: - fa-. . t" h. a OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON THURSDAY MORNING. APRIL 28, 1921 l)c (Btcqon Statesman Issued Dally ExceDt Mondav hv THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY 215 S. Commercial St.. Salem. Oregon (Portland Office, 704 Spalding Building. Phone Main 1116) MKMHKIl 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. R.. J. HendrlAs. . Stephen A. Stone. Ralph Glover .... Frank Jaskoski . . . Manager ..Managing Kditor Cashier Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, Berved by currier in Salem and suburbs. 15 cents a week. 65 cents a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mail, in advance. $6 a year. $3 for six ; aonths, $1.50 for three months. 50 cents a month, in Marion i and Polk counties; outside of these counties, $7 a year, 13.50 (or aix months, $1.75 for three months, 60 cents a month. When I not Paid in advance. 50 rents a vear additional. THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper. I ' will be sent a year to anyone paying a year in advance to the 1 Daily Statesman. SUNDAY STATESMAN. $1.50 a year; 75 cents for six months; 40 cents for three months; 25 cents for 2 months; 15 cents for i i one month. WEEKLY STATESMAN, issued in two six-page sections. Tuesdays nd Fridays, $1 a year (if not paid in advance, $1.25); 50 cents for six months; 25 rents for three months. TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23. Circulation Department, 583 Job Department, 563 Society Editor, 106 emplove. the printer, the apple picker, the manufacturer, the merchant, to every man who works or invests capital or in telligence or brawn in a business, that he shall make a profit in face of any extraneous social conditions that may arise. We're all an integral, essential part of Society why not make the guarantee unanimous?. But a profit guarantee carries with it a sting in its other end almost everything has "another end!" in the recipro cal obligation to establish a price limitation that will take care of the other fellow. A five-dollar wage, a fifty-dollar minimum for a suit of clothes, two bits for an ice cream soda, half a dollar for a movie, three hundred dollars for a bindel, fifteen dollar sugar, three-dollar overalls, forty cent gasoline these fixed prices are as logical as gravitation, in the wake of a profit guarantee for the farmer or any other class. It is an interminable round-robin circle; as endless and profit less as a pop-eyed pup chasing his tail he'll never stop un til he gets tired and then he just stops, and that's the end ot it : he's a sane pup until the fit comes over him again. The way the Idaho farmers took that $5-a-ton loss from the railroad, as a matter of right rather than thankft;' privi lege, gives one pais. Maybe we want only . haritv, r envn -i aft and not equal justice when wp t?!k price guarantees in a land of free competition. "vi" Sk jpessQEaMaf - : ah. v is i -I m V' ;, ' fry BITS FOR BREAKFAST Entered at the Postoffice in Salem. Oregon, as second class matter. SALEM OUGHT TO BECOME THE WESTFIELD OF OREGON, THE CHAUTAUQUA GRAPE BELT OF THE PACIFIC COAST ' The above words constituted the heading of the leading editorial of the Salem Sloean issue of The Statesman of a year ago 1 i And they are reproduced now for the purpose of reaf firming the statement they carry I f And now fortified by a mass of new facts, which will be found on the Slogan pages of this issue. i; In the year past there has been a great deal of interest irt grape growing here; and there is now more interest than ever before: and some of the friends of The Statesman are kind enough to attribute the new interest to the articles in this newspaper. I i It is needless to say that this is gratifying; for thai is the purpose of the Salem Slogan issues to concentrate at tention upon our most important basic industries; to secure as! largely as possible the specializing of our people on the things they can grow and which they can do best. ! I - There can be no question of the great prosperity of the Salem district and the great and substantial growth of Sa lem as a