TTTE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON -WEDNESDAY' MORNING. AUGUST 9. 1922 ' leaned Dally Except Monday by . TUB STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPAJTT . Z16 S. Commercial St., Salem, Oregon (Portland Office, (27 Board of Trade Handing. Pboaa Automatic --- - 511-sa r r ; MJKMBKR OP TUK ASSOCIATED PRESS The Aasoclated Preai la exclusively entitled to the dm for publi cation of all newt diapatchei credited to It or not otherwise credited te thla paper aad alo the local new published herein. It. J. Hendricks . . . , . . . Manager Stephen JL Stone . .'. . . . . .... .Managing Editor Ralpn Glover ........................ ....... Cashier Frank JakoakJ,...............,........M..w.Manager Job Dept. TELEPHONES: Botlneas Office, St Circulation Department. Elt Job Department,' 683 Society Editor. lOf Entered at the Poatof flee in Salem, REPUBLICANS RESTORED CONFIDENCE , The credit value of confidence is emphasized by the' Re publican Publicity Association in a statement issued through the president of that organization. Hon. Jonathan Bourne, Jr., formerly United States Senator from Oregon. The state ment says: j5 "It is a well-known fact in the business world that the man wno is urgently in need of credit usually can't get it, while the man who can get it usually does not need it In the latter part of 1920 and the early part of, 1921, the American farmer' was in the position of urgently needing credit, bui he couldn't get it. : " . "This curcumstance is called to mind by the recent ad dress delivered by Eugene Meyer, Jr., manager of the Wat Finance Corporation, an institution that was designed par, ticularly to help market farm crops. Picking out a few sen tences that touch directly upon the agricultural situation ir. the years mentioned, we quote from Mr. Meyer: 'In 1920, just as the farmer was beginning to harvest his crops the price of farm products, 'and with it the purchasing power ol thf? farmnr. HppHtipH nhnintlv ' Tha cnllonoQ nf loon . due,1 in no small measure, to the pressure upon the agricul tural producer and the stockman to liquidate loans in a short er time than was necessary to market his output in an order ly manner; The prices received by the farmer for his prod ucts under forced liquidation and hasty selling impaired his buying power. .... Early in 1921, Congress decided, in the fare' of opposition on the part of the late administration, that something ought to be done, and revived the War Finance Corporation as" a piece of emergency machinery.' ' "Those facts are a matter of record. The War. Finance fVimnratlnn rnt 1-mov tpitVinnf o lav's talov onH luan v vidjng credits; and giving assurances of more. Agriculture began to revive out of all proportion to the amount of loans actually Tfade the revival being due in large part to the knowledge that the farmers could get credit. . ' -; "This reminds us of an incident during the panic of 1893, when there wis a great run on banks. In a small town where there were. two banks, there was a run on the smaller insti tution and a crowd of depositors jammed the entrance trying to get their money. While the rush was at its height, the president of the rival bank appeared behind the crowd and beckoned to the head of the bank that was being raided. The latter, got as do3e to the door as he could and the banker on the outside shouted 'How are things going, John? If you need any morfey, let me know and 111 send it over.' With that information depositors were satisfied and dispersed, j. . ."That' was practJcally- what happened to the farmers. Uncle Sam, seeing the pressure that was brought to bear uponithe agricultural producers, called out, How are things going, Mr. Farmer? If you need any more money, let me 1 j mi f a . . . -. w turn a a bciiu n. over. farmers saw that the money Hp on the pressure. Uncle loans, on good security, but 1 9Cm $0 i atc-OT s-rc-iJ Copyright, 1022, Associated Editors MbiBcSRirdou's fioWiv MIn ,B4K-PardoR ) Return from . V, Visit ' to : Camp -i "I am deeply shocked by the behavior of the. young ladles of today," said Miss Cornelia : Beg Pardon of Pine ' Court, when in tervteweed by a Spooneryille Gaz ette v reporter.; Miss Beg-Pardon has just returned from a .week end visit to Camp Peachfuzx, the populac summer camp for the members of the Spooneryille jjounger set.' t "1 was anrnrlnd tn u tba e-lrla clinbing fences, running races, and f deporting .themselves ' like young . hoodlums," i added - . Miss Beg-Pardon. , . 