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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1921)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 23, 1021 0tt Statesman i. V " Issued Dally Except Monday by r IIIK 8TATK8MAX PI HUSHING CXJMPANY . - -r H5 8. Commercial St.. Salem, Oregon Portland Off Ice.. 704 Spalding Building. Phone Main 111C) J ' t MEMBKIl OP THE ASSOCIATED I'llRSS I I The Dsoclated Press it exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication oi all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited i tkia ... . . i . . . . u wfis vaiicr uiu auu me local news puDiisneu nerein. R. ;J. Hendricks. , .... Stephen A. Stone Ralph Glorer . , Frank Jaskoskl , Manager . . Managing Editor Cashier Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier in Salem and suburbs. 16 j -, cents a week. 5 cents a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mail. In advance. SS a year, $3 for six aonths. 11.50 for three months. SO cents a month, in Marion : and. Polk counties; outside of these counties. $7 a year, $3.50 i for six months, $1.75 for three months, (0 cents a month. When Bot paid In advance. 60 cents a Tear additional. THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper, j will be sent a year to anyone paying a year in advance to the ! ' Daily Statesman. SUNDAY STATESMAN, $1.50 a year; 75 cents for six months; 40 cents for three months; 25 cents for 2 months; IS cents for I 1 one month. WEEKLY STATESMAN, Issued In two six-page sections. Tuesdays j - - and Fridays, $1 a year (If not paid in advance, $1.25); 50 I : j cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. TELEPHONES: Business Office. 23. Circulation Department, 583 Job Department, 583 Society Editor, 108 '.Entered at the Postoffice in Salem. Oregon, as second class matter. GOVERNOR OLCOTT AND THE FLAX INDUSTRY jv ThY Statesman wishes to frankly commend Governor 01 cott for his actions concerning what appeared to be a crisis in theflax, industry, as related, to the conduct of the flax plant at the Penitentiary. ' The authorities of the Penitentiary woke up a few morn ings ago and found they had contracts on their hands with 35 farmers to grow 731 acres of flax j And no money in sight to pay for this flax when it shall be delivered.: It may come to $61,000; and it may come to as high, as $80,000, with a bumper crop. i Governor Olcott made no attempt to pass the buck. . He is the head of thePenitentiary ; it was on his authority that the contracts were made, though they were made in the name of the Board of Control. But they were made, and more than half the seed had been sown, and the ground was ready for the rest ' ; V And Governor Olcott showed no disposition to shift the blame for the situation onto other shoulders; if any thing was to blame it was" his own sanguine expectation that the matter could be handled,' on the showing of $75,310 worth of flax products on hand the first of the year. So all the contracting farmers were called to the capitol yesterday, and all the cards were laid on the table. The whole conclusion of the matter is that the farmers will go ahead with their flax growing unless one or two may decide to hot take the risk and if there are any such no at tempt will be made to hold them to their contracts. Those who deliver; their flax this "slimmer will be given vouchers showing the quantity delivered and the contract prices agreed And they may use these vouchers on which to secure ac commodations if they wish; and all four of the Salem banks are committed to -a policy of preference and liberality in ex tending accommodations to their customers in such cases; as are some of the bankers in the small cities around which flax Is grown! J The flax plant will work up the product as fast as pos sible,' and. make payments prorata as fast as money is avail able ; ., ,V., " . -'J- " '. . - And, - even - at the7 presentabnonrially low prices, the farmers will get all their money, by the end of next year f . And there rwill be left" just about what there is now; something over $20,000 worth of flax products, or something over. $20,000 in cash, in case it shall have all been worked j And the Legislature will be asked to authorize the pay ment from the flax funds of 6 per cent interest to the grow ers on their vouchers; which no one will have authority to pay till then or without such authorization. The Statesman believes the showing will be very much better than indicated; because we believe the prices for flax products will be very much higher throughout the latter part of this yea'r and all of next year than they are now. HARVEY AND THE SENATORS I It -"would be as politically profitable, and rather better morals,-!! the few Senators who have just erupted over the confirmation of Col. Harvey to be Ambassador to Great Brit ain on the ground that it was "a direct slap at Wilson, to beat the. tom-tom and raise the war-yell because twice