city of this course shall be followed I The farmers producing the crops in all lines best suited to, our soils and our general conditions, and the commercial CEnter providing the marketing and manufacturing and ship ping and merchandising facilities. j Our people cannot make a great success of the European gxapes that is, our people of the Salem district I ! But they carj grow as good grapes of the Vitis Labrusca. or Northern Fok varieties, the Concord kinds, the grape juice kinds, as can be produced anywhere, and as many pounds to the acre ! V ';! ' ...... j j And they Are beginning to give larger attention to this industry, as they should. j; j This branch of horticultureiwill not be sufficiently de veloped here till there are great grape juice factories in Sa lem, as there should be. Prof. W. S. Brown, of-the Oregon Agricultural College, confirms this view, in a letter written yesterday, and print ed in this issue, and the College is now preparing a bulletin on grape growing, which will be the first bulletin of the kind issued by that institution. ' ' t In all the plantings in the Salem district, chief attention should be paid to the Concord varieties, for two reasons. First, they are the kinds best adapted to our soils. Second. they are the kinds needed in jelly and jam manufacturing and in grape juice manufacturing. Ihe more of the Ameri can varieties of grapes our farmers grow, the nearer they wUT approach the coming time of extensive grape juice man ufacturing, and when that time comes there will be a good market for all the large or small plantings of the right kinds (Jniw iur- ':rap'9 And ;thw tlic crap- juice kinds. V ". In this wav S;il-ni will bcromo a trapo prnwinp ci-iit'r. as it should l-ei-oii!" S ThTf is a Concord trap' in' down on the Clyd l.aFolUi't dare at Wheatland that is 1 ."i inrh'1 in diameter at the fork. nd that has produced 2 'j tons f crapes in a single yeaj". Ought i his prape vme not to have a piace in the liail or came tor rees-' One such crape vine would ;o far towards Fupportine a fam ly ju mod-it circumstances on a lailii. S Kvery farmer in the Salem dis- ' i irt oucht to have a tew rape vines, of the Concord variety. !) will be helninr himself and his tha may be made from this time on. PRICE GUARANTEES A reduction of $5 a ton on freight for alfalfa hay from Idaho to the hayless Middle Cast was recently made by the Union Pacific system. It amounted to adding the full a ton to the sale value of the Idaho farm product, hundreds of thousands of tons. It had been demonstrated that under the older freight rate, the hay could not be sold so the railroad made the re duction. Freight men say that it doesn't pay their expenses the more they ship the more they lose; but they're trying to! keep the producer alive. yjWho is going to reimburse the railroad for this loss? For j if it is a public service, perhaps a profit ought to be guaranteed. jlf anyone at all, it will have to be that overworked, dis tressed person, Society at Large, who may well enough be asked to guarantee to them as to the farmer, the railroad t of the last meal of a starving family in North Monan. A youne Chinese mother smii her husband one day to a wealthy triend and neighbor to borrow a little "Kao liang. " Alter he returned with the ma n. she cooked a warm meal and invited him to come and eat. When th1 me.it was half finished, she to d Vim that it was poisoned. Iler husband took the news iuiet !y and waited with her for the end to come This : tol niiht be inul t pijed a t h on sail Ifild in China's '"Valley of Sorrow." .Many have asked the very per tinent question. "What has the Ch nese Kovet nment done to re lieve this s t u.i t ion and "What interest have the local Chinese shown in the welfare of their fellow-countrymen?" Although un able to raiso the whole $200. iiiMj.niMi required to tide over the fainit(0-stri( ken people, they are nevertheless doinjr everything pos sible and have set a lofty example of service and liberat'civing. Shan Cha alone has collected $1.50. '"10 and set as an objective $5, iioo.oiio Civil servants throimh- ,y 1 I ' 'r-' ;.V; !tJ tne AI 7 teams, or "mush" across Broad Pass eighty-four miles to the end of the road being built south from Fairbanks and Nenana. Freight also 18 handled via the Broad Pass, the government engineers having introduced army caterpillar trac tors which have packed down a boulevard In the snow between the ends of steel. Farming along the line of the railroad is expected to be stimu lated by completion of tha line. Officials say land settlers by the hundreds are asking about farm lands, there being about 100. 