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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1921)
r THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON breed; That's going some for St. Mawes' Lad's Lady. t Issued Dally Except Monday by THE STATESMAN PL'JILIHIII.NO tWMPANY (Portland Ibfflce,; 27 Board of Trade Building. Phone Automatic 'ar he!P1n her out oi the 8,ougn of the war Italy is overrun with American tourists any they are welcomed. Italy counts on the Arm-rican dol- 4 S27-69) . I MEMBER 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 IBM paper and also the local news published herein. R. J. Hendricks. ...Manager Stephen Aj Stone. Managing Editor Kalpn Gloter .............. Cashier ( g Frank Jaskoskl Manager Job Dept. Yjmaaji a i a. i usMAt, serreo. dj carrier in B&iem ana Buouros, 10 cents m weei, Bit cents, a montn. DAILY 8TATESMAN. by mail. In advance, $6 a year, 3 for six months, 1. SO for three months, SO cents a month. In Marion and Polk counties; outside of thew counties. $7 a year, $3.50 ; for six months. $1.75 for three months, SO cents a month. When not paid In advance, 50 cents a year additional. Of course, in the coming dis armament conference mere win be no disposition, so far as the United States is concerned, to "let George do it." dl ;'lh art In various parts of the country almost daily burials of service men who died during the war are being held, demonstrating that, although the war is over, its bor rows ai o not. Til PI PirTPIfl linMRSTK A n ha ..na , wn.fn.-r. u.V1 rmrn9 I 1 Will ha apnt m. vear In invnnii nivliif a vm r In arfva.nj tn th VII Daily Statesman. j' fiUNDAT STATESMAN, $1.50 a year; 75 cents for six months; 40 1K1 t cents for three months; 26 cents for 1 months; 16 cents toi I ' Am month. f a, WEEKLY 1 STATESMAN, Issued In two six-page sections, Tuesdays . and Fridays, $1 a year (if not paid In advance, $1.25); 50 cents lor six months; 25 cents for three months. Told you, all alonJ, that this is the greatest cow country iu he world, and, by the same sigu. the greatest dairying country in election and choice and humorous. And he smokes a disreputable old briar pipe that has seen long and arduous ser vice. Being "called" and "appoint ed" instead of elected. liarou Byng has not been required to make any election campaign from any platform, promulgate any views or issue any manifestos. His only proclamation to dat is that the Canadians are his friends and if be makes any breaks they will probably see him through. Quite an innovation :q statesmanship and evidently as effective as any mighty rhetori cal exhortations he may have made. He will have five years In which to prove or disprove Can adian saeacity in its choice of him. Canada elects her prime minister, but chooses her gover nor general. Actually there can be quite a distinction between the world. rELEPifONEsT Business Office, Z3. Circulation Department, S8S Job Department, 581 . Spclet; Sditor, 10S HEXHY FOKITS IU SIXKSS CiKMUK. nnSntered M the Postofflce In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter hi lnl 'Ivvro w A trained farm observer visiting this section of Oregon make both ends meet with high tthrouirh the heat of summer might say that the summer pas- hates. HXure is not -good enough to make this a superlative dairying But, then, Henry Ford knowi country. He might go to the coast, be entranced by the beau- U good worker is worthy of his jtiful Velvety green Of the summer pastures, and say, "Here's pi re; he knows a poor worker J of sentiment and practical com Jwhere I buy . and StaV. I draws a dear wage, however low moa sense with Mother England J a al . ' . m . a a I... - . a a a a. S I a And vet even tne trained observer sometimes sroes i u is, ana isn t worm ms san. ado umy oieasmg me union. ng. The Willamete pastures are dry and brown in sum- whether 11 19 ln nls motor car er: but: the hay is almost always cured without a touch of plants or at his farms or on his ew or rain and the winter feed-is as important as the sum- railroad Henry Ford in one way