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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1921)
4 '. THE OREGON STATESMANSALEM, OREGON THURSDAY MORNING.FEBRUAKY'10;',1921 i lined Daily Except Monday by TIIE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY 21 S S. Commercial St., Salem. Oregon (Portland Office, 704 Spalding Building. Phone Main 1118) . ' MKMBEK OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is'exclusivelr entitled to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited la this paper and also tt local news published herein. It. J. Hendricks. . Manager Stephen A. Stone. .Managing Editor Ralph Glover . Cashier Frank Jaskoski Manager Job Dept. 16 DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier in Salem and suburbs. ' cents a week. 65 cents a monrj. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall, fa advance, IS a year. IS for sli months. 11.60 for three months, in Marion and Polk counties; 17 a year, 3.60 for six months. 11.75 for three months, out ; side of these counties. When not paid in advance. 60 cents a year additional. . . THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper. wi-i be rent a year to any one paying a year In advance to the Daily Statesman. . SUNDAY STATESMAN, 11.60 a year; 76 cents for six months; 40 cents for three months. , WEEKLY STATESMAN. Issued In two six-page sections, Tuesday and Fridays, 61 a year (if not paid in advance. 11.26); 60 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. " - . TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23. Circulation Department, 683. Job Department, 683. Society Editor 106. Shredded Wheat, for evample. would be no more unfair. In other words Senate Bill No. 67, if passed, w.ll merely guarantee to the public that when it calls in the services of a drugless physician it may expect services that shall not fall below a certain standard of skill and efficienccy. It Is quite certain that the house will recognize the need of protect ing the public's best health inter ests by passing this bill as prompt ly as did the senate. Sincerely yours, ,., VIRGIL MAC MICKLE. Drugless Physician. VOrU NOT IK) WITHOUT IT You can stop a common cold If you act promptly at the first sign of sneezin.;' and chilliness, hoarse ness, tickling throat of coughing. Just take a dose of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. It is effect ive and pleasant to take. Harry L. Neff. Price Hill, Cincinnati. O.. knows it is good for long-standing coughs and colds, too. He writes: "I had a very bad cough for almost two years. I have taken 3 bottles of Foley's Honey and Tar and am almost well. I simply would not do without it In the house." Sold everywhere. Entered at the Postotflce In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. ONIONS MAKE A STABLE CROP HERE " There may be years when onions in the Salem district will make a bonaza crop, as there were during the period of hih prices up to the time of the gathering of the last crop But the more conservative way to speak of the industry, and the best way, is to set it, forth as representing a staple crop, and one that will, on the average, bring good returns. Marion county is far and away the leading Oregon on ion county now; Roy K. Fukuda, on Route 8, Box 190, Salem, in his letter written on Tuesday, says that of the four or five hundred cars of onions produced in this state last year, two thirds were grown in the Labish Meadows district, where he lives ' And he says further that that district alone is capable of producing a million dollar annual crop, at the average range of prices for the past ten years. . There is a note ol encouragement to onion growers in tne experiment on a large scale of the Salem dehydration plant in taking care of a portion of the Labish Meadows crop And this process may be a great stabilizer of the onion industry here in the future; guaranteeing growers against loss or low prices. An onion grower in the Labish Meadows district breaks into poetry on the onion And why not? 4 For 'who can say that all the poets of the past may not have derived part of their sustenance if not of their inspira tion from the onion? The onion has helped to nourish the hu man race since the times before the dawn of history. .,: No one can say where the growing of onions first began. It was cultivated in Egypt and Asia from time immemorial, and its cultivation was extended to all lands before the re cording of history began, r . 