THE -OREGON - STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAY MORNING. DECEMKER 8. 1920 JlC statesman j i Issued Daily Except Monday by JllK STATESMAN f PUBLISHING COMrAXV Z15 S. Commercial St., Salem, Oregon (Portland Office. 704 Spalding Building. Phone Mala 1116) MEMUEU OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. 1 R. J. Hendricks. . . Stephen A. Stone. Ralph Glover. Frank Jaskoskl . . . has been forced to take very seri ously the great religions. Inci dentally, she has more Buddhists and more Mohammedans and frobab'.y more Confncianists un der her rule than she has mem bers of fcer established church. But it is in her contact with Mohammenadism anJ Buddhism that England has learned what a perilous and exciting pastime dab bling in creeds can b come., Once - . Manirpr t ..Managing Editor I a th business of using religions .Cashier .... .Manager Job Dept DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier In Salem and suburbs, 15 . cents a week, 65 cents a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mail,' in advance, $6 a yean S3 for six 'months, $1.50 for three months, in Marion and Polk counties; $7 a year, 13.50 for six months, $1.75 for three months, out ! aide of these counties. When not paid in advance,, 50 cents a year additional. ,' THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper, I wl' be sent a year to any one paying a year in advance to the i Daily Statesman. SUNDAY STATESMAN, $1.80 a year? 75 cents for six months; 40 cents for three months. WEEKLY STATESMAN, issued in two six-page sections, Tuesdays i and Fridays, $1 a year (If not paid in advance, $1.25); 50 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. TELEPHONES: Business Office. 23. Circulation Department, 5 S3. Job Department, 583. Society Editor ,10e. Entered at the Postofflce in Salem. Oregon, as second class matter. SLANDERING THE; JEWS in the tasks or administration she ha3 had no chance to turn back and has been going in deeper year by year. Colonel Lawrence, an agnostic possessing to a marked degree he power of handling a fanati cal race, played during the war the game of tribal and religious influence in Arabia with consum mate skill. His policy was to capture the affections and ntlize the fervor of the Bedouins. Since he has retired from Arabian af fairs England has entered upon a bolder policy of penetration in to Mohammedanism. 'Xot( con tent with holding its shrines and with the overlordship of a vast majority of its devotees, she has set out to capture the Caliphate, or supreme authority, of the en tire Mohammedan world. Tak ing no chances, she is secretly backing with vast sums both of the leading aspirants to that high position The situation In India, which is really tied" up with the Moham medan problem in Arabia, is also a delicate one for England as re gards Buddhism. She Is encour aging Buddhists who place em phasis on the transcendental, other world aspects of religion, but is trying to cull from among the leaders of India those who wsnt to drag religion Into ooll- tics. In other words, she does !es or agreements they make are simply for tbf purpose of gain ing time or advantage In press ing the revolution. Any people making an agreement with them of any Vort will learn to regret Soine of America's leading thinkers hold that is too danger ous a thSng to even try and save the Russians from yhemsclve. lA.t them accomplish thrir own deliverance. It will five them the greater pride nnd glory when it comes. CARRYING THE CASH. A Chicago man who was or dered to pay his divorced wife $30,000 of cash the money ov form of 6000 $5 bills. But the woman' neve. complained at the bivnlen fhe had to carry. She bore up under it bravely. AID FOR FARMER!1 SEEMS ASSURED Members of Committee Ex press Confidence That Bill Will be Passed WASHINGTON. Dee. 6. Re vival of the war finance corpor ation r.nd action by the. federal reserve board permitting exten sion by banks of liberal" credits to farmers would be directed In a joint resolution drafted late to day by the senate agricultural roinmlttee. The