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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1923)
i .t . i - 4 ste"'.-: 4 M ' ' - - . i " THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 10, 1923 ' Issued Dally Except Monday by THE STATESMAN, PUBLISHING COMPANY . ' '- . 216 S. Commercial St., Salem, Oregon ' v. p (Portland Office. 723 Hoard of Trade Building. Pbone Beacon 1193 MKMIUUt OK TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated 'Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation ot all news di-patchea credited to It or not otherwise credited la this paper. and also the loCal news published herein. - ' e i R J. Hendricks . Cte;hen A. Stone Frank Jaikoskl if 4 i Manager . . . . .,. ........ Managing Editor ............ Manager Job Dept. iv , ' - ' . TELEPHONES: .j - ! j . . ,- Business Office ...... w ... . . ... . . . .L 21 c . - Circulation Department .............. ;i.' ,f 8 1 : Job Department .................. : .vU . . . 82 4 8oclet7 Editor ................. 10( ' Uatered at the PoatofCcs In Salem, Oregon, an second elaas matter. A TABLOID LOGANBERRY EDITORIAL ! The signing up of 600 acres of loganberries must be completed by Friday night next, if the Loganberry J rowers' Exchange is to be organized -, . ; , . If the loganberry industry is to fre t stabilized j ; If the industry-is to be kept going and growing If" the plowing " up of f loganberry yards' is to be J pre vented, and that great industry saved from a serious set back, v .- :; . '":M :" r '-Vl ' !r' There seems now no doubt that the 600 jacres will be signed up in the time limit- J v'-iilf ' '4V .' But that is not enough. " That will help a lot; but abso lute 'feccurity, absolute stabilization, will not come without tha cooperation of all the growers, and all the buyers, too, for lhat matter--' . f'y ;; .V; - V h;; ? v. :. ; For there must be markets assured at living prices in order . to make' sure of this year 'and all the years of the future." ; -irf 'i' -V.v - f;s -;; .-'Zy,zx. The loganberry industry is capable of enormous expen- sion ; it is worthy and well qualified ; it is deserving. -Put it over and put it over big; 100 per cent. (RESIGNATION 'OR EPPORT WHICH 1 L love, easy love by a (Copyrighted by the San Jose Mercury; The Christian who. knoyvs God as a God of infinite possessed of . boundless power and wisdom, should find it to trust Him and to be resigned to Whatever this God of and wisdom permits to comedo him. .. ' , The attitude of the Christian is beautifully expressed great poet: . ' ' , , . "Purer yet and purer J would be In mind, Dearer yet and dearer every duty find; : Hoping still and trusting God without a fear. Patiently believing He will make all clear. .:;--fW: Calmer yet and calmer In the hour of pain, i. i :;iSurer yet and surer peace at last to gain: - r i . Suffering still and doing, to His will resigned, ' And to Ood aabdulng heart and will and miira." ; ; The man who does not trust and rest in his God in poverty as well as in prosperity, in sickness as well jas in health, . jn disaster, suffering and death as. well as in succespleajrare and life has no God,- and has no religion that is worthy of the name. Let us beware, : however, lest this attitude of resignation be carried too far, lest our attitude be prompted not by a spirit of resignation at all, but byf indiff erencejgnorance or laziness. No man should consent Uo be resigned to evil or imperfect con ditions in his own life qr in the world if he has on can get the power to change them. Resignation should properly come only at the end of an effort after we have exhausted our knowledge, strength and ability in the attempt 'to', change the evil or im perfect conditions. Most bad situations in our lives and in the world do not call for resignation at all; .they .are a call fop action, for an "increase in knowledge, an augmentation of the power in us that would enable us to meet an,d change thenu ? One hundred years agotwhen an epidemic of typhoid fever swept a neighborhood, it was an inscrutable visitation of Provi dence . " His will .be donel'V? Today when -typhoid shows; its head we hunt the cesspool or other festering breeding place of the typhoid germ and abolish it and with it the "inscrutable visitation: of Providence" of our fathers. ' ' 1 j -f i : Thirty years ago when: the yellow fever 'swept out of ex istence thousands of our fellow citizens in Louisiana' and Nearly One Million I Miles Without An Accident! 777 . omm 777 Om . i , . 1 t advises inquir- ing motorist to trans port 8 children from Montana I i . ; . - . to Minnesota . ' . ' .' . 1 . " A - - . ' '. - a v - in a six year old car. How to piclc the best route ; -' f ' . ' . ' -' . ". . . . ' i ' ' How fast to drive. How to pack a heavy load Yh at to V leave behind. Ray McNamara tells . these ; and many other w- imoortant things in- his annual series 99 Florida and tens of thousands of our neighbors to the south, in the minds of' many of Jwir Christian brethren it was God punishing the wicked and giving them a foretaste of what He had in store for them in perdition. But a divinely inspired, philanthropic physician sacrificed his life to discover for us that the mosquito, carried the -fever germ and so . brought on theiyellow feverepidemic. Now instead of being resigned to thej will of God in bringing suffering and death to our bro-; thers as a punishment for their 'wickedness, we go about fight ing; the mosquito, and yellow fever epidemics are no more, j So, too,5 the cholera epidemics of one hundred years ago which were; manifestations of the wrath of God toward the wicked and to be met by hu-aable resignation to. His jnscrutable will, we have now found to be brought upon the world by rats and other1 rodents upon whose bodies : the cholera germs are bred and carried. Instead, therefore, of being resigned j to these "manifestations bf the : wrath of God " we now proceed to make war upon the j vermin and we shall doubtless keep at it, even if somewhat sporadically, until we make ; the Cholera germ as extinct as the ancient mastodon. ' r fT : m j i Millions of Christians in the past believed, millions are be lieving that a God of love has ordained that the vast majority of the human race are to suffer