'The essential thing, however, in this series of Salem Slogan articles, is to show that this is one of the fifty-two most important basic industries .and interests for Salem and the Salem district; and the writer believes this' is established. SENATE BILLS BREACH BETWEEN HE MEN IBS Bell Gets Vote of Senate To Re-Refer Salary Bills Of Senator Jones Percy Cupper, State Engineer, is somewhat handicapped with impaired vision, but there is nothing the matter with the quality of the sand in his craw. Thrice armed is he whose cause is just, and Mr. Cupper is both able and honest; so the ginks out after his scalp have kicked up a row that they will regret; have probably already regretted. BITS FOR BREAKFAST Onion Industry to all right. v v " ,. ,. It Is strong enough to take care of Itself . w . s . , The Statesman will, on March 1st, begin to give Ut week prises for the best reports on results of classified advertising In this paper. . This ' will be continued Indefi nitely and the details will be worked out and announced later. The idea la to make everybody read the classified. I "V The legislature Is to go down the line on hydroelectric develop ment. It Is the biggest thing In Oregon, and If thla legislature gets Its development to ' going as It should, as this writer has said be fore. It will go down In history as one of the most useful and statesman-like bodies that ever sat un der the brown dome. . V. ' -The Salem Y. M. C. A. has been doing, a greater work than ever before, under Mr. Elvln as gener al secretary. He desires to-resume his chosen ' field . of labor, until a worthy successor Is found but . he will remain at the helm to carry on this most important work that has been under his di rection since he returned from war work in France. EDITORIALS OF THE PEOPLE The following bills were Intro-, dured in the senate yesterday: S. H 287. Moser, Gill and Sta ples Providing for furnishing and equipment the Albertlna Kerr nursery home in Portland and ap propriating $5000 for the pur pose. 7 S. B. 288. Hall Providing for payment of expenses of Oregon land settlement commission. -S. B. 289. Mckelen Providing an appropriation of $5000 annual ly for .the Hood River experiment station. c 8. B. 290, Dennis Empower ing the state board of control to supply spiritual ministration for state institutions. S. B. 291, Moser Prescribing undertaking In appeal from judg ment In action for forcible entry or wrongful detainer. S. B. 292 Moser Relating to forcible entry and detainer. S. B. 293. Ryan (by request) Specifying additional securities in which savings deposits may be in vested. S. B. 294. Ellis Making It a misdemeanor and imposing a pen alty for carlessness with barbed wire. S. B. . 295, Hall Amending section 6245 relating to limits upon loans and trust companies. S. B. 296. Upton. Strayer and Dennis Regulating the Issuance by carriers of bills of lading and livestock contracts. S. B. 297, La Follet (by re quest) Making it a misdemeanor to place wheat, oats, potatoes or any other produce on any public road within 30 feet of any fence inclosing livestock and providing penalties for violation. S. B. 298. Committee on elec tions and privileges Amending election laws and defining a po litical party. S. B. 299. Ellis Amending section 4982, Oregon laws relat ing to abandoned school districts. S. B. 300. Joseph Providing for the organization of tunnel dis tricts, for the construction, oper ation and maintenance of tunnel systems and for the payment of the cost of uch systems and ex penses incident thereto. S. B. 301, Joseph- Amending statutes relating to drainage dis tricts and the levying of assess ments and taxes. S.-B. 302. Staples Providing for annexation of certain lands In Clackamas county to Multnomah county. Widening of tho breach between Senators Bell and Jones of Lane, county, which has existed through out the session, furnished a sen sation in the senate yesterday when Bell attempted to have re referred tne j ones salary bills pro viding Increases for Lane county officers. One Dili provides an In crease in the salary of the district attorney and the other increases in the salaries of the clerk, the sheriff, the assessor and the school superintendent. They were up for third reading. Jones charged that Bell's pur pose was to kill the bills. Eberhard, a member of the committee on county and state of fices, wanted the district attorney bill referred back to give right of way to a general bill being pre pared but did not object to th general Lane county salary bill being voted on. Lachmund objected to sending the bills back. "If you want to kill them do It In the open," said Lachmund. "and give Senator Jones a square