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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1920)
1 - -t TnEoiiEcoy sTAfES3Lty: iniPir, Arr.rsT i.t. ipso. t f i I. n. The Oregon Statesman Issued Dally Except Monday by -TM STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPAJTT 111 S. Commercial St., 8alem. Oregoa "- .. MKMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS""" . ' The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ec all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la this paper and also the local news published herein. I dent will be compelled to show hU bind on the Issues of the day. and deal fairly with the rote is. His rmall town politics that are only allowable la a contest for a ward assessor will not go in the broad field covering the nation. R. J. Hendricks. Ifanager Stephen A. Stone. ................. Managing Editor Ralph Glover. ...................... frank Jaskoski. i ....... .Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier la Salem and suburbs, 11 cents a weok, SO cents a month. -PAILT 8TATESMAM. by mall. SI & year: IS for six months; SO cents a months For three months or more, paid In advance, at rate of IS year. Houses which remain ' empty in Manchester, Eng., by reason nf high tent or the preference of landlords. rl.hler re ze1 by the municipality and seiaiers laimues instauea tnerein at reasonable rents. The stupendous sum of money aid by the public for motion pic- he tried all psychology could do to make his married, life nPPr. but it wouldn't work, according to the Los Angeles Times. He told his students that married lire is the cne best bit. and they were so Impressed that some of them even went so far as to flirt or spoon a bit while strollinc off the campus. He al.o told all the neighbors that he. and Mrs. Owen were immensely happy. In other words. Troreswor Owen nukes it appear that psychol ogy is a good deal what we low brows call kidding ourselves along Hut. though he worked this psy chology overtime on his pupils and his neighbors, to his surprise and 1THK PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper, wuilture amusements mar be imagined ' be sent a year to any one paying a year In advance to the Dally I when a picture company can afford dismay his home did not become a 0fcmBa" " I . . at A t AAA . a. tn... I A St A a-rrsmav stitvomiu i - . mm . . ... .a . .Mio pay aiuv.uvv ior me priTiiese ui three months. - v .1 photographing "Babe" Ruth, the VIEKLT STATESMAN, Issued In two six-page sections, Tnesdays and I ball player. imaaya. ii a year (if not paid tn advance, 11.21); SO cents for six months; 2S cents for three months. rELEPUONES: Business Office, St. Circulation Department. ISS. . Job Department. SSS. Doubtless that is very mystifying to the learned professor. But there are a lot of unlearned hicks who ecu Id have told bim that psychology isn't what women want. They want love and ardor and ador ation. It doesn't' make so much Entered at the Postoftioe In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS ISSUE - Definition of the 1D20 campaign Issue has been completed. . , It was sketched first at the Chicago convention of the Republi can party and developed by the Democratic convention at San Fran p cisco and the Harding acceptance speech at Marion, Ohio. It has been completed by the Cox address delivered Saturday in Dayton. jrJ The party platforms and the acceptance speeches tell! the whole T atory." They draw, distinctly and sharply, the line between the par- itiesL v They prove that the Wilson league of nations, not "a league 'of nations, is the campaign' issue. Where the clash comes is in h. dicated below: ; ' , ..... . . , . THE PLATFORMS : . Itepuhlkan ;.- - 5 .Democratic i t i i . We favor a liberal and generous We advocate the immediate rat , '. foreign policy, founded upon defl- Iflcation of the (Versailles) treaty nite moral and -political princi- without reservations which would .The League of Nations Is to be discussed at the Chautauqua meet ings, to be held at Winona Lake. If thtft Inlnt dp hat settles nothing. we shall be compelled to hold the difference what one tells tne neign matter over until next June, during trs or the students as what one the commencement session. tells friend wife. A man can get farther by rapturously exclaiming. There Is no method by which a as he enters his domicile: "Honey. .... I i i- - . t . i j party esn inflict upon this nation ijuu iuvi u m m mi ureas, i the ills of an experimental, pseudo-1 want to show, you off