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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1922)
THE OREGON: STATCSIAlCSALIL. OREGON FRIDAY! MORNING, APRIL 21, 19 Issued Daily Except Monday by. TIIE STATESMAN PUIlLlSHINtl COMPAXY 215 8. Commercial EL, Salem, Oregon (Portland Office, 27 Board of Trade Building. Phone Automatic ' ": , - ; , S27-S9 - . MEMBER OP- TIIR ASSOCIATED PRESS . The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation or all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la this paper and also the local news published herein. R. J. Hendricks ,. j .Manager Stephen A, Stone ................. . Managing Editor Ralph Glover .. , Cashier rrank Jaskoskl Manager Job Dept TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23 Circulation Department, IIS Job Department, 681 ' Society Editor, 101 Entered at the Postoffice In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter mittee that prepared and secured the passage of the budget act, and he has served on many important committees, show ing the high esteem in which he is held by his colleagues for his honesty, ability and industry. All these advantages the people of this district would lose in swapping horses while crossing the stream in send ing Mr. Norblad to commence where Mr. Hawley began his climb a dozen years ago.' However able Mr. Norblad may be, and no attempt will be made to cast any insinuation-as to his lack of ability 1 or in any way to impugn his character, he. could not be of great service to the people of this district now, compared to the work Congressman Hawley is able and in position to do, and which he will be sure to do; for he is in the height of his tremendous power and inclination to, work and work hard and long hours and faithfully, for the public good. His life is an open book. He is a native Oregonian. His whole record is clear and clean, made in his labors here at home and in the councils of the nation. There is not a single reason why there should be a change, excepting to gratify the ambition of Mr. Norblad, which is honorable. But there are many reasons why there should be no change now. NORBLAD WILL TARRY AT JERICHO ; The Republicans of the First Congressional district have no notion of swapping horses while crossing a stream ; , And Mr. Norblad of Astoria will "tarry at Jericho till his beard be grown." ; , The Republicans of this district who will name a candi date in. the primaries of next month, and the people of this district who wilPchoose a Congressman in the election of November, jwill name and choose Congressman Willis C. Hawley to run and to succeed himself ; , Because they know him to be honest Because they know him to be industrious "Rvnnao tViov Vnivur Tilnv in Ko onrvnaafnl ; , They know he will stand up and fight, for what is right; that he will do this in a manner that stamps him in ability among the leaders of the popular branch of the federal law a good judge expressed it several years ago and in fact now among the first dozen; and that he will accomplish results. , They know this, because he has been in action in that "high station for nearly a dozen years, during which time he f has been in the thick of all the great fights and great move nients that have been before the country, with which the "national law makers have had to do. He has secured some $16,000,000 for public improvements In his district in that time and $5,000,000 more are author ized in bills now pending. i lie oiucu in me yaosm&v ui we vuiutLiiuiiuuai ttiiiciiuxiiexi La for the direct election of United States Senators, and for the income tar. nrnhibltion and canal auffracrp. nnd in f ho maV. ing of laws for the control of railroads, trusts and monop olies ; preventing the white slave traffic, gambling in farm products, corrupt practices; establishing national aid for f 1 1 . a m a m ' roaas wun appropriations tnereior, postal savings oanKs, parcel post,, federal farm loan act, vocational education, children's bureau; laws beneficial to agriculture; assisted in securing naval base at Astoria and the list might be ex tended indefinitely. . TT 1- -.' 1 1. 