) ..-"'a - Issued Dally Except Monday by ' - TIIE 8TATESJIAX PUBLISHING OOilTAXV i.' 215 S. Commercial St, Salem. Oregon (Portland Office. 637 Board of - - 611 V MEMBER OP TUB 'The "Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. K, J. Hendricks Stephen A. Stone Ralph Clover ....... Frank. Jaskoskt TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23 Circulation Department. : 583 i Job Department, 583 Society Editor, 10 Entered, at the Postofflce In Salem, .Oregon, as second class: matter 'J LESSONS OF; ELECTION RESULTS f Off-year elections are traditionally disappointing to the party in power; and the election of the 7th was ho exception td this rule. Both houses ,of Congress will be Republican . But with reduced majorities-- ' j, ; , f 'And many familiar faces will be missing when the ses sion opens on March 4th next. But the losses of the notables "are fairly distributed between the two parties. - . These off-year elections are seldom decided on par tisan issues. When the Presidency Is not at stake, locr.l quar rels and petty disputes occupy the attention of the elector ate. To appreciate this one has but to reflect that Senator Hitchcock, Democrat, -"of Nebraska," who led the fight in the senate for .the.ratificationnf. the League of Nations' covenant without reservations was defeated for r reelection ; ... while SehAtof IgHh-mbitteTed personal and political enemy of President Vyilson, narrowly' escaped defeat in'Iassachu seiiv .. -V" ::--y -v--'. '-h ',-. rlii New -Jersey the election hinged on - the wet"-and "dr":; Issue; and former Governor-Edwards, who-rnakes a parade'ol this pp'psitiontdvthe"eighteehth amendment, ;de- crys; . -; .. .... 4 ' .-Fetor Republcian tears ViH beshed over the loss of sen atorial seat, in Maryland. Senator France, although running ! ort the Republican ticket, is known both as an extreme radi cal antfa-"bitter-ender."-J4 was awed witn wonnson, uoran and LaFollette m his opposition to the four-power treaties. Republicans of. Maryland refused tq.support,a 'candidate who usm the party name as a mask for this radicalism. His op ponent is -a conservative, and will .vote with the present , ad ministration, except-on strictly partisan measures;. - .: Republicans of North, Dakota joined with the Democrats to ttefeat a Republican senatorial candidate who captured the nomination by reason of the direct primary. He is a member of the notorious Nonpartisan League, and his defeat was In '.rcLlity a defeat of wfflcalisjn: ; .' Ex-Senator Beveridge, a. former .Progressive lately re turned, to' the Republican fold, went down to defeat Jn In-. di:a. -By defeating Senator New in the primaries the Re publicans of .Indiana lost the senatorship. Mr. Beveridge led Via revolt in the Mdidle West against the Republicaa! party in lf)12. iand thus lost the rizht to make an appeal t6 party - - . loyalty uux xne real reason 01 ius aeieat waapruuaui vhcj uB6licitedendofsenienf whichTie received fronmal&rnlaiq American alliance. mat endorsement cor, mm many unny phchated votes. ' ; ' Senator Pomerene's defeat in Ohio was a personal vic tory for President Harding. The Democrats centered' their attack on this senatorship. claiming a victory for Pomerene would be a reDudiatlon of the Harding administration. Taking the results as a whole one discovers that the electionlwas not decided on national issues. Not one of the .Republican policies has been repudiated; not one of the Dem ocratic protests has been vindicated. V; ! "At, the time of the primaries there was a great hue and cry about the gains made by fformer Progressives in the Re publican ranks. : But the results In the general election in ' dicate that: former Progressives are not as successful against the Democratic opposition as Republicans whomever deserted . ths fold, rf .- ' ' fT ,. .. '4 t vr; . kcwXg mm TV' lk;;int, 123. Aocialwl Editors SUCCESSFUL Getting the Most Out of Haps ' j (This 4s Jbe seventh of a series of arUcles Vhl'ch'wilUhelp tonus students' to- learn more anT get betteif tradea by - showing them how to study more efficiently.) r : : When you are directed to locate eonlethlngLonj Kthe rvmap,, do you simply; flndi It, j point to u .wltn ypur pencil and note briefly", the state or country it is in, or ..Jo you locate It in your mind as well as on the map? . If you are driving an automobile, you soon learn to locate certain routes j by landmarks. A special house tells HOW . YCjHt. ' ' ; ". r ' . r s ; ' ) ' ; you where to turn; a bend in the roai reminds yon - that you- go ; norla at the next '.crossroad; -. a I bridge tells you how near you are , to the, next town. . -s.