er. The flies here are fewer than almost any other place in or anoiner- ,abor un'ons or no Che World I Jnion8 labor boards or no labor 'This! really Is a dairy country . boards, gets na ot the worker The best in the world. tnat does not dellver the gooda There is no other woof as 'rood as the fact that a Polk Tnus tne Producer can get, and Lhounty cow, a Salem district Jersey cow, St. Mawes' Lad's does et. and ouht to et wnat tstffjidv. nwnefi hv Harrv 11. Tliff nf TndpnpndpnrP has msf s- lormeny went to me incompeiem ';tabhshed a new world s record not only for her own breed but Vaa m a a a thor ail oreeas. lor nutter iat production xor a cow 01 ner age wjfor a fulf year. d1 Vive La .France, the world's Greatest Jersey cow of any pjage, and the other wonSerf ul cows bred by Pickard Brothers htff Marion, are' fairly familiar to most local readers; they are P;kt the tongue tips of the whole breeding world. 1 Nobody could tell the wise breeder, even back in the Isle bf Jersey where the breed originated, that the Willamette k valley isn t a marvelous dairy country tcl Dairvinor ia the hest anchor ever forced for riprm&nent Efrarm prosperity. Prices may fluctuate somewhat; but the for, anybJdy e,se- H knows that ctUairv countrv never did. never will o-o hankrnnt. Tr. lnnks unleS8 nls frelght ratea brin- Chrnanarnna well lrof onnionio if Vioo mnnav in fVio Konlro woiiic lor ilia roau 10 uaai lucjr MvfAi Ho KV rv Ua ViAtiona 0 A Ko0 i oirv I are a heavier burden for his car bjports a fixed population without the murderous ups and rI" than forthe Bh,DPr8 ajtiowns.jot .migratory lonsana, people A trayeier:wouid not WONDERFUL DAIRY COUNTRY, WONDERFUL COWS Henry Ford Is one of the busi ness economic geniuses of the cen :ury. He buys a railroad and increases wages on that property when all other wages are being marked down. He establishes low freight rates on his road when other carriers are striving t-: But this "choice" in itself was something of an innovation. For hitherto governor generals havo been chosen and appointed by the king and his cabinet in England and unless he was particularly distasteful to the Dominion he was merely accepted with good grace. On the whole, Canada hai been fortunate in her governor generals, even as the parental se lection in matrimonial affairs in Prance has worked fairly well. Out today Canada, like the mod ern girl, has preferred to choose her own team mate and in thli ase it is a happy combination "heed to see either the cows or the barns, to know instantly r 016 publi,c hich Jr-lhat he had entered a j good dairy section; the fences, the BAKOX IIYXG OF VIMY. li .houses, the shetlded machinery, shout the fact aloud. Dairy 4ng is founded on attention to detail: the really good dairy rnancan not well neglect any. of his farm, for careful atten- dlion to his whole job becomes inherent. There are many farms in the Willamette valley that are f jbeing wastefully handled without cows.. Some of these cpuld t , . iJ -A. 1 A. 1 ' 1 1 c,pe ungaiea lur summer pasiure , uy sieum, vy wmu, oy gaso- fctlme or electric pumping, and some by gravity systems from the creeks and streams. Irrigation, and the fertility that .-brows with dairy! farming, would make these Willamette ttllairy farms-the most wonderful in the world. It is an eco- Baron nynr, who Boes to can pfiomic nightmare, to drive up and down the valley, and note I c governor general, is a "some of the run-down farms still being sown to grain, some definite case of the pob seeking pi wmcn can naruiy pay me cost 01 narvesi; a aisiressing 1 mau. uaaa ug&ea ior mm wbroportion of the grain this year will not pay the cost of in a voice not to be denied. He fiblantintr. the harvest, and the cash rental of the farm. I has never held any diplomatic f ; Grain farming may offer certain advantages to the man position before, says he doesn't m,wno ' does not want to De tied down to tne xarm every day wow tne nrsi ming anont aipio- kin the year. But as between impecunious and vacation-1 macy and has never been mixed atull grain farming,' and