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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1920)
Oregon Statesman i - i i TIIE OREGON STATESMAN: SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1920 - IflaiiAj v- a. TIIE kt.,, vvlf Except Monday by B2'SrATHA3t ITBUSHINU COMPACT : vvmmerciai El.. Salem, Oregon tf ! iJlfJLW OF TUK ASSOCIATED PRESS local news published here n Bpateht, cdi xclu,I1re,j enUUed to tae U8e fr repoblication - ' t r uvk uwiTKiie ci euiieu in in lb nauer : k . . J... " " 1 tone.. '- ......... r -ski....;. .7,7,7; 77 ......... .Manager , . .Managing Editor .Cashier .Manager Job Dept. .TESMAN. eents a month. . - ' ' j . VFo??Nby ar; $3 for six months; 60 cents a ' vin iti?.5l(mthB' or more paid in advance, at rate of J 5 year. 'HO HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper, will ' er to "T one payljig a year In advance ; to the Dally moitti31 -1 ?W 6 cents for six months; 25 cents for STATESMAN, issued In two six-page sections, Tuesdays and li mr If not paid In adTanee, $1.25); 60 cents for six 1; 26 cents for three mentis, j iES; Business Office, 23. ; Circulation Department. 583. , Job Department, 683. I ii at the Postofflce In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. TWO IN ONE ; A SOLID AND SYMMETRICAL' GROWTH - . i' "... r : i. alepj sb.6u.ld have a solid land symmetrical growth. ..fact, a symmetrical growthj will be solid. lat is the spirit of the Salem Slogan campaign of The States. to accentuate the basic industries here: and the kinds ami v.i- and hreeds that' will do the best here to follow the lines of resistance, which was one; of j the life rules of James J. Hill. Vs was pointed out' by Robert C. Paulus in The Statesman of sday in his article oh the? cherry industry, a glace fruit and schinQ. cherry, factory would make the circle of. fruit industries lem'Well nich rnnrmWiv i i ' The. soil .would be hooked tip to the factories so that everj-thing u uc-mcu uiKcn care 01 even ail we oy-proaucta or truit. ilr. Paulns added that this taatter was being looked into, with OSDect Of thia dfififipnpv hMnr snrmliA-l ! I . r . -j uurl...u. In some way the information jshould be conveyed to the parties are Considering th inAnsirv fVinf tTi nrnturtv l.rtMoo 4 men of Salem, and the farmers of this district, are ready to lend inux liauu; in a suosiamiai way. . The farmers can smrolv the vherri Thla a tho try on earth and it is an industry in which the pioneering has 1 uue. jnsnow a sure tmng and will be, more sure of great ii rcturna wim-me aqaiiion 01 tne lactory mentioned.. Last' eight was a-black night for the Reds in various cities of United States. 'And this? will be more nearly a white' man's ry after all of themishall have been sent sailing over the blue v 1 - , 1 - ! - -.f . i, menceau couldn't have pleased Italy or Italy's partisans in try saying to the Chamber: "The Fiurae question has been ng. Italy promised Fiume to the Jntro-Slavs. but went hnol? nn amise' Saying this may not have been diplomatic, but it was . trrthfd than holding Wilson responsible for the mess over - Willi 'I' I 'f :.. . 1 , I . iu:nf ... -.I'.., "... : , . . ,. . i 1 - ... . Forty thousand persons are working in the French textile mills that were looted by the Germans during the war and the industry is recovering rapidly, though to make up an estimated loss of 20 billion ""i iu wutr. Aiiafc me progress aireaay maae great- iiti.iiiuuus me rxpcnij is iiie encouraging iacL ' .The "Heavenly Feet Association" just organized in China to end IkA - - - A. A . 1 " . " . i .A- . a . . j wticui cusium ui oiuumg me ieei 01 gir cables nas a task al mostUs formidable as that of keeping American feet shod without - - v v kuwwvuuua UUU AAA; Sfl C 1UU.1 V Cdl H llf.PIl tTlVPH I . n rl GT TT1 9 O dinners by charitable institutions! in New York City hundreds were Riven them a week ago Thursday ; though, all who came Avere fed. I'liere has been some leveling up from the depths ; and who shkll say "' m j rrgune nas poi neipeui - j ' To the national Democracy; out for the Bryan cars. i T Look V '.'Victory was willed by God." says ocb. lie devoutly believes what he ays. wel Treat the census enumerators They hare an important work to1 peij- iorm. , ;,. Emma Gotdman ought Vo have a good time In Hussia. All the hell over there has been raised. que- tors ; You will have to answer the At . . " ... UODI OI inn fAnviili mimrai Most, people will answer themrwilj Inglyi The information will not be made public, excepting In the mass. at Washington, for statistical Inter matlon. If, when "out ship comes In"Lit only bears a cargo of fair to good round steak and plenty of sugar. For the middle-aged or elderly person who re quires one pair of glapses for reading and another pair for out-of-door us. we recommend Invisible Bifocal or double vision glasses. A t They are really two pairs of glasses in one two lenses fused together 'without any visible join ing. There is no