I 8 TIIE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 11, 1921 DOCTOR TALK S ON GLEW LIFE President of American Med Association Age Bootleg Quacks cheese week !S SET BEi ! pound during the week, or re- iduced even further. , ! ruder the direction of the do mestic science department of Or- I'' and the stressing of trade fca- denre over th? right of the child tures. ; to be Sell born iffittal libit ion Xerevtry. -t 1 rot mture w:irs betw MOSpilallZatlOIl Is MOW the l!TM tiviln fii.htiin m -ii uliirli uo thought Tf.r the sick, partly f' I l,ave lo fear, it is the il.t-nori pro'essional, c hief I for e. ..n :nie fjon of n,,n.'1. jmd tlie inevitable reasons. We rhould hne the hi t ,,Ss ,,, le-pe t lor our in 1 1 v t '1 ti ! tauuht to see the future lios.tal rights, our ttaditmns and our 88 a PO'-ioloeiral institution, a hiKhest ideals. ltiroHi;li a Mil'iu- r ;- nlace n f rfiii?.. rfisttiti r. rh t.. . .... .... .t-,iin- .-- III.l -III' iiiaitii . . ...... r. i .... .-jr. ! 1) for phophyianv a-lv.ee. an-i n ,. . ,.,,, OlOM PfOtlllCt Will bC foal AccnMni; a Li, . " I.;;,,.,, education and mt U.K. n.-.-. ami oouuiauuii Hyamsi i : "V . . , ' "- nie,,talP ttlr. ., n n;, rm ,,nf. , durum chew week, earryinc fo available t. all ,h.',n' P"rnut the importation o - , housewives of the state first hand ; i lnlomiation relating 10 t He use TRAFFIC POLICEMAN GROWS GARDEN ON HIS POST. 7: tJXJmsmi iSMaAtMftSjaIMM gtn Agricultural college appeti.-' f lllg recipe-- for dices-' dlsnes will ' u . 1 . j ... 1 1 1 1 1 y .2. oe piepareu ana mese win dp in- eluded l the council in laily -rlieevo menus to be published by , ? ...... f. ....rw if ft... ul itn ! lonstr.'itors sent out l.v the ' ; 1? B -,,.-.. I l.-i Pirn n linn Rn domestic si lent e lepa It men t of "r 1 ousted m Lampamn Be- ie (.oU,.p(i wm lol th), Ptate $ i i ""The multiplying c.iisfriiK : prduce their kind and soil th" 1 those who mature in body but "''t life str-ani of American cht ! in mind, and so are always !;'- riicn''" DOIiinmi r- .-. . " rninUirLt lb UrntLD:"1"0" m-ntaliy. are mak.tiL then Relveu foil r l.n U- - nti-l.'.l . I younu women, poverned onh ov AN I IH IsK .;i.M IIKI.PI-:i liie, thoughts or sex attraction, i-r-a- council HlinOPt Mfrlf !r rnM -J T tures of a dav t,i nerUli thrfoi'h Cal!ipa!C w erionr. ir.l in ttw 1 nmliKil m .. 1 , ...1. . 1 . 1 1 k -K.lt More Cheese" will be I -t.'te motto 01 Oretou lor on wei-k bemi'ini: June L'o. during . i r(iiuuir, jnu in me i iniiuiai 1 r- immigration That Opens !ar,H " .v,,th- commim-., by N t;, ; iih ai n wit- til f.i 1 11 1 11 , 1 1 1 ri K ' I'l I -:,f 2 4 1 t 11I 4 -ri- r. r ; ;v ;V -v -Hi nit n f AM I""1--. fa T !'.! I " , i r- y. 1 I!iie:i:i Gates to Half-Wits i.m. ;i. St , Vahi!iKt"ii. I' ' I. 'isi winter my o-yeai- approved methyls. These cr.nst:- ,,1,1 Kirj c.utrht a bad cold whirh work,d out by oflicials of left lir with a dry rough. I tute the m nace o th- hall-ma -' pr-!"nt 1 every community. UOHTO f it tk ! Oilll ll.is yirt IHkIiI. mi-cou. presrriber of c hot 1- "T"'r r'r'"u" ' unr'- ' ' sh censed ,hv.i.i.. t... "tricted. and they are purveyor- hoop i nt: . ou-h It would r.uiKti until five voin:'- ,... A ,,ri(... , ... r.. . ,.,,i,,n(1 manulac- must have had I saw an adve- of di.vane Willi in contra'. tis-mnt tor l-"ole's Hone and ethical KPnto rmiM 1 fendr th- MJr-..- ...I .... " hn- hiRh-r in the rociaT ?.al - Tar I tried it and bought two kt nri ntr tnor uj Lr r :i :i l . . 4 - - . l I ' I I 1 I Willi I" t'Vfl il 1 I'M III . . m . Wiv-ii M'lvu nfnc' I ri II r" taken Foley's Cathartic Tablets and I recommend them to every one." Thev banish biliousness, The aid of hotel, restaurant and headache, bloating. Sold every- m . ' i m l ninn and mrniruie I t- nit unn mt niiirn le'l Mer ne- ....... .... k .. nn'-. formlnc dVuttann .r a , h-lh. fore she furshed the second - 'te '' Pl-'lP 'i 'he roun- criminal. 