The O regon - ' Issued Daily Except Monday by THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY - - 215 S. Commercial St, Salem, Oregon. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. R. J. Hendricks. . T. ,. . Manager Stephen A. Stone... 1 Managing Editor Ralph Glover. . -.. .' Cashier W. C. Squler... Advertising Manager Prank Jaskoski Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier in Salem and suburbs, 15 cents a week, 50 cnts a month. ' DAILY STATESMAN, by mail, $6 a year; $3 for six months; 50 cents a month. For thnee months or more, paid in advance, at rate of $5 a year. 8TJNDAY STATESMAN, $1 a year; 50 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. WEEKLY STATESMAN, issued in two six-page sections, Tuesdays and Fridays, $1 a year; 50 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23. Circulation Department, 583. .Job Department. 583. , Entered at the Postotfice lnSalem7 "Oregon, as second class matter. 1 yiajj .ft..VVVWfc. m aa? j LOGANBERRY JUICE IS THE BOTTLES GOING Thirty-five car loads Making 36.500 cases ; Making 200,000 dozen bottles ; That is, 2,400,000 bottles. The above represents the orders and being at this time delivered, or on the way for delivery, to eighteen cantonment points in the United States, from the bottling plants in Salem of the Pheasant Northwest Products Co. That is $180,000 worth of loganberry juice. It is going to the soldier boys of the United States; direct to their cantonments. - - No doubt many thousands of bottles besides are going to them, from Eastern jobbers. But the managers h re KNOW that the two million four hundred thousand bottles are going to the soldier boys. The way orders are being booked now, it is quite plain that there will be no loganberry juice left when the first berries of the new crop will be ready to crush, in July. The supply will be exhausted, and the dealers will be yelling for more. ; The reader must conclude, from the facts mentioned at the open ing of this article, that loganberry juice is the Liberty drink. It is the Liberty drink par excellence. "The taste lingers" The soldier boys will want more of it, and they will want still more, when they get back into civil life, not for drinking purposes only ; not even mainly. They will want it for flavoring and icing and coloring, and for ice cream, and all the uses of the kitchen, where it is destined to play its largest part in the life and living of the nation and the world. " For here in balem is being nurtured a world industry. What other industry will, for add a million dollars to the industry, to be distributed in all the var ious channels of trade I Is it necessary to say more than has been said in this column dur ing the past two weeks, to convince that more loganberries ought to be twenty days T Thousands of acres more. ? This is vital. The business cannot be overdone. . There will be a demand for been devoted to the cultivation $2,000,000 a year industry shall have grown to a $20,000,000 a year industry. The Liberty motor will be Uncle Sam's humming bird. The planting of more loganberries ie vital, right now, to the great lo ganberry Industry. 2 True Americans are standing to gether.' "All one body, we." Don't listen to any other, line of talk. Loganberry juice Is a Liberty drink, too. The boys in the canton ments are getting 2,400,000 bottles of it right now, from Salem. Near beer is not sold at Camp Lewis. But loganberry Juice is, In large quantities, and it is going from Salem. Bill Sunday says that Germany is "the most infamous, vile, crazy, av aricious, bloodthirsty, sensual and .vicious nation that has ever disgrac ed the pages of history," Beyond that, however, it is presumed that Billy thinks Germany is all right. America is not divided by race hatreds. t He fwho says to the con trary lsa pubTUnemy. Los Ange les Times. Quite true. In former times, too, California has been among thje greatest offenders in th!.n rerpect, endangering our friendly re lations with Japan, a nation that wants to be, and is bound by every good interest to, be, on good terms with us. It is hoped that an "nervation made by Mr. Tlryan at sbt rman on the subject of the war will ffnd Its way into Canadian papers, and par ticularly those which circulate in Toronto. It was at Toronto, it will be recalled, that a band of hoodlums took it on themselves to Insult Mr. Bryan taking license from the as sumption that their patriotism is more robust than his. It is to be doubted if those uniformed rowdies TUTU RES DATE 9 "."March '17. 