resolution will ah alimony turned I' reported to the. senate tomor ,ver in eour: in the I? Senator Gronna of North i uaKoia, me agricultural comm u- The Red Cross proposes to dis tribute 500.000 Christmas pres ents in Poland. And. at tha they will be In the nature of feed ing the hungry ind clothing the naked. There wouldn't be much f a Santa Clan.' In Poland ttm capon were it not for the Red jCros. ''- ! : (Springfield Republican) . ' The public statement by the conference of American Jewish organizations in answer to charges based on a mys terious document termed The protocols of the elders of 'ZioiT ought to have a salutary effect in offsetting its vic ious libels. The thesis which the "protocols" are assumed to support, that the Jews have been for centuries and are now engaged in a conspiracy for world domination, is absurd on ft tar. ThA extremitv to which the slanderers are driven in support of their attempt to quicken anti-Semitism is fairly illustrated by their charge that Russian bolshevism is a man ifestation of the power of the alleged conspiracy. j ' It is significant, as the statement points out, that one of thP norsnns enmured in the circulation of the "protocols" was a participant in the prosecution in Russia seven years ago of not want religion brought into Mendel Beilisi the latest victim happily freed by a Russian rditics by the other fellows, but court of the ancient "blood accusation," denounced for cen- f religion must go in England turies by non-Jewish authorities, including czars and popes, win give it a personally conducted The storm of indignation which was aroused throughout the world by that revival of a malicious and cruel slander seems to have given it its quietus. The new. slander is better calcu lated, perhaps, to meet the psychology of a world in turmoil. The Vprotocols," as the Jewish conference statement ex Dlain3."wer4 clandestinely circulated in typewritten form dur ing the war among public officials and others, carefully se lected, "fori the purpose of giving rise to the belief that the Jews, in conjunction with Freemasons, had been for centur ies engaged in a conspiracy to produce revolution and anarchy, by means of which they hoped to attain the control of the world by" the establishment of some sort of despotic rule." Some months ago the document appeared in print in England and later in the United States. Henry Ford's paper, the Dearborn Independent, has been drawing inspiration front the document for a series of attacks upon the Jews. ;; The alleged authority for the document Is one Serge Nit lus, a Russian, who says that he received it in 1901 from a Russian officeholder, who claimed to have obtained it in a mysterious way", from a woman, whose name is not men tioned. No names were signed to the document, but Nilus charges that it was approved at the first Zionist congress inwarks of its j. lts'jf Dy tne Zionist representatives 01 me ira aegree 01 initiation." This seems to be a clumsy attempt to connect the Freemasons with the conspiracy. The sessions of the Zionist congress were open and public and there was no 33rd degree or any other "degree of initiation" to its membership. The slightest familiarity with Jewish history and the opinions and motives of Jewish leaders is sufficient to con demn the document and its promulgators as cruel libelers of the Jewish people. The appeal is to the ignorant and the prejudiced, to the mob spirit. But even such an appeal can only be met by the facts, by reason and by a counter appeal to the love of justice and fair play. No other nation ever ruled n.any peoples so successfully as England has. Rome, for in stance, ursi Drougm home as trophies the idols of the nations she conquered and then had to send out all of her available sol oiers to maintain her arrogant rule and even then she did not ?ena enougn. England uses not or-ly the superstitions but also the Kldiers and the officials of other races as her tools. The Roman empire never really had a religion and therefore dealt with the superstitions of the van 4ulshed with fatally brutal Indif rerence. The British empire has as many religions as its subjects hold to and has made the god of conquered peonies the bnl AXI XKVKU WILL HE. WARSAW SAW WAR. THi: RILL COLLECTOR. It costs the internal revenue department i0 cents to collect each $100 of ro7ernment taxa tion. Last year it cost 53 cents. This may not !e efficienri. bui it is the path tewtrd efficiency. In a few hui.dicd yea- Undo Sam will be ah!