7 .i!i eauc'eJ ; "There ar - no riehts of paren'- tie She had gotten awfuilv thin. r in its catnpaltn ynd nianufac- It is useless to areue that paint nfiiinr a. nwvllui.B. tfc , . . noou vnirn nouia inroiiKn ;n.v rmt now ;s as rat as ever. uri n'p- u nv mt? pm-f m ni;ui?-- mt- t- n .mui .1 he. . p i 7 vi.V-' . .T" . - FT. I 1 1 1 1 (.(ki. kk homkx. too g r ',!i-fj'; w'-r v.ib f cr- - "I ,lme , Oie.on I,:,: Foley Cathartic Tablets toli ,v LrW' ' ZKih - ' will conduct a Mate wide nUi. u,.on ;1 favrite physic withlpn fl - 'STW. 'T t" 'Ufiea,e the use "f.,ncn. Women suffer as much as ' " V2U, ' i'V jJPf Jt - a loud, accordinu to in- ; m,.n j,, from indigestion and con- I & 1 I -1- ' TZ ; 'iU, i- f r.achinB Salem. sMnation and hv also require a! m?-Z b-r.St . ,Vsa Ti - '-4, " I stomach sweet, the liver acti ve l fl 7 rstJ - t f v 1 ' I and the bowels regular. Mrs. i ? I Jt z-ri'" " ' M. JL'Z'l'i '"'! I fM mation Iietails of the rainpaien haio the council, working in collaboi- Cieorco Powers. Wlnthrop Ave Work of Pueblo. Colo., president Mia me American Medical asso ciation, convention here. "These physician are tolerated by the public," he continued. 1 "be cause of the Integrltr, efficiency and slf-abnesation o'f a majority of medical men ao great that theae derelicts almost escape no tice. Horn lYivtletcm Itrtrafetl. "I sometimes fear tout we re gard ourselves as dictators :n medical matters, when In reality we merely meet the demands or the public. We should remember that numerically we are as one In 800 among the people and thtt oar calling has already been grant ed many privileges, some of which are being betrayed. "Physicians are Indifferent to quackery as a competitor in all its phases. Charlatans have no place in 'rational medlc'ne. They are adventurers, supported by people who court deception for the ex ( cltement of It, anC who are lured by the mysteries of ignorance. Principles Threatened. "Thoughtful men believe that a crisis threatens established prin ciples, and that .physicians must now earnestly address themselves to the caus? and the prevention of disease and d'rabllity as the pri mary concept of medicine, safo - guarding- its principles. lest the profession lose its esplrit de corps and iu place in public esteem. If ita numbers become piece work ers, it may fail of public appre ciation as an essential economic factor In the preservation of the national wealth, because of a de preciating national health. Our medical outlook must then be based on public wei'are; and the function of the physician should be not only to treat but also to prevent disease in the families un ler his care, and in the commun ity of which he is a part. . : Press Become Interested. - "Years ago the general practi tioner conceived his duty to be that ot a healer only. He regard ed disease as Inevitable, if not Indeed providential. Later be ad vised his clientele how to avoid it. Both of these functions he con tinued to exercise; but a new field presents itself; medican men mast ttow combat disease in the mass. Within recent years our lay press 'has Indicated a welcome Interest In matters pertaining to public health. "Our people regard it, in a new light, as a virile, organized torce. (tutte Independent of the sick chamber or hospital environment. They see in the practice of medi cine the possible application of civil' morals by those skilled In healing and more. They now urge that it must include the larger field ot civic service for those