( TIIK ORECJOX STATESMAN; KIMIlAY. Jl'XK 25. The Oregon Statesman !tia4 Dally Except Holiday by TUB STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPAXT Hi 8. Commercial St., Salem, Oregon i MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is excluBiTelr entitled to the nse for rerroblleatlon it all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper ana aiso me local news pnoiuhed herein. R. J. Hendricks ...:. Manager Stephen A. Stone Managing- Editor Ralph Glorer. .Cashier Frank Jukoskl. .Manager Job Dept. islinwnts of the Democratic Irmlers. ,11c rrgarda the tendencies of th Democratic party ns negative, the opposite tf ronatmrtive. longhair. Ibe hairs, the mill 'The whole process of constructive government will come 1m lLe snUrrytbinc w.r-.t .-wt Interesting Letter It itaat Boffrax-tlea and . . . ft . . Received nom uxxium an cmL if we have more than two dominant parties," savn Mr. IIiMivcr. That explains why Mr. Hoover would not think of throwing in his lot Vith a third party no matter if it promised him the Presidency. Mr. .Hoover is not a politician in the point of view of partisan ship; he is a politician from the ou of view of the tiMfu!iiCH of a great paily cs an agency of maximum scrvite to the country and the world. He is primarily an engineer; the world's greatest mining en- . a. . gineer. He ixMieves me ngni wuy is uie nest way to get a timig done. There in a- great task before the American people. The thing is to gen it done. And the way to get it done is by putting men in charge at DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier In Salem and suburbs, 11 cents a week, 60 cents a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall, S6 a year; $3 tor six months; SO cents a month. For three months or more, paid In advance, at rate of IS year. ITtlP VACIVW VMnMVaf-V T .V . VI m nan will be sent a year to any one paying a year In advance to the Dally Washington wjio hae organizing and constructive ability and for Statesman.) . . ' ward looking ideaNt backed by a party of performance with a record 0NDAY STATESMAN. $1 a year; 66 cents for six months; 26 cents toi qf accomplishment luree inumaa. Ik ICEKT.Y RTA.TTTaf AM l.nuf In wn (T.nan awt1nna TnctdlTl and Fridays, $1 a year '(If not paid in advance, $1.26); 6ft cents for six months; 26 cents for three months. It la the crand army o( d!tord. Whea poKtlrtana ek to bring to gether all the forces of liorlr sod destruction; to combine all the ele ments cf paaaioo and protest, for no other purpose than to saia plare and power for thetntle. they l-e-rorae dangeron to their country and their fellows. There la bo warrant or reason fr an Extreme Left party in America The bent wy to ri'l be country o.' (triarchy 1 to break it i into ptnall rlecea and not to permit ii to sain the cohenitre forces of an avalanche Harding and nar.Siony look fcooJ. rSLEPUONES: Business Office, 23. Circulation Department. 682. Job Department, 683. Herbert Hoover la genuine thoroughbred. Entered at the Postoffica in Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. The Mississippi Democrat have indorsed the administration of Pres ident Wilson, but the Democrats can get away with almost anything In that part of the country. HEEBERT HOOVEB, PHILOSOPHER AND PATRIOT A Chicago physician says there is I no reason why man should not live to be 1000 years old. If the Demo- tt-i. tt i;:ol arf f iUa imrl,l Icrats are to remain In Dover we iKIUCll XXUVJtCl. lailVUIK uu I lit puuwvai axiaiis vr. said once: 'The reason why the western democracies have sue ceeded is that individuals have learned by experience to yield to the will of the majority. If you are a prohibitionist and the district goes vyet, you don't take a gun and go out to enforce prohibition on your own account." lou accept the will of the majority and try to change it by persuasion. That's the reason for the constant rev- dont Just now think of any excuse for liTing so long. Exchange. JUi SAW I'l'ZZU.. Those who wouid bring a new party into the presidential cam paign are having trouble In rounding up and .cementing the discordant elements from which It is to be builded. It will take something FUTUKK