000 acres awaiting settlement in the Matanuska valley and in the Ta nana valley, both on the railroad. In the Tanana. No. 1 hard wheat is being raised and milled into flour by a new plant at Fairbanks. Mixed farming is also proving suc cessful. Incoming farmers are warned that they will have to clear the lands of small spruce and poplar growth, without taproots. fhice the land is cleared, they are told, it will grow every variety of hardy vegetable, and is suitable to sheep, hog and poultry raising and will prove a splendid berry and dairy ing country. Fifty-Dollar Prize For Deschutes County Comes inn Tit. ..no -i- inn fiii'V .mi!V i-luWJlS Wltft 1)111 i.MH,, v..v. Barnes circus, which comes to Salem Saturday, iviay two performances G. for ramily and his children's children. nd he will be helping his home out the Celestial Republic are vol -itv to g"t into the crape juice ! untarily donating a fixed percen- husiness on a large scale. S Walter Stoltz and Fenator Mr- Nary, on their farm below Sa- em. are adding 'he acres a year of filberts. Th are headed to- "-prds th distinction of being the filbert kings. m S By the way, where ;s the man who will organize a rnmpanv to tlant a hundred acres of filberts n the Salem district. That would fix Salem absolutely as the fil bert center of the I'nited States. ind it should be don';. WD C I ISE HELP IH BELIEF Portland Foreign Born Raise $4,000 For Starving Countrymen (age of their monthly salaries. The Chinese of Victoria have raised (3,liiin and set as an objec tive $5000. a group of high minded Japanese business men in Tokyo have given $ 15,000 apiece to start a fund in Japan for their starving neighbors in North China. Chinese people in the Cnted States and other countries are raising funds and sending food. The Chinese people of Portland have cabled $4000 and are raising more. Relief committees, com posed of Chinese. American. Europeans-. Canad ans and others are already setting in motion the vest and complicated machinery of relief necessary to alleviate the suffer ings of the famished millions, and whenever possible, administering the liberal g fts of the charitable throughout the world in perma nent and productive works. These appalling facts. iu bald est statement, make their own ap peal. The force of that appeal must not be. weakened by exhortation. WHY YOU SHOULD HAVE A BANK ACCOUNT 1 1 D0NT PAY IT TWICE Vi A candled check constitutes a sufli- ii i 4 - m SHJ3te3 cient receipt for a paid bill. So the man or woman with good judgment car ries a checking account with a leading bank as a matter of financial safety. You will find hundreds of men and wo menn in this community who pay their monthly bills by check on the United States National Bank. Put yourself among these sensible people. SALEM StatesMmtalBanli 7 Tho fam ne region may be geo graphically described as a recta a gular plain with an area ot 120. 000 square miles, stretching from a line drawn .".o miles south of Pekin and Tientsin on the north to Kai-feng-fu on the kouth (300 miles) and from the Shensi bills on the west to Tsinanfu on the ?azt (4oii miles). This plain ir. broken on its western extremity by the Pei-Llng mountains, which orm the border of Shansi and Ho ion provinces. This repion com arises the major portions of f i v very populous provinces, viz., Ho lan. Chili. Shantung. Shansi and Shensi. and has so dense a popu lation that it averages 4 50 to the quare mile. Faced w th seeming y unavoidable starvation, and racked with typhus and famine fe er. these millions of human bo ngs in their hopeless ni'sery pre sent a truly pitiable