- THE ORtiGOk Sfr ATfeSMAN; SALEM. OREGON , . iMned Dally Except Monday by TOR STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPAHX SIS 8. Commercial SL, Salem, Oregon (Portland Ofrice, C27 Board ol Trade Building. Phone Automatic . MEMBER OF TIIB 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 la this paper and also the local news published herein. R. ' J. Hendricks Manager 8tephen A. 8tone ... .. Managing Editor Ralph Glorer Cashier frank Jaskoskf Manager Job Dept. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier la Salem and suburbs, 11 cents a woek. 5 cents, a month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall. In advance, $C a year, ft for six ' months, SI. 50 for three months, SO cents a month. In Marion and Polk counties; outside of these counties, $7 a year, S3. 60 f for six months, $1.75 lor three months, f 0 cents, a month. When not paid in ad y nee, 60 cents a year, additional. TUX PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the greet western weekly farm paper, a ,; will be sent a year to anyone paying a year In advance to the Dally-Statesman."' ? SUNDAY STATESMAN. $1.50 a year: 71 cents for six months 1 40 cents for three months; 26 cents tor S months i 16 cents for - one month. 'i ' "- - - '.- WEEKLY STATESMAN, Issued la two ilx-page sections, Tuesdays and Fridays, $1 a year Of not paid In advance, 11.26); 60 cents for sis months t 26-cents for three months. - -. ideals worthy of adoption by all the nations of the earth, and :apable of bringing to fruition the highest hopes of human ly. " ' Tbe cause of the midair trag edy in England has been discov ered. The time to have found tbe latent danger would bare beca before the trial trip. TELEPHONES: - ' - Business Office, 21. Circulation Department, SSS Job Department, 682 Society Editor, 100 Entered at the Postofflce In Salem, Oregon, as second, class matter. ." CONSTITUTION DAY ; ; Constitution Day will be appropriately observed in Sa lem by the Bar Association and tne uaugmers ot the Ameri can devolution and the Woman a-Reliei Corps. 1 he Constitution of the United States was adopted by Ahe convention of delegates from the original thirteen states 1 on the 17th ot September, 1787 ; 134 years ago today. It was ratified by all the thirteen states before the end of the fol lowing year, "excepting three, though by rather close votes in some of them for instance, the vote in Massachusetts was ,187: to 168. The vote was unanimous in only three states, Delaware, New Jersey and Georgia. ' North Carolina did not ratify till November of 1789, Rhode Island in May of 1790; and Vermont in January of I Of those attending the Constitutional Convention, 39 signed the document and 16 refused., , rhe. adoption of the Constitution was opposed by many, who believed that the extensive powers granted by it to con gress' and Jhe executive would be dangerous to the liberties of the people. It Jwasr, however, finally adopted, chiefly through the exertions and writings of James Madison, John lav. and Alexander Hamilton. Virginia ratified the Consti tution with the declaration that she was at liberty to with draw from the union whenever its powers were used for op- . pression; and New York, after Hamilton had declared that no state should ever be coerced by an armed lorce. , The government is about to sell 2S6 vessels for $2100 each that cost tbe, taxpayer $230,600,000. That is making money after the manner , of tbe dealer who sold overcoats for $10 that cost him $25. He claimed that he got bis profit by the large trade he had at the lower "price. The Filipinos cannot eat their cake and have it, too. They want to be independent, but still have the protection of the I'nited States. They are children. and the? will be children for 1009 years that is. all but a few cun- They are no longer hampered wiih four petticoats and 10 yards of dress. They have attained a measure of sartorial freedom un dreamed of by their grandmoth ers and only tbe extremists among them have exploited their new liberty with immodesty. And with it all they have managed to increase rather than impair the artistic. Men have really gained less lib erty than women sartorially. And they have certainly sacrificed the artistic. They still wear starchc.l shackles, still burden themselves with too heavy clothing In hot weather, still hold ' fast to ha'.s that are neither becoming nor practical. All of wbich may be significant in other ways for milady has certainly made more in the last 100 . . . I ... ; ... foolish. It Is tbe contention oticomerence ana the saunme possi- the Jersey sleuths that this ten J , bility that 300-ialle guns and all to put the officers la disrepute the other deadly appurtenances