-,,' i t'e similar landmarks In locat ing points on the map. ''. C , yOjU will find, that, once you havB located a place, you can find It a gain easily If you remember that ( It was a certain distance aborb a bend in the Mississippi, ; or fipar a peculiar looking hook on .,he ' coastline. Then . if you haf?j to 'locate, t on a blank map, you can do it eiactiy. :. : t ; A BLiike" Your Own Map Tf"' a learn -to use. 'a map, .you h( U!d be "able to make maps also. In flstodylng a lesson which has to do,.wtth geography,: you can learn - metre s quickly, if you buy large blank;maps of the state or coun try : you are studying abou,t. Tlin as. yotiodyjCwrJteJn; names.iJf tow'os, products found la certain THE OREGON STATESMAN, Trade Bulldlrig. Phone Automatic - 93 1 ASSOCIATED PRESS ..Manager ............ Managing ioiwr .......... .....Cashier r i J I . Manager Job Dept. a. .. .t a.1 ' 1 ., The Biggest Little Paper la the World STUDYING parts of the countries, and other main features. - , , , ,'' " 'Do! not rlmply copy.: from a map in your boo'k, K'UjiJf, 1. Locate the town or river on the map in your book so L that you have it . clearly In mind. It It is a town; try to figure why it was located in that V particular : place and why certain industries are found there. Then look away from your v book ..and locate JbB place on the map you are making. These blank, maps mre inexpensive and well worth getting as sindy help. - ' s.v-' :i' . .. Try BeiniS m "Suryrjof. $ i , One boy who had to learn to draw the outline of his state fixed it in his mind by staking out the boundaries in his back yard, He took Bome.strlng.Tsome smsll wooden pegs,; and the map'i : :He used a scale 'of five miles to the inch; that is, where the boundary was two. hundred miles long, he staked out a line forty inches, or three feet and four Inches. 1y careful measuring he laid -out the curving lines' and soon had , the state complete. He liked doing it, as he Intends to be an engineer some day, aad be found it agood way to fix the bouirdariea Inhlsl mind. ui -. ... , THE SHORT STORT. JIL) Getting Billy's Goat What a life," sighed William Goatr-gazing ftK.crnftfl..tliharn.Thpr rffrftr-f Irmk nn thBrh-thvM yard. "Here I am, growing old, SALEM; OTtEGON Sophisticated Doliticians little to do with the defeat of Second Oregon district; and less to do with the election of a Democratic Gfovernor of Oregon,"fa the face of a Republican registered vote in this state of tered Democratic vote And in many states there to tell, or known to the wise birds m politics. .. . One result of the reduction of the Republican majority in the House of Representatives will be a tightening "bf the Republican ranks. In the last jority was so great as to be factions. The farmers bloc cost the tjartv at least a dozen that the Renublicans will have er house of some twenty votes conducive to party unity. ? Representative government func tions best where there is a dominant party and a strong op position' The vets are now, blaming; the Harding administration with. n- d ncin g the Kemallsts to make Thrace dry. . Colonel Bryan announces that he will deliver no more lectures on Darminlsm. It possibly Is no longer a drawing card. With the retirement of Associ ate Justice Clarke and the resig nation of Justice, William R. Day from the United States supreme court bench there will be but one Ohio ' man on" that 1 tribunal - Chief Justice WHam H.dTaft. Ain't that awful! Something will have to be 'done about It. Ex change. I - ,1- ", -vp-- Kind' women " are? on" trial throughout the United States for shooting at men. Evidently the right to shoot' Is one of the new ly acquired right's of the sex. The heaviest rainfall In October for 33 years, with three excep tions,, was recorded by -the soils department of the Oregon Agri cultural cortege In Corrallis last month. The precipitation