lets go to idealistic, irritatingly unpractical, a show tonight!" than he can by crenlv sectional, noisoniously Social- telling outsiders about It 36 days I ' - I isUc government and get away with la year it without any "come-back." It I Kidding cne's self alone Is a grand must stand up In the court of pub-I little institution. But if one for- Iic "opinion and answer for its acts, gets to kid along the other half of The Democratic party, no matter the house Just as much, or more, it how eagerly It soughi to renounce I won't work In married life. an exposed and condemned Wilson by the secretary and unanimously adopted: "Inasmuch as it has pleased oar heavenly Ka.Vher In His Infinite wis dom to take from our midst our be loved sister a-pd co-worker. Molly Dennison. who with her husband. Comrade E. K. Dennison. was an active member of this association. And whereas, we shall miss her and her help and do most sincerely and deeply sympathize with her be reaved husband and family. Therefore, be it resolved that the Marion County Veterans association does hereby extent to the bereaved husband and family our deepest sympathy, and do earnestly pray that they may be comforted by the great. giver of all rvf tri i. hour. T Re It resolved that a copy ,t resolutions be seat to the un? and that a copy be sent to the tmf and be It farther resolved that a copy of these resolutions be tprti upon the minutes of this assorts, tion." - 4 ism by naming a non-Wilson ticket. must accept the consequence of its "seven lean years' and await the verdict of a thoroughly exasperated people. Philadelphia Ledger. i O. VU.I .VbVl v j o'vwa U M 'Idarktandinar of and firm adher. ence upon our own rights and un failing respect for-the rights of others. . . . The Republican party stands for agreement among the nations to preserve the peace of the world. . . . We believe that such an International association may be based upon international justice and must provide methods which shall maintain - the rule of public right by development of law and the decision of impartial courts, and which will, secure in stant and general - International action whenever peace shall be threatened. Impair its essential integrity. ... By doing this may we retrieve the reputation of this nation among the nations of the earth and re cover the moral leadership which President Wilson won and which Republican politicians at Wash ington sacrificed. ... We reject as utterly vain and vicious the Republican assumption that rat ification , of the treaty would In any wise impair the Integrity and Independence of our country.' BUYERS HEDGE. One of the mail order houses re ports that its business Is over ten million dollars a month less nowa days than it was last year. A drop of ten millions a month In trade would make almost any merchant look for a slump. In the collar button business it would be con bidercd almost a hardship. - i ' ' THE NOMINEES ' Harding Cox 1 Our first committal Is the res-, The first duty of the new ad toratlon of. popular government, ministration clearly will be the -under the constitution, through T ratification of. the treaty V; The the agency of the ' Republican ' Jqnestitm-s"whethee we shall or party. . . shall not join In this practical and' - . ;w i- i . ' humane movement. . u I promise you formal and ef fective peace so quickly as a Re publican congress can pass its dec laration for a Republican execu tive to sign. Then , we may turn . to our readjustment at home and proceed deliberately and reflect ively, to that hoped for world re lationship, which shall satisfy both conscience and aspirations and still hold us free from men acing involvement. No power, exists anywhere In the American state to compel an employ er of labor to continue In business at a continuing loss. And ho power exists to compel employes to choose no work at all when work fails I them at precisely such. wages and in such volume as now prevails or has Resolution Of CotlioUtlCe i uueiy prevailed, uxcepi upon me condition of greatly Increased ef ficiency in production, wages have no more right or reason to expect an Indefinite continuance of the present- extraordinarily high and more or less inflated level than commodity prices have ' to expect I the same thing for them. Arbitrary Interferences with the working of economic law. may for a moment stay" Its' course In any" Inevitable re adjustment, but only for a moment. New York World. i - Are Adopted ri Meeting At the rKoiar ' meeting of the carton County Veterans associa tion held at