-.- to collect the war taxes with Hi.- eyes shut. tee chairman, who will ask for Immediate consideration. .Members of the committee ex pressed confidence hat enough votes were assured to bring about its prompt passage, but members of the finance committee Indi cated they would ask that it first tx referred to them for consider ation, inasmuch as the war fin ance corporation was created un der a -bill 'drawn by their com mittee. Restoration of the war finance corporation to furnlh financial aid to farmers also would be di rected in a concurrent resolution presepted today in the house by lirnes. Democrat, of South Car olina. The senate agricultural com mittee decided to report the res olution as a committee measure, hoping thereby to save time. 'Uh unanimous consent under the senate rules the resolution could be read twice In one day cd placed on the calendar for passage. nator Norri. Nebraska, ruera- ber of the agricultural rommltte. flrat proposed a concurrent reso lution which does not require ap pioval by the "president. liutoth-r numbers objeetd on the ground bach a resolution would be be strong eaougb. While not antici pating the action of- the presi dent. Democratic Mutators made dear their intention of voting to cierrlde a veto if recewsary. The senate committee reso lution declares that "unpreced tnitd and unparalleled distress" exists anens'th farmers because of their inability to market their products at prices equalling the cost of production and that the people of Europe are In "dire need", of these products but not able to purchase because of ex isting financial conditions. The revolution further recites that banks have bwn unable to extend credit to farmers so they may hold their products until "they can be sold In a fair and reason able markrt." INVESTORS There is a small amount of Oregon Pulp & Taper Company, preferred stock available to Salem rctle. Thi investment at maturity. pays 8',; cumulative, p!ui ti - . bonus Invest Your Money at Home Keep Salem Smoke Stacks Burning Write or phone A. G. Riach Bligh Hotel i - I 1 & w IV Statrmaa CXIfki Ada THK RRIWETTKS. There are 110,000 colored resi dents In the city of Baltimore. That forms Quite a r?siwctable group of brunettes by itsel! and an increase of nearly 30 per cent in the decaJe. At the nr: time the colored population 5n Louisville has fallen off. Prohi bition hasn't bad anything it do with the movement, either. I BITS FOR BREAKFAST 1 a . jfe w when the road Is finished. That is mighty good news. It means the definite early opening of that great district, so long delayed. Now Playing THE SILENT BARRIER A Mighty Northern Picture Saturday So Long Letty" GRAND GRAND THEATRE One Night, Tuesday, December 14 U Mall Orders Now ' IfJII' I, Scat Sale Monday 9:30 A. 3L ' jfailLrf: Lower Floor I V I r Balcony SUi S Gallery 11.03 . 3 War Tax 10 Extra i The Statesman believes Salem ought to be a clean city; that every gamblinz game ought to be suppressed, and that the dry laws ought to be enforced, no matter how high or how low cleaning up processes may hit. A law breaker is a law breaker, and the laws ought to be enforced without respect to persons. ' ; i ii. 1 j - The Salem slogan pages of to-j be does not already know, that morrow's Statesman will contain a veritable mint of Information on the mint industry. 