'Something should 09 aone aoouc u. . t. , wiiaa ucfrsruuD, who is UCS- cendant of the famous Beg-Pardon family otVirginia, greeted the re- SP00N-D0LL ADVIOTURES t T " "1 s porter in an imported dreas jmademade-of lightweight wlre and Oregon, aa second elass matter Ana wnen me creaiiora oi tne would be forthcoming, they let Sam did furnish considerable the benefits were far in excess The Biggest .Little paper In the totorld i i ' ' ' - f. Is Vasv lor iou lo 'rosy lorpi lo moke from a strip of salmon pink crepe paper, slightly frilled at the top and bottom and held in at the waist by a wide sash of the same material. She wore spark ling ear-rings made of bits of roll ed crerTe paper covered with silver flitter and dangling: from black thread. Her red-brown hair' of cmshedjCrepe paper 4wis arranged high on her head. : Miss Beg-Pardon was not ready to state when she would open the Beg-Pardon country home near Spoonervllle. " : v Make Miss Beg-Pardon Thla Way v. A paper spoon .with a water color complexion, and with long lashes; eyes,, nose and mouth of India Ink is the foundation for. Miss Beg-Pardon.-: Her arms are of the actual advances in cash. The Democratic administra tion had brought pressure to bear upon the' farmers, and the Republican administration relieved the pressure. Mr.' Meyer does not state the facts so directly as, that, but the record shows that to be, in the main, the true story of the agricul ural depression and revival " ' Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, is dead. When he calls up Central in heaven may the line never bi busy. Exchange. Miss Alice M. Robertson has been renominated by the Republi cans of the Second district of Ok lahoma. It Is mighty hard to beat a woman who makes' eof fee like mother- need to,-. -- - Oh, well, Dreckeoridge Long is accustomed to defeat.'v In I920 h was' skinned by Senator ' Selden Palmer Spencer by the brutal ma jority of 121,683. Hissourl is uncertain In political matters. The death of Dr. Alexander Graham Bell recalls the trouble he had selling stock in the first company organized to exploit the telephone. Mark Twain says Bell offered him a handful of stock for $500, and he did not have the nerve to invest. The humorist had just been bitten in a stock deal and he Was "gun-shy." But he missed the opportunity to make a fortune. The free trade newspapers of New York are desperate now in their attacks on the protective tariff bill. Must be getting warm; about ready to be put over.'" For which the great majority of the people of this country will be thankful, and all ought to be. - There will be more about pears and other interesting' things In the Pep and Progress pages of The Statesman of tomorrow. Our people must grow more and' more Bosc and Bartlett pears. WKLL-SPEXT LIFE i - The old timers had something of a literary sensation back in the '70a when it was learned that the Charles Egbert Craddock, , who had been writing .strong, virile and thoroughly masculine stories of the Tennessee mountain folk, was none other than Mary. Noall lea If urfree. a wisp of a girl who FUTURE DATES v August 9, Wodaesdsy Wisconsin pic nic at stat (air grounds. Aurntt 17, Thursday lows picnic at fair froands. Ananas 26, Bsturdy iRinjlinf Bar nam Bailer circus. September 1, i and 4 Round op at StartoB. September' 2, S and 4 Lakavlav Retind-np, Laieriew, Or. . September 6. Wednesday Orefoa Methodist Conference. Salem. September 7. 8 and 9 State Elks renvcBtton, Seaside. September 3 V. 22 and SI Pendleton ronnd-np. September S5 te SO laelnalva Oregon Stata - fair. - - - - -eber 5, 8 and 7 Polk County fair, Dallas. - November T. Toesday General aloe (ton. covered with flesh-cplored crepe paper.' The lorgnette is simply fine wire covered with black crepe paper and bent Into shape. Florence Winee. I THE SHORT STORY, JR. : BROTHER BEAXPOLE "Of all the long, lanky tooth picks, grinned Joe Weber, "Steve Mullin sure is the worst. He's so awkward he steps on himself. What's , Ping have to bring a stork like him along for?" "I dunno. ' He sort of likes him. And anybody Ping brings always gets by." Ping, the shorty of the crowd, was their favorite. His good na ture, wit and daring made him welcome everywhere. Therefore the rest of the boys decided to put up with his ungainly guest, for the time being at least. Their camp was far up the Wa haba flyer. There they . fished and bunted, moving their camp farther. down stream-ach .day. One morning, as the boys were scattering after breakfast Ping offered to take SteveJor ft ride in his canoe.. "Don't you boys go far," , cautioned Mr. Denton. ''There are rapids farther down, you . know. Since, these midsum mer rains, that parf of the river is much worse." Ping nodded absent-mindedly, and the two boys started off. Ping paddled easily,-and the two boys talked eagerly. Steve could