11 It- . A A ;t- xl- ie is rigut u" u uie great questions, line vne protective tariff, the merchant warine, public improvements and devel opments; the Roosevelt highway; exclusion of Oriental and undesirable immigration; protection of live stock and dairy I industries; passage of American vessels toll-free through the Panama canal; airplane patrol of forests . In 'short,' all. legislation and movements for the good of : the world, his country, his state and his district. lv CongressmarCHawleyJs now a member of the most . im portant committee 01 tne nouse, tne ways and Means com mittee, and he is the fourth ranking member, and is in line for chairman;. an advantage that it would be the heicrht of folly for the, voters of this district to think of forfeiting ;that; in fact, they have no remote idea of forfeiting. Long andiaithful service is "the only open sesame to such a com mittee place. Mr. Hawley, while his name does not attach to that bill- but goes to the chairman of the committee. Congressman Fordney, was as much responsible for the form of the nrenent tariff hill it loft tVio TTnnso umi "MV Fordney himself. He was a member of the joint committee that framed the federal farm loan act. and of the select corn- Are you having your new house antennaed for radio? Everybody's doing it. 'i Congressman Hawley will re main in his place of great useful ness to the First Oregon district. It should be unanimous. Great activities are ahead in the Santiam mining district and per haps not very far ahead. Salem will be a mining center some day; perhaps soon. There are only fourteen women lawyers in all France. The ladies do not lay down the law to the extent that prevails in this sweet land of liberty. A college professor says that women will rule this country in fifty years more. Why set the date so far ahead? Don't they come mighty near ruling it now? resources are the funds it gets when It writes to us to please remit. Over in Russia they thought government was a mag ician and they printed bales of money. Pretty soon the people saw that the magic was a fraud and now the money isn't worth anything. , OF BOOKS A Massachusetts commission has recommended to the leeisla- ture of that state a bill permitting oration of the beloved past, to be Cy W. T. RIG DON Oh books, books. y monumentk of mind in multitudinous supply, sweet solace of our human kind and proofs of our immortality! Thou wert found in stones and running Brooks, long ere letters had represented sounds or figured in records of thought. Thou wert In birds and flowers and fruiting trees with leaves for the healing of nations. Oh, thou art in the flaming sword cutting and divid ing the flying thoughts that the truth may be put into record that nothing of worth may be lost or come to caught! That, nor higft.1 nor low; nor rich nor poor may be deprived of the bountiful gen erosity of books. That all may feel the mighty impulse of the old that shapes the things of the pres ent. That all may walk through time with the great, the noble and the just, and feel the sympa thetic ties that bind friends, com rades and counsellors in a golden bond of unity as contemporaries. Oh, to live, to move with the countless ages, to see the faces, to hear the words, to feel the love and affection and to feel the ex perience of the patriarchs, the ad- graph of time and emblazoned on the tablets of Imperishable time. Oh books, books, books! Pres ent, past, venerable, glorious books; how I love thy sacred com panionship. Deaf la the ear that never .heard hy Cmustei blln-i Is the eye that never saw thy gleam Inr: dead Is the. soul that never felt the thrill of thy Inspiration .Books, blessed, books! Linlj In the golden chain that bind the past with the living present and are stretched along the highway to. eternity. : aerson Injured by an automobile overawed by the music to have a prior lien on the car for the satisfaction of any Judg- of the words of Him who spake as man never spake! These, yes these ment that mav be secured. . Some- are only a ,ew of the exultations body is alwayg insisting upon mak- tttal one to tne suonmesi ing life miserable for the careless heights of enjoyment. That build automobile driver. FUTURE DATES the giant edifice of thought upon the solid foundations of the world's beginning. Little by little, step by step, from the cave to the gilded man sion, from the naked savage to the polished statesman, from John The rising prices and enormous dealings in stocks in Wall street reflects th arener&l feel in r of on- , , .. . . I April 27, Thursday 100th AnniTerssry umum concerning iuo u u 11 u uus-. 