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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1919)
THE ORECOJf BTATEflMAlff TlirRSDAV. JAXVARY 30, 1010 The Oregon, Statesman W; - 1(8 Upd nll Ptrsnt Uniiila. THE STATES IAN i'CBUSIUNQ OOJIPANY 21 & S. Commercial St, Salem, Oregon : ' MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - 1e,, u "liy entitled to the use for republication or all sews dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited: in this paper and also the local news published herein. U. J. Hendricks. .Manager I. Stone j, . .......;". Ma'naVlng Editor Ralph Glorer . ....... A ... . . nMhi.r W. C. Squler. Frank Jaskoskl. . . . ....Advertising Manager .Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier in Salem and suburbs, 16 cents a week. 50 cents a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall.-f 6 a year; $3 for she months; 60 cents a month. For three months or more, paid in advance, at rate of $6 year. SUNDAY STATESMAN, $1 a year; 60 cent for six months; 25 cents for three months. i WEEKLY STATESMAN, issued in two six-page sections Tuesdays and Fridays, fl a year (If not paid In advance, 1.25); 60 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. TELEPHONES: siness Office. 23. Circulation Department, 683. Job Department. 683. Entered at the Postof flee in Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. The reds of Berlin that were yel low are now 'blue. The Stars and . Stripes is . good enough for Oregon. AH the world Is bringing its trou bles to President Wilson. He is the chief trouble man of all the ages. Many strikes in England. With the vast reconstruction projects there, no laborer in that country should be idle. The Turks have promised to pro tect American citizens and estab lishments in the empire and, on ac count of what Las recently taken place in the world, they possibly mean it. THE RETURNING SOLDIERS ARE ALL NEEDED. Some one suggests that no doubt the ex-kaiser chose. Holland as a place to hide in because it is such a flat country he can see the posse coming a long way off. That is some advantage: In Switzerland It could sneajc up on him. America needs all her returning soldiers. William Q. McAdoo, former Secretary of the Treasury, has ad ministered a stinging rebuke to the alarmists who fear that our returning soldiers will glut the labor market or swell the ranks of! the Bolsheviki. ;. 'Every returned soldier is an asset, lie adds to the wealth of the nation," writes Mr. McAdoo; "It is inconceivable that strong, healthy man can be a burden to the nation or a drug on the market. He is a producer, and PRODUCING MEN ARE MORE NEEDED TODAY THAN IN ANY PERIOD IN THE COUNTRY'S HIS TORY." . Mr. McAdoo has given voice to a truth as obvious as it is ele mentary. . ' ' - The American soldier represents the highest type physically and mentally, of American. citizenship. I He is the country's greatest asset in the reconstruction period which has now dawned. He has been and is a worker, not an agitator; he has looked upon life and death with eyes alert and unafraid; and every man in.every rank feels that he has contributed something to the great victory of free peoples, over the minions of military despots. lie knows the enemies of his country because he has met them 1ace?io face. ; . ,. They are the disciplined soldiers of despots ;the pacifists who were called in the " supreme crisis and found wanting ; the agents of Socialism, Bolshevism and anarchy. He knows that the lives of two million gallant fighters were sacrificed because of Bolshevik traitors and pacifist time servers. He knows that if the advice of the Socialist and II. V. Sf. agitators had been followed Germany and not the United States would now be celebrating a great victory. There is a place m the industrial field for every producer.' As Mr. McAdoo so forcibly points out, the demand for men of the typo of the returned soldier is greater than ever before. "It is bound to exceed the supply. ' And the soldier himself is not looking for trouble, not looking for leisure, not rooking for loot. , i. He is looking, foxvorkituies productive-work oXJhead and fiand. His aspiration is to be an effective, not ajoafer-on-the-job. . .One of the first boatloads of returned soldiers celebrated their home-coming" in New York by attacking a parade of reds. They tore down every red flag and permitted no detachment to pass that did not'earry at its head the Stars and Stripes. The returning American soliers will take care of both themselves and the destinies of the country they fought for, as soon as they get home and get their bearings and no other body of men will be as powerful in keeping the whole world in the uplifting path marked but for it by the ideals of the great struggle on the battle fields against 'the reactionary forces of autocracy. The