whd are well; for social morals should protect against dis ease, as well as cure it. and busi ness thrift has come to recognise medicine as an essential in public policy. , Spiritual Tpheld. "The practice or medicine de tnonates some men to the exeju alon of many things that broauer. mad sweeten life. To boast of no knowledge outside a specialty, to Bmothr Inicrest in cultural arts or collateral sciences, to Ignore the spiritual distinction between Knn and animals, is to Invite pro fessional deterioration and exclu sion from the highest concepts of the profession. "No thought Is ntertalned nf minimising the Importance of in dividual or Rotated achievements. 1 wish, rather, to deprecate tne tendency to attract attention to them to neglect of the larger things in mdlctne so necessary to retain public confidence in our profession, and to secure eoopern tlon of physicians Instead of ther dlssasociatljn. now threatened, largely through special societies, which is tending to obscure medi cine as a national asset. Cities Healthier. "The city now rears the health iest children, and schools them better, offering conveniences ant attractions, not to he found on the farm. Consolidated community schools havs already come, and with them must come readily available protection to the heaPh of rural itwellers. or we shall very soon be compelled to pav famine prices for our food, and the source nf virile m?n shall fail. "In aPMIAmfsl tt liAnltV. wrlttl 1 4 . .-IV v, U..IIH " .V.. governmental prerogatives 1 an acute need ror this nation, for the primitive purpose of producing our own food and fabricating our materials for trade and exchange. "Clearly the stat5 or some unit of government, should contribute to Install at convenient points the housing and apparatus necessary to medical precision, making it available to the poorest: but be yond that an organized govern ment should not go. Th intimate relation between physician and pa tient must be preserved whre l xlts. and restored where lost. If re would give our bt aid ana avoid a whole time state service w th . its .attendant commercializ ing ot the profession of medicine. process of reasoning, take prece- Sold everywhere Adv. cheese set at about lid cents a woman or a motor car. William ncldcn, a traffic policeman stationed In New Yorkclty to watch for speeders and Other l iolatora, baa time to tend a beauty spot. Tho photographer snapptyl h'm at his work fixing up his patch, - l; A WANT AD. IN THE STATESMAN WILL URINO RESULTS 7 Gig IT T antic Unloadie Sale l in Full Force . . i ;. llliiij,-- . , ... -;.;,;.T- " - ZdT "'t - - cS V ZjL r I mwms- -WW; Trf:, ;wwitri! --. " " i i-JT": 1 - f.?i K -i ? 4- &. - ... Pi I t r-T X - Jt 111 1 1 " . - tw''",',NY' IJ" """"''4: . it'- ' ' -, ,,..ii..."rv"'i,,nr vf5- ' 5 ,'. i - if ' I 1 1 : t . i r.AN.r.ic.i I K . r mj at ;-- ... .. v - " Km r- M. Kit ,2 - ' ' (V'V Vs.- p. - s - The People Know Here Is VIDENC 'X Of Our Great Underselling Money Saving Op- Thousands Are Availing Themselves of These portunities For Satufday Throughout Our Mammoth Sore a Wave of D : " . . n s no js?P) f p np no s? Will Sweep Every Department i)f Our Immense Store. Hundreds yes, thoussuidsi-of Bargains will be carried forward by this great tidal wave of underselling " ij. Se at the Doors Early Saturday 8 ! ."bo pkgs. at . pounds Cano i'digar 25c 910 5 cans Hazle wood Alilk. tails 40c 10 11 ro cans Standard Tomatoes, No. 40c i;pz. Hotllc VahJlla Kxtract I 25c 34 2 lbs. Ground ' Coffee 25c Heavy Twill Kha ki, per yard 19c Pillow Cases, lin en finish, hem med 19c Big Lot of Army Duck 60 Inches wide. 12 oz . per yard T.a inches wide. i oz , per yard 9c 40 Inches wide, 11 