talk to Ping as to no one else, i "Seems to me we ought to be getting back," said Steve abrupt ly. They had forgotten, as they talked, Mr. Denton's warning. -. i "Dldnt- realize we . were going so ; fast," answered Ping. He tried to turn the boat, but a giant's hand seemed to be pulling It on. A roaring sound beat in their ears. "The, rapids!" shout ed Ping. "We're'headed straight for them and we never could swim in this current, either.t ; He yel led for help at the top of his voice, knowing it was useless. "Lboky." said Steve In his slow way "There's a tree limb ahead sticking straight over the water. Looks- strong enough. - B'lieve was a cripple and paralytic, -But rueh was the tact, and jher vigor ous tales continued, to be. pub lished under her masculine nom de plume. ; She wrote of what she knew, however, for she was" born at Murfreesboro. Tennessee- a town named after her distinguish. ed revolutionary ancestor and oc cupied by succeeding generations of the name. What she published was eiean aad wholesomey" and even to this day her' stories hold a deserved popularity. , Now, at th-? age of 72, she has passed on. leaving none bat fragrant menr ories behind,- COMIXG EVENTS A child born, in Dakota the other day is said to have been marked with unusually long ears like a mule. Dehold the fu ture head of the Nonpartisan League. Exchange. Not in North Dakota. The peo ple of that state will not forget their disastrous experiences with the Nonpatisan League, or get over paying for the folly of their experiences with it, in time . to give this new child another whirl at it. . But perhaps he may move to some other ' state and make rood use of his natural endow ment. THE SCHOOL BOOTLEGGER The ruperintendents of public instruction are starting out after bootleggers who are said to be specializing in the sale, of illicit hooch to -the pupils of high schools In the larger cities. This is the most infamous type of of fender. Traffic with old-time souses and sports was to have been expected, but the outlaws whowould supply poisonous con traband to' the untrained palates of the young should have little mercy shown them. The fact that a thing Is forbidden makes it ap pealing to certain unfledged souls. Those who would create a rising generation of law-breakers merit the' full pressure of the law with which they cope. CHEAPEN FILMS Two Czechs In Prague are said to have invented a paper that can be used instead of celluloid in the ' making of moving-picture films. It is not inflammable and will not cost a twentieth of the price of present film. The picture is printed on the film and repro duced by reflection. For cheaper pictures and home consumption the discovery - is said to offer splendid possibilities. - It is being tried out In this country. Some thing advantageous to the Indus try may result. Edited by John H. Millar can reach. Get a tight hold on my leg. Two other boys in the camping party came running out on the oppositee shore just in time to see the tall boy stretch up sud denly in the canoe and grab the jutting limb. They saw him work his way toward the tree, the smal ler boy clinging to him, until they were near enough that Ping could swing onto the bank. "Gosh," said Joe Webber, as they talked about it afterwards, "ain't it lucky we brought good old Brother Beanpole along? Guess this gang never goes out without him after this, . and it's not only because he's tall." I PICTURE PUZZLE - WHAT 15 MARY PLANNING TO & WtttN 5H 0R0W3 UP? XTOfOS wou 4 POjODS AND THEIR RELATION TO BOXES AND TISSUE (Fifth article in a series of ar ticles by Paul O. Sampson, na tionally known food expert.) A lamentable cry is going up from the dentists of our land be cause of their inability to fit a set of teeth where the patient is suffering from pyorrhea of the guma. Weeks and weeks in the treatment of this condition seems to afford but little relief. When the teeth are finally fitted, the ild trouble often returns, and the dentUt U blamed for not properly fitting the teeth to the mouth. i Our foods have much to do with a healthy month. A noted chef in one of the leading hotels of the southland told me that his teeth were loosening, and he be came alarmed for fear that he might lose them. Investigating foods that he might determine what ones particularly fed the teeth and bones, he found that by proper eating his teeth soon be came solid and his gums in a healthy condition. We find the calcium salts that especially is a bone food to be in the outer skins of vegetables and grains. Especially is this so of the potato. The baked potato is a valuable food if it Is so pre pared that the skins are palat able. The average