DATES A servant girl and 810.000 di appeared from the same house the same day; the report do- not state, but it nrobablv was her car day. stations,-the political instability, in Central America they haven t Philadelphia No'rth American yet learned that principle. The spirit of yielding to the will of the majority, plus free discussion for the minority it is all a democracy needs." The above is taken from"an article in the Saturday Evening Post by Will Irwin, writing from. Germany. Mr. Hoover is just now taking a large dose of his own philosophy. The following statement was issued from Washington, D. C, on June 18th by Mr. Hoover: "I breakfasted with Senator Harding this morning at the Sena tor's invitation. I presented the views which I believed were held tjj a Euusiuciauic (iuu ui iiiuci'ruuriu mm t i-wi - ih'uihoihi June ii IS and It Portland Rom upon various questions The Senator stated that it was his most festival. I A,. AS A . A A AV n l. tk. U r. 1..:..;... 4 June Zt. eaiaraav toiler Mrrwr amccic ucaiic iu ue inc uiaiiumcuiaiuj iui Lftiiiin mc " n I convention In Salem. elements of the party together; that the views of both the eonserva- June it. Sunday coir, eu a . ' . ... ...... ... I Kalrra. at Euem. tive ana progressive wings of the party would ie luiiy represeuteu in jui jt. nundar i--haii. tL. -J . l. i . : l ,.t inrnuTrr. wiiorn rim. iue BUiiiiuisirauuu ; uiai lie i t-prcsciuru uu ianu uiar j;iuuji uui tuaij. jMfle 2g Monday Kir.t band concert Vim nnntAAoraA it n-aa Vita first 1iifv at loartAi tf tlio rtiirtv tn fnn. I nf mion WtlisorT park. ...... . . i . . . . ... - 1 June it. lnnday t omnoercial club sol mate ail elements into a united iront. lie win. oi course, issue no iUnShon at auto camp around, statement until after the Democratic convention, and then after con- df&jjSwSZ?"'"'' " sulfation with all sides. . Jr s. Monday r-ie ... ...... . . , I nOUHl CIO IB wnBs vi iBiiw My own position on various issues is wen enougn Known, ana as i pndnr day. to the party situation I cannot make !t more clear than the following L.fttll.f . .rSXm.uY vtViEttV July to tS Annual cncampmnt or a w A.a.,a fiHatmi . ranrvn aaH days ago and before I had any communication with Senator Harding: LngiBer. at cuds L-wi. artillery at Fort Bt arena. Juiv la nturdar narcaia iar July 1. Thursday County court to "I beg to acknowledge. the receipt of your letter. I have received many hundred other communications from friends advising various courses with respect to the situation v that eventuated in Chicago, for undoubtedly many of the independent and progressive Republicans like myself arc greatly disappointed over some tendencies that were ap parent at Chicago. The Chicago platform is not radical; the greater part of it is constructive and progressive; noth ing prevents the compromise planks on labor, the League, etc., from being given a forward looking interpretation; some things, including a reorganization of our election ex penditures and the primaries, are not adequately dealt with. "In these times when the great problems and issues cre ated by the war are new and are so complex, we must ex pect a wide divergence of view among the members of the party as to the methods by-which they are to le met. It follows, therefore, that if there was to have been unity in the convention, there had to be a large measure of compromise. The compromises on the platform and the candidate are m proof that we have not arrived at an era of new political and social tendencies and for this same reason, the same divergent groups and the same attitude of compromise will be found in the Democratic convention. "Nothing could be more disastrous than the development of several party organizations representing the complexion of every group in the country. With the legislative and executive functions more widely separated than in any other democracy, the whole process of constructive government will come to an end if we have more than two dominant parties. If we should come to this"position, there will be no possibility of the American people securing an expression of the will of the majority and we shall be entirely ruled by log rolling minorities or