oz.. per yard 9C 'Z'.t inches wide. 8 oz.. per yard Rlhbed top heavy: all Silk Thread.'' ladies' full fash ioned Hose. pair 98c Yellow Krinkle Crepe Nigh i gowns with fancy Mutterfly de-,1. u on sale Men's Tennis Shoes, all sizes on sale Men's ll.oo val ue Silk Dress Tie.s on sale each 69c 49c Men's 25c Dress Socks, assort d colors, per pair 9c Ribbed top heavy Silk Ladies Hose, assorted colors, per pair 69c r.C inch Indian Head, yard 20 Inch White Sateen, yard 19c 19c Ladles' Hlack Kid Ox fords w i t h high, low am! military heels, on sale To 35c values French L a w n H a n d kerchiefs, each $1.49 $2.98 2c Arrival of an unexpected shipment of 7't Hoys' Wool Suits in grey, blue and brown, a complete run of sizes, new est style suits. These extra values to $10 go on sab? SATI'KDAV ONLY 3 6 inch Pleached and I'nbleac bed $4.98 11c r.o Inch Tabid Linen, good qual ity, yard 43c M e n's Heavy Khaki Pants Men's Khaki Kid In g Breeches $1.19 $1.98 Women's White Canvas P u m it s end Oxfords, hun and low heel Orow n (Jirls' and adies' graduation Oigandie Dtesse on sale Men's Pri'B.i Suspenders $1.98 $5.98 Kl ne Egyptian Elastic Ribbed I'nion Suits 95c One lot of Ging ham, yard lie Men's 25c Collars 8c Rock ford Socks 7c Canvas Cloves 7c Men's Athletic I'nion Suits 59c M e n "s W o r k Pants 98c Men's Genuine Li. V. D $1.19 Women's sea Is land W hile Dii"!: Shoes with Inch, low and medium heel $2.49 White Caibai dine Sport Skirts neatly made 98c 19c Sheets, linen fin ish, size 72XTM) 69c Men's Dies s Shirts, ulues to '-'. in a big ar tay of patient, ;; on sale 89c 35c Children's. Ribbed Stcklngs, all sizes, pair 17c $2.75 Summer J-'ilks. Taffetas. Messalines and olh crs $1.49 Muslin, yard I 5c Madras shirt ing with . woven stj-ipeh. and lig u res. yard White Summer Voiles, picMtv se lection. a ril 29c Men's $ l.oo Kha ki Work Hats on sale 69c ?r inch Curtain M a r ci u i setles wit Ii sat in taped ede, yard 29c 39c Itliached and un bleached Crash Toweling, yard 9c Grocery Bargains Oown Kjtir VhniTp'JI,iril Im'.ii Klour Wliiii. Ilji'sii, iu ll... 1 :i ii 'm k 111 r. I limhnin t"t.hr 1 lln.-Uouit;; Milk. i'l'rtH, I1H ( urn, ."i C'Ihiiii.. ! i','i!v 1'ork h'i'I "fi.ti.ii. k III, 1Ii;iIIK.imI ) off' Cilfli , ;il. r II. iih milk . r II. fr.c Milk t AH y i h i 'Mi,r. b'li n Criv (I !:vibf. Ii III. !';.. I M. i. Iint;t4'r. I II. It.n-.it. Ill .lll'ik I Hi I lit., tili.l.-, '1 ; 1.1, r. .Canning Suppllat VI- irnllmi Makun .?r. doifti V'ikM Mtet)i. tloirn 1'itit Mnnof tliit-n Kt t.iuiiiij tr. ilo.t pi Qn .rls Si.. ' I'llits , 'll.v K'UM.?!. Holfll . KiiIiIdtk. tllo.o Kfoiiomy t:f(ft-, ), 1, ,R Pfitl.t rry Vtir-o. I ' .,fc. Co.ou. in iiulk. ll.a. Kuril in Ixiik.. ,! I'fxnnt lintiir, ." P. striiitifl lfin.v, 3 n fr.- 12.30 .. 1.90 .. .43 . .58 .. .45 ...4.76 .. .53 .. .53 . .70 .14 .38 .38 1.S2 1.10 .IS .21 .1 .23 1.1 1.00 .90 1.65 1.35 1.20 .55 .05 1.00 1.00 .50 .50 .40 .50 A Big Special Selling of Men's All-Wool Suits MaW tip in the latest double and single breasted models, for men and young -men values to $.T, on .sale $14.95 and $19.85 Shop With the Crowds at Salem's Bargain Center TWEfg u uiNa! LnnnioTFi IL!JfnHlriIIIUIlliei FREE - FREE 20 Pounds of Sugar, 1 Sack Flour, r, pounds of Diamond W. Coffee, 20 bars of Laundry Soap, Ladies' Gold Filled Watch and Chain, :ji;xr,2 inch Grass Mat Hug. 171x70 inch YVooInap Hl.tnket. Men's Silk Suspenders, Men's Fine Silk Hose and One Pair of Indies' Silk Hose, all go absolutely Free. Head on. TO GET THESE tic at the doors on Satur- ! lay at H a. m. and 1 p. In., when 500 numbers ij ill be dislributed free, "ft? 10 h-.lding the lucky umbcrs drawn by one of he crowd these items yVill be given Free.