busy-all-the-year-'round dairying that! i in politics. riotro mAot arkViA va Vntm ri Anoir r r n flaf o rrfteK All nf torhifh la clvntflnnnt in (.rfjajB, uiwt BKjkjL iucunuuiu jicivc an ojr cuuit. vjv-l a guuu ......... ,o o..i i. ... a punch of cqws, suck to the dairy, and the Willamette valley tnat Canada was obviously 100k- Bfcould double its population1. Quadruple its bank accounts, and ng for character, for intelligence. )xnultiply by mfinity its desirability as a sane member of so- courage, resourcefulness, rathe THK KU KMX KI.X. Editor Statesman: Persons desiring to secure in formation about this organization can find condensed accounts of it n The World's Ilest Histories serleB, The United States, vol. VIII, page 59; in Andrews' U. 3. History, Vol. IV, page 273; in Nelson's Encyclopedia; the Ency clopedia Americana; the Dritanni ca, and in "The Aftermath of th. Civil War." by Powell Clayton, United States senator, and gover nor of Arkansas, 1868-71. Also in the International Encyclopedia in both the earlier and the. latest editions. The following notes ar taken from the last named work ivu iviux Kian, a secret or ganization which existed in some of the southern states during the reriod 1866-1872. It is said to have originated in Giles county business, and a large slice of all I Tennessee, in 18C6, and to have . ... the money ln the country. And I oeen at first an association of all the while perhaps nine-tenths I young men for amusement. -The of the rest of the population go I demoralization and turbulence around cussing their luck be-1 among the negroes at the close - aV a . a, a a. I v A 1 . a. . a. cause ibduious ricnes aon t rani" me war, necessitated, it was into their laps as they fall into! said,, some means of restrain Henry Ford's. New York Herald. ) which the government did not af ford. The association devised bv or the slacker. And Henry Ford knows that what! gets the business is the right price. He knows, whether it is his automobile, his tractor or his railroad, that unless he operates to capacity he cannot operate with economic efficiency. He knows that unless his price sells the motor cars and tractors lit is a worse price for him than So Henry Ford gets the support biety. s J Thf new wnrM rermrrl rnw in the Salem district ia heln- I adroitness. v!ng to prove what the Salem Slogan editor of The Statesman Everyone who has ever come in sion of a,d to the widows am or- than for , glamoring titles, diplo matic distinction or political .ue joung men or tennessee was adapted to this purpose. in Its beginnings it was not greatly dilTerent from the old slave patrol, and was intended simply to scare the superstitiou -lacks into good behavior an ooeaience, ,and its membershiD comprised some of the best citi zens of the South. Its orieina purposes as set forth in the con stitution of the Klan, a copy of which is printed in the report of he so-called Ku Klux Klan com mitlee of congress, were the pro lection or the innocent and weak from the outrages of the Inwlocs 'and brutal; the relief of th. in- lured and oppressed: the Kas been saying and repeating . contact with Baron uyng, who as t n t a il . a ! a 1 " a 1 J ? - a i Ji m - j 1 C4 , mat mis is potentially tne greatest dairying country in omier won iame ana maae nis wlhe world: the trreatest cow countrv in the world, and thatrory in that first fearsome Intro- llllhe competition for world records in universal Jerseydom will luction of the tanks in France l w IU- kftfrnAAn ivf9rv mttb Kaf waati CqIotvi 1ia I whlrh ark ahntt&rckH (ha innri In nf II luo a VibUi. c uc uc li n ecu vt ckuu wno irevnssn uatcui viij- i - iq v lict bows. , ' . t ' 'he Germans, insists upon his es- Kl St. Mawes Lad s Lady was competing for the world s sentiai nonesty. And, like so 'Tecord in hr class with, an Oregon cow; and she not only many of the men in high places broke that record but exceeded the record of anv cow of anv today, he is just plain, whole- . 