1 D'Annuniio, the poet, has de clared war against Italy. He will no doubt fire a few verses of his : torrid poetry at the enemy. Elea nor Duse might help. If we are to have a -national tree,, as has been suggested, what li the matter with the plum tree? Ail Republicans in favor of the motion will indicate the rame by saying aye. this is one of the potentially big gest little industries for the Sa lem section. There is a mint of money in mint, and its cultiva tion and distillation in this sec tion is bound to grow. Oh, well, read the Salem slogan pages to morrow. And, If you can add anything to the information; please speak up. and do It today. Some one suggests that Charles Garland, the young man who has refused the million-dollar bequest of his father, possibly doesn't need the money; that he is probably a newspaper reporter and accus tomed to handling large sums. The year 1920 was a bad one for the minor parties, r There will be only one member j cf a third tarty in the Slxty-seventn con gress, Me'jrer London. Socialist, of JVew York City, with this ex- cpt:on (here will be nobody in cither the penate cr houso except Republicans and Democrats. A CORNER IX ;oiS. ;Tomorrow's Salem slogan page? of The Ctatesuian will carry a ver itable symposium on the mint in dustry in the- Willamette valley. The careful reader will learn, j if . '' ' PCTVRK IjATES. , lto'voiV ft. W.4n7 Anaasf ' t f rm!.ril rink. Iwrnb-r . Wcdnndar Moooic re io at trwTj, - , .-. . lfar,lr 10. it ,J.i t3. VT,tra Oro OlAmt Hf' evnferenra. !.' i.irbsf TuMJr Annil elae linn Sli Bi )!, U'a )ram. Ir..r 15, We4y War Motk u MlMr in rmorf. Xcbcr 25, Saturday, Caxiala. KnKiand is the onTr Important nation in . the world today which i dogmatic enough to have an established state reliuion. Hav- Ir.g.pjaced her official stamp upon one particular type of belier,. she has immediately turned around end attempted a corner in world religions and has succeeded at it, j it holding holy places mean 3 anything. Int possessing falestine she has the region which cradled ootn Judaism and' Christianity. j In her grip on India she includes the Garden of Luinbini.' where amid splashing fountains and, the soft voices of the doves. Uuddha was miraculously born. Iaj her mastery of Arabia the holds the two shrines of .Mohammedanism: Mecca where the prophet ra reared; and Medina, where he bnit up his elaborate system of lawjs and laid the foundations for a vast empire. Through her treaty with Japan she has a de ciding voice In Shantung, where Confucius , is buried and where the J stranpe faith or system of etiquette which bears his name has itsroots. As an inevitable result of en tering into world politics, or nthcr world-wide; rule, England "There has never been a panic n thi? or any other country with jverybody at work." Los Ange les Times. i And there never will be. And all the people of this coun try who do things need is a :hance for their white alleyr. And it is the duty of congress to give them that chance To provide a protestive tariff hat will protect our products against ruinous competition of foreign cheap labor; a law framed by experts and i amended when called for by changed conditions. a schedule or an item at a time would be the risht way uut any way, just so it is done. and so It is hurried And the hands of the land credit banks untied, even if it is necessary in order to do so to put the corsafrs of finance wha are holding ihem up in the peni tentiary, where they beloa. -" And the producers of wheat and other product of tie- soil given the proper financial aid to tide them over the reconstruction period And foreign exchange stabil ized And an American shipping pro gram fostered , And then there will be work tor all who want work in the United States, and our country will lead the rvorld. as ita reourc ?s entitle it in do. in all things. - The United States need big men on guard at Washington more than it! has needed, such men at any former time in its history. j - Every one fk encouraged to be lieve that siicjli men will be on guard afterMarch 4h; and per haps some thfhgs may be accom plished before that time, even though the administrative c part- Enforce them all. "U Whatever gambling games are running in Salem, they should be suppressed. Whatever bootlegging there is being done here, it should be run down. - a Salem Is a law abiding city, and it is and should be jealous of Its good came. If there is to be