Silrerton, August 5. the following resolutions wers presented The most important step.ttv ward better baking is securing Teliabfe flour. . The rest is easy -merely follow the diredions ofa good recipe. (SMSEQS is reliable flour whoever has used it says so, and many haveused it during the, past .i . V f inirryyeais. Celag Cassplaf? Tack In soma s CSSXTS Pancake Floer. Carapflre, paacakes have a ddidoos tang. Of eomrst. pomftt inclmdt tSSSESS Wai Hearts, too. t? Yoor croeer htt it in 10, 24 and 49 pound tacit:. I Deep Apple Cake for Tea 9 add se yolk. , 1 ubWooaMkW taw. 2 cupi f '-''"- Flour. ftet QuiciJy ; fold (kiddy wah pmrmd. ad mt all J. aW ii r This means ; but one thing a separate peace with Germany. This would be the most disheart ening event, in civilization since the Russians made their separate .peace, with Germany. . . ..If Ger-" many should accept the chance ,we offered of breaking the bond, , it would be for the express purpose of insuring a German-American alliance, recognizing that the al lies tn fact, no nation In good standing- would have anything to do with either! of us. , We believe the .. unspeakable sorrows, the Immeasurable sacri fices, i the awakened convictions and the aspiring conscience of hu man - kind must commit the na tions of the earth to a new and better relationship. - In short, America, refusing to enter the league of nations (now already established by 29 nations) and bearing and deserving the contempt of the world, would sub mit an entirely new project. This act would either be regarded as arrant madness or attempted in ternational bossism. If the mistaken voice of Amer- ': President Wilson, as our repre ica, . spoken, in unheeding haste. . sentative at the peace table, en led Europe, in the hour of deep- - tered the league in our name, in est anxiety. Into a military all!- Bo far as the executive authority ance which ' menaces peace and permitted. . . . As the Democratic threatens all freedom. Instead of candidate, I favor going in. adding to security, then we must . r speak the truth for America. ' . , j " I can speak unreservedly of the. American aspiration and the Re publican committal for an associ ation of nations, co-operating in sublime accord, to attain and pre serve peace through justice rather than force. -,UjJ'.-:;;. They term the league of nations a military alliance, which, except for: their opposition, would envoi op our country, when, as a matter of truth, the subject of a league of nations has claimed the best thought of America for years. The finest impulses of humanity seek to make another horrible war impossible. It Is better to be the free and disinterested agent of interna tional justice and advancing civil ization, with the covenant of con science, than be shackled by a written compact which surrenders our freedom of action and gives to a military alliance the right to proclaim America's duty to the world. No surrender of rights to a world council or its military al liance, no assumed mandatory, however appealing, ever shall summon the sons of this republic to war. Their supreme sacrifice shall only be aked for America and Its call of honor. There is a sanctity . In that right we will not delegate. . i Let us analyse Senator Hard ing's plan or making a German-, American peace, and then calling for a "new relationship . among nations. This would entail our appointing another commission to assemble with those selected by the other powers. With the Ver sailles instrument. discarded, the whole subject of partitions and divisions of territory on new lines would be reopened. The difficul ties . . . would be greater than they were at t net peace session. . , . They hypocritically claim that the league of nations would re sult in our boys being drawn in to military service, but they tail to realize what every high school youngster, in the, land knows that no treaty can override our consti tution. . ' ' SOMETHING ON FOOT. The natlonl convention of chiro podists now being held In Philadel phia furnishes matter for thought an; the part of those who still cling to the use ot their hind legs. The chairman ot the scientific committee presented an able argument In favor I of dancing. The fox-trot was about the best thing In the world for the proper development and exercise ot the human foot. Nothing could be more beneficial for the small bones ot the toot and the muscles sur rounding them. But the people had to be properly shod. The high heeled shoe Is very hsrmful. ' It throws the body from its natural balance and makes