ot and impair their importance in j war will become superfluous and the community. Even the small I disgracefully unfashionable. Wo toy on the street is likely to hail j have us$d up all the enthusiast!! the cop with derision. The at tention of the directors and sce nario writers is called to this un pleasant situation. Unless the cop can be made to appear as in telligent as an ordinary human beta? the officers of New Jersey are going to have the film censored. THE I XCMi JOK AMENDMENT. we had to snare for briliiantlv conceiving bloody weapons and scientific ingenuity in death dealing and are looking forward to a world in which the monu ments will be raised to the peace makers rather than to the war makers and to the occasion- when that typical munitions manufactu rer in Shaw's play, '"Major Bar bara,"' will erase his motto from the wall . "Unashamed." and re place it with "Remorse." ever c omes when the- gossips are j taken to asylums" it will be aeces- j sary to build aWw'seL Of coursa gost-ip is here used in the sense of small scandal! It Implies , a 'careless disregard of the truth the spreading of a tale without guarantee of its worth. Most com munities would be bettered It the gossips of this class could be restrained. toTiave a future, yet Aiasaa aas great resou recs, a wonderful cli- ... mat and bowl most remarkaVe scenery There na pcrnsps seen I CHI UIUVU - f""v. Alaska will como '' back with a marvelous buret, some ot these ' days. .j :'r ';. v " ! .. THROl'till TIIK lSIXti GLASS. progress years ning politicians among the 10.-I 'h" milord in sex privileges and 000.000. most of whom have no conception at all of the ideals of a government of tbe people by the peopfe for the people as they are understood In this country. advantages and she started under a greater handicap. She has im proved her intelligence, her in terests, her capacity and ber scope generally, while msn has remained largely content to rest The federa: authorities are upjon hls traditions, against the real thing In trying ! 1,er clothes may be cither the to deoort buddoko.1 Chines immi- i cause r the effect ot these con- grants. Any given number of Chinese .contrabands 'againbt ditions, but she has certainly ac quired and reserves the right to Whom deportation proceedings are ; dress prcUy mucn a she P,ese had (wur thv .ro Um n... 1 whether it be trousers for bik- ponfc street, San Francisco, an 1, being native born, are not sub ject to deportation. And In most of the cases they get away with the claim. Dupont street must have been a famous breeding ground for the Chinese. j ing or negligee for hot weather whire men are still the slave of certain very restricted custom, which they would shudder to af front. - FIATS AX1 MISULKS. "The settlement of the ions standing lawsuit over the copy right of the song, "The Sweet By and By," by the payment of $16. 000 to the heirs of the late Joseph P. Webster recaps the fact that Webster also wrote the sonc. 'Lorena," which was doloriously chanted by every youth and maid-1 instead of en fn the United States in thn iaa- 'li,, 3 As Daniel Webster declared.1 "We live. untier. the only government ihat ever existed which Avas framed by the unre strained and deliberate consultations "of the people';, y In the same, speech from yfJhe:BXm&e . t " tt . if ... . Iter saia, among otner imngsr:; - '.The American Constitution is the purchase of American valor. It is the rich prize that, re wards th$ toil of "eight years Df war and of blood: and what is all the pomp and military glory, what are victories, what are armies subdued; fleets cap tured, colors taken, unless 4hey end in the establishment or wise laws and . national haDDiness? i 'The Constitution is the great memorial of the deeds of our ancestors. On the pillars and on the arches of that dome their names art written and-their achievements recorded. J "All countriesand all ages produce warriors, but rare are the instances in Which men sit down coolly 'at the close of - their labors to enjoy the fruits of them;: Having destroyed one despotism, nations generally create another; having re jected the dominion of one tyrant, they make another or themselves.. England beheaded her Charles, but crowned her Cromwell. France guillotined her Louises, but obeys her Bcmapartes. (This speech was delivered in 1802.) Thanks to God,; neither foreign nor domestic usurpation flourishes on our soil! x ;v-. !