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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1919)
) THfc felATESJiAlC: SCXDAY, JUXE 1. 1010 fPf tr nniyt a nw n . 1VT Ihistorv of the develomnent of man from a state of barbarism. 1 rttL VJlvtiVJVjlN O 1 A 1 HOlVlAlN In conclusion, does the reader now think the words in the heading - "1 Issued Dally Except Monday by THE STATESMAN PCBUSHTXQ COMPACT 216 8. Commercial St-. Balem, Oregon, . of this article are too. strong t (Make it even, and unanimous. MEMBER OF THB 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. ... Manager Stephen A. Stone. - .Managing Editor Ralph Glover. ; ... . . ...... .Cashier W. C. Squier. ..... . . ..... . v. .Advertising Manager Frank Jaskoskl. . . . Manager Job Dept. Put .Oregon Tuesday. on the- road map. It will be a big week in Paris and the 'wide world.' i, DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier In Salem and suburbs, 15 cents a week, 60 cents month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall. $6 a year; 3 for six months; SO cents a month. For three months or more, paid in advance, at rate of 5 year. SUNDAY 8TATESMAN. $1 a year: 60 cents for six months; 26 cents for three months. WEEKLY STATESMAN, Issued In two six-page sections Tuesdays and Fridays. S 1 a year (if not Dald In advance, S1.26): 60 centa for six months; 26 cents for three months. Read hopes to make it back in one hop. Leave it to Read. iPickers, and more pickers, will be needed in the Salem neighborhood. iPut Oregon over the top and on the; grade,, grade. Tuesday. On the up TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23. Circulation Department, 683. Job Department, 613. Entered at the Postoffice in Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. Put Oregon in -the front Hue of progress to stay. Vote the even num bers all down the line. 1 American marines are fit at to fight, and American naval men first I to fly . ' ' WE CANNOT BE A GREAT NATION WITHOUT MILK. " 'How to Promote the Use of Milk' is the title of a bro chure just issued by the Department of Agriculture. . How to get it at the present prices would be more to the point." Los Angeles Times. - ..The above flippant remark of a paragrapber calls for the rather startling heading. - Read it airam : Ve cannot be a ereat nation without milk. And more milk. ' , Why! ' - '. ' Because we would be under nourished arid mal nourished without the free use of milk. , 1 - Dr. E. V. McCollum, formerly, of the Wisconsin Experiment Sta tion. and now of Johns Hopkins University, has recently startled the world by publication of the results of exhaustive experiments in this field. . ' 1 v He has advanced the knowledge of scientific feeding of man and beast by a decade. ' Chemistry had done much before these experiments If you have any red blood in your veins, do not stay away from the polls on Tuesday. It is your . duty to vote, and get Oregon started right. Carranza isfripe enough to Dick. But Mexico hfs few, better or abler men, and many worse one3. More's the pity. . There is very little talk, and no argument, against, the Oregon good roads program; or against the Mar ion county market roads program. 'I do not harshly blame the pres ident for yielding, to the' temptation to join, me luxury ana aauiauon j which awaited -him in Paris." says Speaker Gillett. This makes it cer tain that, the , f&eaker does not in- It had worked out dietary tables on the basis of calories and pro-1 tend to spoil the president with adu- teins and fats, But Dr. McCullom has shown that, before we can anticipate re suits with exactness we must know what kinds of p'roteins arid fats, ? , as well as how much. And he has definitely and conclusively proved that there is nc substitute for the products of the dairy cow. Children will not grow normally without milk Physical and mental and even moral stamina depends upon the use of milk. . , " ' The ., reason for the; prevalent blindness in Oriental countries is the lack of milk: also beri-beri and pellagra are due to milkless "'diets. "; "'"-I-.,.'' i ' ' ,V' The young must have milk. jt tl - , And any people who wish to achieve must hare milk. - Science can find tro substitute. f 4 lation when he gets field Republican. back. Spring transient stay were visioned even greater than they developed. Jajnes'J. Hill shortly befor-3 his death said