for the past three years and that they demand $o a week for this. Because she feels she is the rightful protector of the child and because she says she can give it a good home and an education, she asks that the grand parents be compelled to show cause why they should not deliver the boy into her possession. jay Cnnvi IIauGA Naure t lyVIUl liuuov mno An action for the collection of a promissory noto of $100 and also for the collection of money for goods sold and delivered in the sum of $175 wits begun in the circuit court today by jjrnard Kleekers against J. H. Klecker, et ux. asked. Judgment for both sums is Default and judgment in the sum of $2S9 was givn'against Hose W. O'Con I nor in favor of Silas Malcy by the j'eourt yesterday. A second judgment ! in favor of Silas Maley in the sum of I $313.07 was granted by default I against Rose W. O'Connor and F. D. i O'Connor. i T.i the action brouirht by William w4 eompmy against Frank luda, an action to recover damages for an alleged breach ot 6 ntract , to sell how, the defendant tiled a motion .sen iiuj j i ii,....,,' j today asking that the. jilaintitf be tt- ; quired to make the worflTttg ot the eon : qu tract more ' definite. A suit in equ'iy for the partition of land which is the residue of the estate of Theodore Gehlcn was begun t.iday bv U'na Minton. et al, against Nicholas r i:,.M., m 1. It is asserted both parties are the oivners of the land. Thev ask that three disinterested per sons' be appointed to act as referees to divide the land into the parts each should have. In the matter of flic estate of Katharina Schuele. who died February 14 1010, George A. Schuele, executor, reports that the money on deposit is, $1 130 nnd that 308 had been paid out. ; Of the sum remaining ifoOO is to go to : Kntchen Tciber, who livts in Germany. Tin moner is to be sent WTOUgn im- agency the Gemrau consul at 1 ori- lnnd. The final account of Buchael Unhurt. . j i-I.i .i.triT mt the estate of Harry til,ort iWonsod. states that tl i uMi 8 ex-1 enlleete'd was 1.51l.35 and that tl. nj tM were 1.5Hi.35. January 15. has been set 'for the final hearing estate. 1'ilT. f the PERSONALS ! I , a i J. E. Drillctte is in the city from .Marion. . . " A. J. Palmer, of Dallas, is in the city. F. G. White is in the city from FUl city- L Mrs. E. E. Wharton, ot Monm uuth, in tne cny. Miss Grace Bailey will spi n the va cation season in Tac.omn. Mrs- H. M. Cox will spend the holi davs in Arlington. Ore. I Mrs. Fred Crowley was in me citj yesterdav from Falls City. Mr. arid Mrs. L. W. Orimni, of Shaw. are registered at the BHgh. ' Mrs. D. C. Hearth left this morning I for her home at Calgary, Alberto. I M. Okable, of Independence, register 1 ed at the Capital hotel yesterday. ! E. H, Huberts will leave in a few days I ot Tacoma for the Christmas season, j C. H. Chapin and wife left this morn j ing for Emmett, Idaho, for the holi I days. Miss Laura A. Cunimings lett lor r.v erett. Wash,, this morning over the Ore gon Electric. Mrs, T. K. Ford left this morning over the Southern Pacific for Chicago for a month's visit. G H. Tracy and wife left this morn ing for Tacoma where they were called bv the illness of their daughter. Clyde McMillan and F. M. Broun, ot In I. Iiendcnce, are in the city transact ing business. Abner Magers left yesterday for San Francisco over the Southern Pacific for the festive season. B. E. Jackson, of Willamette univer sity, will visit with friends and rela CO g CO 3 0 1 00 "8 i aj ImmL - JJ 0 3 T3 O1 "S tives during the holiday season in P;tv- ctte, Iduho. Miss Mary Mae Walker and Miss Esther Yeeaiid, of Willamette uuiv.r isity, will spend the vacation time at i their home in Walla Walla. B. M. Hill and wife left this morning ;over the (Southern Pacific for Croft, 1 Texas, where they expect to make their ihome. 1 Dr and Mrs. F. M. Hellworth of Falls City, were in Salem Tuesday. Mrs. Hell- "uriu nil ior u. visit, witn relatives in Montana. Hudson Council Elects Its Officers i At a meeting held Monday evening! , in the Masonic Temple, the following ; officers of Hudson Council No. 1, Itoyal and Select Masters, were in I stalled: ' Thrieo Illustrious Master A. P. j Marcus. Deputy Illustrious Master Dr. O. A. 1 Olson. j Prineipul CoudiK'tor of the Work j Russell M. Brooks. Treasurer Lot M. Pearee. Recorder Glenn V. Niles. Captain of Guard B. V. Carlton. Conductor of Council Pete Rasmus sen. Steward W. T. Davis. Se.ntinal 11 e n ry Si-hoe maker. The work wus conducted by M. L. . Meyers, Pact Grand Thrice Illustrious Master, assisted by past" Illustrious Master L. S. Rowland, 3