- m, - AnmpAy roRNmc ATOnyii92i - - ru- - T : . Ije 10011 Issued Daily Excent Monday hv THE STATESMAN I'UBLISHIVG COMPANY 21 S S. Commercial St.. Salem. Oreenn (Portland Office. 704 Spalding MKMREU OF THE rhe Associated Pre i Piri Heat fan of all Dews diSDatchex credited In it or nnl nlhorwiu credited In tbja paper and also the local news' published herein. R. Jf. Hendricks Manager Stephen A. Stone Managing Kditor Ralph Glorer Cashier Frtnk Jaskoski . Manager Job Dept. DAIUY STATESMAN, r erv. d by currier in Salem and suburbs. 15 cents a week. 5 c n a month. DAIIjY STATKSAj A.. y n.aii, in advance. $6 a year. $3 for six . inonths. $l.su i: i ice months. 50 cents a month, in Marion and Pplk count cm . uu title of these counties, $7 a year, $3.50 fOr six months, $1.. tor ihr.-e months, 60 cents a month. When hot paid in adv;i:e. cems a year additional. THEsPAClFJC HOAlEo'-iAi. i iic groat western weekly farm paper, .j I will be sent a yr io anyone paying a year in advance to the I Daily Statesman. SUNDAY STATESMAN. $!.:.. a tents for three niouihs. i bne month. WEEKLY STATESMAN. Im,u;1 ana rriaays, si a yt-ur t.i cents for six months; TELEPHONES: Busiuos.i Office, 23. Circulation Department, 583 Job Department. 583 Society Editor, 105 Entered at the Postofflce in Salem, FIRE THEM; EVERY ONE OF THEM fTo President Harding, Senators McNary and Stanfield, and Congressmen Hawley, McArthur and Sinnott: . jThe way the farm loan act was held up under the Demo cratic administration was a disgrace jAnd if it is being still held up on account of the un friendly attitude of Mr. Lobdell and other members of the Farr i Loan Board at Washington unfriendly to the spirit of the aw itself as is asserted by the Master of the State ' Grange, president of the Farmers' Union, secretary of the Farrh Bureau Federation and other Oregon men represent ing the farmers of this state ; iv If what these men solemnly say is true ' Lobdell and all the other members of the Farm Land Board at Washington ought to be fired 'i Fired bodily. And so should every other official of every other branch , of t'fcfe whole system in the entire country who feels that way. at these men do not believe in the system they are sup to administer, they have no business in the system ley should in self respect ley belong some where any wnere in tne wide worm a . lty they now hold. mt law has been battered A I6t of hired assassins or attempted-assassins or it danc . ing tp the music of the jingle of the dirty dollars put up by a grea association of companies lieve they are the only people rights. o the men mentioned agalr If there are injustices in the present law and perhaps there are Amend it. -l:, I But, in the name of common sense and honesty and de cency, do not allow it to be butchered in the house of the men drawing salaries' to administer its sfiint THE APPEAL FOR these are not times in which it is easy to raise funds for needs. in distant corners of the world. But the appeal to aid t$e starving in China comes with a peculiar urgency. The recorfl of American effort for China is one of many splendid 1 . mm mm ! 1 1 1 pages.' It Includes the iounaation oi colleges, scnoois ana i hospitals, the remission of the Boxer indemnity and greater than Ml these things, the consecration and willing sacrifice of many lives. - n an hour when the international purposes of the United States are under some doubt and suspicion, however mistak enly Jamong other peoples, there is a double value to philan thropies such as this. Within 12 days from the deposit of subscriptions, the food will have been bought and transported from Manchuria and be in the mouths of those whor would die withrJut it The famine Is the product of inefficient government; irrigation and similar public works would have averted it. Some American observers on the scene appear to believe that -for tfis reason it is the last great famine for the relief of which we shall be called upon. Others, less sanguine, feel that China cannot so quickly be awakened. For the present . whatlver can be sent should be sent, and that quickly. i Theretuni of ex-King Charles of Hungary seems to have been a case Of per-Hapsburg. : Hati off to theNew York lg- The annual appropria- lclatu tloa bill at Albany has lopped oft about 22000 state officers. ) Shut oft the Democratic calam ity hollers and gloom gazabos of III mi m THE FARMER'S BANK THE United States National has al ways proven its interest in the ag ricultural development of Marion and Polk counties, and has Served as the farmer's right hand assistant in work ing out his problems. Nor have such financial affiliations ever been more appreciated by tho farmer than recently when conditions have jumped around so much. II m m ) SA1XM Statesman BnMding. Phone Main 1116) ASSOCIATED PKKSS year; 75 cents for six months; 40 ix-uts for 2 months; 15 cents foi mi (wo six-page sections. Tuesdays no: paid in advance. 