that every man worth the name had his great adventure. To some, he said, it was a fortune of dollars, to some it was a wealth of political accomplishment, to some It was a liney of steamships sailing the seas, but to hiiu it was the Great Northern Railroad. He visioned that road, put his heart la it and bis shoulder to 'the wheel and became one of tho great men of his time. Talk to your neighbor and find what his vision is. If it' is small and uninteresting, savoring not in the least of adventure, you may look for ward to the time when you wU call upon him; 1 j his little rut and sug gest that he teach visioning to his children that they may escape his fate. ' . And Jhcse visionists tell us that visioning puts' radiance into life, dulls all the exigencies of today and makes every hour a happy milestone on the way to the realization of our vision, whatever it may be. But they say you must wake up and . put a vision ahead of you that is wide and deep and high. No puny vision will do. No hoping for glories that will crush or maim, any other human be ing for If you do that will work, too, and your dream come true will bring you sorrow. For visioning. they maintain, once started will be come your own condition "ia spite of everything. If they were sure of that they would be faring better than the old-time preacher. The common laoorer now adays sets his mark at about iizv a month and lots or pastors would have thought that a good income if they could collect it. It is fine indeed that the ministers have the consolation of a future reward, for certainly they do not all get it here FORGIVE THKIlt FAULTS (By V. L. Stanton) If you'd seen 'em a-ma renin as J have, you'd seen 'em all night and all day. With packs that was breakin' theil shoulders. A-fillin and blockin the way; With rain soakin' thru' 'em la tor rents. With mud reachin up to their knees. You'd never say no word agin 'em. These boys that went over the sea. If If 'em a-sleepin' as I you'd seen have. Their faces so peaceful and young. Forgettin" the things they was livin. As If there had nothla' gone wrong: Just, like when they laid In the cradle. Or slept In their dear mother arms, j You'd never say no word agin 'em These boys f:xm the towns and the farms. tlons or politics. All the betrayers go down one road. Los Angeles Times. . IX A FAR-OFF GOD'S ACRE Why was it that my eyes were dim as we carried his body down to the gravethe latest of all thoe acres of small white crosses? It was aot at the sublime words that fell from the chaplain's lips on the faint au tumn air: in them there was hpe. It was not at the thought of him we we-e to leave theie. The distant chining of the sea ndtr the vaulted blue: the Italian soldier who stood beneath a pine tree oj a little sandy bill, statuesque, his haad raised in that strange Italian salute as though he were shading his eyes to gaze out to sea; the hush that was. upon our gathered j comrades" all these :. were mating, but It was not becaQ , of them; that my eyes were c.z'k Working amid th multitude c. graves ere English girls, l routes hardhafcde'd. with big, bavy fcoc'x And my ;. eye, were dim becm. j thonrhtJof thou&ande of ri t v. - " il lives must now b givea to notkllt more than that ketping fresh tjj fj green tpit graves or weir men S.- in Manchester Eng.)( Cnarfcij. LEST WK FOI.'GETI The timult and the shouting dfe The ciptalns and the kings deparu. Still stands Thine ancl;ot sacri, An humble And a contrite heart, Lord'oJ of hosts, be with us y Lest f' forget lest we forget! " ! r Read ithe Qanlfied Aj, rBICYCIlES. J" OS GOING TO CHURCH of to Sergeant Alvin C. York of Pall Mall, Tenn., and the 328th infantry. a1 church elder aod former conscien tious qbjectbr. who has been called the "greatest' war hero, Is back from France. He admits that he killed. 