18 and 19. Toymen Mis sionary convention. Salem. March 22. Friday. Mating of bank , Ins re;rantattvra of Marlon county to rievlae waya and mean tor waging next Liberty loan drlre. March Jr Fridar Ornfon ITortrrow ra association meeta for dissolution. March 20, Saturday. Freshman alee at Willamette university. April . Saturday. Third Liberty loan drive bea-ir. ; ApTll. Saturday. Third Liberty loan drive opens. -vAPrJ,U '1?rih wf.it Marlon County Christian Endeavor convention, Salem. conVVnt'S.reln. UlaeTecUIri!U5r-'rlmar,r Statesman Cl - LIBERTY DRINK; MILLIONS OF TO THE SOLDIERS for loganberry juice now booked each 1000 acres of land cultivated. every one in Salem and vicinity planted, and right now in the next mote, after 20,000 acres shall have of loganberries. -and tlie present of Toronto can match either tha clearness of vision or the resolute ness of spirit witnessed by the ob servation of Mr. Bryan at Sherman "We are going to win this war,' he is reported to have said, "by whip ping Germany. Going straight throue-h is the only way to do It, and ll of must get this idea of go ing through into our systems." It is to he hoped that all Canada Is as free of "defeatism" and of faint heartedness as hat statement shows Mr. Bryan to be. He is not clamor ing for the beginning of peace nego tiations, because he sees that the only kind of a peace obtainable now by negotiations would be a peace of defeat. There is, however. nothing surprising in this attitude of Mr. Bryan's. He showed more re luctance to have the United State3 pnter the war than many of us thought was compatible with a just sense of its duty or its interest. But once his judgment was overruled by the country, he submitted to It with a completeness and grace which may be held up as a splendid example of patriotism. However much of a pac if 1st Mr. Bryan may have been, he at all events interned vhis pacifism for the duration of the war and has rbown that his pacifism is of th-3 kind that is entirely compatible with latriutism.(-Dallas, Texas, News. We have spent a, lot of time to'l Ine what we are going to do In th prosecution of this war. A narra tive of what we have accomplished will be much more to the point. I.os Angeles Times. The record tak en as a whole is very creditable; though there have been mistake; I TO RELIEVE CATARRHAL ; DEAFNESS AND HEAD : NOISES If you hfive Catarrhal IH-afncei or hend nics fro to ymir drug lt and get 1 ounce of t'armint (double strength), and add to it hot wat-ir and Just a little sugar as directed on parh package. Take 1 tablespoonful four time a daj This will often hrintr quick re lief from th.? distressing head noiee. . flogged nostrils sho-ild open. hreathinR become easy and the'mucous stop dropping Into th throat. It is tasy to prepare, com little and is v'easant to taie. anyone who has Catarrhal Deaf ness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. For salo by Capital Drug Store. and there are weak spots, which are to be remedied. Considering our ttate of unpreparedness a year ago. the tasks accomplished are stupen dous, and the speed already assumed is such as to make future accom liishments even more marvelous. Put, with all the progress so far Made, our forces in France still lactt some of, the essentials in equipment for successful heavy offensive f ght irg and it is not likely t'.ifet Gen eral Pershing will be stampeded, by any amount of impatient urging, to put our forces into such battles un til everything is ready; everything, down to the last detail. Then our boys will go through, and they will do it with proportionately small los ses small as compared with what they would be if some of the essen tial things were either lacking or scarce. HOW GKKMAXY IS ISATIOXKD. Nearly every commodity is now rationed in Germany. Cards ar? row in use for bread, meat, potatoes and sugar, for eggs, milk, cheese, fish, marmalade, vegetables, soan, coal, underwear, clothing, boots and choes indeed, for almost every im aginable thing. For a number cf things cards are not issued, but per mission to buy these must be obtain cu before they can be had, and then, even after running from shop ti shop, it often happens that the ar ticle is not procurable. Even scour ing clothes for scouring floors come under this heading, and cannot t? bought anywhere without specip.l permission. Fowls, geese and other varieties oi poultry are not classed as meat, and can therefore still be had with out cards, but the prices asked are so high that only the very rich can buy them. Fowls, for instance, are sold at $1.25 to $2.00 per -pound, that a fowl of, say 4 pounds we'ght costs from $5 to H. Geese cost an even larger sum, and it is nothing out of the common in Berlin to pay $25 for a goose, and not a fat or heavy one at that. In some shoj3 of the better class sausages suppos ed to be made of the flesh of fowls can be had at $2 to $3 a pound. When dining at a restaurant or hotel the customer must, if he wish es a course in which any rationed eatable is contained, prove that. he Is in possession of the card for it. and hand over a portion of the said card corresponding to the weight given to the waiter. The allowance of bread (very dark colored and made of rye, eked out with potatoes,) Is about three an 1 cne-half pounds per week for each person; meat, one-fourth pound; po tatoes, five to seven pounds per head weekly. A working man is entitled to seven pounds of potatoes a week, whereas those