promi nent seam 01 joint to tell the public that the wearer is "getting along in years'' With Invisible Bifocals even your closest friends cannot detect that you are wearing double vision glasses. Call and see them. The sporting experts found that their dope was wrong. Carpentier displayed such form in the ring that there are those who question whether Jack Dempsey could have withstood the onslaught. Never before in the history of the ring was, so Important a contest de cided in so short a time. Carpentler's opponent did not re cover consciousness for 10 minutes after receiving the coup de grace. Here is food for cogitation for those who used to prate about French de cadence. It is the first time that the Latin has ever robbed the Anglo-Saxon of his prestige in the prize ring. Ferhaps that four years of lire in the open was not such a bad form of physical training after all. The Liberty boys who have returned home after one year of it do not have the appearance of physical weaklings. IIUBBIXQ IT IX. Henry E. Morris & Co. Eyesight Specialist 305 State St. Salem 1 guessing as to the objecUof his visit. It is possible he wanted to show father-in-law Woodrow that he was n't a bit proud even if be did wear patched pants. Exchange. Attorney General Palmer says that the high cost of living will surely be reduced the first of the year, but he doesn't say what year. Chairman Will Hays of the Repub lican National committee says only small' amounts will, be received in the shape of campaign contributions, which ought to warm the hearts of the ojld boys who have been "sweet ening! the kitty" in large sums in previous years. Los Angeles Times. When Ludendorff rushed into print he forgot the cry of the ancient writer, 40 that mine enemy would write a book." The memoirs of the -German gen eral have now been published and military writers 11 over the world have fallen on them tooth and nail. One says the German commander has shirked the "key points." - Another says he. is querulous and insincere an dthat his work is marred by expositions of Prussian mentality. Lieutenant Colonel Repington, for merly military critic of the London Times and now of the Morning Tost, hits his old foe hardest. He says that the de facto commander-in-chief of the German armies from August. 1916. until the close of the war does not give in his memoirs the true ex planation of his military failures. The reviewers are. indeed, rubbing in the defeat. They speak of his fatal errors and declare that his reputation for lead ership has been destroyed beyond repair. Nevertheless, now that the war's over, the critics in England speak In hot unkindly fashion about their de feated foe. Thev call Ludendorff nn honest soldier, riot in the front rank oi generaisnip.-Dut also not a cour tier, and they see him through his book, "struggling with overwhelming difficulties and pursuing his course with a firm desire to do bis duty." Major General Sir F. Maurice, he of the "where is Blucher?" episode. is perhaps Ludendorff 's kindest crit ic. He says the book shows the Prus sian to us as a deep and earnest stu uem oi nis protesston of soldier, a gallant man in action, a skillful or ganizer and a tactician of great mer It.. It's easy to be wise after the event, but we all know what was Lu- dendorff's greatest failure. It was that he did not appreciate the power of America. PHANTOMS OF THF DESERT rp America ; lri fg 7 ( r . ( V LIVES ! fMi, . teg -v a j , .428 AMeicM civilians i j v , hrrfn r :l ft 1 1 ! Ft I wfiV-J'irv '0iw ' 0. if . Oh. that's all light." said the em-!to me!" minute In that ease I'm afraid yon This Job Is not suited to NOT PROPERLY EQUIPPED. j "Perhaps I ought to tell you, ' f aid i you. But, wait a tue applicant for the position; "that i kind of a prison was It?" m- wlth .ailonsed hands and I have just finished serving a prison "A model Institution, sir. Tb corned-beef-and-abbage appetite-" sentence.' warden. Goo. Hess you. tiu a faihcr Birmingham Ace-Herald. wi,, ! won't do. This job Is not t .a "hothouse plant.' What I want is t SABOTAGING TRADE-VXIOXIS3L Society note: Miss Emma Gold man and Alexander Berkman are en route to Europe for an indefinite stay. It is now claimed that meat. Is the curse ot the nation. But the pack ers will never agree to that diagnosis of the situation! Ex-Secretary McAdoo was a caller upon President Wilson the other day. and the correspondents have been The I.W.W. trial in Kansas City, Kan., has demonstrated that the Reds in America are striking at conserva tive organized labor leadership as viciously as they rant at the capital ist. Their program of overthrow of our institutions "without regard to right or wrong" is menacing the fun damentals of the trades unions as much as it is menacing property rights. ! There is sabotage of labor unions as well as sabotage of property. The conservative labor leaders are concerned In stopping illegal strikes. breaking ot contracts and attempts to defy the government