1.25); 50 .n for three months. Oregon, as second class matter. get out without being fired. else, in some other employment ; dui in me places 01 responsiou- a J .! ?1 about too much already in the United Mates who be- in this country who have any in the first above paragraph, it according to its letter and ; STARVING CHINA congress, and jam through the tat Iff bills an.. oher n"dol leg islation. That's the stuff; ud what's the sense in waiting to listen to tb yawp yap.. The agricultural department at Washington announces that a survey of the pests of the country is soon to be made. Now watch a lot of 'em duck to coter. You oacooa Salem's annual Blossom Day iinnually has come to stay. Lots of blossoms on each tree. .Everywhere for us to see, M any orchards here are found S ending fragrance all around. pple trees are white for you. Nodding when you're passing through XT i Notice everywhere you go Underneath Is white like snow, And the flowers what a sight! Land of tulips gives delight. Blossoms, blossoms; how they spread. Low and hill-lands, pink and red. Opening up the whitest field, S ending forth an ample yield. S outh or north or east or west Our fruit stands Inspectors' tests. M any flowers can be seen D own among the 11 the time, like ou're welcome to Portland. Or.. 188 W. Russell conld mention a few yourself not in Salem, of course, but not far away. If a few more towns put a ban on the Henry Ford newspaper Henry may be able to scare up a few subscribers. Even a news paper profits by persecution. The Denver & Rio Grande rail road has been sold for 1 5.000, 000. The name of the plumber who ought it has not reen at nounced. They call it grass for short in California. We call it asparagus here In the Salem district jrhero trfe best In the world can be srown. Sloi;;.a a'ibje-t next w f k. Let them come: mke ;t 300 acres of broccoli if possible, and seven cars or more a dry going out from Salem during the sbip pinp season. That wiK guaran tee 75 cars a day In 1923. There was a boom in marriages In England and Wales last year when nearly 400.000 cduples were wed. This easily constitutes a record, says the registrar general. For the three years preceding th war the annual average was only 280,000, and only twice has the 300.0000 mark been passed in 1915 and 1919 when, owing to the recruiting cry of "single men first," the marriages In the sec ond half of the year went up with a bound and eclipsed all previous figures. IAKKHH AND WRITKRH OF HISTORY. It is quite Interesting to ob serve how many members of the late Democratic administration, who were makers of history dur inn the war period, are busy writ ing it now. Joseph us Daniels has taken a place In the press gallery t Washington and. like another Josephus, is writing both current and ancient history. Former Secretary Lansing's disappointing personal narrative of the peace conference and his interesting newspaper studies of the four chief actors have been received and. for the most part, forgotten. Colonel House, once the morgan stic secretary of states. Is now writing criticisms on chrrent poli ics and world events for a Phil adelphia syndicate. Mr Wilson carried away with Mm from the White House some tons of documents to eerve 83 ref erences for the history of the war nl the peace conference which ie in expected to write. He has iven as yet no information con crning the nature of the work r the date when it will be ready 'Miration. rrhai he er- FUTURE DATES April 1. RttnrrUr Barball. Willim Mt t. f. f O. it KnfB. April 17. fcunda, Rlfttuuwn Dt April I A and IT. Saturday and 8tn dar t)aatalt. Salem Senators ti. Re rina. Ai.ril 19. Tur.Uj Highland Parent Teacher aoHtion meets al Highland irhoot. April 52. Vridar 1. rel,at b tween Willamette and Whitman April 'Z. Thurda Marinn ConntT Children's reaii clinic at Commercial i Inh. Ma 4 . Werfnendar. Apollo rloh in nrert with Virginia Rae, soprano, at Armorr. Mar 5 to inenaie- Annual roofer "I r.angelical Aaooeiat.no Ma 7. K.torH.r t'elet.ratinii of founder dar at Chatnpoeg. May 7. Haturdar. Marinn Connt traek meet and hebal! trnirnim.nl May 2 27 and 2 B.eh.ll. Willsm rti a. Witt..,, at Walla Walla Jonr ts. Thursday Oregon Pioneer aktneialinn meeting in Cortland. Jnne 17. r'ridar Annual Iowa picnir. Hlat fair grounds. fVtoKer I. Kattirda MenUtiTel rthll. Willamette s O. A C. st Cor esll's Neemher 24. Thnrsdar (tant',tl) Thar-k.girmf a,T, -o,hsll, WillsyMtts s. MoftMask. st Balaa. garden green. Blossom Day, come here and stay. Orrin O. Smith. St.. April 14. 1921. pects to take a weii deserved rest before he begins. All four of these men have been makers of history. While Mr. Wilson overshadows the others, like a pine rising aboe the chaparral, the name of each will remain attached to the epoch during which they were in nation al life. But whether any of them will be a successful writer, that i.