engaged in lighter oc cupations are entitled to but five pounds. The allowance of butter amounts to but one ounce per head a week. The cheese ration is figur ed at a quarter of a pound a month. Each person is allowed cne egg every three weeks and a family of thre- is entitled to buy one herring each week. The meat allowance of a quarter of a pound weekly includes every thing in the meat; line that is to eay, sausage, or suet, or fats of anv kind. Tea and cocoa are hardly ob tainable. As much as $10 per poun-l i? paid, and only, small quantities are to be had even at that price. Coffee is unprocurable. Recent ar rivals from Berlin declare that it is a riddle how the pVople manage t,o exist at all. The mortality rate Is raid to lie very high among the el derly people and young children, j Soap, that is to say the real ar ticle, is unprocurable. The card al lowance Is one pound monthly of soap powder for washing clothes, etc., but it Is said to be such a vIH concoction that it is almost impos sible to use it. For a cake of good oap as much as $2.50 was paid in 191G. Today it is not to be had at any price. A BLOW A WHISKY. Canadians protest against being called upon to continue gong with out wheat bread in order to ship their grain to England, where part cf it, at least until lately, has bten distilled into. alcohol that is used in the production of spirituous bever ages. The Ottawa Conference of Women, with the Canadian. Wai De partment, resolved: "That to pro vent this waste of foodstuffs the trilling of grain be done in Canada, and only the manufactured articles be exported to Great Britain, until such time as remedial legislation prohibiting such destruction of food stuffs be enacted in Great Britain." Home writera think this action should be followed in the I'nited States by an embargo against the exportation of unmilled wheat, corn, rye or barley. As was stated by the Canadian temperance lecturer.; Mrs. Nellie MeClung: "The elimination of alcoholic beverages on an empire prohibition basis is one of the cer tain reforms which will evolve from this world-wide conflict. The Ikjuor traffic is too expensive a proposition to be continued much" longer, and every department of public welfare is an argument against its further maintenance." I A SOCIAL ! WAYI 71 By Flresee Elisabeth MchoU Society was busy with several af fairs yestery which drew guests from long invitational lists. During both the afternoon and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Stolz presided at a reception which was held in ob servance of their fiftieth wedding anniversary at the home of their daughter. Mrs. Lenta Westacott, on Court ilreet. Over one hundred and fifty guests called during the receiv ing hours. Although the celebra tion was filled with large sentiment and Mr. and Mrs. Stolz are long time residents of Salem, they asked that there be no gifts. Another pretty, assemblage of the evening was the large dinner party with Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Hamilton as hosts, which was held last night. The HanIton party was a birthday anniversary. Judge Peter D'Arcy. accompanied by his sister. Miss Teresa D'Arcy, has returned from a visit in Seattle. While there Judge D'Arcy delivered an address Sunday evening entitled . The Golden Age of Erin." Miss Joy Beals, supervisor of mu sic in the Salem schools, passed the week-end In Eugene, wbye she at tended the annual banquet-reunion of th Delta Ga.ni in a. sorority, of which she is a member. The affair was held at the Osborn hotel. While in Eugene, Miss Beals was the guest of her mother, Mrs. C. H. Beals. Mrs. Ernest Hunt returned Mon dav night to Portland after a de lightful sojourn of nearly a week In Salem as the guest of Mrs. Ralph Glover. f Messages of cheer and sympathy are finding their way to Miss Alice Baker, who has been confined in the Salem hospital, following an opera tion, for some time. Miss Baker is a Cniversity of Oregon girl. Mrs. E. W. Tillson of San Fran cisco has been visiting in Newport as the Euest of Mrs. Charles Free land. Mrs.; Tillson has been with her sister. Mrs. Richard Cartwright. in j Salem, Tor some weeks. Mrs. A. M.-Hansen has returned from a fortnight's stay in Seattle, where she has been with relatives. Miss Irene Curtis has returned to Corvallis, where she is a college student, after a short visit with her mother, Mrs. I. G. Curtis. Miss Jessie T?ic.hol has arrived from Clevelajid Or., fo be the guest of Mrs. J. iNJ-eMnrrav. Miss Paulina Sehlaefli of Hills boro is passing a few days in Salem as the ruest of Misses Ruth and h.sther Roeder. A program has been planned as a diversion at a meeting of the aid so ciety of the Women's Relief . corps, which will be held Thursday at the arniory. The members of the G. A. R. 