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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1919)
V THE OREGON! STATESMAN: TTESDAY. MAY . ICt M M n fates than ' being an American ram-1 ' "1 THE OREGON STATESMAN , ',. ' Issued Dally Except Monday by ! . ; " ; THE STATESMAN .PCBUJSHIXa COMPAJTY 216 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. . i fates than being an American farm Salem was oyer the top first. Df course. And Oregon was over the top first. Of course again. R. J. Hendricks. .'. .............. Stenhan AJ Stone ............. I ....,... t . Managing Editor Ralph Glover. , !..... i -Cashier W. C. Squler.;... J. Advertising Manager Prank Jaskoskt. .-. L - .Manager Job Dept. More trouble reported in Bavaria, with an army marching on Munich. Manager j probably in the hope of capturing the j breweries. What has become of the old-fash ioned statesman who, at the opening of: the Paris conference. Insisted that It would consist of -open covenants. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier in Salem and suburbs, 16 cents a , week. SO cents a month. ; - i DAILY STATESMAN, by mail, 6 a year; $3 tor six months; 60 cents openiy arrived at?" Exchange. month. For tnree montns or more, paia ia. aance, ri ui SUNDAY STATESMAN, $1 a year; 60 cents for six months; 25 cents for thru mnnthl I o1 In. inn lT.ar BACtlonB Tueadav II (Iiliil i U fwimi " rm t Fridays. $1 a year (if not paid in advance, 1.26); 50 cenU fo , f months; 25 cents for three months. . '' .' ! PEOPLE will buy if you tell them about the things you have to sell. tnd TELEPHONES: Business Office. 23J Circulation Department. 583.. Job Department, 683. - - The covenant of. the league of na- ' . ' . . a tlons was adopted wunoui a aisseni- lng vote, which is not at All surpris ing, inaspujch as about everybody gotJ?1?hejr wanted in the document. Exchange. Entered at the postofflce lB Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. A MESSAGE OF ENCOURAGEMENT TO SALEM. It was The fact that President Wilson has succeeded In Incorporating an anti- child-labor clause In the league of na tions means that he is out of the race for the presidency in 1920. That would cook his goose in the South. Exchange. Advert! not aimed for a boom speech. Far from it But the address of Prof. C. I. Lewis, chief of the Division of The liquor Interests have lost their IT O- rrunniiiAf Qtntinn flpoornn A rrimtural i " w " " " llllrLlrlllLlllc Ul LUC s J' UAmilluvui . . - v v . w.w. n " I . - ... t . . t . Unfa farnn nature or Oregon, rauiying me P- Uoiiege, at ne airm wiap:. uu u"""" " " ' hlbitlon amendment to the, national at ine noon nour 7Ji constitution, referred to a vote of the lie said that tne nonieuuurai proaucw ol vrrgun w i4 ""'" a people of that state in a decision bring in: $50,000,000 a year ; and, before very much longer, $100,-L rendered by th gtate gUpreme 000,000 annually. : f " ' And Salem is the horticultural capital of Oregon, as well asthe political capital. I" '-. ; Here we; have the largest fruit handling, preserving, shipping, Dressing, canning, dehydrating and other plants and factories. In this vicinity we have the largest! apple, prune, pear, cherry, -rimes walnut, filbert and other orchard acreage, and the largest acreage in the berries of commerce. , We do not depend j on one line; we have them all. - f I - This guarantees rapid growth and rising prosperity, in country and city.; , " . '- . .' j ... - tTwo things Prof. Lewis said, among imany good things, that de- . A a ' rw n WA illAM A act wy M W AT 1 A A , t U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR court. Some sweet day the liquor men will learn better than to blow their money against an impossible proposition backed by lawyers on the lookout for fat fees. Los Angeles COMPOUND INTEREST (Kedilsn Francklyn In Los Angeles "I Times.) jlf the Duke of Normandy had, when he established haa sway over First, bur prune growers must pay more attention to improving J the vjnea0ms of Naples and Sicily the soil of their orchards, and more attention to cultivation. There I In 1019 A. D., beea benevolently dis must belconsistent wood growth, in order to insure vigorous blos-loog toward the Normanda now liv- soms followed by the best fruit production, as to both quantity and lng n Los Angeles and had invested quality. ! . ' ( ! . one silver dollar at 6 per cenL com- , He said the prune has become not only the autocrat of the Ameri- pound interest to he paid by some can breakfast table it has become almost the plutocrat. bank to Los Angeles, May 1. 