two is four or because the minute is longer than the second. i The verdict in thee last election was, to get as far as pos sible from the regime of the past eight years s And Harvey is none too far. ! JIarvey was the prophet who foresaw if he did not in deed actually create Wilson President. As such, he deserves just -what his work was worth. Harvey is an implacable friend as well as enemy. His incredibly virulent fight against Roosevelt probably gave the election to Wilson; who was then his best friend. j But the Wilson type of mind could not brook even un bridled, insistent and advisory friendship; he demanded that I 15-,. zzzz II l i i - T WHY YOU SHOULD HAVE A BANK ACCOUNT BENEFIT OF ; FINANCIAL ADVICE TF more men took their banker into A their confidence, before investing, there would be fewer financial trage dies. The banker is the community's financial specialist; his advice is valu t able. The United States National Bank can save you time, worry, and perhaps mon - ey. if you consult ns as to mnnpv mat. x tr ' . .. . ters. we are aiwaya glad to have our depositors talk over their financial dif- iicuuies witn us. f AJLtM Harvey cease championing his cause, and follow the Wilson train, if at all, wearing a muzzle and with gyves on hand and foot. Harvey, who was a free man with an exalted sense of friendship values, spurned this order to trail in the dust of the Wilson triumph. He said, "The man who is false to the personal friendship that made him, is false m All things American and I'm through!" Wilson fell through the lamentable operation of his own colossal egotism that knew no friendship or toleration or the counsel of equals only the adulation of dupes, slaves, under lings. Harvey helped to bring the revolution And there are so few honest. Americans who think that he did otherwise than exactly right, both in political expedi ency and in personal and national retribution, that only a few' fool Senators who ought to be Oslerized are raising a 0rtHarvey is brave, and capable, and loyal; they'd better let him be! : Flax growers: Sit tight. We must grow more grapes. See Salem slogan pages of The Statesman of Thursday next. Secretary Hughes will probably be required te do a lot of Japan ning on that Yap proposition. T Professor Einstein says that space is limited. The professor must have been an editor at one time in his career. Armistice day. may become a national holiday if it can be de termined just what sport blooms best In November. Old Doc Sun Yat Sen has been named president of the Chinese republic. Horrors, another "yel low menace." It looks as if the coming con gress would legislate and not In vestigate. The shores of the 66th congress are strewn with the wrecks of Inquiries. The typhus fever Is reported as raxing with deadly effect among the Russians. So far. neither Trotzky nor Lenlne has Issued a proclamation to stop it. President Harding says one of the tasks of his life has always been to help the down-and-outers. Why doesn't he get busy, on the esteemed Democratic party? The theory of Newton has been knocked into a cocked hat by the movement of prices. Have you noticed how much longer it takes them to come, down that it did to go up? i mm mmm aaaaaaaaass 1 y ' The fact that the organisers of the Nonpartisan league have been treated to a dose of tar and feath ers In Kansas has discouraged them to the extent that they have abandoned tbeig plans to come to Oregon.' Glory be. The flax growers who have con tracts with the state of Oregon to grow this product are going right along about their business. They will have to wait some time for the last of their money for their crop bnt the state of Ore gon has never yet repudiated an honest debt and never will; and they will all finally get all their money. And the flax Industry -will this year be bigger than ever--three times as big as ever If there is a bumper crop and ready-for greater things in the future which are bound to come to it, in the very nature of things. Mrs. Harding is setting an ex ample of economy in the furnish ing of the White House. Under the universal rule she would be entitled to spend any amount of money she desired for that pur pose and congress would consent. But she is going to get along with the old furniture, supplementing this with belongings taken from her Wyoming avenne home and from ber house in Marion. She will save more than f 10,0 00 by the operation. From Washington and New York she could have or dered a variety of costly things and there would not hare been the slightest objection or criticism. BLACK AXD WHITE FUEL Pseudo-scientists delight In di viding the world's industrial pro gress into different epochs, such as the wooden age, the coal age, the steel age, the gasoline age. Accepting these general classifi cations, we may surmise that the world is now entering the hydro electric "age the age la whlclUhe future of a community will de pend largely on the extent to