sterile political coalitions. - 0 'I am convinced that those of us and I lelieve they are the majority of the party who hold more definite views, could not, even were we so inclined, successfully effect the consummation of such views outside the party, and that our duty is to endeavor to bring them to realization within the party organization itself as the issues on which they bear arise. The tendencies of the party will gain their meaning only from actual administration. ' . "I am convinced that unity of action among the lileral thinkers of the party, especially if they exert themselves in the current of congressional elections, will insure the country against legislative reaction. "If the Republican 'party is to be irrevocably split I cannot conceive that Senator Harding will for one moment submit the administrative side of the government to the domination-of any group or coterie. Furthermore, we have - the. possibility of having administrative measures and joli. , cies determined by full cabinet resjwnsibility, and of having -f o operation restored with the legislative side of the govern . meut; ; I need not reiterate my conviction that the en--: - Mi-active ability so critically needed for the vigorous bus iness reorganization of the Federal government ami to meet t lie many econimic issues before us lies in the Republican . party." - "For all these reasons I believe that those of us who look upon party organization not from the point of view of partisanship but solely from the point of view of its useful ness as an agency of maximum service to the country, should support the Itcpublieau party at the .polls. Vours faithfullv. (Signed) h'eRP.KIIT HOOVER." opn Did It on rota ooiraa. JBir IB IO II fllHW UHUKIIuyii July 23. II and Stala Elks coav v ant Ion In Salem. September ST to October tat faf more than an architect to draw the plans and piepare tbe working rpe- ificatlons for tbe new atructure. It will need more than a chemist tn blend tbe foam and dregs into a plansible stimulant for tbe human frame. Those Hi saw puzzles, over which people weie wont to spend some hour of time. furnih an idea of the problem betote the promot ers. Here are 37 quaint and odd- shaped pieces of wood and they mut be put together so as to form one harmonious picture. Hut tbe trouble Is they have Jum bled four C fire different puzzles They have taken tbe bind legs of -an elephant, the ears of a donkey. the horns of a moose, the hump of a camel, the stripes of a zebra, the tail of a tiper and the bead of a hyena and they are trying to ut them toge'her so as to make some animal that is lit for a domestic pvt. It can't be done. No more can ou patch up a dachshund and a duck to make an American eagle. When the puzzle fiends hate a- sembled the Inconcrous parta they will have something thai would be even unreccgnizable by tbe scientist who bad asembledlbe bones of the dinosaur and the Ichthyosaurus. It would be like nothing in the heaven above or the earth beneath. It couldn't even growl Here la a section or the Socialist party, a allde vt the publie-owaer-hip" Democrata. a lot of tbe single taxers. most of the Nonpartisan league, a irlng of the labor organi zation, all of the pro-Oenaans. all of the parlor Bolshevists, a -collection of anarchists. Communists, syn dicalists and iholy terrors, a few plumb Plan Republicans, a lot of wets, a taste of drys. mot of the I. V. V. menjbers. the anti-preparedness crowd, the unconscientious objectors, tbe peace-at-any - price f'KLTIC TOrcillXIX. Premier Uoyd George of Britain, a Welshman. In an Interview with be presa on tbe San Kemo eoater- nce. diplomatically explained num erous litlt) misunderstandings with tbe remark that "we Celts are so much more suspicious than the An glo-Saxons. No wonJer a good many people i suspected IMratu Johnson of being aj Sinn Keiner. lag gallet-w-r.. a:o la Ceklrat aaf Colocae. "No war J frvta boat " Oa the lak of ik rrd Is a sc- Iroia Warsaw. Poland, nnd.rdate Ko-(pkrf Uakl- at kraat cf May Z9. K. n. Korkaart wrteI.K-. IUU ... ,..! he follow lag to a aaetnter cf The j the city I -Wanuawa." tatemasi forre: na-aa .astca; aew iimm.