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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1921)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 20, 1921 n j!)c r0it Statesman Issued Daily Kxccut Momlnv liv f j TIIK HTATKHMAN PI ItUMI I . ( OMP V . i 1 . 21& S. Commercial St., Ka'.em. Oregon (Portland Office if7 n...r.i ... -r i.. t .. . i .. i ... .... j. - i ii am- iiiiii'iiu. i liojm A II MJIII.H i 527-5'J) lu re o.icht 4o know all about : activities. That is what tin- .-!-rati ai;e Will attempt lit -I, on. pa- MKMUKIl OK TIIK ASSM l.Ti:i I'KKSS Th Associated Press is eil'lusi Vf-lv -If il l-l In 111.- uo for ronnh. lira t Ion of ail new dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited mis paper and also the local iicwh published b r in. Tin French soii.t-l im homarc to l : 1 1 . . . vi-n in .! T ,1 li;.s 1 1 ma i n ii for tin- I;;: --an In : limii.tfi ti. ,i Willi out be.mlc GEORGE W. BRENT WILL BE DIRECTOR OF SCOUT CAMP rinii county fruit of any kind, hut this car t lie company will Use two cars of ; Haw Ihti :-h. oin1 ea h T lo'-'a n lull les ninl raspberries, and several tons of dried cher- I il'S. J. Hendricks. glephen A. Stone. 7talph Glover Frank Jaikoskl . . Maiuiti r ...Managing Kiliior Cashier . Manager Job Dept. JLOAILY STATESMAN' i c i 5 A X'-w Vol!; in. in was loon-h: Lin ( a. i rt on ii tii. a li il i ha r . e lii-causc he pii-ted in ...-Uiiij for mine r - - I' in ii t ! ton. ti in ( hi ast 1 1 1 1 1 v i ri in k a in ;i n i (iav lor wanting 1 1 1 1 r wa;:; - Bervi-d by cerrir In Salem and suburb, l.'i - . cents a week, cr cents a month. DAILY STATKSM AN, by mail. In advance, $C a year. ?S for six luomug, ii. rr tlirep inontha, 50 rent a month, in Marion and Polk counties; out Mile of these counties, $7 a year, $:'..50'; lor six monibn. fl.7 for three months, 60 cents a month. WIm Hot paid in advance. 50 cents a vear ndilitiorl THE PACIFIC JIUMKSTKA I). th great western we, kly farm paper. A Wo.nall fol'tfior of c ke ili-trirt ii i h a u r j i r i h i ; t "!1 appoi'ii' L i tnl. i.- ill I ne Sai Th ? onpbt to fa r- liail.' to lil .if llii-liain YoiitK'. It ustil ! o i 1 rin i. i .. .. ... ... , I'murni Tiiat a womnn cuna coi- - - ,w u j w i. puj uif, . icai m auAU.c iu Liie i A Dally Statesninn. ', brt tn,thin l. ;t co-iuim fSUNPAY STATESMAN. $l.r,0 a year; 75 rents for six months; 40 1 : oSt'US!ththree '"0,Uhs: 27' :1'"'a for 2 IontD8: 15 ' Word ...s from London that WEEKLY STATESMAN, issued in two six-pago actions. Tuesday Xm,,ay:,,,"r "-ey has cancel I .! ' Bk.1 Vvl.touu ! . l . a ... r.. !. .... . ..... , i m vm - mu;a, 471 u JIUI III UOI IaiU in aUVailCe, )l Z), aU I I v. o t;--,.n 11 1 10 ..u .11 j.i.if- l . . I . . . . ; ,'ic function-:. !'eihais he has 1 uceiv.-ii cmle insl r;i( : ions not to 1 rpin his mouth a fa in until he j learns how lo keep it shut cents for tslx month:;; 25 cents for three months. ir i TELEPHONES: IiusinesM Office, 23. Circulation Department, 583 Job Department. 583 Society Editor. 106 1, Eateroi! ftt the Po.stoffic in Salem, Oregon, as seevnd class matter u . . . : r i1 MADE IN GERMANY j .last a - v.e i xpi-cted. t'ae Dem ocrats are alreaily sayniL' that .'President Harding's ad in mist ra j Hon is a failure. They won t a;l ! in it that the Wilson gcrowd tie! the tail of the country into so : many knots that sonic time wiM , he re uired to straiehten things i out. Eiuht years of tniMiianae- with llo Wlll.l. I'KOVIDKD I'Olt. TIiptp is food for thought in thp statement of the Manufactu rers' Record that the I'nited States has