spectacle Heartrending tales, from reli ible sources. are reaching uv laily. of fathers killing their ch I tren because thev could not bear !o hear their pitiful cries foi 'iread. and in turn taking their "wn lives. In some of the most severely af fected regions, canals and rivers 'tave been choked with th bodies f men and women who havt -ouht a speedy end by drowning -ather than linger on in agony a t ik for the food that ha. never come Horses and cattle "veil dogs and cats. have been on-iumcd, anil the famished na Mves are seeking to derive nour 'shment Irom weeds and thistles ind leaves of tree.. Famished oarents. seeking to preserve their wn lives, are selling their daugh ters to a life of shame in ninn1 !aces the dead lie unburied in roadside ditches, upon the fhres holds of deserted courtyards, in treets Htid market places, s leticed by death. Among the sufferers are loo. 000 men who served in Krance during the war under Hritish ro ors, and loo (too nior who served "n other allied armies d"rinu the conflict. A atory is told by a relief work FUTURE DATES OftCOOM Mitrion "finn! t ""mnrriii' April 'JH, Thnrhdav -Cltil'f reo'n piirau rlmi rlnV Mt 4 . WHnraHaT Ho rtnh it "n-rrt with Virginia Ka. soprano, ai Vrirnrv May f to S in Iiiait - I nnua? ronfVr nf KvnnzUr al AnA-iat irn Mav 7. Saturday - - CrUt.ral ion of Konnti-r' day at ChamiMx-c Mar 7. SatiHr Marion CoHinU tra-k m.f anfi Ka't.a-M tntirnamnt Mar 2 37 lM 2H - R.nrhalt. W,llm tt . WTwiin.it. at Waila Wa!!a Jtin- IS. Thnradar Orrfnn Vtonerr ftsorulinn H'whnj in Portland .Itin 17. Krid( - Annual Intra i'-ni-. Hlat fair eroiind Ovtotwr 1 SatTirdav OfiiUiti" footh.ti, Wi;;.iru g. o. a c it Cor Xorohr J. Thoradar f tftr.tiT) ThraagiTij 4-r. f.Hrthall, WtlUowtt . Valtaa-nah. at FUlrm. AH FREJGH T RATES WILL DROP Interior Country Will Pay $25 Ton Over Govern ment Road road and down the Yukon rrom White Horse. When the railroad is complet ed, time and cost will be saved. (Joods .will lie shipped from Se attle to Seward or Anchorage, the seaport towns on the railroad and will be carried by the line across the mountains to Nenana and Fail banks, two interior points both on the Tahana river, a part of the reat interior river high way system. Already on the portions of the road completed mining operations have increased. Fourteen outfits will mine with hydraulic machin ery this year on Cache creek, three stamp mills recently were erected on Willow Creek, and pla cer work on Valdez. Green and other rich creeks has been revived. Government coal mines at Kska j and Chickaloon, which are con nected with the main railroad by a branch line, have produced ap proximately 100,000 tons piled and ready for railroad and do mestic use. The foundation for a 1,000-ton capacity coal clean ing plant is being laid at Sutton, where the Eska and Chickaloon branches come together and when completed tho navy department will be invited to fill bunkers and begin distributing coal to Tacific stations. Many new bituminous coal .has been discovered by gov ernment prospectors within re cent weeks and is being developed. Already. Alaskans who reside in the interior are taking the new "steel trail" over the mountains in preference to the old routes out of Cordova and Valdez. They take the trains at Seward and An chorage and ride to the end of steel, at mile 2 75. From there they take a stage, pulled by dog v-AVAVAVAVAVAVAVA KIDS & "SN00KEY" g 2 Will be at the OREGON Cff-ii1a v Vavavavavavavava i .1. A. Churchill, state superin tendent of schools, is in receipt of a check for $.".0 from the Stat ' Hankers' association which will be awarded to Deschutes county because it led last year in tho per capita sales of thrirt stamps, having a margin over all other counties of the Btate. Mr. cidine what county shall receive the prize. The award to chutes was made last fall. Des- Land Plaster Now is the time to use land plaster on your clo ver, vetch, corn, etc. Fertilizer Use our High Grade Fer tilizer on your corn, po tatoes, gardens, lawns, etc. It certainly increas es the crop on any land far in excess of the cost of the fertilizer. Alfalfa Jtay Another car of that fan cy hay now in stock Poultry Supplies We have the most com plete stock in the valley today, including all kinds of feed, grit, bone, shell, charcoal, lice killers, remedies, etc. D. A. WHITE & Sons Phone 160. 