-. another story, When one turns to the past the name of Caesar alone looms as both a successful maker and writer of history; and there is no existing proof that he ever personally wrote a line of the narrative of the Gallic wars. There were propagan iets even In those days, and the diction that is still so much ad mired is probably that of some talented secretary whose name the canker of time devoured with his bones. Napoleon wrote memoirs while at St. Helena; but who has' read tbem? Grant's memoirs have al most been forgotten. Perhaps there was a psychological reason why few of the great makers of history of the past left person ally written records of their achievements. Thse who were successful to the jtime of their death were too busy doing things to take time to write of them; while those who failed seldom had the opportunity to write. It vas the unwritten law of the re mote and middle ages that to lose an army or an empire was a capital offense. In modern times it has been chiefly the losers who have cared to turn historians, to give their versions of the events of which they were a part. The former kaiser and his army and navy chiefs have written books telling bow Germany came to lose the war; and Count Czernin of Aus tria has written a really interest ing account of. the decline and fall of the Austro-Hungarian em pire. But, on the other side of the water, the winners have been content to accept the place In his tory which others will assign to them. Neither Clemenceau nor Lloyd George has evinced a desire to become an author, although Clemenceau was a ready and In teresting writer before he became premier. While there are, of course, exceptions, the general rule has been that only those turn to writing history, after having collaborated in its making, who have loft the power they once ex ercised and seek to explain away their fall. Colonel House has made one in teresting contribution to the his tory of events leading to the dec laration of war. He relates in a recent article that he was in Potsdam on June 1. 1914. as tho personal (representative of then President Wilson: that he wit nessed an assembling of the "pick of the imperial army." He ob- j serves that "it is doubtful wheth I er there was ever-before or since ; suchr ar brilliant military display." In a park outxide the palace the kaiser Btood alone in gloomy ma jesty reviewing the honor men from the crack regiments. And Colonel House notes that "he looked a martial and imperial fig ure the embodiment of a mod ern war lord." f At a luncheon glveu after th teview Colonel House told the kaiser frankly that th assembl ing of so great a war machine on the part of Germany could not be viewed by the entente countrieg as other than a war tuove: that rulers peacefully Inclined did not make such martial dlsplaa, The kaiser replied In substance that it was good for his neighbors to hfar an occasional rattle of the German sword, that it taught tbem their places These comments were written by Colonel Mouse after reading a teview of the kaiser's memoirs in which he asserts that he was the most inclined to peace of all the monarch of his time; that be and not Mr. Wilson was the first to propose a league of nations. Col onel House writes that he was ronvinced by the review that ".pmeone'1 in Germany was ex pecting war and was .getting pre pared for it. and that he secretly advised our state department to that effect; that there can be no question that the kaiser prepared all the fuel for the conflagration, although he may disclaim having been the first to set a match to It. It Is doubtful, however, wheth er the pages of ( history will be greatly enriched by the contri butions of anyone who took an actual part of prominence in the world war. The historian of that conflict has probably not yet been horn. A living history of our own Civil war has never been written. although scores have made the attempt; and it is pos sible that the towering magnitude of the world war may cause that conflict of the states to pass at last from the world's memory for want of a gifted chronicler. BTALK IIUSRAXDS. The president of the Women's Freedom league says that after the fifth year the man is an ab solute negligible factor in the home. "Negligible factor" means that he cuts no Ice. He's a dead one and is about as Important as a rabbit at the zoological gardens. After a man has been a husband for five years, why not stun him on the head with an ax and bury him In the pansy bed? Why not drown our fifth-year husbands nd save a lot of money? In recent years women have taken to shooting their husbands. Sometimes they do not wait for the fifth year, but begin blazing away as soon as the honeymoon has staled. They take no chances on having a negligible factor around the place. They want a live one and start the program by killing off the one they have. There is nothing as useless as a shelf-worn husband. He simply clutters up the place and takes the room bf something mors serviceable or ornamental. Pos sibly it would be better to chloro- St . . .. . , ip I ' i 11 '4 form all husbands after the fifth year. Yet husbands have their value. Probably4 the lady in command of the Women's Freedom league took some pride in thi first one she rounded up and was inclined to show him off to the neighbors. Women usually do. Sometimes