1919. And the consumption of Oregon prunes will keep on growing. therfank making the payment would Kecpnd, and the most important, Prof. Lewis said that there is a J very likely have to employ two or new trai opening up in the' proper estimation of the value of fruits! three extra clerks to count out the in tin dietary of the people of the Unitd States and of the world, coin, for It would amount to 37,-.-. Tb scientists have been figuring in calories. ; 77S.931. 863,037, 161.568,768 dollars, Ifut it has been discovered that they 'have been wrong in an im- which enumerated reads 37 million. port ant respect and that is that all calories are not alike in value I 778 thousand. 931 quadrillion, 8 63 for: human. food. I ! trillion, 37 billion, ll million. 568 , And here is where the fruit men of Oregon ought to advertise I thousand and 768 dollars. ought to tell the people of the ereat cities of the actual food values! Thirty-Jtwo thousand . silver dol of fruit. They will be surprised. And this propaganda will increase j Im weigh a ton, and four and oue- the consumption of fruit by leaps and bounds and add millions to I "tn cubic reet equals one ton the value of our fruit crops. . j ? . equals a cubic root. (It was recalled bv a Salem man that Prof. Lewis made his first 11 The amount of the principal and speech in Oregon at Salem; at our first cherry fair.) 1 , 1 The American public is a buying public It has the money to spend and will spend it if yon will show them the need for spending it Therefore Advertise ! ! . ' ' " I I This is the message from the Department of Labor to all lire, progressive merchants who believe in the future pros perity of America. M : HOW ABOUT SALEM'S MTLKLF.SS KIDS! !379 feet i interest divided by 7680 gives the number of ' cubic feet, and this di vided by the number of square feet In one square mile gives the number " D. A.-Grout, superintendent of the nublic schools of the citv of r 8uare mlIea th silver will cover Portland, has completed a survey of the schools in which he has I to a dePtn of one fooL The num Rscertained that out of the 27.989 children covered in the report.1 18 17.413.702.113 square miles. 5.702 children are ffettino- nn milk in iheip diet 12.817 iret a nint 1 7 area of the United States Is or more daily, nd 20,497 children get some mUk. Among the dis- s.521.262 "Qae miles, hence there trcits wiiere the use of milk is least are: Albina IIomestead,y856 in would be aoa dollars to cover the KfbntA unrl ohi, nr (hi ;thot TnilV in tliiii Aet . PUntnn Kollv entire area a depth of 50.099 feet 748 in" school with 244 on milkless diet ; Davis, 356 enrolled, 129 .without milkr; Joseph Kellogg, 498 children, 157 without milk ; Lents, bid pupils, -22b lacking milk; Lmnton, 186 children, 53 no milk; Sell wood, 706 children and 261 of these get no milk ; Shattuck, 875 ' children, 206 'having no milk in daily; diet;- Thompson with 820 , children show 21 8 on " the list of those without milk. Lau'relhurst has a clean record with all its 62 children getting the food that na ture meant them to have. ! ! ' . r. In some of the districts where the population is lacking in this orld'sjwealth it is notieed the children nevertheless are well cared , for in that a large percentage are given milk daily for their meals. ' So, it; is not all a matter of price. Milk today is one of the cheapest foods for the value it contains. i .Tt,. K ..1 i ' zt-! m , ;i a; a a1 : I uc uuie vaiuc aiuue, nounsnuig ana ouiiamg anu sirenginening 1 Mei h8 nom diplomacy in writing tup it-ciu aim uuues, suouia oe argument enougn 10 maxe everyone itc the Italians, appreciate mlk. . " j v Its value in butterfat is too well known to need explanation. According to Dr.'. E. V. McCollum, of Johns Hopkins university, who experimented in foods for manyj years before giving out his 'conclusions, there is no stubstitute for this food element. Jhe (act that nearly 28,000 children in Portland went home and I IS vest, but this will not Interfere said, 'lother, how much milk do I use a dayf teacher wants to I with the "V be will invest in the know, " will cause many a parent to realize the value of milk. Scores I Victory Loan or teachers in the recent health crusade found their pupils in large proportions drinking coffee and not itouehing milk. Making the survey they just completed was a certain amount of trouble to the superintendent, principals, teachers and office force of the schools, I I Defeat hasn't changed the Germau imi w.ey tua it giaciiy lor tney rtaa tue interest or the children at 1 nanrer. President Wilson has heart. 