of 4.88 Inches was ?.0 3 inches In excess of the mean "( normal . of 2.85 Inches. : ;'J- ' 1 ' The penitentiary flax plant, as has been related in the cblum of The Statesman several times, has realized a profit of '85 per cent in working up tfie crop of the past season, which! was a, poor sea son for tfha production of. the best fiber, owing . to the dry weather during the growing sea son. But there was one crop on which 114 per cent was real ized. This after the state was al lowed 75c a day board for ' tfife men, and the men allowed 2 5c day for their work, and all over hea'd charged up. "And the galea of the products have been at ab normally low prices, top. There is . no doubt whatever that the flax plant can . be made to pay, just as i Js ? But why leave it as Ai FUTURE: DATES! t KrmW H. Mody SaettUk , Bit Itmu I ant ia Balam. - NotibW 14. Tued7 ReprfBUtiT W. 0. Hawler t tpik Stlea Six O'clock elK Tint' MaOwlirt ehmrch. November 17. Friday Football. Wil-lam-tt mnirermitx and Pacific aniTertitr, St Foreal OnT. Nevambar 10. Tanradar Tasaksciriag laf. - ' " '- - lemmhi9 t, Batarday Baaaar, :8t Paol'a Caarek. 580 Chaaaakata. and Ive; never been' oft the farm. Kever had any adventures. I wish I conld see something of lite before I die." The more he thought about It, the more deter mined 'he was to cut loose from the farm. I -M. . So next morning "he slipped through a hole in the fence and went oft down the road. All day he kept on his way, and. late in the. afternoon he reached the edge of town. He tried to make friends with several people on the "way, but somehow-they avoided hlm.x . William wandered . a - while around tha outskirts of the town and then decided to enter boldly. By that time It wa almost dark, and "he ' was getting hungry; in spite of lunches he had picked" up from, tin cans on the; way. I think' I'll go dp ,to one of these hAuses,. he thought, "and ask for a hand-out, t he way I've ' seen tramps do at bur farm: 111 bet I have "better luck than they did. I'd like to see any one sick a dog on me." ' As he spoke he was passing, a graveyard. It was all so still that he felt lonely, as well as hun gry. He resolved to stop at the very next house. The house he chose was set back from the road amid a tangle of vines. It. seemed quite; desert ed." except for a glimmer of light in one of the front windows. Billy went bravely up to the "porch and looked curiously in the window. Two men were insIde.'Brin; ;the light over Tiere, Jake, said one. "Let's "go through this desk. C!mon, make it snappy. . I dont like this Job. It's too spooky around here," ... I ii wonder what they're saying." puxzled Billy. "Maybe I'd better! knock at the door." - j V Suddenly one of the . men ' looked in his dfrectlon, and made a very queer noise. .. "Look! , Something white a long beard! I have any sympathy for a hungry know, that political jssues had Congressman McArthur in the some 135,W0 above thej-egis- . ' ' tl is the same or a sirriflafr story Congress the Kepublican ma unwieldly. The party split in brought about a division 'that seats. The returns indicate a working majority in the low The menace of defeat will be it is? It can be made to pay aU the expenses , of the lnatltutlon. by adding the spinning of twine to the industry. And this woald be a great thing for our fisher men and farmers, and it- would help to build up the greatest in dustry In Oregon.' NO SUCH AXniAIi The new British premier has ''tranquility for a platform 'and a slogan, but; thus far the 'only place in the ' world where fran quillty can be found is. In .the dictionary. : .--i, - SO PAST TDIG FLIES' What has become . of the . old fashioned girl who bobbed, her hair and wore short skirts? Chi cago News. . . 