deal." . Bell brought upon himself the wrath of Jones when he said that Jones bad agreed to withdraw the bills. "I did not," shouted Jones. , He was rapped to order. "Well, he can't lie about me," retorted Jones. Jones explained that he wanted the 'district attorney bill sent back but not the general bill. By the vote of the senate the bills were re-referred. Attempt to Ikfrat. Fenator Hume yesterday frus trated an attempt by Senator Moser to defeat his bill providing that circuit court judges in Mult nomah county be elected for the court at large and not by depart ments. The bill was on the cal endar for third reading and Hume moved t table the bill till all of the sanators were present. The motion failed. Moser moved that the bill be in definitely postponed. Hume asked a call of the senate. Some of the senators could not be found and Vinton had been excused. Sena tor Hare appeared and Hume moved to dispense with the call of the senate, then renewed his motion to table the bill till all members were present. He charg ed unfair parliamentary tactics to defeat the bill, This time his mo tion carried. Jealousy Prompts Killing Of Three at Spokane Hotel SPOKANE. Wash., Feb. 9. Jealousy, according to the police, prompted Elmer Harding, aged 30, today to killing his brother. Carl Harding, his own wife, and himself. Harding shot his broth er and wife and then killed him self today at a local hotel when the former emerged from a room to which his wife had denied him entrance. The shooting followed closely recital by Elmer Harding to Geo. Taylor, a roomer at the hotel, or an account of what he declared had been his wrongs at his broth er's hands. According to Taylor, Harding charged his brother with having gone to Portland with his wife, after having left his own wife and three children at Mis soula. Mont. This was denied by Kmmi Field. Mrs. Elmer Harding's 16-year-old daughter by a former marriage, and by Mrs. Harding's mother, who said they recently teturned from Portland with Mrs. Harding after she had been un successful in finding work there and at Seattle. They charged that Elmer Harding's treatment of his wife had forced her to leave him there. HIS TKOIHLK IS ALL CJOXE "I was arfected with pains all over my back and kidneys." writes Charles McAllister, 1 Clark Ave.. Kearney. N. J., "After three or four dozes of Foley Kidney Pills I became all right And my pain Is all gone." Foley Kidney .Pills relieve backache, urinary Ir regularities, rheumatic pains, stiff joints, swollen muscles and other symptoms of kidney trouble. It is a splendid medicine, prompt in action, and always helps. Con tains no habit forming drugs. Sold everywhere. Now Playing "HELIOTROPE" ' GRAND "Where the Big Shows Play FU R IM ITU RE AUCTION' Saturday, February 12th, 1 p. m. sharp 2146 North Church Street Near Highland School Waxed oak, 10 ft. round ex table; 7 oak dining chain; 3 oak rockers ; oak duofold davenport ; oak library ta ble; oak book case; new companion drop head sewing machine, a dandy; 7 ft. extension table; oak bedstead; iron bedstead; 2 steel springs; 2 cotton mattresses; lawn mower; 50 quarts home canned fruit; 25 pound coffee; 9x12 wool and fiber rug; oak dresser; 2 new fl grass rugs; 4 new 40 pounds felt mattresses; 50-gallon gasoline tank; 25 gallon meat jar; range; heater; wash machine; comodes; kitchen cabinet; linoleum, 9x12; Daisy Chum kitchen utensils; dishes; garden seeder; hand feed cutter; cross cut saw; garden tools; grind stone; porch boxes; child's rocker; lounge; settee; tool chest: small magazine rack and many other things. TERMS CASH. . L L PARKER, Owner 2146 N. Church St. . F. N. W00DRY The Auctioneer 'List your sales with Woodry for Results Who's next? IN SENATE BILL 67 ANALYZED WVTVRB DATES. 1'ehnnry 12, BaturUr Lerttir at rnorf. Dr. Wa. E. U a!K Health. JftVruary 14 t 21 Proaa wttfc is Ofton. ' F.braary 14, Monday BaakatbaH, WllamM - LiarIt7 t liaaa. al Mawr.. February IS i4 U TaaUy nd Wa4na4ar BaakMS.il. WilUmatta t. Whttwaa. at Walla Walla. brary IT, Thrarfay - BaiWibaTt, Wiilaanta a. Wall Walla T. M. C. A at Walla Walla. VaUraarr J. Tuaadar Dabata. galea ViKh arhool. affirmative a. Albaar. r atW, at hih arhool 8a1rm. ?jaua Albany affirmative, at Albany. , f.hraarr ! aat J. fndar aed Rat- nrdajr Baakttball. WUlamatta va. Gaa MM. at Ppanana. ' ' Vcbraary 23. Taaadar BaiketbaH. Witlaattta . Idaho, at Salara. Vabraary 22. Tacaday Waakiagtva'a birthday. February 14 and t Tharaday and TVI dar Baikatball. Willamette) . Whltmea a) m. I HerHi 4 end 5. Friday and Satarday BaakttVall. Willamette t. U. at O, at Lectne, r.rt' Friday BaeakaH WiDaaetU va. t af 0 at Baleaa. a aril l, Hatvrday Bait bell. WlHtaa ette a.. V. at O, at Eaceaa. May 2. 