which it develops Its natural wa- FUTURE DATES Anrn IS. Tkarada Marina. Coast 0('drV bareaa rliai st CoamtrrUl tab. Vlav 4. WuUy. A pell Mab- la ftmrert wita Virginia Raa, Moras, a A.rrry. 8 J ' '"wlnsiva Assist eeaftr af EranrriKal AjMcUtWa. M. 7. ftatartar CrUbratiaa af Founders' lav at Chanpoe-. Vuf 7. Ratnrdur Marioa) Camatr trtft mi and bwbiH tonraamrM. May tJt ao4 SS RaaofcaM. Willaia att; a. Wait"a. at Walla Walla Jafu 1 a TkMil : aaaariatioa rtin( ia Portland. o. . ' rrwi.T Annual law pirafe. Stale fair rronaAa. OrhvSer Patartar tottva) FwnaIL Willaaaatt mm A a r . iw TUakartiM 4y. faataVtaiMssttS vs. MaltauMk, a Balaam, . lt MILWAUKEE'S FIRE DEPARTMEN1 USES MOlUSC. ter power and turns it into heat and energy by means of electric dynamos and bigh-tension trans mitters. Old King Coal has had his day. The Queen of the Mists is as cending the throne. From the black fuel of New castle, which built the British empire, science and business have advanced to the white fuel of the Rockies, the Cascades, the Sierra Nevadas and the Coast Range, de stined to revolutionize the Pacific coast. Water is accomplishing things in America that never entered in to the plans of the prohibitionists. King Alcohol Is not the only an cient monarch that water is de throning. White fuel promises to do as much for western America as black fuel ever did for the island empire across the sea, and at the same time to save us from those unfortunate industrial complica tions that at the present day are helping to hasten in Great Brit ain the downfall of King Coal. Perhaps It was for the Pacific coast region a blessing tn dlsguisa that it produced scant supplies ofJ coal, bnt was granted as compen sation "limitless mountains storing abundance of white fuel. Per haps It was not altogether a bless ing for Great Britain that she was overstocked with black fuel so that, in the strength of he- eoaf resources, she neglected to make use of the thousands of streams and water courses running to waste in the Scottish and Welsh mountains and the bills of Derby shire and Cornwall. If you figure how many men it takes to produce a given quantity of horse power by digging coal from the earth and bow many men it requires to produce the Bade amount of, horse 'powef'by harnessing a mountain stream and add to these the difference tn the cost between hauling the coal over files of raijroada and trans mitting the electric power over a high-voltage wire you will begin to realize the advantage this coast has over England in employing white instead of black fuel. Furthermore, if England hadJ developed her water power to any-4 thing like the same extent that Oregon has developed hers, a handful of red agitators would not have been able to cripple Brit ish industries by closing down the coal mines. The mills ' of Lan cashire and the factories of Shef field and the lighting of London could still have been carried on by the turbine and dynamo col lecting the water power from the furthermost parts of the British Isles. The big Welsh mountains would have been a valuable help to the little Welsh premier in his present fight against anarchy. So the physical features of this coast region that made it a water power instead of a coal country have afforded her a flying start for first honors In the new hydro electric industrial era. Xo Red peace disturbers can cripple her by calling out. a million of men she will never have to employ to produce mechanical-energy equal to that obtained from the coal pita of Great Britain. Coal, of course, will still be necessary; so will oil and gasoline. But, as the main source of heat and power In the future, neither will he able to compete for efficiency or hur man convenience with the white fuel of the mountain stream. Salem, with over i5-,ooo horse power of water within her immedi rte territory, much of easily and cheaply developed, is bound to have a large place In the great strides that are coming- soon In this field. IntvmatlooaL This motorcyck", bonring eight extinKuishers and two fire men, was recently jriven a successful lest in Milwai.ke, Wia. It Is able to reach a blaze mnch sooner than even motor drawn apparatus. HOPELESS QUEST. (Los Angeles Times.) The school superintendent in an eastern town is advertising plteously In the papers for ''love proof teachers. Wlth!n a few weeks no less than five of the lady teachers on his starf have desert ed their desks for the matrimon ial altar. Doubtless some of them will regret it when the honey moon has waned, but that doesn't relieve the schools for the mo ment. The superintendent fs either taking on the iscant class es himself or breaking tn new in structors all the time. He Is get ting peevish about It. It worries htnu He awakens In the dead of night to find himself crying fori a love-proof teacher. But we fear he is doomed to disappointment. There is no Buch creature. Even when a teacher has grown white in the service and her nose is worn