25 Germans the day he cap tured 132 prisoners, and says.' "If I hadn't killed them quick I. wouldn't be'here. The trouble with the views I of a great many conscientious objec tors was that they didn't Bee the So, the United States must do one of two things," in order to main-1 question of national defense In terms of like concreteaess . Just exactly 1 the advantage smoking in chuch does nr,t seem be clear, ' About onca In so often there bobs up aa unnaturally nervous clergy nun who is sure that the churches are going to close and be used for garages. He is, sure that if they is sued a notice permit tine parishion ers to put their feet on the seats in front or to smoke in. church or. tango in the aisles -or use the cellar for a shooting gallery the public would block the traffic trying to get there. If men won't go to church for the sake of going to church they woa't get all dressed up In a biled shirt and their best shoes and march down there to have a pipe. Meanwhile the oia cnurcn seems to keen nereinr along on the job just the same. I VISIOXIXG tain world leadership - First, double dr treble the number of cows. ' Or, second,, double or treble the average butterfat prdouction of the present number of cows by proper breeding and feeding. The latter may be done, as the reader may readliy sec. Take the Jersey's, for instance. A Jersey cow is eligible, to registration' on producing 2o0 to 3601 ins visioning as the first requisite . pounds of butterfat m a year, owing to age. . I toward a huppy future. And they Vive La France, the greatest Jersey cow in the world, at Marion,tell us ths visioning should .begin Marion county, Oregon, actually produced about 1043 pounds as a I arly when we are learning walk senior four year old. She is probably capable of producing 1200 m5 and talking and new words and A new mental muscle-developer is biddiug for attention. It is vision- PA11XG THE PREACH FIR Reports at the. Baptist convention were that a majority of the ministers were receiving day laborers' wages. the worst that If you'd seen 'em a-laughln and jokin', When .things was could be: If you'd seen era a-ruunU and swearin' Right into the Boche enemy If you'd seen 'em a Tallin' and lyin,' Their faces turned up to the sky. You'd never say no word agin 'em. These boys that was williu' to die! Note: Written at inirnight la the port of Gibraltar, while on watch in the hole of a transport whsre hun dreds of enlisted men were sleeping. They were packed two tiers deep. lying in all kinds of positions, cov ered and uncovered: but on each face, as I picked my way in the dim light 'over packs, rifles aod shoes, was the same peaceful expression of "sleep that knits up .the raveled sleeve of care." BICYCLE SUPPLIES . Yon will find the vvheel you want at p "The Home of theiindian" . f3 126 South Commercial St We Want Your Berries JUDAS "It Is true that Judas got thirty pieces of silver at the tlmte but he did aot enjoy a great degreo of pros perity afterwards," remarked one of the leading preachers of Los Angeles In his Sunday sernun. And the same- can be said of every Judas In all history, whether in re ligious life, business, family relar n i Loganberries, Strawherjiii, Red Raipberriei, Black Ra$pberriejfiGooteberries, Blackheme's, etc. WE PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICE I J. L. Vail IDoren Office 312 Masonic Temple Phone 342 pounds. The common brindle cow produces around 150 pounds of; butter- : fat in a year. - , : The reader can readliy see from this that the butterfat of the . United States eould be doubled trebled, or even quadrupled, and then some, by proper breednig and feeding. - That is, without any substantial increase in cost of feeds; just ' bv knowing how. and care. f In one of the two ways, or by a combination of he two ways, " the milk production of this country must be increased; must be doubled; trpbled. , f It is good citizenship to promote this. It is along the line of efficiency. . Even of patriotism. . ' And it is good business. It will mean more silos; better barns; better cultivation; higher land values. Better roads, better schools, . , and a higher plane of country and city and village life will all .. follow. .7 .... - ; 1 1 ; No flippant matter, this. And the wide awake people in all walks of life are fully aware of the great importance of the cow. -r--;J rt f- : u i: i.