guardianship of Turkey and the possessions which she lost by the war may come to the United States. The Armenians and Syrians would be easy to manage. They will gov ern themselves well, if given half a chance. But the task of keeping the Turks in order would be a difficult one. MEAT CAUSE OF (. KIDNEYTROUBLE Take fialts to flnb Kidneys If Hack j I Hurts or Bladder Bother. If you must have your meat every day. eat it, but- flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, rays a noted authority who tells us that . meat forms uric acid which almost para lyzes the - kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney tegion, sharp pains In the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue Js coat ed and when the weather Is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets 'cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating ac ids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's -urinous waste get four ounces of Jad- Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablspoonful in a glass of . water before break fast for a few days and your kid neys will then act fine. . This fa tuous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthla, and has been used for generations, to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so It no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder weak ness. Jad Salts Is inexpensive; cannot injure, and makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink. IN A SOCIAL WAYr i By DORRIA LKA1I SIKES BUY That Is mighty good advice, given to our farmers in a creamery adver tisement In The Statesman: Build more silos. And yet more and more. Western Oregon is potentially the best dairying country on earth; but its full development In this direction contemplates tens of thousands more sllosi They will come. . It is all right to give victory med als to the men who have returned from the war, but would It not be more to the point If they were as sured a job and that the checks to their dependent relatives would be more regular? Medals art cot very successful is keeping the wolf from thedoor. Exchange. Correct and to the point. .In the passing of Henry L. Pittock. chief owner of the Oregonian, Oregon loses one of her foremost men of affairs and the nation loses one of its outstanding -newspaper publishers. Mr. Pittock was nearly 84; he had been in the newspaper harness, on the Oregonian, about sixty-five years. He was one of Oregon's wealthiest citizens, though he commenced work on the Oregonian for his board and clothes, in 1853. He carried; Oregon 8 chief newspaper through many times of stress in the earlier years; but lately he has been able to turn over the great task of its management to younger hands. Mr. Pittock will be missed in many ways in the life of Portland and of Oregon. With the expenses of the railroads under government control exceeding the receipts by millions of dollars Uncle Sim will soon find himself in the position of the clothing dealer who offered to sell a coat for $5 that cost $10 and when asked how he did It replied, "Oh, we sell so many of them.' Exchange. Nrf;" be fore Uncle Sam gets much further into this undertaking, there will be a Republican congress at Washing-! refunding to ton, and this country will get down to business and back to first princi ples, and out of the railroad busi ness, and every other sort of busi ness that can be conducted more economically and efficiently by com panies and individuals, i WAR TRAINING BILL'S OBJECT Central Camp Vould Be Es tablished at Eugene by Hurley's Measure To establish a central cff'c?rs training camp at the University of Oregon, a military training commis sion and military training 1n the high schools of Oregon is the purpose of a preparedness bill Introduced yesterday by Senator Hurley. The measure ' proposes that thej state superintendent of schools, an appointee of the board of regents of the state university and another member appointed by the .regents of Oregon Agricultural college. The commission would be given power to prescribe and regulate military training in the high schools and training would begin in September of this year. .The member appoint ed by the regects of the University ot jOregon would, be designated to go about the state 'is. an Inspector of training in the several schools. senator t j ui ley s , oiii providing a irrigation districts of rnon'y paid for certification of boMi and fixing fees to be charged for the purpose by the secretary of state was passed by the senate yeterday. The'followlng bills, were Introduced at the afternoon session:' Lieutenant F. IV. Mason Awarded Service Medal y?!?!yfffr ii"r' "TTi ir .TV "S.".' Set Contents 15 fluid Prachr .' r " 1 " ". "" -: 1 4 t ' i ' j ' " i .'..