'will also be quests. Sewing will fill the hors. I BITS FOR BREAKFAST ! Another beautiful spring day. Busy days with all the farmers. m I The Dutch ships will be taken. V And. Germany will do nothing about it that will matter. "a She cannot afford to have Hollan;! for either an ally or an enemy, she can afford to have her enly as a neutral. V V The heart of Germany would 1 e exposed with Holland, fighting elthtr with or against Germanv. Th Germans are advertising an other offensive. But this is no sisn that there will be one, on her part. Rather the contrary. S "a "a For all future bloodshed, the allien must accept full responsibility, say. von Hertline. hecauso ihcv win nui listen to tentative peace terms; lead ing to a peace "made in Germanv " GIRLS! THICKEN AND BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR AND STOP DANDRUFF Try This! V.,ur Hair Get Wavy, !- and Abundant rt Once. To be possessed of a . head of heavy, beautiful hair! soft lusfrnin fluffy, wavy and free from dandruff is merely a matter r using a little Danderlne. It is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. .lust eet a small bottle of Knowlton's Danderine now for a few cents all drug stores recommend it apply a little -an directed and wvithin ten minutes there will be an appearance of .abundant, freshness. riuffinefs and an incomparable uloss and lus tre, and try as you will you rannot find a frace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will te after about two. weeks use, when you will see new hair fine and downy at first yes but really new hair sprouting out all over your sralp -Danderine js. we believe, the only sure hair grower, destroyer of dandruff and- cure for Itchy scalp, and it never fails to stop falling: hair at oce. If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really is. moisten a cloth with a little Danderine arid carefully draw It through your hair taking one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy and neauiirui in just a lew minutes a delightful surprise awaits everyone who tries this. The Port! . 1 and. Now occupying our former Ready-to-Wear department has an - Coats, Suits and Dresses from $ 14.50 to $50 Display of Suits, Coats, Dresses, Waists and Petticoats. UL HA Modeled in the latest and most popular styles of beautiful fabric, distinctive, smart, well-made garments that appeal to the discriminating buyer. A Millinery Department Is one oi the leading features this firm is displaying. AH new up-to-the-minute millin ery. A CORDIAL WELCOME AWAITS YOU. Extra Special Waist Offer Lingerie Waists, very prettily designed 95c to $1.95 But that old gag has been worked to the nauseating point on a tired world. There will not be enough logan berries planted, even though twieo 10.00 farmers plant one to three or four acres each, this spring. And even though every piece of vacant city property were planted to logan berries. 1KSIM.IKXT WIKX Nature intends every wtman to be cheerful, light-hearted and happy, but when dragged down with pain and suffering from female ills, will power alone cannot overcome a nervous, despondent condition. Mul titudes of American women, how ever, have found that there Is one tried and true remedy to restore health under such circumstances, and that is Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound, made from herbs and roots. This old-fashioned medi cine is now considered the standard American remedy for such condi tions. ' ROLL OF HONOR i : ; U WASHINGTON. March 19. The casualty list issued today by the wr.r department contained only thirty rames. The list follows: Killed in action Captain Phelps Collins, Private F'rank J. Konope. Died bv accident I.ieutetfartt Oeorge O. Middleditch. Cadet IKfl ward K. Butler, Private Martin J. Murphy. Died of woiirtds Privates Alma M. Martin, Arthur P. Vaudreiul, Wil bur Wilkerson. Died of disease Sergeant Wil liam V. Carroll, pneumonia; j Pri vates James F. Alford, meningitis: Charles It. Hurtch, pneumonia; Her man Crosby,, pneumonia: .Tommio Dudley. -pneumonia; Frank K. Fish er, pneumonia; Arvel Johnson, pneu monia: Darre Montezf pneumonia: Kalnh H. Peters, diphtheria; James Walter Moore, pneumonia: Eman uel Scott, pneumonia; Oliver W. Seaton. pneumonia. Wounded severely Sergeant Frank Hickman,. Private Austin II. Schumaker. Wounded slightly Privates Rob ert O Vauehn. Charles Tiibeau. (Jra rlcri B. fiodfrev, Daniel J. Dealer, William J. Mulligan. Sam Todor. Stewart. Treible. Ka7-iiler Wolhnnk. DKTHOIT, March 1 .Captain Phrlps Collin reported in today's rasirtritv list ns killed In .action, was i inejnb-r of the American flying! forces in France. He was born in. Alpena. Mich., 2 1 .years ago and bad 'ived in Detroit for several years. Mis parents received notice of hi death in a telegram from Washing ton today. Collins, while a junior at the t'niversity of Idaho, enlisted in the French aviation service in April of last year and held the tank of lieu tenant when in December he was transferred to the American" flying fore . He was promoted soon aft erward to the rank of captain. According to relatives here, Cap tain? Collins during his service in France had accounted for three ene mv flyers, although the records technically