1 . I I been served by a notice from the i ne survey, was matie as result of the educational work of the! teuton "intellectuals" that unless Oregon Dairy Council, an organization that is teaching the foodtn,r country is let off easily, the value of milk. , t ' balcm has several members in the council. Among these are F. O. ueciceoaeh and Ldd & Bush, bankers. Why not a milk survey in Salem? ! . 6, inches, or 9 miles, 6 Inches. j There would be enough, silver tc build a tower 3120 feet 4 Inches square from the earth to the sun. There wcfald be sufficient metal to encase the globe with a solid cast jacket 5580 feet thick or 300 feet more than a mile. j A NOJXE PLUME I Premier Orlando is of the opinion that President Wilson should have INVESTMENT The government now applies an extra tax on the man who buys a GERMANY'S BLACKMAIL Tell your story through the press and reach the greatest number of potential customers at thr smallest cost ' t Advertising, intelligently planned and executed, is the surest, quickest, and moit economical means of seenring sales stimulating business. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR ROGER B. BABSOX, Director General, lalornmtlon and Education Bervicc. , ' i W. B. WILSON, Secretary I.V-. . . ...... than one squint at our president's Jaw to know how easily bluffed and frightened he 14. President-Wilson Is about the most stubborn Individ ual outside of Missouri; and though we may deplore this trait at times. one of those times Is not when Ger many la tryiag to scare htm. The Germans forget, anyway, that after a jag the headache must follow; and the protests of "never again" are no more to be accepted than those from a rounder. 41 Germans will become Bolshevik! which may be interpreted as a little case of blackmail. But "if the Ger mans were such atndeati of charac ter as they were students of devil devices, they would take "iio more 'All? the reconstruction measures look alike to me," said Repre sentative 'Jim'" Stewart, in a short talk at the Salem Commercial Club luncheon yesterday. In other words, he will vote and ask all others to vote for all the reconstruction measures, on Jnne 3.1' M.'y Mating u sim for Tl,? i th i-h Va.t r c..u .1 I " 1 eomrctil cinbi of Marie - " 11 .p, " v nynif tui UI9KIU VICKUll, OUUlUCrU VJTCltOTl. I UP I ruasi wumics, me niimraene vaney ;; tor rortiand and Salem and Aslnrm tni All t h A pitia anl nn-no rnann w. :n 11 " - - - v --VA J IT V A. ViirCUU. Will Hll 17T11W I ! " - ' r tnpvtlier or wa will oil mo ;Ma 41... ttu.a j. i , 1 1 y 7- .w M.ftta to .d.nr " . ? . : - . hiuc ivgcurci, n uai is nrtuea is a nn ior fountj t. ji." C. A. spirit rwtn or progress and co-operation. ita In fact, the latter will in sure tin, former. The thing to do is toivote for all the even numbers, TUTOVt SATES. Mt 6. TtndiT Win, M-iocther mrtin( at Flrat Uathedial Yes; raise more fruit. .A ud raise more vegetables too. - The silence of Col. Edwarda Man dell House at the present Juncture Is deafening. - -, - Salem is Oregon's horticultural acta in naiem. j May 10. Saturdays Birycla raera ia Salem May 17. Saturday County spelling match at high school. 'May 17, Saturday Chemekaia chapter 2- e terti ia honor ol Vice rmiatnt ueoral Mr. I. I. Pattcrsoa aad capltaL That is what Prof. Lewis I at Maaonic tempio. told,: us yesterday. It is estimated that the coming wheat crop will be the largest In the history of the United States. And May 17. SarardaT onfamiM ,..v at WiUametto BDiTeraity. 1 M'J 3 OtU rnnr rraod Mp mmy in o is urcron Jersey Jubilee. May SO, Friday Memorial Dy. Juae S. Toeaday Special election to Ore- eon. Jan. j4 a , a. i. . . that is not the best Side Of it. The P" Bpani.h war etenna. raisers have a government cinch of Ld,12 'SlLltZ" Ca.ry - -.- aw.w mm VVUMHWSS, VUIV PAY IX ADVAXCK ' The ex-emperor of Austria has rented a house near Geneva once owned by Prince Jerome Napoleon It is hoped that the nre&ent owners were thoughtful enough to tazlst on getting their rent in advance. WHEX TO FIGHT Senator New of Indiana says he does not want to surrender the right to decide whether and when to fight. Most cf this argument Is for conver sational purposes, but oren membe ship in the league doesn't make it Impossible for a mu to atart a fight. Of course If he's wrong he may have to fight the whole universe and that U wherein the value of the league Is shown. that it made little dlffetenee la the decision of the war whether the Ger man fleet was bottled up in Heligo land or in Davy Jones's locker. The British navy licked whatever showed up. and though it would have made more exciting schoolboy hlstorr to relate how the fleet took a fool's