to a point from much delv ing in the past the love porm still finds lodgment unler her corset, and if a Locbinvar should happen along she would buy him a horne rather than have him miss his stunt. There are school teachers 70 years old who would elops with Tod Sloan. Even the prosy atmosphere of a schoolroom can hot completely stifle romance. We fear the quest for "love proof school teacher'' will be a hopeless one. Of course, some fcea&oned spinsters may tespond. but they, loo, will prove fale alarms when they hear the call. They will desert their charges for the matrimoniat noose at the first beckoning. When one of these blU-tfmer' get thetlove bugr she has it bad. XOTiQ VILJ. Anhor. shivering on the bank: "Come in, the water is fine? bu? he does say: "Plunge in and get It over with." All the bricks in the row have got to topple alike, and the sooner it is over wftij th. beftcr. Orange Judd Farmer. ' BITS FOR BREAKFAST There have been but two legal executions in the territory of Alaska since It has belonged to the United States. Alaska doesn't seem to be half as wild as th3 movies would make it. MIST TIUVKL Tilt: KA.MK PATH. Slow-business, closed shops and mills, reduced railroad operation, wage cuts, strikes and unemploy ment are met with in every di rection. The farmer was made the. goat six months ago, but the rest are getting theirs now. And; however much the farmer may sympathize with ether people in their troubles, he cannot forget the fact that the rest must travel the path that he was forced to walk in before we shall reach the level of economic equality that must precede any return of pros perity for anybody. He does not call to capital and Flax is all right a "a. , The flax industry goes light along. ft S ; When Congressman Hawlejf Is heard from, in the tariff billgthe price of flax products will if Im prove. You watch and see them climb. : B S : t; Other districts of Oregon are doing it making a succes of building up poultry plants dh a commercial scale. Salem must hustle in this line if be expects to lead, which she should. !-'; S m S i "Syrup of Prunes" Is a 1 Jiew Oregon product, being put up by the Oregon Syrup of Prunes; com pany, in which Hon. Seneca Fouts of Portland is interested. Mr. Fouts was In Salem a few (jays ago. and Salem druggists will carry the product, as they should. There is a place for such a fero dnct, and It will advertise Oregon and Oregon prunes to the four corners of the earth; and, in, its modest way, help to make a mar ket for the prunes of this state. Syrup of Prunes is, a .laxative preparation after the fashion: of Svrup of Figs. It has passed all the tests of qualitx. ang !t is truly on the way towards fame ind, the writer hones, fortune for, the Oregon men who are behind vthe Company, who conceived the great idea and are pushing it. They propose to keep it the best tiling in the . world in its line,' and to push It as fast as their resources will permit. Their office if In the Chamber of Cemmeree build ing, Portland, room 80D. ! f. Dinnerware and Glassware j WM. GAHLSD0RF The Store of Housewares j 135 N. Liberty St. i M'DOWELL MARKET j Where a Dollar Does Its I Duty . Phone 1421 173 So. Commercial St t i McDowell's Service- -i McDowell's Quality j McDowell's Prices i Nuf Sed j Rolled Prime Ribs oV Beef to Roast for Sat I urday. lb,-.......... JI5c 1 Freshly Ground Ham- i burg, lb 15c" I The best Pure Pork Saus-. age in the city, lb..0c -Our own Sugar Cured Breakfast Bacon, per lb L ..0c rOur own Pure Lard in ! 5's ..J75c, jThis is our own and not a i cheap product shipped' in to deceive the 'pub- HC. .: ., , !Choice Mutton Legs, per I lb .......,... i.20c - 'Mutton to Roast, lb. 15c Mutton Stew 10c ; 3 lbs. for..... . 25c Quality Bleats For Less ' lOpen Until 8:00 p. mv ASOtM XVKOK prmntit CHARLES MAIG raoDUCTiow. ml .emuciaaiis WUh MONTE BLUE Camaourj(?ktttre I j 1 fl; Starting Sunday - I "Chase Me" A 12 cylinder at high? ' speed " if- TheitreD'- Wlire the fcig . how : Vl, i aL- 1 U ggwwsgjfgBBjsygBjj J. L. Boslck & Sp ill ( .L Just Ireceived " Vv Full Car i SCO i j .i Direct From Factory SPECIAL ON CRISCO 9 lb. can, absolutely fresh 6 lb. can, absolutely fresh..... 3 lb. can absolutely fresh Wesson's OiL pint ..... ............. Wesson Oil, quart Wesson's OiL half gallon m Wesson's OiL 1 gallon Mazola OiL pint Mazola Oil, quart...... Mazola OiL half gallon Mazola Oil, I gallon 100 lbs. C. & H. Berry Sugar 11 lbs. C. & H. Berry Sugar 1 gallon Blue Karo 1 gallon Red Can Karo L Best Valley Hour, sack.. Vim Flour.t:... $US .V. ......Jfci. -w ff . ' , i : 'i I ..... . . . ... : ;.i -S9e 35c 65e $U0 $235 -35c. SSc $120 $2.35 $8.80 $1 - S6c - 76c - $1.65 $2.15 I w Lion t forvAf tL . . t L. i i. j?- w iuc targcxi assorimeni qi canned gooas on played in Waiamette valley at prices noi eqdaled in Oregon The reason you always find our goods so new and fresli js because we - . . . . . turn our stock so often . , ... . ;jI4!ilL..v.-