8 a ohans of Cor federate' soldiers; th assistance of the government In execution of all constitutional AW " ( TIlO Ilrllon.l.. - I J ' V V j III IIOUUILH Hiins 'The emancipation of the whites md maintenance of the political and social supremacy of the white race.") "The organization was soon perverted. It became a .band for ' purpose of whinnln? honi.i, - ii---Oi wMninu- ing, and murdering negroes r.nd northern men Many oX the bet ter class of citizens abantlnnoi i. pureed m her age class; and, more than that, she exceeded the some ,man. folks" for ha Ki-ecordof the world s record cow of her breed in the next hicrh- h a not an aristocrat bom. his . , 1 . rofr ace class. - l tine having been recently con- And Salem district breeders of world's champion cowsperred upon him by King Georg Ua nnf fvnrVi TViora will Yt ntVrnr rpcnrila amaaVioH Voi-o land anDroved as a nersonal honor mJB iiukumvuBui. oiviv ..... - .."i-v. .wv., - - ' . 11 AlT. 1 . rfl. . IOAA A Vx.. . 4- n. tl. i i.l.ltn klma.lf l.v Kn PinatUna nrkvllint huniuifni.ll. 1. . I.... . . pun BU me Classes. - . i in; i6UV(Muau uuitci tuw is uu uic lv "j vu.uiauB, " t ---- -vu.uun .-i vuuMsiea or ine "ivay: and She lives Or Will be bred in the Salem district; and asked for him as their governor more restless and lawless char ' lhe Will not be long In coming - general before nis elevation to aciers or the South." And by the same sign, the average production of all ine peerage. u was styled the invisible tlairv COWS Will be increased greatly here : giving this district When Baron Byng is affection- EMPIRE, and had territorial di ctt Still ttiore distinctive lead as the best dairy country and ate'y accused of being democraUc prions as follows: The general queathed to as by our forefath ers. (2) I reject and oppose the principles of the radical party. (3) I pledge aid to a brother of the Ku Klux Klan in sickness, cistress or pecuniary -embarras- and their households., shall be the special objects of my car and protection. (4) Should'I i ever divulge, or cause to be di vulged, any of the secrets of this order, or any of the forejroine: obligations, I must meet with the fearful punishment of death and a traitor's doom, which is death, death, at the hands of the breth ren." (This oath is copied from the older edition of the Kncyelo- edia as taken from the congres sional report.) Membership in the Klan was confined to Confederate soldiers nd the sons of soldiers, except by special orders from highest uthoritie. All weie required to be well armed and ready to assemble at the call of the Cy- lops. and obey any orders re ceived, no n.atr what the char- cter of the deeds might be, even urning and killing. "In nocturnal raids they were isguised in long robes, wore masks over their faces, avd high cardboard hats with ears and horns attached. Exaggerated tales were circulated among the freed- nen as to the numbers and super natural powers of the Ku Klux. who were reported to be the shosts of dead Confederate sol-dierf" "Resolutions were introduced n secret meetings oi tne Klan ind the decisions took the foyn f decrees. The most frequent ictims were negroes, who were active in politics, agents of the L S. Freedman's Bureau, carpet- t'anjrers (Northern men who went with for business!, scalawags Southern white men who became Republicans in politics after the var, as did General Longstreet t . Vorthern teachers and ministers. rhese were sometimes simply warned tb desist from certain courses, or notified to leave the community, but sometimes suf fered punishments of whipping ct eath." "In case of a warning or noti- ication the decree vas couched in strange or mysterious phrase ology, and posted ia some con spicnous place about the premi ses of the victim for whom it was intonaea. The fallowing ar-3 samples of such decrees, the first being copied from the congres signal report, the second from Geaeral Clayton's Aftermath: "K. K. K. Dismal Swamp, u2 D. XIV 11th hour. 'Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin. The bloddy dagger is drawn-? the '.rying hour is at hand; beware! Your steps are marked; the eye of the dark chief is upon you. First; he