one-half of the world'- i f- .' A Cleveland manufacturer sells a certain machine for j- $109. It costs him $75 to make it. The other day he jjot a K . letter from a firm in Germany, offering to duplicate the ma il chine and deliver it to Cleveland for $21. ' t cannot be cured It A year ago, this would have given American manuffic-! winking or an eveiash. turers heart failure. But now they re get tint used to it. r Next' time your wife buys a pair of cheap gloves, turn them inside out and you'll probably find "Made in Germany" rubbed-s tamped in very small letters. So it goes, even to a high-grade German safety razor which has just appeared iu the Unites! States, retailing at 32 cents. - Last year Americans imported $08,83G,230 worth of goods from Germany. ' , oal an,i iron arPa- one-haif of While we sold them about three and a third times as the world's railroad mileage, two much, German competition is becoming steadily stiffer. The! thirds of the world's cotton, onf shoe pinches most when we try to sell American goods abroad - third of the world's stock of poid In competition with the Germans. j and on-thini of the world:. ' The official table published in The Statesman of yester-i wealth, but only e per cent of tii day morning shows the American workman getting an av-j world's population. certainiv erage of $32.98 a week, against the equivalent of $5.40 paid j there is no occasion for despon- to t,ne merman worKman. v" Suppose you are an American manufacturer, or one of - Vila AmnlAiraa- mqlrtnM r w. Inl 4A I . nAl J Z L! . 41 in tiijjiivjrtd, uiowug xlu aiLiLic iu ue jiu 111 mis cuuniry 1 make the best of our ojiportuni- or aoroaa. 1 Suppose the American labor cost in that article is $G. The Germaa manufacturer and his workmen, duplicate the name article at a labor cost 'of $1, according to table men It is going to be hard for our American manufacturers to compete with the German manufacturers in foreign mar . kets; that is a matter for deep concern ' And we cannot control that matter by legislation. - But-we can protect our own American markets against T this ruinous competition, and that is what the main tariff bill now about ready to be introduced and rushed through . Congress will be designed to accomplish. if if . rv si ... jf - 5 fJ'-y : 7,1 , X ""A ; :f - t : fit tf ) : . : it ' fL. 3 - ... . , - xl Historic Chess Board Given Commercial Club When some ' tii" Salem chess-. rpeiis went up to Portland a few ui'i-f.s iltil. to ye,, the Polish boV . prodii'v. .-aimiei Kzi sliinski. play; 1 Z killed plaers simultaneously.. A. N. Moo res Iho'iKht he would like to have one of the boards oil .iiir!i I he mat' li was p!.ied at t !.e i .i r an. I 1'i ank auditorium. -.-'o ! hoip i t tin- 'i ita 1 e n pon- i:iaie liattlepround of kings, and , presented it to the Salem Comtner- j i:tl club, where it U now occtipy- j .in a place of honor. C. O. Oien ol the Salem delegation was one; of the few players who got as ' eood as a draw with the Polish wizard, lie scored an easy victory over most of ihe players t hough ! he said that the match in Port-! land was one of the hardest he ver had anywhere in the country. Covers Laid for Twelve At Silverton Dinner S1LVKRTON. Or.. .Juno 2",--(Special to The Statesman I Mr". Anna .I'-iiscn i nti rtaiiied at a din ner at tier home Sunday. Cover" were laid 'or 12. Two out-of-town guests wore present: Mlw; Thea .li'iisivi am! Hatty Tliorsen of Portland. The Silrerton guests present were: Hans Jen sen and his two son. Norwean an1 Marvin, Rubin Jensen . Orval Toue, Alfr -.l JepKeli. M ss AlU-e Jensfii. Mrs. Marie P.unlKS, Mis Vivian l!unics and the hoRtesa, Mrs. Anna Jensen. 