any severe I snow storm in this valley this sea I son, it is likely to come before the 10th of January. That has been the general rule in past years. Let us all hope that we may escape the experiences we were having at this time last year, or anything like them. The mint industry is a coming giant of the Salem district. Read the Safem slogan pages tomorrow. II. II. Lotz of the Lotz-Larsen mining company, was a Salem vis itor yesterday. He left about 14 inches of enow at that Santiam camp on Sunday. His company has the road from the Black Ea gle mine to their camp about half finished. The bridge over Horn creek is done; with a 6 per cent grade for its approaches. In the early spring, automobiles may go clear to that camp; and Mr. Lotr. says his company will be shipping ment is floating around in the aoldrums. I - V XOT TO I5K TRUSTE!. Leniiie and Trotzky have open ly sought tfi break the relation!' bitween America and Japan. They have sought, to create an indus trial revolution in England and they have tried to establish the Commune in this country. They admit that it is their desire and purpose to destroy all existing government and that any. treat- V a.-..' .'' l - l6 Albert Lindquest TEXOR A.isiM Ing A rt 1st h Leonora Allen. fMprano -. RoIert MacInaUl, PianUt ' Second Number, of Lyceum Courre THE ARMORY Friday, Dec. 10 8:15 p. m. Admission $I.to. Reserved $1.50 Reservations Friday at Armory 9 a. m.-6 p. m. .Telephone lul5 Tickets on Sale at Geo. C Wills Myrtle Knowland, Also Season Tickets Adult ?'-.50. Student f2.00 OURENTIRE STOCK OFFERFD AT- A UG REDUCTION - , i We Can Use the Money , s, ........... r Our Stock Is All Standard, Reliable Merchandise. No Shoddy Good On Our Shelres , Christmas Shoppers . No More Suitable, Worthwhile Gilts Can Be Had Than The Gifts That Can Be Found in Our Slock Our Service Is Up to the Minute We will lay packages aside for you until Christmas. We will parcel post packages if you so desire. Come and visit our Store and inspect the values we are offering. Our salesmen can make suggestions for you. SOME OF GOLF GOODS BALLS OUR VALUES U. S. No. 29 and 31. regular 85c Dunlor No. 29 and 31, regular $1.10. Victor No. 75, regular $1.00 1 Wilson Success, regular $1.00 Wilson Red W, regular 90c ; Wilson Floater, regular 65c.---.... ...60c ...83c ...83c .80c -70c 50c AIR MATTRESSES Metropolitan Aid Goods Co. No. 1 Original, regular $10.00 value....- No. 2 Original, regular $47.50 value No. 1 Compact, regular $31.50 value No. 2 Compact, regular $34.00 value No. 1 Justright; regular $15.60 value No. 2 Justright, regular $1G.50 value No. 1 Outing, regular $25.00 value ... No. 3 Outing, regur $35.50 value $37.30 . .... . ..j o00 v..$26.00 11.00 $12.50 $18.30 $31.00 LADIES' CLOTHING Riding Tants, regular $6.00 value $ m Skirts, regular $5.23 value . .-.j. $3.23 Divided Skirts, regular $6.50 value 1.. $3.2 Riding Coat, regular $8.00 value $3.00 Above Good Kamp-It Brand. Also Woolen Outing Clothing. 1 CAMPING OUTFITS ' -Get ready now for your outing 3 Leaf Double Outfit, regular $115 value !l$0.fK) 3 Leaf Single Outfit, regular $75 value. .$30.0U Combination Table and Cot. regular $13.75 value $10.00 4-in-l Outfit, regular $55.00 value .. .$41.00 Musso Outfit, regular $85.00 value $65.00 Water Proof Tent, regular $18.00 vaLie $12.00 Water Proof Tent, regular $26.00 value $19.30 DUXBAK CLOTHING Riding Pants, regular $7.00 value . , ..- $3.23 Long Pants, regular $6.50 value $1.60 Hunting Coat, regular $12.00 value.... ..$95 Hat Cap, regular $1.73 value $1.13 KAMP-IT CLOTHING Riding Pants, regular $6.00 value Ifng Pant, regular $5.25 value Norfolk Jacket, regular $6.50 vaiue X30 $1.23 CADDY BAGS $6.00 to $13.50 values $1.73 to $9.23 Reduction on our fiolf Clubs Wright L Ditson and Thos. K. WiI.eon makes Remember all our Stock is Reduced, including Traps, Skates, Gun CoTers, Firearms, Ammunition, Purses, Bill Folds, Leather Coats and Vests. Oiled Clothing, Razors, Knives, Shears, Ingersoll Watches, Fishing Tackle, Knit Goods, etc SALEM C0RVALLIS MAUSER BRO SI$E OUR PREVIOUS AD. OF DECE.MRER I ALBANY EUGENE