warns; then the aveng ins dagper flashes in the moon light. By order of the grand Cyclops. Lixto." Posted on a tree at Pine Bluff Ark., April C, 1SCS; "K. K. K., Corinth Divi$;on, "Pine Bluff Retreat, "Special Order No. 2: 'Spirit Brothers; Shadows o Martyrs; fnanioms rrom gory fields; Followers of Brutus ! ! Rally, rally, rally. When shadows gather, moons grow dim, stars tremble; glide to the grand coun cil hall and wash your bands in tyrant's blood; and gaze upon the list of condemned traitors. The time has arrived. Blood must flow. The true must be saved. Work in darkness. Bury in wat er. Make no sound. .Trust not the air. - Strike high and sure. Vengeance! Vengeance! Veng eance! "Trie!, condemned. Execute well. Fear is dead. Every man is a judge and this executes ! ! ! ' Fail not! ! Mandate of the M. G. C. By D. M. G C. 12 m m 2.'" SATURDAY MORNING. AUGUST 20. 1921 , tini a wn rnn RELIEF WORK., AMPRIPAN NURSES GOING UAtK rw,w-, , , It ISt r"o yk: h'KT v A i w?-AViiV . . pi-Kn-tU ; -,v rklxr:: I I AMERICAN -WlLi ' irJ " H w JrS NURSES CONDUCT J iv J fe &l ' ' U XhY J' M A BABY - - , , Jt J&yS H?S HOSPITAL J MS - ' uV bxM IN WARSAW. V;W"""- Z SMSM 11 - ... . IT1..M an n a& KaMIA Twelve American nurses will shortly leave for Poland to go onu reuei wr -- about two months ago and now are anxious to go DacK to me lamme . . Jy. " " J." , f," vering over Russian hordes in and about Moscow and Petrograd. because of a famine.! the peasants of Po land look toward the American Red Cross for rood, i pwara oi jdu.iwu.uuv peopi ut uc i y rnni7.t(nn , hoRnital conducted bv American nurses nas Deen openea ia atsw iur m v children. The photograph shows American nurses with some of the children they attend. j beas corpus writ, and to use the Military forces to execute the or ders of United Staftes courts. Of the effect of this legislation the World's Best History, :eferred to above, says: "Any negroes who showed fight were whipped. maimed or killed, treatment which was extended on occasion to their carpetbag and scalawag friends, these titles denoting re spectively Northern and Southern men who took the negroes" side. The very violence of the order. which it at jart turned against the old Southrons themselves brought it into disrepute with its original instigators, who were not sorry when federal marshals, put up to it by President Grant, hunt ed den after den of the lav breakers to the death." To this historical sketch, talrer, wholly from the International En cyclopedia and other works named at the beginning of it, may be dded the statement that, rocem activities of certain organizations and the extensive exhibition of the 'Birth of a Nation" pictures seem to have been parts of a prop aganda looking to this attempt to revive the old Ku Klux Klan of 50 years ago. That it is, m fact, the saijie organization that President Grant suppressed is clearly indicated by the name titles of its officers, its masks as pictured in thT daily papers. the seal on its literature, and other marks, and the fact is plainly stated in its printed an nouncements in whi'.-li the most bitter language is used ngait.s! the United States government's policies and action during t':o years just following the Civil vr language not less bitter than vas used by the most pronounced se cession papers of that day. district cow. Blood will tell in cowdom; but the titles are won by perforni- nce only, which :s -the rightful way. ". It is now claimed that the sen te hearings of the tariff bill will be ended in three weeks. But what year? m After the hearing will come the awpings, o last till the crack of doom, unless some one gags ths Marathon wind jammers of that body. When President Harding went o Secietary Weeks' siinimer home or u short visit, tho hotels there aised tluir rates from $2 to $C a day. They needed the money. If any of those millionaire Jer sey men oi the east expect to break the records of Oregon Jer- he best cow country in the world. Hall to StMawes' liad'i Lady! The galem district, must raise ., - 1. l.v' I. ikn a1rv