7m 5e mitiri vium aiH4n I'UI la Kr. " ti14 MUUAJ torn. m1 k fctaa Elstaa.' ItlAMO.NU KRAMI lILULfcZ yewr h mamm m best. S.lcst. A'.wyt $lthau SOU BY DRUGGISTS EimrtK gi:oi:ge w. prent dency over the future of America ah we neeci is a determination to ties and prevent those who ar willinc to work a like determination o any intorferenr with BITS FOR BREAKFAST Keep on keeping qn all the fruit will i" - - August I to :! 1 are the dat that !i:.e a II set for t he. ;, u n r. A '. tiov Si a ut jio'.v-wow on S.iit ere -k and plans arc now w II iind:' v a.. I.j, o'.ll i-s i: the S:i!ra ec- uiive co in- il for !ln hir.g- t an 1 li'-i cam;) ve;. I ad ecu ll'i a'ul ;.' 'in local Scouts are -p--i : eil ' i attend and Hervais, Woodlmrn. Anmsil!e i.nd .IonmoiMh will send delegations. A uuiiiue feaiure of the ramp will he' the iorni of govi-rnmenr. Per.'d" their regular Scout crgru: izatioi:. the cfip.ip will be under a municipal go'. rnment. A mayor aldermen, commit teeen. all of tt:" usual city officers, will be i l t 'ii by tha hoys. Muniripal poli tics will nil in ao-trdancp vi Siout principle?:. A daily news paper will b- edited and :uhiisti ed by the boys. The camp is to he under t'ir diicction of "Oh '"f" (leorg-? r.rent. of the' ("heinawa 1 n 1 i n n chool. Mr. I're-nt is a well liiu.wn caiut) d ir ctor -Xhoroui; b !y 'am. liar with all hi'anehi s ol '-oiit activity. l;y tradition he i. chief ol the ' !! in nes and he h;'i a reputation tor !.:n.g a fine ti ii r of Indian legends. Those in charge of the camp have plans for every minute of th- i inc. I'nder the leadership ot Mr. Print trips ai" jilatnitd to Diamond peak, which i a snow-aip-d peak of an elevation of, :J.o it .TliJ feet and on which the j Scouts are co ng to liold a snow ' hat'!- in August. Pint . mountain. Wolf mou'M.iio. Kitson ridge and to many o: lit r pict ni e; tj tie places in the south in Cascades. j ' Itegisi rat ion ''or the camp v.'i". j lie In this week. Scout K:eeut:vo , Cook said last night. Each boy ' will be charged lor an amount' covering his expenses and thej railroad far- r the 1 ." ml' trip. i And saved. be And that will be something to i be proud of. duo to the Salem spirit of cooperation. r The news columns of The Statesman of this morning carry some very encouraging information to loganberry growers. The strawberries have about all been taken care of. There is no occasion for a single loganberry going to waste. They can be dried and sold at a price that will bring 'around 5 cents a pound for the ripe berries. The Willam ette Valley Prune Association has actually done this, for its own members, and it is ready to take all dried berries and find a market for them. Perhaps future prices for dried i loganberries will be still higher. Stranger things have hap pened. It looks like all the cherries of all kinds will be s ; taken. If any concern in Salem had had the nerve to put up 4 Strawberries in barrels, they could all have been sold in that v :' form; -v. And there would have been a large outlet in that form for our loganberries, too, and for our sour cherries and j other fruits. If the splendid spirit of cooperation in Salem and the balem district continues, there will be no fruit f wasted; all will be sold, at low prices, to be sure. But a splendid foundation will have been laid for future vears. Our fruit industry will not have suffered a black eye or a set f 'back, as, only a few weeks ago, was feared might happen. j It will put