- - ' - - - s rJ ' 5 3S1 1 c i j AclabtePrcparatkrAs 1 imiLit;nthcFooibrKrfuU- . . . z M ThotrtPtomoUaDiwtiQB Cheerfulness and i--wu -neither CplanaCMorphloe a WineraL Not JiAHCoxiv ' m . ... n .1 HUM II lyjutii For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature. of JtlM J li- i nkr j .1 etc 1 tint nf 111 CstJ pation and DUrrhoci. i and reTrcrtsnm-3 r The gentle Lenlne, wnen his Bol sheviki assassins weie trimmed in a Russian town, ordered them to re turn " and kill all the bourgeoisie. They took the Cadmean orders, re turned and were themselves killed. Who tfre the bourgeosieT In Rus sit, they are all who are not Bol sheviki. And who are the Bolshe viki? They are all who have the dis position to kill any .one, who does not. think as they do. And as most of them have nothing to think with. It Includes nearly every one in Rus sia who can read or who ever own ed a rouble's worth of property. Bol shevism in Russia Is lcoed Social ism; it is anarchy gone mad; it is the atavism of human nature chased back to the , prehistoric progenitors of the tiger and the hyena. It is a disgrace to darkest Russia. And that is as low as symbolism can bo carried la terms of language. Lieutenant Francis W. Mason is among the Salem men who have been awarded medals for heroic, ser vice in France, the one awarded to him being the distinguished service cross. Lieutenant Mason was with the Portland Railway Light & Pow er company while in Salem. When Company M went to the Mexican bor der he was with it and later went to France with it. A French paper says: ' ' "The commander-in-chief, In the name of the president; has awarded the ' distinguished service cross to Lieutenant Francis W. Mason. 328th infantry for extraordinary heroism in action near St. Georges. France, on October 22. 1918. Lieutenant Mason led a patrol or 40 men through the wood in order to envel ope the, enemy's position. Advanc ing under heavy shell fire, this of ficer was severely wounded, but dis played .excellent leadership and un usual bravery. He continued the ad vance after being wounced and suc ceeded in occupying the wood." JONQUILS formed a pretty center piece for a pleasant dinner party for which Mr. and Mrs. F. O. lay ers and Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Webb were joint hosts at the Myers home' Mon day night. Those for whom covers were laid were Dr. and Mrs. G. C Bellinger, Dr and Mrs. John C Evans. Mrs. Walter "Soauldlng. Mr and Mrs. Roy H, Mills and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson. Last night Mr. and Mrs. Myers had as their guest at dinner James Chinook or Grants Pass. Mrs. C. Leroy Brown and two daughters who have been enjoying s visit with Mrs. Brown's mother Mrs. Ida L. Niles, returned to their home in Portland yesterday. ' - - H. W. Scott, of the "firm of Scott & Piper, is back In Salem again greeting old friends and laying plans for the future. ' lie was a member of the motor, transport corps until mus tered out a litye over a week ago and may reenter the bicycle and mo torcycle business again in Salem Ills former partner. C. S. Piper, is still in the service, stationed In Port land. Miss Amanda Matthews was week-end guest of Salem friends. Mrs. Milton Seymour, of Seattle accompanied by her brother-in-law-R. B. Faulds. of Portland. .have been guests of the latter's nieces. Edns Garfield and Mrs. Roy Anderson, a 205 Lincoln street. Sergeant Jeoffry. Tavener of the coast" artillery, recently discharged from service at Camp Eustls, Vir ginia, has ben visiting Sergeant Hor ace M. Blbby. at 205 Lincoln street Sergeant Tavener, whose home was formerly in Ashland, expects to lo cate in this vicinity. . r Miss Leona Graber, who but re cently came from Alaska, was guest over the week-end. of her bro ther and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Graber. She went on to Ashland Monday for a visit with her sister. One of the first letters received from Salem men with the army of occupation was one received Tuesday from Clay Toothacre. 10th company. 6th regiment, U. S. marines, by his parents Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Tooth acre. It was mailed at Lautersdorf. Germany and is dated December 23 Prior to his enlistment over a year ago. vounr Toothacre was employed in-the state nrintlnc office. In October he was wounded and con fined to a hospital In Paris but at the time of the sighing of the arm istice had returned to the scene of activity. Will H. Bennett, state bank super intendent. and family have leased the Jackson residence, S07 Center street and are moving from 15b North Fourteenth street. Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Sargent lived in the bouse until recently and during Governor West's administration, the, Wests had the place. Mrs. J. B. Littler has returned from Eugene where she was the guest of Miss May Rowland. Mr. and Mrs. V. P. Cherrlngton had Miss Elizabeth Briggs as their guest at dinner last evening. Mrs. W. W. Banks came down from Portland yesterday to spend few days with her husband. Senator Banks. Friends of Miss Carrie Cooksev have received cards announcing her marriage to Richard Lacey. which was an event of last month in In dianapolis, Ind. The bride was a student of Willam ette university with the class of 1917. While In college she was so ciety editor of the collegian and BMEAD THE DELICIOUS QUALITY BREAD. THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL LIKE IT. Ask Your Grocer Salem Baking Co. . Successors to " THE MODERN BAKERY 439 Court Street Salem, Oregon , Telephone. 954 president of the Adalante society Mr. Lacey Is a stock raiser near Kan sas. Illlois. where they will make their home. - Mrs. Arthur Wilson and her sla ter. Miss Mildred Davies. who ar rived ths week from Hong Kong China, spent yesterday in Portland. Miss Gertrude East retained to Corvalis last night having come to Salem for the funeral of Gray Kyle. She was accompanied by Orange Dab men. Robert Stuart and Allen Mor rill, all fraternity brothers of Hugh Kyle, the brother of the deceased and Miss Dorothy Morrill. LEST WE FORGET! As tumult and the snouting dl the captains and the kings depart f till stands Thine ancient sacrifice. An humble and a contrite heart. -Lord God of hosts, be with us yet. Lest we forget lest we forget! IF YOUR EARS RING t WITH HEAD NOISES If yon have roaring, bussing 2 noises In your ears, are getting ' hard of hearing and fear Catarrh al Deafness, go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of Pannint (don- ble strength), and add to it pint ot hot water and 'a little granulated sugar. Take 1 table- spoonful four timet a day. This will often bring quick re lief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and1 the mucus stop dropping Into the! throat. It is easy to prepare, costs little and is pleasant to tare. Any one who has Catarrhal trouble of the ears. Is hard of hearing or baa head noises should give this prescription a triaL Capital Dru, Store. Rfcr Days ; To Get An Extra Pair of Pants With Your Suit Order . This opportunity positively ends in two days. It is an opportunity yon should not miss. We have hundreds of new high grade woolens for yon to choose from. Come in today, or tomor row at the yery latest, and let us take your measure. All suits are guaranteed satisfactory in every respect . SCOTCH WOOLEN MILLS STORE 426 State Street MJt ECONOMICAL, DEXlUIITFrU LIGHT Ft-ACK TO TRADE L BITS FOR BREAKFAST . . : i Read the Claitified Adj. r 1 i r i i -i m li si r, t m. Exact Copy of Wrapper. Use For Over Thirty Years THS MSMflr. VM OfTT. Flu flu the coop.. m May it stay away forever. Bob Paulufe will make a splendid nrpsiiiAnt rF ttifi Snlfm Ctm mArrial I w And there will he a lot of import ant things for the commercial organ-; izatlon. in the reorganization period ahead of us. ' - v V President Wilson laid down a set of - general principles that sounded good. And they were good. But when it comes to applying them to particular cases well, that it is an other matter; in fact, a long list of other matters. But It will aU come out In the wash, and the world will nter on a new era.. S S Looks like both sides of the strike situation at Seattle want to fight. This is part of the war after the war SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK Grandmother's Recipe to Bring ! Bark Color aad iMnlre to Hair. New York Forty-fourth C 1 Voting for Prohibition f ALBANY. N. Y.. Jan. 29. New York became the fortieth state to ratify the federal prohibition amend ment when the senate tonight by a vote of '.11 to 24. concurred in the McNab Ratifying resolution adopted by the assembly last week. That beautiful, even shade of daik glossy hair can only be bad by brew ing a mixture of. Sage Tea and Sul phur. . Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns grey or streaked. Just an application or two of Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the mix ture; you can get this famous old recipe improved by the addition of other Ingredients at a small cost, all readyMor use. It is called Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound This can always bdepended upon to bring back the natural color and lus tre of your hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound" now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been ap plied. You' simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the grey hair has disappeared, and after ancther application It becomes beau tifully dark and appears glossy and lustrous. Greatest Dress Goods Values A wide choice of desirable fabrics in the best weaves, designs and colors. Prices greatly reduced. EXTRA SPECIAL 50 to 60 inch wide Suiting in all leading plain colors for suits and spring coats. Ri&t $2.98 for tbis week only j 416 State St 416 State St 71