pilOie I1V8 BlUC. 1UBI H IUO ..2 . t . a a A n l. ' TKa rflogan editor solicits your help. new records will be broken; and, 9tiirmoro important, the average annual butter fat production will be raised. The 1200-pound cow is coming, and the 150 to 200 pound common brindle cow is go- u.vto iuai ciciiuu ia v. ntJ v,. no Li V 1 1 lea was tne '"1- cratic nowadays, that everybody j Pire. and its chief was called the who would be anybody has to belrand wizard; each state was a democratic, since the publls realm, tnd Its chief the grand taste has-wandered far from that drafen; a congresflonal rlisfr:,-. i . tradition which valued a man was a dominion, and its chief the upon his birth or his estates. I grand titan; a county was a nrn. "People take a man only, forMnce, and Its chief the grard what he Is, not for what he was giant; a local lodge was a dfn d4 The eye l au : jersey aom rj M n Oregon. The future champion f'r'hip competitions are between 11 iregon cowhand many records ill be broken and then thoso FIT! URE DATES A nut 11 ' 1-7-tIi,Sl Z:Tnf, mp wiilWWOjWjf r',rk.- . LlIa ,.. l, W-vlnradaT Join! pirn Iff 'VJpmbJI"? OcUber'lUr.toa tJUiSr . vr-aiiiH.a.v stt .oi- aid roramUaio t opaa i bW t 000 OOO bnd. , , raveniber J. 22 23 Msrioa . v In.titllt. . . .. ( .' Ing out, to give way to the 400 to 500 and up business ccw oflDorn for what he imagine ana its chief the grand cyclon the future. I himself to be," the baron is re-land the individual members were ported as saying, and since the j called ghouls. vouauiau aruijr was t,u tiuoci) us- . vain la Ken Dy all mem- soc fated with him during some j bers, at an altar covered by the of the bitterest trials of the war, j Confederate flag, was as follows they had good reason to knowj"! (A. B.,) before the great, im yv ji i miBuer ui iuu mis oyns i-uiaie juage of heaven and o the tanks really Is. earth, and upon the holy evan- ino new governor general o: geiiBis or Almighty God. do, of Canada Is 59 years old. six feet ray own free will and pcord snb- The new Salem district cham- j tall, erect, soldierly, his brown scribe to the following sacred plon cow skins any cow of her! hair showing but few gray j binding obligation: (l) I am on ciass or any nreea. ana ajso ue i streaas. nis moustacne suu an un- i tne side or Justice and humanity next hlshest age class of her oym 4ided . brows'' and his eyes bluo and constltutlcnal liberty, as be- The foreign embassies at Wash ington have a right to all the liquor they care to own and house. We might refer to this as a "leak of nations." "Following the withdrawal' nf the military governments in the South and the restoration of civil government, the Ku Klu. out rages increased to such a degree as to threaten the general secur ity. In March. 1871. President Grant sent a special message to congress in which he declared that life and property were insecure in some of the Southern states. and that mall carriers tnd reve nue collectors were in danger of personal violence. He urged con gress to enact appropriate legls lation to meet the situation. A joint committee ot 21 was ap pointed to investigate the matters complained of. Their report (13 volumes) snowed that many crimes, some of them of revolt ing character, had been commit ted ior political reasons only, and that life and property were, in many localities, insecure. In April, 1S71. congress passed an act, popularly called the Ku Klux act, which removed the trial of sneh disorders frpm state to the United States courts, authorized the president to 'suspend the ha- The claim to 100 per cent Am ericanism is very suggestive when it declares that none but native- born white citizens of Christian faith, are eligible to membership According to the census of 1910 this declaration excludes IS,?. 16, 000 foreign-born white and 10. 360.000 colored people 2:!.G0fi.- f'OO in all, besides all native-born Hebrews; and many intelligr persons interpret other parts of the declaration to exclude all Roman Catholics also. If Catholics are not excluded tne declaration applies to more than one-fourth of the population of our country; if Catholics ar exciimeu, more tnan two-tiitns n our people are treated as un American. 