a foundation under the fruit industry here that will go a long way towards making this the greatest fruit country in the world, which it is by nature intended to be. " " " We are to have peace by reso lution at last, and the technical state of war will be over. Now for ihe program of gradual dis armament, and we may have ac tual peace the world over. " The reaction in price has been apparently checked. The reduc tion in May was not moi e than i about one-half of one per cent. according to the current wet-klv letter of Henry Clews, the Wall Street authority. This means the whole list of commodities. Now there Is a solid basis upon which to begin to build the nation's prosperity. Wholesaling and jobbing, Sa lem Slogan tomorrow. Help, if you can. Secretary Hughes takes issue with Ambassador Harvey as to why we went into the war. In ternational relativity seems to bave many varieties of exponents. King George has also come out emphatically In favor of peace in Ireland. This makes it virtually unanimous save for the Irish. lot of them are still sttong for war. The people of Gjshen. New York, are to renovate their old . I town hall. Noah Webster, the -' .1 1. : . ; mi iioii.ii iimner. once taught a district school in thai building. The Salem Commercial cluh will be the principal subject fo; the Salem slogan Issue of The Statesman a week from tomor row. There must be an awaken ing concerning the benefits of this organization, and the people The Fourth of July orators of Salem ate limbering up for the fray in various towns of the val ley. Salem will have to hurry. Sil verton is building a hundred new ! houses. Oh. Well, if this keens ti'i the two cities will build to gether and become suburos ol one another. X The Most Interesting Book Itrri lfE most interestinjr book i m m. i i i i . i . . ciicvk uook, wnen trie balance m the bank is not fiction," remarks a certain trade journal. Worthwhile history is recorded in the bank books of many depositors of the united Mates National; stories ol pluck and perse verance autobiogra phies of men and women who accom plish things. FRUIT OUTLOOK still clogged.- It has been under stood that l.ihby. McNeill Ac Libby would buy exten.-ively here, but ud to the present titje ti.t y s-.eeui to have made no loganberry con tracts. One local firm, however, is said to have shipping orders for several carloads of log.un that might be f-or the Ibby (oneein. The I'ua!lup A: Sumner inter-' "?ts have been expected to buy quite liberally tor their loi.;f'i berry trade, but n.i contiacis hae been made knon lo the public. It should be said, however, that i the loganberry .season is Mill in it.i infancy. ' The first picking ha- , been li.-ht. a:ol thoi-e alread.. .picked would he a negligible pro porunii of t lie seasons produc tion. Many, interesting develop ments nnUit come within the n t day or two. i Kred.-ri'k Schmidt or The I'hez company, reports that company's outlook is li r at least as large a prodi'i'tioii of loganberry juice this year as ever before. The fruit is the best in five years. Mr. Schmidt ri poits. It will make a superior pio'.uct. and the world is lust now getting its mouth set and its eye educated to the beautiful I Willamette valley product. Cherries ai" coming i:i ;n larr tpiatitities this wick. They arc line in i.ual.ty. and will be fairly abundant in qu. ntlty. The de mand lor berries" is making the:;; the banner fruit rjrop of the year At least two of "the company's plants vill handle them for mara schino treatment - the Sab :n King's company and the Produ cers' Canning