credited him with only one. , Hugcins Who. was It said that if be could make the fonts of the people he wouldn't care who made the laws? Muggins Don't know. Hut if he's the chap who's making the song? of the people nowadays I'd just like to have the making of the laws for a liltle while! That' allGrit. "MK.v; MK.v! MKN!" SKIS CLASSIFIED AD and -.Cloak Suit -Go. ; rHOnSU NAVY EXPANSION PLAN REPORTED Bill Involving Over Billion Dollars Is for Three-Year Program WASHINGTON. March 19-4The ennual naval appropriation bill car rying more than $1,300,000600 an 1 authorizing a Iv-ar tiirie Increase in the navy's enlisted strength from 87,000 to 1S0.0O0 men, was reported to the house today by Chairman Padgett of the naval committee. Secretary Daniels tonight express ed complete satisfaction with the measure saying the committee had improvedfUpon official recommenda tion as a result of a thorough study of the department and Its needs. "The bill Is larger by fseo.000, 000 than any prior naval bill, car rying roundly $1,327,006,000," said Mr. Daniels. "Thts sum toeether '! with lasi year's bill and the supple mental appropriations carried in the two deficiency hills of the preced ing session, make almost three bil lions of dollars provided for Uio navy In a little more than twelve months, while the total expenditure of the navy from 1794 )to 1916. In clusive, a period of 122 years, onl exceeded this sum by three hundred and sixty odd million dollars. 1 make this comparison better to con vey what It means to support and operate the navy on a scale demand ed by the present conflict. "Almost $200,000,000 is provided for aviation purposes, and while 1 cannot make public the details to which this large credit Is tobeau plied.Ia represents, what our experts felt necessary and Will, be used t) greatly increase th? efficiency of the excellent services the naval aviatois ! are performing, n "The bill provid"; the money nec essary to carry forward the three- year program of dfead naughts. Hat te cruisers and other, types of ship. already authorized1, it provides, a recommended another emergency fund of $100,000,44 4 which may be :ed in the' construction of destroy ers and other small craft, which an the present most pressing need in the fjght against thr sul marine men ace. Small craft and merchant"" ship? are the neecl of the hour, but I am polnc to ; "press the construction o the big craft as soon as possible." Try This If You 1 Have Dandruff There is one sure-war that never fails to remove dandruff completely and thnt !s to dissolve it. This de- i stroys it entirely. To do this, just Eet about four ounces of plain, ordi nary licjuid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moist en the .ecaln and rv.b It in gently with the finger tips. ISy morning:, most. If not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely de stroy every single i1gn and trace or It. no matter how much dandruff yon mar have. ' You will find.too, that all 'Itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair wHl be fluffy, lustrous, gloWy, fllky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Yjou ran get liquid arvon jat any drug store. It is Inexpensive, and four, ounces Is all you will; need. This sln)de remedy hasi never been known to fall. i 311 f? CORNER C0UET AND COM'L STREET, SALEM LA FOLLETTE ' MM MAY Will Hope That Wisconsin Wouli Take Patriotic Stdhd Plung ed Into Gloom . ' "' vt MII.WAUKEK, Wis.. March 19. Victor Berger claimed he would po!l 50.000 votes. The Socialist candi date at the primaries in 1916 receiv ed 11.479 votes. WASHINGTON, March 19. Indi cations tonight that Joseph E. Davies .had won the Democratic nom ination for United States senator from Wisconsin brought an an nouncement from the national Dem ocratic "committee that President WHspn would throw his support he hind j Mr. Davies, Loyalty to the gov ernment's war program, the commit- , tee announcement said, would be tbe Issue in the campaign. Commute? reports here Indicated that James Thompson, La Follelte candidate for the Republican nomination, waa leading Irvine L,. Lenroot. The com mittee also announced that a list of speakers. Including the house nd senate 'members who will stump tie state in Mr, Davies behalf will b "iafj' public tomorrow. The sense of refreshing cleammess that follows the use of a real scalp prophylactic is comfortingf in the extreme aHERPICIDE Applications at the brttar barber shop Guaranteed by Th Harpicld Co. Sold Everywhere "V PBS Switches Reduced 2 ,-im i Switches, made from bct .grade .French hair, re-duced-to ' $10 r . - , l.'"-irich Switches, tame as above, reduced to $8 "20-Inch. Switches, same as above, i educed to $6 Second gradr? German hair Switches, 21-inch f $2 I also havcj a broken line of econd grade switches which I will" sacrifice at 81 wii. o.nk vi:i:k only -' These reductions are for March IS to March 2, in clusive. Phoebe E. Thompson Hairdressin and Beauty - Parlors, ' 228 Hubbard Bldff. Salem,- Or. Phone 1021