the dance more dangerous than desirable. The jaxz In some ot the spindly footwear af fected by some of the girls of today is to invoke disease and disaster. A leading surgeon from St. Luke's hos pital la Chicago declared that the kind of shoes women now wear would In time . produce a race ot single-toed, high-boned people with feet like horses. But It he thinks that fwlll change the style he Is mistaken. The average woman would rather hare a one-toed grand- daughter with the make-up ot a gi raffe than be unfashionable. It she wants to jazx on stilts she will con tinue td do so. What business Is It of the chiropodist, anyhow? It it were not for the freak shoes women wear there wouldn't be much excuse for a chiropodist, anyhow. KJIIIN YOURSELF ALONG. Dr. Festus Edward Owep. former ly professor" of psychology In the University of Southern California. testified in bis suit for divorce that : President da la Huerta of Mexico has suppressed all Bolshevik and an archist, publications. FUTURE DATES Aurust to 1 Buj-ers wek enn vrntloa in Portland. AuKQ't IX.. It and IS Convent iw of State Editorial association. Corral M. Aurust IS. Monday Kalcro hVFoitl to "i- jic r inijr acnooi nulla in a;. drawn from, the privilege ot sale. I 1Att,tl'- Monday M.tina- f irtutuToi ,r oiner aisposai, leaving th land free, to "development. President Wilson Is preparing a history of the Democratic party. It will be entitled, "Wilson. That's AH. ,- - The tar sands along the Athabasca . river la Alberta could be utilized .to provide 'sufficient oil and, gaso line to supply the entire world for centuries,. It , is claimed by experts. The country in which the sands are situate J has recently been vrltS- 'ommrcial cluK Auir list 17. Tueadav Prrarnl.tUn .r iropnr cup to Company ii. Willaon park. Anruat 21. Fa turn a r Franklla D. Roovelt. Imorratt- ranrfidat for vice-president, to visit Salem. Aurust JJ. Monday Baseball. Knlem senators and Portland Pacific Coat They are holding the congression al elections in Mexico. The list of the killed and injured has not yet Ilea rue team. Oxford park. been compiled. t I. Aurust zs. Thursday Baby ell ale August SI. Tuesday First mnmnmi Old Janus. Who had the reputa- Ek'ni f .Minnesota rlub of Halem. at tlon of being able to face in all dl-Capitol street. , . rectlonji at th same llm- hHffoiSl.,?p,rm.b:f "1 Tf?t"te eonvea.. .inn or AriiHa irui,,, kaIam Hep t ember S. Monday La-onr day. September IX. Monday Meetinr of associat membership of Salem Com mercial cmo. SMfttorarese ST to Octobae S Orsron 'tn ls. , NoTsmbsr 2, Tuesday Electloa day. leg. on James Mlddleton Cox. But the people are almost tired of being fooled. As the campaign progresses ihn Democratic -eaadldaCe for presU 11 eifxn gerat'ot lie The first day of our refrigerator sale was a great success. The prices we have on them during this sale surely speak a real dollar's worth of value for your money. Buy now,save dollars.: - 5 2SSv Yrz? KzrJy r "" : amnmU J1 tl'V No. 1. The eight walls of insulation keeps cold air in. . Saves ice. No. 2. . The porcelain-lined water cooler, same ice cools foods and water. Ice does double duty. No. 3. Wide shelves, of best possible construc tion. Permits use of large platters, etc No. 4. Patented water bottle holder in event you wish to use bottled water. Exclusive feature with au tomatic I 4 No. 5. System of air circulation (air. must and does keep moving in an automatic) keeps foods fresh, sweet, cold. No. 6. Most accessible, most easily cleaned and most sanitary trap evtr invented. There is no refrigerator nude quita.ao good u the Auto matic. We think you will find that to when you inreitigate. Regular $110.00 Refrigerator, to close out now ... $82.50 Regular $ 86.00 Refrigerator- to close out now . ..$63.80 Regular $ 75.00 Refrigerator, to dose out now ..$55.80 Regular $ 70.00 Refrigerator, to close out now m $51.35 Regular $ 80.00 Refrigerator, to close out now $59.60 Regular $ 50.00 Refigerator, to close out now S3G 95 Regular $ 48.00 Refrigerator, to close out now Regular $ 45.00 Refrigerator, to close out now Regular $ 40.00 Refrigerator, to close out now a :.....$35.50 - $32.80 1 j .$29.80 Regular $ 33.50 Refrigerator, to close out now ' cyj ce Regular $ 22.50 Refrigerator, to close out' now ...... , $16 75 Regular $ 20.00 Refrigerator, to close but now $14 95 "' Embodied in this Refrigerator Sale are to be found four of the best refrigerator fac tories in Americasuch as The Automatic, Not a Seme, Alaska, Illinois and Belding Hall Century Line. , aSt m ..' 1 1