0f birth of U. a. Unit. Iness condition of this country, and I regarding the outlook for the fu ture. The corner was turned a while back, and things are begin ning to go strong. April 16 to 25 "Better Hosts" week ia Salem. ADril 21. Friday Dual debate at Wal lr halt. College of Paget Sound . Willamette nnii-ity. Anvil 91 .miinr1 Anril 91 matinm Dane recital, "Bottwrfliea Ball," Grand the Baptist preaching in the wll- Xbeater, benefit1 Salem hoapitaL April 21. Friday Company F Smoker. April 24, Monday Prof. Pannnio tee- tabernacle with the whole world hm . W T1 im.ltA tinivAraitw h.njhl I uiw mm " r . ... . . i . Profiles of Prejudice!." s p.m. I for a listening auaience, irom tne feather and the piercing arrow to ADril 27. Thorelday 100th anniTer-1 ho hlar Rortha frnm th hlrch m ntMh of IT fl nrantL I , r. . -. , . , April 28. Friday State tax committee canoe 10 ine incumparauie ureau- tft meet In Salem. I tho faUKfnl KnnVa April 29, Satnrday Hospital banquet I """S"' ' " at Marion hotel, eyenms. April 30 Sunday Hospital Radio is capturing the boys in greater numbers than any other of their enthusiasm since the early bicycle days, except war. It Is raising up a generation of young scientists and results are bound to be important to the whole. human race., Chioago News. . "The voters are red up on post ponement," says the American Economist, referring to the tariff bill. They surely are, and dis gusted to the limit. It is to be hoped that the current proceedings In congress mean an end to post ponement and procrastination and dillydallying and all other forms of monkey business. There is no magic in govern ment. t Is made up of you and me and the rest of us, associated in various activities. Its only Sunday ; kirk-off of hospital fnnd campaign. ADril SO. Sunday Blossom day. May 1. Monday W. W. Ellsworth. noted editor and literary nan, to address Willamette students. May 4. 6 and 6. Oherrian Cherrlnro. May 5, Friday Junior play. "It Paya to Adrertise," Willamette nniTertity. May 5 and 6. Friday and Saturday- Junior week-end festival at Willamette. May 6, Saturday Founders' Day cel ebration at Champoea. May 12, iridiy concert by Mary; Schults, violinist. Grand theatre. , May IS. Saturday Junior week-end entertainment at O. A. C Mar 19. FridayPrimary aleetlon. May 19, Friday Open house, science department of high school. May 20, Saturday Marion County school athletes meet. May 26 and 27, Friday and Saturday May Festival. Oratorio Creation Friday ia armory; Urine pictures Satnrday nixht. Jan 8, Saturday Automobile races. at state lair grounds. - . June 6. Monday Track meet. Wills! tt and Pacifio University at Foresi, throve. Jnna 14. Wednesday Flar Day. June IS, Friday High achool sradua- tion. June 2S-20, July 1 Coarentlon of Oregon Fin Chiefs aasociatioa at Marsh- field. July t and 4 Monday sad Tuesday. State convention of Artisans at Woodbura, September 13, Wednesday Ore go" Methodist conference meets in csiem. September 11, ll and lsPudlatra iwand-np. September 25 SO ineleslvo Oregon Stats Fair. -November T. Tuesday Oeneral alee BOTTOOs, -TUDT tFOXTS m sumos FLAT WORK Copyright, 1922, Associated Editors The Biggest little Paper in the World Edited by John H. Millar made the unimpeachable records. Books, books, books! Thou art the stepping stone from birth to the ultimate, flaming torches through the vicissitudes of time whose light shines brighter and brighter with the perfect day Without that light, the Indian, the Hottentot, the Eskimo might live In the same groveling sen suality, alone with his whiter neighbors but little higher In the scale of humanity; no feeling of the great thrills that, through books, energize the whole living, thinking, throbbing mind of man. Oh books, books, books! Thou art the reservoir, the storehouse, from creation to eternity; the guide-board on the world of des tiny, the boulevard for oncoming generations where travelers will crowd and jostle on the highway to knowledge. Thou art also the receptacles for discarded notions and wornout theories with warning signs to the unwary. Thou art the golden ladder that reaches to the realms of the ethereal where one may eit and muse among the i stars. . Little