-ul u: '1 selves directing great force of men fionuu tvuiii;, si v gun, siaiius ill lire lime iiiib m mis muvuulCIll. I upon : vvesiern vregon is. pouna to remain in ine lime ngni in ine aairy world, because there is a difference of a good many pounds of butterfat each year for the same effort here over and above the possibilities of nearly every other section of the United States ' Why! Because it costs so much less .to get the cow through the twelve general all-around impossibility of " v v iiiuu v uva n uvi v ,aw w ii n. a o ouu LitC oil 111 III VI .0 heat must be fought. The difference is at least 7 cents a pound of butterfat in our favor, according to good authority. ( It is perhaps more.: , , - So the beaten track of the dairy world is to the door of the Wil lainette valley dairymen. - And it will remain so. new placea. isioaing means a full lite, these visionists tell us. It Is the foundation tor things which will come It we hang, onto our visioning. it is hope madd practical. It is no longer enough to vapidly wish' for this -or that. You jnust see yourself in the conditions and situations you desire. Your preheat must be scin-. tillant with the inwa:u sight of other races and other places that is. if you yearn for other faces and other places and most of us do. Further more, they tell us that those who nave struck deadly ruts have djne so for the simple reason' that thev never learned how to vision. They never learned to see themselve3 suc cessful in whatever way they de sired success. They did not see them selves speaking in their legislatures or congress; they did not set them- Majestic Rare aim' Week JUNE 2 TO ! 7TH buildings or bridges; they dtd not see themselves as orators or men of money and power; they slumped eany ana began to talk about the advantages they had not had. the drawbacks they had had and th ever having anythrjg worth while in this vale of tears Thev visinnai themselves in exactly the sanw un- nappy limited rut in which they first Tound themselves and there they stayed.' They do not belong to ths Sarah 'Bernhardt class whose motto is in spue or everything. It is quite safe to say that all the great accomplishments, the pyramids and monuments of maa a aeermination to make some impression on the earth during his Harvey Scott, when he was editor of the Portland Oregonian, once wrote an able article that attracted wide attention; m which he proved to his own satisfaction and to the satisfaction of manv of his readers that only the meat eaters were and were destined toU" the rest of the be world conquerors; world leaders. It has frequently been said that the dejrre of success of the various European nations in science, art, literature and politics runs parallel to tneir consumption of meat. ...Dr .McCollum has shown that, this was only a seeming truth; a nan irum. r. L' lie nas i Known, a tter carefully analyzing the effectiveness of the combinations of foods employed in human nutrition, that the effic iency of a people can be predicted with a fair degree of accuracv rprvxz DATES. . ' -commencement at R. icm inaian iraining- school. 0)miir Jn S. ToMday Special leeUaa la Or Jun 5. Thuradar lm.i...i from a knowledge of the degree to which they consume dairv pro-U"t m sViemU ' of MrlOB COUBt' to UUCtR. . i l..w"Hr. omrnT Annual nrn! rniir is I vm lumtri grove. June 7 to 11 Historic par cant ron memoratCna: 71th annirersafy of WU- "fw'L 'mon. First Meth- June 14. Saturday Flag dar. Salem ch001 elect,o In i 6l3 Kill-,1""0 ATm ffuIS .nt S encampment of .nmn war veterans til Ha lorn. T"" . i. tika atat 'iin at KlaaiH Fll September 22-27- During this week an expert from the factory of the Majestic Mfg. Co. will demonstrate the superiority of Majestic Ranges in our south window. 1 5L ism: J SSSSSMSMaaWaWaaaaaajaaaaaaMaWaWaagJ Cull thisl wonderful Range--the new, smooth finish modeIs--the last word in beauty and I labor .. - I- '- i mg, and see sav- ducts. The use of meat and milk and its products will in nearlv all eases run more or less parallel, and Prof. McCollum asserts that it is the nunc and butter and cheeseTand not the meat, which has the good influence on the promotion of the virile qualities of the people. nere is one of the concluding statements of Dr. McCollum, in summing up the results of very complete" and exhaustvie experi mental investigations: . ; s "i.t,hout the continued use of milk, not only for the feedine of tu, Iutl, JU uullB1 amounts m ooogrery and as an adjuvant to our diet, we cannot as a nation maintain the position as a worfd imii we nave arisen. . --v.FuiS oi uauy anmai3 was the greatest factotr in the kta state fair. -Fifty eighth Ore- ABSOLUTELY FREE E-i????11.. wiil.siye absolutely free a handsome set of afford I to mws Kange sold. An opportunity you Corner Court and Com'i ' Get MY L FARMER HARDWARE CO! i: can t Phone 191. a Range and set of cooking ware for the price of the Rcmge only aaCM,,l'l'iMa"3,M t r Hi-