27 aad 'in Baarball. WUUaV tte a. Whitman, at Wall Walla. O-loW 1, Satarday (teatatire) FeMb.ll. WMaaaette a. O. A. CL. at - Cervallia. Number It. Friday 'tntetWaV wTn.Iw.i,ru-,iu heehr 34, Thsrad.f fteautl) TheekapWtef daf iMtbtU, Willamette ffl. VoJaaol-aJk, at galeevT Editor Statesman: . , In the modest hope that a dis cussion of the true merits ot Sen ate Bill No. 67 might prove ac ceptable to your valued newspa per, the following brief analysis is made. OBJECT To standardize and regulate the practice of Drugless Therapr In Oregon in order that the people who choose the serv ices of a drugless physician in their hour of need may be pro tected against Ignorance and Quackery, which, having been ex cluded from the practice of medi cine, osteopathy and chiropractic by the enactment of laws coveting thoe respective branches of the healing art, may try to take refuge under the cloak of the term "Drugless Physician;" and to pro- tect the honorable, ethical and ef ficient Drugless Physicians from suffering tne loss of a well de served, high publie esteem that is bound to result from the activities of those ignoramuses and quacks whom we are powerless to elimi nate unless Senate Bill No. 67 is passed. . It Is not a bill giving Drugless Physicians any rights which they do not now have except that of protecting the general public from fakery, and themselves from hav ing their own high standards de graded by fakers. ' No one not skilled in medicine may practice medicine; no one not skilled In os teopathy or chiropractic may prac tice osteopathy or chiropractic, here in Oregon now. Then, why, in the name of common sense, de ny the public and the Drugless Physicians the right of excluding the Ignorant, the incompetent and the unfit from the practice of Drugless Therapy? As It is. any one may call himself a drugless physician In Oregon and none may say bim "nay." A blacksmith, who my be a. marve!oisly good black smith, may tire ot his work today and tomorrow open uii an office as a drugless physician" without let or hindrance. Is that fair, either to the public or to the profession. which numoers among tut mem bers some of the finest Intellects and noblest spirits to be found anywhere? To permit the manu factnre and sale of sawdust bis cuits under the label of snch a i Justly well-known product Trades and Labor Council Plans Mass Meeting At the meeting of the Salem Trades and Labor Council Tuesday night arrangements were complet ed for a rousing mass meeting to be held in the armory next Tues day night under the auspices ot the council, at which President Otto R. Hartwlg. of the State Federation of Labor, and C. A. Young, affectionately known by all the people as "Dad" Young, will be the speakers. These men are so well known that no intro duction is necessary to the citi zens" of Salem. It Is hoped that every man, woman and child in the city will make arrangements to be there and hear the message these men will bring to them. Salary Increases Subject Of Bill by Umatilla Men The joint "Umatilla delegation yesterday introduced a senate Mil to increase the salaries of the county officers of that connty. The increases provide are: Coun ty judge, increase fra-n flSOO ro J2I0O; treasurer. 1500 to 2 t00: clerk. $2000 o $2400; re corder, $1800 to f-2000; sheriff. $2500 to $3000. QUICK RRi ft ROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' OliveTablets That is the joyful cry of thousands fa nee Dr. towards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid hvcrs. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative.. No griping is the Tceynote" of these Ettle sugar-coated, olive-colored tab lets. They cause the bowels and h verto act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. . If you have a "dark brown mouth" bad breath a dull, tired feeBng sick headache torpid liver constipation, youll find quick, sure and pleasant re sults from one or two of Dr. Edward Olive Tablets at bedtime Thousands take them evcrvdzht nir.t ai - to.kecp right. Try them. 15c and 30c. 51 nr MEN'S SUITS AND OVERCOATS BOY'S CLOTHING, MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS NECKWEAR AND HEAVY-; UNDERWEAR AT Lii o 0 PUX7(Q1 a o, mm Hlh)Q l$uMm Warn it s M $2. 75 Men's Blue B.&.R. OVERALLS 11 (01(0 $1.50 Men's Gray and. Blue WORK SHIRTS 1 $10, $12, $15 and $16 Men's Brown and Black DRESS SHOES HATS AND CAPS 1 OFF 33 MEN'S AND SHOES BOYS' OFF ALL CLOTHING AND FURNISHING GOODS 1-3 OFF