4rHE tAXDLORD'S TROUBLES : .Pity the poor property "owner In Vienna. He was forbidden,, by law during and after the. war to raise rents. Apartments of two or three rooms 'arc bringing In what amounts to 3 cents a month in Americjtn money, There y ara hardly., homes enough to go around, but the : - families that were housed at the time of the vrar . cannot be put out very. easily nor can their rent be advanced. The man who owns the house i is the one who suffers. ; He .must take his rent at the old figure end it is In paper crown that are' worth less than nothing. Mean while his own taxes, have been boosted to the skies. Better f is A dinky little lot in Highland addi tion than a palace in Vienna. ; WOMEN AND THE HAREM I According to . recent rresfefarch" as recorded in the dispatchesthe women of iTtorkeyi are not-all giving . three cheers for their re cently acquired '' independence. Most of the old-tlmerl are still strong tor the harern -Now. a, lot of them have to get out and has-, tie for : their meals. In4 the u old days all they had to do was 'to sit on upholstered cushions In a nice warm harem and munch ho cojate creams. They could push the buzzer for coffee whenever' theyr felt -like it and. the- hours were spent In gossip and em Hmcon - PLAT , WQULV Edited by Joha H. Miliar" goat, Billy thought? nnd .lh drcwinto.the, shadows. - A side door was thrust violent ly open and two men almost fell over each 'plher In their haste to get v away from the "haunted house. '' "Wonder 1 what's up?" said Billy. "Must be some excite ment, and I've just missed it. Isn't that the worst luck! . It geU my goat. Seeing the world isn't what it's cracked up to be. Guest I'll go back to the farraZ I PICTURE-PUZZLE i WHAT WELL ISNOvVN DUOTATTON IS HEP P1CTUREO? V Aw i l,it puiale. lit iOre - broidery.- To ; go forth. Into a rough world and put In twelve hours a day In some factory or shop for the joy of being ind pendent does not appeal to all of them. They are aighlng for the good -old days when Mustapha rhelira. provided a nosebag for a whole flock of houri and oda lisks. It seems to be mighty hard to please all the women In the world. THE WIND-UP Down in New York a Tammany man wanted to lick Mayor Hylan because some official communi cation sent from the, mayor's of flee to his wife was signed by the mayor as "Tours Sincerely." He thought the Gotham executive was getting too blamed Intimate with his family. Hereafter . Jhe mayor will never be ,more than Yeurs Truly" to anybody. THE LAST,BIONOPOLY It has comeat last the suit by an aggrieved radio fan at Omaha to -enjoin the big radio Companies from taking all the air. Free air has a different meaning now from what it had when it was . used for breathing purposes only.. 0ome day breath ing-air may become a public util ity and be municipally owned and commissioned and "bloced" and placed on the ballot and then we shall all be able to turn politi cians. ; SCOURGE OF THE AGES Leprosy, the scourge of the ages, is apparently near its end. After 'raging over the A world, probably since the beginning of man,. ; it is at last being con quered by modern science. Egyptian prescriptions for the disease have been found dated 4600 B. C. Literature from Bible times to the present Is fill ed, with descriptions of lepers and hcw they have been stoned, killed or avoided with the utmost, fear rtnd disgust. In the Middle Ages the disease became extensively diffused in tttrope. At this time every town had its leper, house.- No means were found to conquer it, segre gation seemingly having no eJ- fictr. Yet strangely during the fif teenth century the disease under went , a remarkable diminution hhd practically disappeared from cfvMted parts of Europe.v . 4;v 7 At the cresent time tanrnqrv prevails extensively throughout Asia ana m Airica. it stui exists n Norway. Iceland, along the shores of the Baltic, in South Russia, Greece, Turkey, Spain and jPortugal.' ? It Is found In tetfly all parts of South and Cen- t a! America and In certain parts ht North America. Isolated cases thought to be imported appear everywhere. In the Hawaiian Islands the disease, unknown before 1848, is believed to have been - imported by Chinese, so that by 1882 there were reported to be 4000 lepers there, . . Because the disease seems to affect Islands and the sea coast- more than the interior an an cient belief Is held my many, that it Is caused 'or fostered by a fish diet. But leprosy is (found In the Interiors where fish is not an ar ticle of diet. As 'yet no theory advanced for its cause appears to be bullet-proof, but a cure does seem to have been found. It is Chaulmoogra. oil, an oil derived from the' flower of an East'In dian tree and given internally to the patients. ' i This treatment has been ad ministered at the leprosy settle ment ' at . Kalaupapa, 'Molokai. 