-:'.;' 'The true definition of despotism is government without law. It may exist," therefore, in the hands- of many as well . asof one.. Rebellions are despotisms; factions are despot isms ; loose democracies are despotisms. These are a thousand times more dreadful than the concentration of all power in the hands of a single tyrant. The despotism of one man is like thq thunderbolt, whic.h falls here and there, scorching an$ consuming the individual on whom it lights jjbut popu lar commotion, the despotism of a mob, is an earthquake, which in one moment swallows up everything. It is the ex cellence of our government that it is placed in a proper me dium between these two extremes, that it Is equally distant from mobs and from thrones. i t; 'In the next place, our government is good because it' is .practical. It isoiot the sick offspring of closet philosophy. It did not rise, vaporous and evanescent, from the brains of Rosseau and Godwin, like a mist from the ocean. ' It is the production of mea of business, of experience, and of wisdom. It is suited to whatman is and what it is in the power of good laws to make him. Its object the just'object of all governments is to secure and protect tne weak against the r. strong, to unite the force of the whole community agains the violence of oppressors. Its power is the Dower of the nation; its will is the will of the peopled It is not an awk- wani, unsnapeiy machine which the people' cannot use when tney have made it, nor is It so dark and complicated that il is the labor, of one's life to investigate and undersfunH if All are capable of comprehending its principles and its opera tions. ic admits, too, ot a change or men and measures. A the will of the majority, we have seen - the crovernmpnt n the nation pass from thchands of one description of men into tliose of another. I .-.rr r r ' ! ' "It is, too, an equal government. It reject principalities and powers. It demolishes all - the artificial distinctions which pride- and ambition create. It is encumbered with no lazy load of hereditary aristocracy, -It clothes no one with the attributes .of .Godr it sinks no one to a level with birnf ps- yet it admits-those distinctions in society which are natural and necessary. The correct expression off our Bill of Rights is that all men are born equal a It then rests with themselves ' In Mn!t! IL.I J : t?l 1 li t . i 1 iiiaiiiiaiu iiitir equaiuy Dy tneir worm. . v Pages could be filled bv trie tributes nf irreat AmoHmns to the Constitution of the United States. .Nor are such trib utes coniined to Americans. Gladstone-predatmed it. "the K:uau pouncai worK tnat was ever struck off, at one time -.v iiie orain ana purpose of 'man." ;! .. :.- r tinued observances in honor of this great document, and fresh 70s. Remember the words, "Tho ' years creep slowly by. lrena, the snow is on tho grass again." But it was the " first named compa ction, one of faith an1 hope, that Aide the reputation of Webster, who was a New Hampshire Yan- Wee with a musical education, who toiled and died teaching music in the little town of Elkhornj In the extreme southern part of Wis consin. A Parisian milliner, who has made a vast fortune out of hats, has just donated tbe funds for r sumptuous athletic club for wo men by which she hopes to en- ; courage Frt nchwomen to embrace the new vogue for muscular and r"tysiral development. "he wanvs to wee thnm a!l Junos ann Diana t' c ".s-cty. fibbhy, art- lmilatioii specimens who SAHTOKLVL KFFICIEXCV We moderns seem to have made some little progfes in the use of clothes. One is particularly impressed with this fact after viewing certain "costume films" In which one realizes how oiur ancestors burdened themselves with complicated raiment, not 3n1y the women, but the men. In tbe swashbuckler era both mea And women must needs have tak- an a couple of hours to adorn themselves, and the maintenance of their wardrobes in good repair. neatness and rectitude must have becq a most exacting duty. The Juried wigs, the' laces and nifties ihe knee breeches, silk stocking and fancy doublets for men what modern among us can con ceive or maintaining such a stan dard ? And the women, wefghed qown with layers of r.rm.m. - oB Maai,f maneuvering and piloting tho fearsome, bunchy gowns, powder ing and curling those alarming wigs can they ever have had time to attend the club, run ttaa city, influence politics, reform the woria ana tend their enormous in . . wmhiw inio the bargain? No wonder the chief feminine topics ot interest handed down through me generations are clothes, ba bies; maid servants and gossln. Now.although masculinity ha sacrificed all pretense to art i.i the process, a man can dress i;t 13 minutes, including a shave and UA .Jl . . w7 aujuBinicni or a stiff neck shackle. And even women, witli kt i . .... ..en last peuicoat shed, their one-piece dresses, their minimnm of lingerie, their, snug-fating ha?s and their - simple hair dressing, can achieve it in about an hour, at tho worst.