v Parkin- company. All the canning factories ar run- 'tiing full blast, wiili cherries a their prim :pal product. Two hundred and fifty tons of Royal Annes are blng bought for shipment to the I.von; California Glace I'r iit company, according to Arthur C. Raas, buyer for the company, who is in Salem this week. Some of these cherries: have been contracted for at Dallas. ' at the enrrent price of 4 cent3 a! pound. This is a market that has' not heretofore called for the Ma- ! BARGAIN DAY Friday, July 1, 1921 and the Day Following Real Genuine Bargains on Seasonable Shoes More and Better Shoes at Less For Cash Foot Troubles oulckly disappear when Dr. Scholl'a Foot Comfort Appliances and Remedies are fitted by our foot xpert. These" simple, effective. Inexpensive devices are for sacn foot troubles as corns, bunions; eatlouM. weak ankle, broken dowa aucbea. Bat foot and tired, aching UrC. Dr. ScbotTs Bunion Isdscer (lvet Immediate relief to ore, teoder bunion. Advice and (rv. At The Electric Sign "SHOES" sag AAKtJUMJLMajULU f I f T W ill 1 I ft 'A.WatAMpWPV 1. 1 M MIfJf I if StAiJJAJAAMAASMA il m y n et vT r 5? iS 5 ilEIL P M MLB isl af V &. Cr Al r m I K i ll t TT- ,i v... tLa r,i,.- ttru j we uu i t'jjaii ijijj uy aiic viuifttycai ttcii- sil System, using only the best of leather and materials. Notice these prices: Men's Leather 2 Soles $1.50 Men's Neolin or Panco Soles $1.50 Ladies' Leather i2 Soles $1.00 Ladies' Neolin or Panco Soles $1.00 Shoe Repair Shop All other repairing at Reduced Prices Xt The Electric Sign MShoesH BE 1 m Too Busy to Write An Ad But I Want To Tell You This When I Was Ordered to Close Out This Entire Stock it was With the Un derstanding That I Make the PricesNow I Don't Care a Rap What Prices I Get-The Entire Stock Must be Sold at Once- My Prices Speak for Themselves mm BRIGHTER Much Speculation Heard Re lative to Firms That Buy In Valley a ii e m m i i ft "It's all a matter of nerve." said one veteran fruit man. talk ing over the fruit situation, yes terday. "We had abnormally hi; h prices last tear, and abnormally low pi ices this year. hu the av erage isn't xo bad after all. Wo sold every berry last year, and e saall rell eery berry this year; at low prices, perhaps, but still they will all sell. Win- make lil. miser able with forebodings' that never irtim li-iiuf L'..... l. . "ii" u il-- . I..T-II 111 irai 21 floor market beats nothing all to a pulp:' It is finite true, however, that onie of the regular channels for the deposition of fruit seem to he ; I Port of Nchalem 1 H (Tillamook '.'ut ntyl E I a '":ir ', tleneral tihlica- IP 97.89 i "iSWiil iSi n a i fUaal.ial.i a, ut, fiiMjIffjafcavaBwt FUTURE DATES Jnn li ! 2K irrreon Nations? riant ... .iiv".r"n m vamp 1.11 ana r on Steven Jnj 1 fn 4 Stv ceitTentkia of Vf at Orsn fhiml for the def Jalv 3, SatMTilar Mar km eoaat mrnmnt pw-B. !( (T mmada. I JmI. 9 o-t 6.50' and No Income Tax Da!.-I July 1. ll L'l Due July 1 . 1 i.'O Denomin.i 1 ion ? .". o The total bonded d.-bf on the 4iMl.iiiii acus. securii. this issue is le,s than '.' . of the assessed valuation. Descriptive Circular upon request Wm. McGILCHRIST, Jr. Resident Representative Clark, Kendall & Co Inc. U. S. Nat'l Bank Bldg. Ladies' Shoes Gingham, yard Men's 4-in-hand Ties Fine Dress Shirts $1M 12c 19c 89c Men's Heavy Work Mfin,s HandkerchJefs La(Jics, Dresj Men's Dress Socks ?-noes per pair $248 4c 19c 12c We Have a Big Surprise For You on Friday and Saturday. Be Sure to Visit Our Store and Be Convinced Coesomers Ti atlin House 373-377 Court Street ypposize miner