6lnce 1919. The number of lepers thiere. la reported to . be steadily diminishing. Just recently the lerritorial board has recommend ed for "parole" sixteen men and STOP PAID OF When you are suffering with rheumatism so you can hardly get around just try Red Pepper Rub md you will have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. msiam renei. just, as soon as od apply Red Pepper , Rub you "eel the tingling heat. In three ,.n mutes it warms the; sore spot iyrough and through. Frees the blood circulation. - breaks "up the congestion -and the 'old rheuma tism torture is gone. ! IRowles Red Pepper Rub. made from red peppers, costs little at any ; drug store. ;.Get a ; Jar at once. Use it, for lumbago, neur lis, Ducaacne, buii neck, sore nuscles, colds in ctaesU ; Almost infant' relier awaits - you. ,.Be s'uTe to'get the genuine, with the nane Rowic3 on each package. - !EB PEPPERS HTM TUESDAY MORNING. three women who have long been Inmates of the settlement. They have" been found free of leprosy so far as tests can determine. A-definite end . to this worst of all possible diseases U It sight; -;'. ,' : ; BiT5 FOR BREAKFAST Good id a. To get extra fire department equipment at the earliest possible day. V Strawberry Industry in Thurs day's '.Statesman. If yoa can say something worth while about this industry, pleare do so. Today or tc morrow. : mm ia And the autumn leaves are falling, falling; falling . every where. With apologies to 'Gene Field... v -: . ' . It-s reported that the ex-kaiser wa4'a wn?rtBl lOT maker. WeUbQ had. nothing else on his bands? , y-tJ-.VV.v- , A lot of people in the United States, 'are laughing their heads oft over the fact that this coun try ;i-'not mixed up In the Near East; troubles. But may we not be, .if they get" out of hand? And is there any one simple enough to ttflnk that if the United States had 'had a hand In directing af fairs'; in that region, things wduld ever have come to such a pass?T ' 5 ;';- v- . S S '. The 'ostrich never hides his head, in the sand. a some one said in .the long ago,- and everybody has-'repeated . since But the Unlt"ef States," If it follows the lead -Of the provincial and little Americans, will be like a bird that would be foolish enough to hide its head, in the sand, thinking it secured safety from such a trick. . S W If there are any flappers in this wry Toothiomc, nutritious, nicely browned, Hillman's Health Bread- n is a product of health ? i v) whirW l4i hnman tvtlam maiim ' - Months of testing and study by leading dietician of the Pacific J Coast have resulted which contains grain, fruits and nuts. Its delicious quality imparts zest to ones eating. .1 4 -- 4 ' ' - ;'" ' ' " - ' j ' 4 ' ' r olt has an appetizing taste that is always just as good the next -M It gives the very ffec ost careful conditions, and that its bakers their art NOVEMBER. 14. 1922 town or country, ; perhaps this from the Loat Angeles Tunes wui be new: j "Jusi now the flappers are busy trying to fasten hair on to their bobbed tresses so as to The Economy E3f iiaV VJ LM1 CJ lUi VJ TEST J THE JVORLD'S GREATEST BAKING PGIV. fiealtn l containinc iust trip rnmrf in this perfectly balanced Health Bread a bread impression of being kneaded and baked under '.' Yours For Health a . Hillman s Health Bread do away wltn the short effect. And they are having their trou bles. The bobbed-hair faid did not last long.' .i because it has moxQ :lhc5 the ordinary leaveninr ' strength; it raise3 milliona ci bakings every day to a liht, perfectly bakedx perfected , that cannot be equaled. , because it contains rh!t52 nfVtrtr the vital element tR gives TJie jaouwivw uiso tion aeainst ' usinff a MtlHi Vo- VlOQ lACf ffO' nal leavening -strengths It assures light, tender, tectcfd,; things every time you bc!a -"-because it is ecoriomiclJ -pure, sure and wholesonis. That's why the sale of Cdal met is - over 150a crcx than that of any otheritzi- ing powder. ; A pound cm of Calantt crrv tains fall 16 ounces. Som I z& ing powder com in 12 cmct inmtead of 16 OtmCJ CORJ.. 12 ' gore yoa get a pound when yea want it. SBNG Efl"JEZL2i mm- l st site', I" - amnnnt are the masters of rood if H !