chance and won a ffcond Trafalgar, there would have "been nothing about such an exploit to win the favor cf strategists. Admiral Jellicoe 'ueeds no defense, the fact that the sea lanes were kept open shows that tha navy did the work. 12.26 . i, - r-i a bushel. . There are worse Anenat 14. IS. ana IS. Elk a atate venttoa at Klamath Falls. JKLLI COSTS OOXTUOVERSY Admiral Jellicoe. the hlzhest la command at the Battle of Jutland. Is now implicated in one of those Inevitable controversies that follow wars. Should he or should he hot have slammed In and dug the Cer mans out? British pride says "Aye; forgetful In these day of victory USST VVK FOI.GET! The tumult and the shouting dies The captains and the klncs denart Still stands Thine ancifjt sacrifice. An bumble and a contrite heart. Lord Cod of hosts, he with as yet, Lest we forget lest we forget! Mr. Kruttschnltt, of the Southern Pacific, said la Portland yesterday that the Natron cut-off will not be built, nor any other considerable ex tension, till the railroads go back to their owners..! The country sus rected as much. But the roads will go back, not long after the new con gress gets to grinding. V V . " Salem Is Oregon's horticultural capital. And there's million's in It- I BITS FOR BREAKFAST I Genuine spring weather. The price of bread is up again. The higher pricesof labor and material did it. ...... wnat roes up must come down: perhaps. But It looks like a new process, right now. And It is bet ter so. too Snririo-i A-- .it -i the line might make a lot of trouble ueanj eryooay. Italy Is coming back. . V The rnmrr is that the Italians will finally get Flume. Ther should not have It. without provision for a free port on the Ad rlatie for Greater Serbia. Partni that Is provided for. TRAVELING -SALESMAN Tells How He Regained Strength, Ambition and Vim. Atlantic. Iowa. "I am a traveling salesman and was run-down, worn out, no appetite and no ambition. My druggist told me Vlnol was what I spent the week-end with her mother, Mrs. C. F. Grimm. Mrs. John Caplinger and son Ir vine spent a few days this week with Mrs.' Capllnger's mother at Stayton. - K number of boys from here hare gone to Oregoa City to work In the paper ml!L Among those going this week were Robert and Eugene Whee ler. Joe Tuleja and Arthur Laurlt on. Mr. and Mrs. 'Everett Iewls and sons Bobby and Nile visited at Scotts Mills Sunday. Mrs. C. F. Grimm entertained the school children Wednesday evening at a farewell party, given la honor of Gertrude and Mjrtle Ennls. who leave today for Medford to spend the summer with relative. Music and games were the diversion of the w'la ,w dlJrf evening. A dainty lunch was served " 4 commence io gam ana , by tha ho.te-. erf w th. ii tor es Minnie Schsller. Ella Grimm. Mar it built op my health and strength mo every spring and fatl I take It to build me up and it keeps me in splendid condtilon. W. E. Brock elsby. , The reason we guarantee Vlnol is because It Is a, constitutional remedy containing beef and cod liver pep tones. Iron and manganese pepton atea and glycerophosphates the most successful tonics known. Emll A. Schaefer. and druggists everywhere. P. S. For children's eczema. Saxol salve is guaranteed truly wonderful. . Ttdeja Farm cd Rickey . Sold to Cclifoniian tha Tuleja and Golda Wheeler. Those enjoying the evening were Ronald aad Ivan Buster. Anna and Theodore TuUJa, Allan and Raymond Wallace. John and Gladys Wheeler. Gege and Tola De 8antls. Paul Dlekman. Leon Klllan. Michael and Margat Flti- patrick. Claude Grimm and Myrtle and Gertrude Ennls. (RICKEY. Or.. May S Jacob Tule ja has sold his farm to a oerson tfrom California, who will take pos- sessioa at once. Mr. Tuleja will move to Salem. Miaa Golda .Wheeler visited at RIckreall this week with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Horner, who are making their home there temporarily. ' " !M1m Haxel Harris who is teach ing at Creawell was home on a visit with her father last Snndiy. . Mrs. C. A. Howard of Portland yesterday. Body of llru Adelman Found Near Essons Ferry The body of Mrs. Rose Adelman. C4 years old. who vanished during the night of Thursday. April 24. from- her home at Gervais, was found In Pudding river Sunday one-fourth of a mile below Esson's ferry. The body, lodged In the brush, was found by George Rltchey. a fisher man. Authorities who have investi gated the case say there Is no doubt that Mrs. Adelman committed sui cide, and the cause Is believed to hsve been temporary Insanity and have been temporary Insanity. No Inquest was held. The funeral was held at the Gervais Catholic church ' 1