- Wlsh joa .ere here to altead V a 1" " '" ' . the rkarrh atare. Wa rt remits this Itu.sUa cbarrh with me . naraifWat a'rmrl-tr eroLalle t. moraine sad go to grand cpera j pairing ! years or sfv t baCI. Carmen. tonmriow. Mr Iwkhart t la T. M. C. A. re.ullfut city with tree..,a-4 ' Warsaw lie was la T. M. treet. and looking .oa,- " ' .rVv bwt eome plucky MH.ers. too ' A-ea who remembered me in Pu wl J maasgleg editor 4 Twe tutrraa. Ut year for Y. M. C. .. Y. " f a4 was paster Of a aeasVer f A.. It. C. and cr-rnmi,. o.t-uui t MMt tntr ta Ofef aa4 .ulte a lo. I ... -UA.iK.r L..tir.i Uakgtt. "Spent few daa in lerlla suit. I children are la &aleaa. Mrs. LMkkart al tVe I BITS FOR BREAKFAST I w Salem's turn next. The Klks will come in ialy. The letter carriers will be ta Sa lem tomorrow. a "a Tbe firt American sold iera ar rived In France three years ago to day. A lot of water has run under VUIamett3 bridge since tLat day. S -a S ' Nearly every one wants sunshine especially the bay harvesters, a The men In charge say work Is to begin on I he Salem hospital right soon. The sooner the better. S At least a hundred men are new nittinc wood for tbe Salem paper trill for wood pulp, moetly white lir. The wood la already being re ceived an 1 stored on the grounds of the Kails City Lumber com pa ay near Fourteenth street, eavat of the jam factory, which hare been aeenr ed for the purpose. Work Is roiag forward on the big boilers of lb mill, at the foot of Trade street, and on every other part of the mill row strurtloa. ta fast as poeeible. As soon as the holler Is ready, tbe sul phide pari of the mill will be started up. and It will ot be long then till the finished product begiaa lo go out. The boilers ousht to be ready early la August. BRAIS, BRAWN and HOLSIM BREAD FOR THE BLUES TRY PARIS GREEN "In tTtry fTiia of mhtl then U alsxml & ccss pleu ration of raw food lo xaett iti cedi cf lit fca Dia body.' Th. U. S. Drpartocst of Ajrricultsrt la Tira ert Bolletta Ko. 07 Saji: "ZZZAD exxzx to zttr to bdxtf coaplru food, L t-, U froridizf nttldtzl bod bnllrtlTif tuxd body Ttgvlxlizs cxUrul, HaI It would b an adr&sUft, frota tba gtaadpoist cf econ omy (conxidertnx Ilia xiourUhritat it rspylie ta cospaTisoa with iu cost), lo w U cert Urp!j ta diet. Tba Aaericia family tpeadi appro xinxUly osa-Usth cf ill food xaocry for BE TAT) ard dctiTct xnort thxa cat fonrth of its tzaxj tbcrtfixa. HOLSUM BREAD u yoor Best BREAD Bay more oi iL is your Best food Ett core of it Thr a hove letter will pxnlain anil mnlci elour n lot nf ilun. - - - - . g - - aa w r iiiini r the men and women-of the United States who hoped to see Herbert jioover maie J resident oi the I nited rtates. : .He says.: "I need not reiterate mys convict ion that, the construct tl'O nlillill' vil ! I !u 1 1 IT iKuiilnl fill tlx. t-trririii I .i: ...,.. .. I . tion of tlie I-'cueral govciinnciit and to meet the many economic is sues he fore us lies in the IJepuhlican party." - That lithe reason why .Mr. Hoover refused to listen to the Mand PARENTS ATTENTION! Particular Attention of Parents of Boys is Directed to One Item Featured Herewith as It Is Positively the (Greatest Bargain We Have Ever Offered In Boys' Clothing, Parents Will Find It to Their Advantage to Buy ClotMkg for Boys at This Sale men's suns OUR ENTIRE STOCK of Hart. Schaffner & Marx, Michael Sterns and David Ad ler's High Grade Clothing at 20 Per Ct. Off MEN'S HATS Take your choice from oar immense stock of Stetson and Mallory hats. 20 Per Gt. Off MEN'S SHOES "Just Wright" Shoes for men who want the best in footwear priced from $10 to $16 Less 20 Per Ct. 50 BOY'S OREGON SUITS Bishop's Tailored Suits, Made of Materials Manufactured by Kay and Eugene Mills, of Oregon Wool, to Sell in Regular Stock IFow 27 and g Assorted Patterns Latest Models, Ages 6 to 15 Years. See Them in Our Window. On Sale Friday and Saturday for $ A.50 EXTRA SPECIAL ONE LOT MEN'S SUITS Staple and young men's mod els, regular $25 to $60, Special 33 PerCt Off SHOE SPECIAL One lot men's Ugh grade tan and mahogany sKoet, lice, regular $12 and $15 at At $7.95 ARMY SHOES Men's Manjon Uit, brown and black tray tbott, rcpi lir $8. $850 and $9 $5.95 Bishop's- Protection Sale salem wooien mills