scraps of wisdom, little dreamy thoughts, little visions of - I eternity, .little gleams of destiny of man are caught by the phono- ; A MAY DAT PAGEANT A plain stage with a green car tain at the back ia all that is needed to stage a little May pa geant using a number ot charac ters. . - (Enter four girls In k row. They are wearing galoshes, and rain coats and carrying big umbrellas. They come to the center of the stage.) . , . GIRLS: April's such a rainy month X ' . You can't go anywhere Unless yon have a bumbershoot. Although, the skies are fair; , For sure as you're away from , home The skies will turn to gray Annd bucketstul of rain descend , To spoil another day. . FIRST GIRL: April's such a ' rainy month, My hat is Just a sight. - SECOND GIRL: And . all the curl has left my hair , X simply look a fright. TI IIRD GIRL: Those slippers ' that I cherished so With mud are caked and brown. FOURTH GIRL: And every time a picnic's planned -The rain comes pouring down. (Enter April, a tall girl In a flowing gray gown. The four girls step backwards, as April comes to ma iron 1. 1 , APRIL: April Is too name I'm -called; : -$ --r'-r I'm not Well liked, It's true, ' Because you never stop to count The good things that I do.'" (April, Waves her hand, and lour. rain, drops,' girls In gray dresses and with silver paper caps, scamper in, hand in hand.) RAIN DROPS: We're the drops of April rain r - That play such naughty tricks; We bring tha misty, molsty air And form the mud that sticks. But that la not the only thing That we can do, you see. s For were it not lor April rain No blossoms would there be. (The rain drops scamper off again. Then the first c rain drop returns, hand . in hand with a girl In violet-colored ; crepe paper dressed to represent a violet) A. FIRST RAIN DROP: Violets, violets, blooming in the ':'- spring. ": V Hiding in the marsh or mossy'," ; dells. 1 . (Enter second v rain drop and daffodil.) ;.. ' . SECOND RAIN DROP: Daffo dils, daffodils, blooming In . the spring. See them ring their dainty golden bells. (Enter. . third rain drop and crocus.) : . :':.. , THIRD RAIN DROP: Crocuses, crocuses, blooming in the spring. They're such gay and blithesome little flowers. (Enter fourth rain drop and red tulip.) FOURTH RAIN DROP: Tulips bright, tulips bright, bloom ing in the spring. With a cup to catch the gentle showers. r ; -' '--.. (Enter May In bright blue Iress with flower wreath in her hair.) MAY: Did my friend, sweet . April, call, laying, .''Time for May"? Tor after all it's prll calls: To life the flowers gay. (April and 'May join hands at the front of the stage. Girls, rain irops, and flowers form a circle about them.) -.- , 4 GIRLS: We can stand the April , showers, For soon they'll pass away,' -. - As smiles come chasing after tears; ' - ALL: All hail to lovely May! pi I know two twins who are so much alike that they borrow money from themselves without knowing It. ONE REEL YARNS f 4 THE SACRED COW HIS is the story of the Sacred Cow and the Boy who didn't know any better. Now it's easy enough tl tell about .the Sacred Cow, for ever since she could remember she had lived. In state in the temple yard, but there's much more to the story of the Boy who didn't know any better. His mother worked as cook in the Louner family. The Roy had tumbled around the house and grown up with the Louner puppies and the Louner horses. And when one day his mother, who had never -paid much attention to him anyway went off and never came back, he stayed on. - i nd when old Mr. Bolton Louner got an appointment to. represent his country in the court of a far eastern prince, j he took the boy along. . , ' : So that -wasthow he- happened on the Sacred Cow. 'He felt sorry for ths Cow, standing all alone in the , little square before the tem ple. He didn't know it was a Sa cred Cow. guarded by the temple priest, and no one dared touch her.