255 State St. ffiead The Classified Ads.- iUCTI0lii SaTIE Tomorrow, Friday, April 29th at 1:30 fam. 1749 North Front Street 1 range; 1 three-burner oil st0ye; 1 oven; 1 kitchen cabinet; 1 safe; 1 heating stovaet; 1 organ; 1 bookcase and . writing desk; 1 dresser; 1 ehiff&nier; 1 Axminlster rug; 1 in. grain carpet; 3 iron beds, springs and mattresses; 3 rocken; 1 stand; 1 clock; 1 wringer; 1 ash board; 2 comodes; lv lounge; fruit jars; dishes; pillows, etc. ClayBiby, 174 9 N. Front St. W. F. Wrighi Auctioneer, aaggajgaggjggggSBBXSSSaSaiaaSla CAN WE IGNORE APPEAL? THIS ANCMOKAGK. Alasa. Mar. 2H Kates on freight consigner to interior Alaska points will be re duced from around f.15n a ton. he present pi ice. to within $25 a ton. when the government rail- j road from tidewater to the "in ! -ide" is completed next spring, ill is estimator here. i As a result, a sreat deal of 'Mining machinery will he shipped ; to the inteilor. it is thought, and! nar.v dredge and frozen plater i areas will be enabled to resume, lcration At present the high i freight rates on supplies and ma chinery make it impossible to op- ; rate at a profit. For years much of the freight j for Fairbanks, Nenana. Fort Gib- j hon. Ruby and other interior I points has been sent by teams 1 ver trails from the seaport town.i tf Valdez and Cordova. During he summer some shipments went j in by the long wter route from Seattle I,, st. Michaels and up the Yukon Kier system, while otro-r! consignments uere billed via So- : attle to SkagAay. across the mountains on the White pass rail ! I PIMPLY! WELL, DON'T BE People Notice It. Drive Them Off with Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets A pimply fare will not cmb.-imss vou much loncer i( y-u cet a package of Ih. Edward-' 'live 1 abMi. I he skin rboidd i c;n t clir aiicr you have taken the tablets a fcw nights. Cleanse the Nond, LovcU and liver with IH. l-dwaH.." Olive 1 al,!L.s. the successful subs-nut.- -x caSrnr! ; there's i no scktxs? or pam nttrr t.ikir.j them. Ir. Edwnris' ( hvc '1 aSicts do thnt which calomel docs, nnd p.M as effec tively, but their a tion i rcntlc and cafe iastead f severe ami imtatine. No one who tak'S f'liv.- Tablets is ever cursed ur.h a 'Virrk I rwn tustc." a hnH hrnnlh t rli.'l I, I. ., ! leenriR. nmrfipation. t-r; i ! liver. Lad dispositin or f im-ly f ir-. Olive Tablet nr-"a p' rely vegetable compound mixed with cvvc rw': you will know them by their oliv color. I)r. lidwarda spent years ?tivng jia ticnts afilicted with bvr and lwcl complaints, and Olive Tab! n arc the. immensely cfTct ti vc result . 1 ak one or two nightly fw a we? k better you feel and luok. 15c and 30c. r.-j!? : "i !. ,,,, . t i t ' - LI ft, in 7 tr'f' A nation is starving. A nation that is America's best friend 15,000,000 Starving! 40,000 of whom are Christian. 200, C00 of these boys from this area fought in France (or the same cause that our boys fought for. You will be called on today and tomorrow to give to this cause. Can you conscientiously turn this ap peal down? Copyright by Inderwood & I'nderwood FATTENED FOR MARKET Children from the Famine area of Northern China are fattened as we would fatten cattle and then offered for sale in the mar ket by speculators, who of for them from 20c each up. So great is the extent, of the famine however, business is poor because of the over-supply of babies. Mothers and Fathers! Does This Appeal To You? Then Give Till It Hurts ! Things Ypu Can Do 1 cent will buy a; meal; 3 cents will save a life for a day; $1.00 will save a life for a month; $2.00 will save a mother and babe for a month; $5.00 will save a family for a month; 10.00 will save a mother and babe till Harvest; 25.00 will save a family till Harvest. Send Contributions to China-Near East Relief, Salem Commercial Club S.B.Elliott , This space donated by Ladd & BushU. S. National HnnkA Friend i a't-