they are so desirous of a man that they do not hesitate to fcteal the husband of some other wo man even a fifth-year husband. Indeed the Women's Freedom league is so called because the members feel an absolute freedom to engage in husband Ftealing in addition to running for sheriff and other sports. Possibly husbands are not worth much sympathy, but some of them at; least deserve a better fate than to be labeled as negligible factors and pushed off the earth after their fifth year of servitude. A neighboring editor suggest!, that w might at least have a be-kiud-t dumb-husbands week. THE Git HAT DANK. We have heard of Christian king, but King Christian of Den mark is expected to pay an offic ial vie U to this country this sum mer. There is nothing rotten in the state of Denmark since Chris tian cleaned up the place. If he comes across we shall be glad to show him, some of our ham lets. THE KILLKIt. The Georgia planter who killed eleven negroes to avoid paying them wages w&s finally convicted, but the jury thoughtfully recom mended him to the clemency of the court. Tbtey thought he should be punishred for careless ness, anyhow. But a dozen ne groes, more or less, doesn't seem to deeply concern the state of Georgia. BITS FOR BREAKFAST Blossom day tomorrow. S All dsessed. but there is a place to go; out to see the blos soms. Hurrah and bully for good! The house jammed the Kordney emer gency taritf bill through yester day V But it is now called the Young bill, because it has anti-dumping clauses by Congressman Young of Texas. It will saw the buccaneer ing importers off at their pockets, before they can dump onto Amer ican markets ship loads of junk. W S The yellers with yellow streaks and red flags In their hands yel- THIS WEEK IS epheis Six DEMONSTRATION WEEK We will make special demonstrations from our salesrooms every day this week of the "SEN SATIONAL STEPHENS 20 miles to the gallon of gasoline 15,000 miles to set of tires. One quart of oil per 1000 miles. ted their heads off: but those were the only fatalities. U Now cherrieB will have to pay 3 cents a pound as soon as the senate gets the "instant" action demanded by President Harding, and that will start the maraschino bunch this way. If the main taritf makes it 6 cent ft, ay it should, they will keep coming V And all the cherry blossoms seen on blossom day in the Salem district, when they turn and ripen into cherries, will have a market at least some point above a star vation price for tue growers. LIFE IS BEGUN y Industrial Accident Commis sion Reports progress Of Rehabilitation The practical p irpos-; being served by the vocational training Uw as applied' by the state in dustrial accident commission shown in figures a they stood tn April 1 when 5., men were la actrve training for new vocations. Al presc.u: 11 hav-. fit'Ve. their training and nine havj diepped out. The c.i:rfis-l n se:t question naires to 361 men and women who were eligible to I ho courses be cause of the serivu iia'tin. of their in'tiries whil i'Lg.te.l in industrial occupn: .r . Klsuty of the que'I'rf.: i' is wire not re turned and for various reasons no action has not been taken on 195. lTp to April 1 th. commission had spent $22,4 STi in the work n a little more ian a year's tme. Among the fioup now in train ng the. e is 'inly one woman. The com niiit 3 ri ump -m pay f penation o 88 ii'sn a .in '. i 1 1 csL.blfsh Ing tbem i-i ?. iuia . 'h-?y might be na. '. v st r' uriortlng. The per3n n rvi"K hto tak ing cotirv a In lH,okke.oi.ic M-mi- ANEW Ml Ell .9usmmt$. . ..... K.' llEAST iJNE" wm l3WKDLttIewMA , I At The Oregon The'atrd a i ? i n & Sa 11(P1M JUL H- 1111 VLs SALIENT SIX' num. graphy. w r ! opcrv.i.r !v.e. AlUUIV, I'll .1 ill V T. Oil 1 II. I.'! cn. dan ;i i notiltrv iin .i. ..... to KtLMiiK. i I ill mprniHiii. .rafting and vulcanizing. As far as pos3blj the coma!. Inn I nolne ivl it In , .... iiu is Hoii-h -i.!.ii4 "iallO,1( chools. If a suitable school can ot be located the enmm Bsion en. eavora to find a place for lh eueticiary as an apprt i.tice. PRAISES TirrrM TO HIS FKIKNDS TiarV Of Via la a avm tit rm i; r disordered kidneyB. Stiff gjyj alnful joints, rheumatic aches lore muscle, puffiness under tha Byes are others. These symptoms Madder need help to do the work pf filtering and casting out from ':. t a. . 1 . inn avaiBiii iiiiihiiin Hnn ivnaiA ... iacts that cause trouble.' Ben VlUchardson. Wlngrove. W. Vg, Writes: "I will praise Foley Kid. . n Tt11e tf a ii a t V. . tr V. .. . . ild me." Sold everywhere -(adv.) f "They charged me with putting rtlini' niattor In Kttttm "I see ycu won." 3 "Yes. my foxy lawyer tried thjB itase before a jury of ladies, and ervery one of them was using a lite -He cororlng matter." LouUvIll Courier-Journal. y M-.! I --M--M--.MMMM Salem School of Expreuka ri i TAMn4 TKTm 1 tnM m.:. - - - ) ww u m Ma - mm 147 It. commercial T : Phone 692 1484J Special Coarse la PnDlte SpeaUag Dinnerware and Glassware WM. GAHLSD0RF The Store of Housewares 135 N. Liberty St. Next Sunday. 31 ' ii ! I i i! i E .it in