-.. Once the boy put his hand over the fence to pat her on the nose, but the priest came out and called to him in strange words, so he decided the old man was par ticular about the cow, and after that he visited the cow when no one was looking, taking her hay from the Louner stable. Then one day Mr Louner came to 'the Boy, " looking very much worried. "One of the guards o( the palace . has - reported to the Prince," he said, "that yon were seen , taking hay to the Sacred Cow last night." The Boy looked puzzled.' Then I -"SSd MEAT CAUSE OF sSjill KIDNEY TROUBLE Mia. I J alT V pvA ft T- s i ii i - hi- Take Salts to flush Kidneys li Back Hurt or Bladder bothers. he said, "Oh, you mean that poor old cow in front of the funny place on the corner? Sure I took her hay. The guy that keeps her gets money to buy her hay from some wheres and be has the hay brought In, all right, but he sneaks it out back at night and sells it cheap to some of the sta blemen of the English families here. I've seen It.' The poor old cow's about half starved. I like her." , 'So Mr. Louner told the story to the prince, and the prince set spies to watch the priest, and the end of it was that the old priest dis appeared, the Sacred Cow got plenty of hay and grew fat and contented, and the Prince gave a ring all set with jewels to the Boy who didn't know any better. TODAY'S PUZZLE Fill the second blank In each sentence with a word using the same letters used in the word which fills ths first blank:-"-1. rabbits are often raised for "Alice attended many in the Answer to yesterday's: s-nip-e. - Real lTlnees V Mother: Don't yon Jhink we had better send for the, doctor?" Father: "Oh no, Jimmy has Celt ill before and got over It.. . . Mother (anxiously): - "But never on a holiday." It you must have your meat ev ery day.' eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally. says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyses the kid neys In their efforts to expel ii from the blood. They v become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains In the back or sick headache, dizziness your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full or sediment, the channel often gets ; sore and Irritated, obliging you tc seek relief two or three times dur ing the night To neutralise these Irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and to flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here r take a tablespoonful in a glass o' water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will the" act Tne. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes nd lemon juice, combined with lithia. and has been used for genera tions to flush and stimulate slug gish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates.. thus ending , bladder weakness. i - Jad , Salts Is inexpensive: can not injure, and makes a delight ful effervescent ' u lithla-water drink, AdV. -n Cute Little Novelty Kerchiefs 25c and 35c Smart are these little squares of colored linen neatly embroidered in one corner. . ,e.3a3aT . Dame Fashion Says Ear-rings! and ear-rings it must be The Vogue tor Jewelry The black and white vogue finds delightful expression in the cut jet and crystal jewelry so smartly in evidence. Crystal in high col ors is also a favorite for neck laces, bracelets and ear-rings, without; which Milady, of Fashion feels but indifferent- r ly dressed this season. ;. Beads at 59c, 75c up to $7 JO a string Ear-rings 79c up to $238 a pair Handbags $2J0 upto.$7-50 French Flower Bouteniers 39c up to 69c each Rhinestone Bar Pins 75c up to $2 JO Fancy Hat Pin Ornaments 98c, $1 25 Bracelets 75c and $lMj2achV r There's always something new - coming into our store daily. - .. ' ' YOUR MAIL ORDERS Carefully and promptly filled. We pay the postage or express on each order within a radius of a hundred miles'. Salem Store 466 State street Portland Silk Shop 383 Alder street We Can and Do Undersell Others v 1000 1 FAIRY ars of SOAP ' On Special Sale Fxiday Only Regular 10-cent Bars SPECIAL A BAR Limit Five Bars to Customer mm mm Large Size Package GOLD DUSTT Regular Price 40c FRIDAY ONLY 30c Always More InducWe Everyday Low Prices at Our Store " This Store of fers its patrons An Added Discount On purchases at thi3 store through our Premium Coupons given on all purchases f of 50c or over. Free Deliveries with orders of $2.00 and over. Blue Ribbon Flour, 49 pound sack Barton's Bacon, per pound . ... Barton's Lard, put up in pound packages. Mustard, per bottle 6 medium Dill Pickles Sweet Pickles, per pint Diamond W Coffee, per pound Peaberry Cbffee in bulk, per pound Cocoa, per pound u, White Wonder Soap, per bar Old Dutch Cleanser Cream Oil Soap ; .$1.65 .26c 18c .10c .10c .25c ,35c 10c . 4c . 9c 7c