restaurant po tato is unsavory, as well as come of the household bakes. Let me uggest to those who prepare the potato after having washed them, to oil slightly with some vege table oil and then place in the oven and bake. You will have a real food, not only in its mineral contents of the skins, but a real colon food as well. As the horse needs roughness, so our bodies need the fodder for good health. Too much concentrated foods are eaten. The lack of chewing foods and thus calling for a good healthy flow of saliva has much to do with an unhealthy mouth and throat. When the fluids of the mouth flow freely the pores are kept healthy and thus many of the diseases of the mouth are avoided. To stimulate an un natural flow of saliva by the chewing of gum uses excessively of these fluids and will work an inestimable harm. If gum is shewed it should beat'the close ?f the meal and then only for a tew moments, which helps to :leanse the teeth, but the tooth brush is much preferable. The peeling of most foods is wheteaome and palatable when prepared in the proper way. To Dil an apple before baking makes t much more desirable. rNMERGER OR DISMEMBER J1ENT? Here is an illustration that mts the Southern-Central Pacific situation in clear view: In discussing the controversy between the Southern Pacific and the Union Pacific, the words "un merger" and "dismemberment" are often employed indiscrimin ately. Since the lines composing the Pacific coast system were built together, they were not merged; therefore they can not oe unmerged. They would sim ply be dismembered pulled apart physically and financially. A lumber operator over on Coos bay who was, an. active busi ness man in California for about 25 years and knows the history of rfilroad building in that state, remarked when he heard of the icderal supreme court decision: 'They've ordered something done that can't be done. I could im agine a judge in a divorce suit ordering the joint property dN vided between the plaintiff and the defendant, but if the most valuable piece of property hap- uinai) in ho a child, it couldn't be divided without dismembering it. and I'm afraid the pieces wouldn't be worth much after the opera tion. If they unjoint the S. P. and the C. P. in the interior of California, and then would offer me the C. P. remnants for 1, with me obligated . to oplerate them, I'd look at the dollar sev eral times before I took the of fer." Marriage In New Guinea Pigs are not rated particularly h'gh in any country, but in New Guinea they are considered more valuable than women. , It is a handsome woman indeed there who costs the btidegoora more than two pigs and a few elamshell bracelets. The payments are made on the installment plan and are stopped In case the bride proves unsatis factory. Exchange. It required three days to count the money in the San Fran cisco mint. But don't mention it to congress. Exchange. 1 J it1 XA Jlajhmb mtukum pilu. M ts rf ar I BITS FOR BREAKFAST j "Woodman, spare that tree." S An awful protest has gone up arainst the order of the Salem city council to cut down the red wood trt-e in North Summer street, near Division, in front of the ; home of George G. Brown. So the city authorities mill halt the proceedings, to let the lovers Of trees in Salem Vave time to devise ways and means for sav ing this tree, ang to render it safe in the heavy traffic on that atreet which will begin with the opening of the street at the end of the month; when most of the Pacific Highway travel will comei that way, at least for a year, when it is expected to . have Capitol street opened and paved to the Fair. Grounds road. Now that the halt has been made, sugges tions are in order. Lights should be provided, for one thing. Per haps the tree should be fenced, or parked. This is. the largest redwood tree in or near Salem, and the moa conspicuous. It is historical. It was set out by the late William Waldo. It is a beautiful tree. Wh0 has sugges tions What shall be aone about it? A public discussion is in vited. " "I have read with great Inter est the articles by the expert on 'Food Values and Their Chemical Changes;' though all the rules the writer says we must keep are almost impossible because of cer tain fixed habits fastened uuon thn imorlrnn nilhlic thrU.h viavf - r gourmandizing and letting ous teeth dig our graves. Wn'.l you through your excellent iaper tell us where we can reach the writer and secure more kirbwledge from some book that the author may recommend to follow and give ' mn ii a to follow? Can we Ret in menus to follow? Can we get touch with tj.e writer personally to get first hand information?" Thus writes a Statesman reader The address