- Which may go far o account for woman's increased interests, and the timr she is bi to devote to public aL'aif. A f this ii to th good, this greater efficiency in clothes, it la ntftttl . .- . Biiipuaucauy one form cf progress In which real' gains hava de. Women po .longer lace themselves into tight corses mat distort their bodies, ruin t Knf. a I ' "jv,.r uiScBuons and. give them .lUBir oeaas are -1 louger fearsome erections of UU powdered hair and tottering hats Svplnbar FUTURE DATES . ; BaUrday Cratlitvlioa IV; fETtZZr "Vlre.ft Court have so readily expfided fortunes for tiieir hats at her Bh..,i i?'h says it was always the weediest. most fragile specimens of her se that demanded chic "sport" hat.- knowing and caring naught for sport. 'Such jaunty, little, practical bport hats on such unhealthy, im practical women it is my wish that tbe jeunes filles should be as practical, durable, useful and chatming as tbeir sport- hats,'' aire Bald. There seems to be an enthusi astic vogue for athletics among frenchwomen just now for the first time in history. Formerly they were apt to hold their Eng lish and American sisters in con tempt for their physical exertions their boyish strides, their unfenil nine energy, and for a long time 'sports clothes" were advertised ia "i!.ngiisn" or "American.- Hat now tne newest snort attim la frankly claimed as French and 'he Frenchwoman, ever being re -ponsive to her gowns, is evi lently going to live up to the pic ture. And, incidentally, the French woman is first and last a special st in man-pleasing. Always it is her aim to be the kind of womau monsieur admires. Voila, mascu 'ine tastes must be running to ithletic maidens with lissom healthy, capable bodies other wise there would be no athletic ogiic for women in France. ANOTHKIt CONSPIRACY. T11K GRKAT OXKS. - The business manager ot a New York musician make3 the state ment that the celebrated harpist Is concentring ia France. Wo understand thai F.abe Ruth, the celebrated horue-runr.ist, is base balliiing iu America and that Demnsey. the rightist, lias been black-eyesing in- S'ew Jersey. Boston Commercial- bulletin. KXtKKIXti Of IV ALLIbi. There ouuht to be a twentieth amendment to the constitution, so changing the language of secuoa article I. as t except the 18tn j;CiriPi of Illinois from the elec- iscount James Brice, author of u j toral requirements obtaining else- "The American Commonwealth." wnere ' ; savs that three men came out The amendment should provid3 lle giants from the ruck or th that in tne rive counties compos-j .t ing the Illinois 18th there shall hiSh abe the rest; they are Ma- be no new election of representa- " a, me vzecno-siovaK execu tive as long as the Hon. Joseph J tlve; Venixelos. the former GreeK . . - ! nrAniiop rtrl Ian Phrktian Sitintc Carney Cannon is wining " c,tk Vm n i American who had gone overseas ( present SUtesman buildinr til i i wnnii ihn ie 'he South Afiicau soldier anil , . .. ui, tae serve. ...... ...... oarea tne eauor to attempt to returned every two f "a"--"'- " l " uuu! clean him out row v libon 19 it ol evt-ii wntapercu, i but one would think that there An eastern paper Fpoke of the necessity to the community of cleaning out the dirty alleys, but spelled it "our dirty allies." An I I BITS FOR BREAKFAST Constitution day. . I It was adopted IS i years asj today. , - . But ft took some time, and some fight, to get It ratified. j There were many folks in those days who were afraid the states were giving up too ratnv . mrv few states claiming 'enough ot ; tbeir rights, and their responsl bilitles.! , . . i S "Al" Croasman was in Salem yesterday, and be wandered off down town while Mrs, Croasoua ' attended a party. A. B, Croas man was ltostmaster ta Salem un der President Arthur, along In 1883 and 1884. The nostofn was then in the corned or h& . automatically vears during an indefinite future. nd much election money expense would be saved in Ford, Living- . . . . . i . - .i ston. L-osan, jicueH uiju wwu- ford. And the whole country would be sure of the continued satisfaction of knowing that this esteemed and venerable states man was not yet in the past plup erfect. N'cw York Herald. KXI'KKT KNTHtSIASM. And be (s still do- utlght at least be mention of Mar shal Foch." Hut it scorns that the Sighting men do not count cts heavily as was imagined. Military and firearm experts'. we are assured, arc highly enthus iastic about a new guu which will jhoot rour-ton explosives 300 miles. It can attain the velocity if a mile a second and be de pended upon to deal deatn aaa destruction with peculiar cinci- sncy. We can hope this exciting en thusiasm is exclusive lo the ex perts, for just at present the rank ind file of usl the teeming mll