and public the methods of the radicals in labor movements to sabotage the principle of collective bargaining. If the pur poses of trade-unionism are to be preserved and made serviceable for the. workingman this "Red-card" ele ment, with its hatred and direct-action methods, must be kicked out by American labor--the rank and file must do the job. Kansas City Times lltFlliilAl .Vt IF PROFIT PAYING DAY T HAT was January first at tne United States , national Bank, and every Savings Depositor received a profit b INTEREST for his good judgement and effort in SAVING. I If yon did not snare in that reward don't let that deter you from opening a Savings Account .iv ii ouu ucwg m on me nexr melon. BACK X UMBER, Seven of the largest trade unions in England are said to have united on an anti-strike program. They have found that the strike is a futile weap on especially wnen It Is In unau thorized or incompetent hands and has only weakened the standing and prestige oi organized labor. Yet a few seasons and the strike. will have! become an ancient and sorry jest. SITTIXQ nY THE LAW.- Seats on the Kansas City board of trade have been fixed at $20,0000 per each. They ought to pay a man that much for staying in the town long enough to sit down. The great value ot Kansas City is in the .opportunities it furnishes for travelers to ihange cars on the way from the east to Ore gon, f ( MwA t : l'; wT. . i. . ! i j MAR) Originators - 1 351 .SIC onniBanjtt Oregon. AFTER SERVICE. .Alarmists who have seen the wast ing of the vitality, of a generation by reason ot the physical deterioration due to trench lire will have some dif ficulty In ' explaining how Georges Carpentier, a French pollu. was able to come back from four years of ser vice at the front and win the heavy weight championship of Europe in 74 seconds.. j Carpentier had less than 'six weeks to train after demobilization. He lived on the meager food that was served to the troops at the front and drank his quart of wine -a day. ana me oniy exercise ne naa to Keep In training was flinging bombs and grenades at the Boche. Yet when Carpentier was once In the ring he displayed a combination, of speed and punch that simply over whelmed the English champion, who went into the ring a favorite because his opponent was supposed to have been so weakened by exposure and privation at the front that he Vbuld not possibly be in fighting condTion. . AY' I Hand Sapolio I BITS FOR BREAKFAST I Watch North Salem, j m m m The North Salem I mnrnvAment a a. sociaiion is on the job. j They propose to improve fifteen streets out that way. S Oil excitement over at Amity. They have, struck a socket of ran ai iuu ieet. n That looks like oil; being so far away irom tne united states senate There is going to be a "bee boom in the Salem fruit district. Then, with the COW bOOm. thU milt h trnlr (ha Ii A.I ... ... ... J Liana ioai iiows witn min and honey. A lot more of the Reds in eastern ernes are on the Inside looking out. m K The easiest wav to discover what an average family spends is to learn wnai an average family earns. ,eii ine statesman what vou know about pears. That is the slo gan subject for next Thursday. Of course there is Dlentv of leather for daughter's coat.. The shortage appears when father wants to buy a pair of shoes. 5 S S The Kurds has a new king. Won der if this will be another argument for an Increase in the price of milk? v. Possibly CarrKflza figures It out that ve -aratc proud to f laM - X -!? ; Tt" "f";?-r f'tPTTn was a AUtlti i i I A v i , A nt amount of wwU itnir vtium. tn hr dun lii h the .i;lertiitKin uf wr U.i nnvt Mrily d-Uyrl ai n uiiiih lit-l. i l lite n-sult it lut Trrf l.ttgr tuft' ml rx-I-n,lilurr oiizlil madr to ratkr un for tlir intrruTv ti.Mi iiMritabiv titr t" Die r aixl l-i jirrtwre tlw raiifimla to h-fr -lqtui.'-l) tln(iiT a J trmili tlir.iif ti i tlx t'.'iilry. rAt.KF.R I). 1IIVKS Isirrttor Ozntral vf Uuili ouda the jcak of their Work more Produce morer- Save more Iut we can't continue increasing r.ur pro duction unless we continue increasing cur rail road facii.vies. - The farms, mines and factories iannot in crease their output beyond the capacity of th.? railroads to haul their products. Railroads are now rear carrying capacity. Witliout railroad expansion more engines, more cars, more tracks, more terminals -there can he little increase in production. But this country of ours is going to keep riht on growing and therailroads must grow with it. To command in the investment markets the How of new capital to expand railroad fa. cilities and so increase ..production th-re must he public confidence in the luturc earn ing jKiwcr of railroads. ' The nation's business can oniy grow as fust as the railroads grow. " . : i adwrtisemen t ia published bij Ihc dissociation ofSlaiUcmj LlavcutitejL I JTwar ilrtirimg iuormitum rmr,rni9 tk mux Hurarfu-f b0 ?. uif la Tkr Jtv i4 itatiom m .A. IjmT a tl JtrvmJ the T, XVJij.HM W "4 id rw- -a.J H A