of Paul O. Sampson Is Los Angeles, Cal.. 615 South Grand avenue, care the Sulley News Service. But he is still In Salem, and he is to give at least three more addresses, under the auspices of the Roth Grocery Co., as the reader . may find by con sulting items on the City News page of The Statesman of this morning. li S , "You cannot say too many good things about the band concerts," says a friend of The Statesman. He points out that great crowds always attend the band concerts In Willson avenue; that people come from Albany, Corvallis, Aurora and Silverton and Wood burn, and all the other surround ing towns and cities, and from every point of the compass, to at tend the concerts. He declares that the music is of a high order, and that the concerts are an asset of great -value to Salem, In ma terial as well as other ways. To ill of which this humble reporter fully agrees, and it is a good thing to pass it along, and to let the men of the band and those in any way connected with the concerts know that their efforts are ap preciated. Boost the band and the band concerts. . V "W - Speaking of the health articles of Paul O. Sampson, it is not too KEEP OREGON DOLLARS AT HOME Gone Palmer Day Vanisfaln Gene Palmer Night fasag Gene Palmer Lemon Crea In Tubes. Gene Palmer Face Powder Gene Palmer Marvelous S leading hair dressers la 1 ftoap) r. . , .; . "Gone Palmer" "White. St a hold remedy, per tube . , "Gene ' Palmer" "Radio-Rej and tissue builder) "Gone Palmer" Hair Ton "Gene Palmer Astringent. Pace Powder Compacts (a Hough Comparts (all .had Lip I'omeade (all nhadea) Eye Brow Pencil (all shad i vrrn OREGON DOLLARS AT 1 1 wmiF DANCER AGAIN HOME. . TV 111 r T v i.'v;y !s r ' i ' Lau... Miss Margaret Ilawkeswrtn, famous American dancer; who has been having a European va cation, snapped upon her return to t!e States on board tfce Olympic. much to say that they have yi roused a wide interest and that fcey are destined to do a lot of d to extend the span of life of many, and make living more pleasant as they go along the srnv lnA nf tha hoat fhlnp in the Worfd Is good Health. - S S The summer home of E. B. McLean Is to be the home of Pres ident and Mrs. Harding, during the hot spell in Washington. E. B. McLean is the only son of the late John R. McLean, owner, of the Cincinnati Enquirer, and President Harding was elected to the Ohio Senate in 1899, the year that McLean was defeated for the governorship of Ohio by the late George K. Nash. At that lime "Eddie" was a little boy running around in knickerbockers at the old Kelly home on - East Broad street, Columbus, where McLean had his Campaign headquarters.' V Three years ago Will II. Hays was an obscure lawyer at Sullivan, Ind., and an Inconspicuous elder of the local Presbyterian church. Today he is at the Jiead of the moving picture business and one of the hikhest-salaried officials in the United States. " 'm , It has been discovered that Charles Piez, former head of the United States Fleet Corporation, who was divorced last December, was married in January to his stenographer and is now in Eur ope on his honeymoon. Love will find a way. 5? ft Hi Today and AH This Week Free Demonstration "Gene Palmer' Toilet Preparations , . Not only just as good but superior to many, are the famous "Gene Palmer" Toilet Preparations, made right here in our own state at Portland. Today and all this week Miss Mildred Scover of Portland witf demonstrate the different articles of this famous make and each lady will be presented with a free sample of "Gene Palmer Face Pow der. Below is a list and the prices of the various "Gene Palmer" preparations. g Cream ..,..$1.00 e Cream. $1.00 m CleanHing (in jars) fi.OO 7 (in all shade) $1.00 hampoo (used by all ., enton-tar ' and green .T5 r Ointment", the hoaae- UIO avenator' (a massage tl.OO " fl.OO .'.$1.00 11 shades) . t . f i ,""5 ")... i.:. .r.'. .5 ) ...25c 1 GxrfGootfii: 9 J Vyl& Monthly pitas. V neuraJgfc. sciatic a , mvuiuuw At' pains, headache, backache and f alt other aches are quickly re lieved by ' ; , ' ? Dr.Miles'AnU-rilnPlUs r - Contain no dangerous hab ; t forming drugs, f Vhy, doat yoa ! try them? ' ' : ... - ". X ' Ask your iinjggist t : - ; i : TODAY - " and TOMORROW After making sacrifices Galore, risking her Honor and Life For a man she was con demned as it FAITHLESS" AN IT A STEWART QueUonloJ lfonor FIRST TIME IN SALEM Thrills a Plenty ' ...- : Vr . :: ' The famous Star in a dra matic and daring part, with a fine cast that carries this story to a powerful climax. - : A Comedy and a Weekly Too Coming Elaine Hammerstein KEEP OREGON DOLLARS AT . HOME KEEP OREGON .DOLLARS pflr ;-'AT -HOME i ; it h if i t: i r t V 7