lons of average citizens of us. re confining our enthusiasm to Jie succei-s of tho disarmament THE ltlCi BLOCK AIM-:. The League of Nations says it will blockade the UnTed States, along with tlic rest if Uncle Sam essays to sell supplies to any country which is being disciplined by the League. Even the bis League would find it something of a task to bottle up America, but it is to be hoped that the states men at Washington will so be have as to make even the threat unnecessary. fiant. CillKAT CIJMATK. Snow and ico In Montana re mind us that this is a great coun try and that even the people who want ice every day do not hava to rely on the Ice man. ix fin: swim. A woman ' swam Trom Albany to New York, a distance ot 143 miles, and was in tbe water for 64 consecutive hours. No man has equalled the watery task. There is no question about the ladies being in tho swim. Tllli MTTY WOULD. Tbe Chicago health officer says that gossip is a form of insanity. It scem3 to be mighty prevalent and there must be a lot of nutt people in the world. If the time IX Till-: FA It NORTH. Alaska is shrinking ln4-popuIa-tion and some of the pioneers ate worrying lest It becomelcnown only for iti Christmas trees and reindeer. If a place can only be remembered in connection with Sa'nta Clans it ran hardly be said part of the building now occupied by the jW. C. T. U. Then he, was postmaster of Portland . under President McKlnlcy, from 1815 to 1903. All Salem old timers knew Mr. Croasman, who was active- ia business and social life he for so many years. He 'Still thinks. " Salem ;is the most beautiful and - sociable city In the world. 1U . was surprised at the many Im provements. Mr. Croasmaa 1 1 now in, the mortgage- loan busi ness In Portland. . His dauchter. Lillian Croasman. Is In a leading Broadway. New York, theater od she is one of the leaders In th United) States In her line.; His other daughter, Alice, is married, living In Portland. "Al" spent some time at the supreme court building, and Chief Justice Bur nett . and Justice Mellrlde put aside their duties .to talk old times, j In the old days "Af and "George" (Burnett) were among the leading firemen of Salem, members of the old Capital En gine company when the fire ap paratus ; had .to be , dragred by main strength of the men through the muddy streets to tires. . Little drops In "Krvvera," Little cuts In "Joleo' , .Speed the spending spirit"' And make us all cat loose. A woman who claims lo have invented a pork-and-bean biscuit is suing the Armours, the Rocke fellers, Charles Schwab and other plutocrats for 5120.000.000 dam ages for an alleged .conspiracy in restrain of trade. She claims that but for these jealous milllon aices the armies of tbe world would have been equipped with her pork-and-bean biscuits and would have been able to figh! that much the fiercer. Berause of their opposition she has been beaten oat of 1120. 000. ooo. sh says, and she insists that she be now reimbursed. A pork-and-bean biscuit sounds very good. It would seem like fit nourishment for warriors aud battlers of all kinds, but it would also seem that no woman could have a patent on the combination or an exclusive right in tbe baking. If the pork-and-bean biscuit is such a desir able thing the Armours would have been making them Ions ago. But why ring in Charlie Schwab? Did they expect to give the bis cuit a Bessemer steel casing? THK POLICEMAN'S LOT. renewals of devotion to the ideals it represents, which have prrccrvorj us. a. nation: tho fnrrmnc.t,-,, ii M.UPwb. at. 22 .a ta-..u. - r::r . " uc uc"1' uuu I rrT"-"-v" v v...mwu, u T-chri iBttitntr T l buad and likewise horoughry The New Jersey policemen are angered at the manner in which jthe orficcrsof the law ate bur-, lesqued tn tbe moviea and In son ventlon the other day resolved H fry and do something to correct this unhappy condition. -!,- A . policeman in Cue movies is supposed to be deaf, dumb and My : - lliK 3 . 1 . . ., t .. The Vacuum Process is a figurative "FpunUirkof. Youth," for coffee packed by this method retains its original freshness and flavor for an indefinite period There is nothing magic about the method. On the contrary it is quite simple. Coffee becomes stale on account of the oxygen in the air oxidizing the essential elements that give coffee its delicious flavor. Under the Vacuum Pre cess the coffee is packed in air 'tight cans from which the air is withdrawn -preventing all detc rioration. Hills Bros, use this method s it insures the purchaser of receiving the fine, rare coffee of which "Red Can" is composed, in as perfected fresh condition as when leaving the roaster. To) . 3 teHHSSo nnonrr nD I Originators of Ute process ,of pacmng conee in vacuum XJ h :