1 nis would ban nn out of every four of the Worl. war men as p or Americans. Wha do 'the Legion boys say to that It also ss tip a new standard o American patriotism when names Gen. X. B. 'Forrest of Fort Pillow fanfe, as the organizer an first grand wizard of the K. K. I' Persons having access to Hon James G. Blaine's book, "Twent Years in Congress," will find volume II very clear and graphic statement of p 'fit helium con ditions which tp . largely tho work of the K K. K.. or arofo under it? protection and encour agement. HISTORY. Salem. Or.. Aug. 17, 10 21. in peys they w(ll have to come to Oregon, and the Salem district, to do it. It can't be done any where else. 3ut It can here. And will, right aong. j The telephone investigation has covered every subject under th3 Min excepting relativity and Cupper to Investigate Med ford Irrigation Tracts Percy Cupper, state I engineer, left last night for couthern Ore gon where hie will pass a few days making an ItiFpection of th Med ford irrigation district. Mr. Cup per said hai had been surumcneU to Medfordj; by the directors ot the dlstr ct.j&nd had not yet been advised bf the problems at ifsue there. !.,.,. 'Mr. Cupper and family returned Thursday night a'ter two weetta passed at ROckaway. LADD & BUSH, BANKERS Established 1868 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p; m. RO - J "QUALITY GROCERIES" "A Sale Place to Trah" Cantaloupes j ' ; , 50 crates of Turlock Cantaloupes, the Very best quality of fruit Buy them by the crate, 12 to 15 in a crate $1.10 per crate, or 10c, 3 for 25c and 2 for 25c, accord- . ing to size. I Watermelons Fruits Watermelons, per lb... . .2c Ice Cream melons, per lb. 4c Honey Dew Melons, per lb 4c Casabas, per lb. ......... 5c Gravenstein Apples, has. 2or Elberta Peaches, basket -50r Local Peaches, . basket . .-tOc Plums, per basket.'. . . . .2.1c Blue Damson Plums, bk. li-V Blackberries, 4 for. . . .2." Grape Fruit, Florida ea. 20c Oranges, SOc and ."c per doz Vegetables Bananas, per lb.. . . ; . . ,13c. Green Corn, per doz.. . .".33c Tomatoes, iper lb lOc Per basket 43c Head Lettuce i()c Celery, large bunches.. lOc Sweet Potatoes, 2 lbs for 23c String Beans, 3 lbs. for 23c Egg Plant, per lb .13c Pickling Cucumbers, all sires Pickling Onions, 2 lbs. 23c Spuds, 10 lbs. for . .23c Fisher's Blend Flour The merits of an article are proven by its repeating sale to the customer. The users of Fisher'sSllleml Flour are satisfied that it is the host flour they lean buy even if the price is a few eents more per sack than ordinary Hour. They know Ihey ret more loaves per sack and a Letter loaf of bre.nl. $2.40 per sack, $250 in 4 sack lots. C. & H. Berry Sugar. Sugar 1 BITS FOR BREAKFAST 4 Hail St. Mawes' Lad's Lady! N V She is the newest queen of Jer seydom , m. Came info her title at midnight last night And, ot course, she Is a Salem" $7.35 per sack, cash Cakes I Why sweat over a hot oven in ihis warm weather bak ing cakes when you can pet them here baked from the Mime high-grade materials you yourself! would use at a eost of very little more than the materials would cost vou? tor Saturday a full line of our delicious cakes freshly made. Mocha, prune, - chocolate, nut, cocoanut, mgel, sunshine, jelly roll. Orders fori special sizes of cakes must be in early in the day. 7 I Ihs Apple, peach, blackberry. Ti well-lilled pics. Delicatessen Nothing finer to take on. an outing t! salads or cold meats. . ese are liberal, lan some of our 1 otato salad, shrimp salad, club housej salad, prepared jello, mayonai.se dressing, dill or sweet piekle, green and ripe olives, cold sliced ham, corned beefr kippered salmon minced ham. head cheese, souse, jellied tongue Norl weg.an smoked sardines in olive oil 2 for 25c ; $1 40 per old Leaf Olives, large size, can 50c; 3 for $1 23 Oregon Cream Hrick Cheese, 30c pound.! ' Swift's Premium Hams and Bacon. I Roth Grocery Co. Phones 1885-6-7- - No diarge for Delivery