eternally in a burning lake of fire; His glorious will be done!" They did not believe in the past,, they do' not today believe that it is God's purpose .to evangelize and save the world. He will save only a few, the elect, when He destroys the world and Christ comes to set up His kingdom on the earth. They are therefore resigned to hu manity going to hell, while they, being sure ! of their Own calling and election,", calmly j await the destruction of the world and physical "coming of the Lord Jesus. Could any thing be more un-pbristian than such an attitude f hi I; Some of us are coming to see that when God commands ns to "Love our enemies, bless them that curse us, do 'good to them that hate us and pray for them which despitefully use us and persecute us," He meant us to obey His command. Not only so, but it is foolish ; to -suppose that the God who ex pects us to reach Hia degree of love and charity is not so good himself as He commands us to be; that He is angry' wifh His enemies, and instead of doing good to them will thrust them into a lake of fire. ;; j: - "... j .; . ' . . . ; ' I Unless we have caught enough of the spirit of Christ so that we really love the sinner litd'go out after him and do our best to turn him from hiq evil ways into the path of righteous ness, as Paul says, "We are, none of His." When He taught us to pray,. "Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth as it is in heacen," He intended us to work as well as pray for he coming of His kingdom m ourselves and m the world, so that His will may be done here as 'well as hereafter. , y- Be sure that the cause of all suffering, whether of body or soul or of conscience comes either: from our ignonrance or the violation of some law; of God. r. It is our job to learn the cause of our troubles and go about removing them to.find what the biws of God are and go4 about obeying them. There .is really no place for inactive, supine, weak,' helpless resignation until we have really done our best to bring His kingdom in ourselves and in the world. . . 1 ' - i --- The way to stabllli tne logan berry industry is to stabilize it. . Lots of people worrying about dying that don't .know how to lire. ; .... ; r Riches mean happiness tor the happy, I Hpei la iheT; only thing ; that hard luck caint kill. 66 lplate aihunting trip into the mourtlains, week-end trips to the i xr rttit : Tt tr MrWflmflfn'a fiimmotniit4nff nWlnlno mill sek-end trios to the sea shore, or a Ion crcocountry tour, Hay McNamara's' Summer urinfi articles will add safetyi" economy and comfort to your, outir He knows every .trail, erery hiijhway, every situation you mirjht encounter. - - 1 ' rnTAT?TIM(Tl II IMP' 1 .7 IM TH!7 QTATT7QMAM CHURCII ON THE PRONT PAGE If Dr; Haldemann o! the rirst Baptist church had merely dif fered with Dr. Woelfkin of the Park Arenne Baptist ' church on the doctrine of Immersion . It Is doubtful if the matter would hare been treated as first page or as . news ' altogether: But when Dr. Haldemann calls Dr. Woelf kin an infidel and one of the nine pins of the devil Is how engaged in knocking down the affair be comes news of first interest. I. Re ligious controversy becomes news as . soon as it is dramatised. New York Evening Post. , LEAVING THE SHIP ' Desertions from, Uncle Sam's navy are now running at the rate of nearly 6000 a year. If recruit ing would cease those who want to dismantle the navy would soon gain their poinC The odd thing about it is that it is much easier to recruit the navy n time of war than In - peace. ' Sometimes ' the sailors find the routine of a ship dull in time of peace and so they proceed to extend their shore leave Indefinitely when the oppor tunity comes. ' THE BUILDERS . STRIKE There Is a builders' strike all over the United States; a protest against the high costs ot labor and materials In the " building trades.- A total of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of build ing projects are being held up- In this country: In Greater New York the total is said to. be above $100,000,000, and . in Chicago nearly as much. - V - A ' number, of big r newspapers are carrying on a campaign against what, they term prof I leer ing by labor leaders and building material jobbers and manufactur ers.'. The following; from the New York Herald, under the heading. "In Terms of Barter,?, is a sam ple article: ' . ' ; ;r A man who runs a farm in Vir ginia sent to the New York Her ald the other daya letter in which he translated the cost of construction, at present wages. In to food at . the price the farmer gets. The examples are most il luminating:' i f "It takes 3 M down, or 762 eggs to pay plasterer r for one day .' of eight hours work , H ' -It Ukes 17 bushels of ' corn, -or a -year's receipts from half an acre, to pay a bricklayer one day. , "It : takes . 23 chickens - - weighing three pounds each to pay "a painter 'for one : day's work in New York. "It takes 42 pounds of I butter, or .the output from :' fourteen cows,' fed and milk ed for 'twenty-four hours, to pay a plumber $14 a day. , "It takes a. hog weighing 175 'pounds, r. representing eight months ' of feeding and care to "pay a' carpenter for ; one day's work." '. ? Thus reduced to terms of bar ter the . charges made by skilled labor in the building trades ara startling. Yet these are facts t a yond argument. Men in. lines of endeavor ctir than; farming can . figure bow much of their produced wealth they are compelled to give in ex change for construction -wcr'-. How much coat must a miner t'.z in order to have -his house paint ed?', How many 'volumes must a bookbinder ' bind ' that he ' xzzj have a new front porch? Barter is never, so well ex pressed, however, as in terms cf food. For that Is the coin of tha earth. : AH , else in trade depends, In one way or another, upon it. In some cities of this country, however; they are 1 still - -gclzz strong on building in Los An geles they are going stronger than ever before. In the first fire months of this year, building per mits there figured up more than $80,000,000; claimed To be tha record for' any town of leas than 1,000,000 souls for a like period. The residents down there say this record of. $500,000 a day in new buildings will soon be far exceeded. .The Influence of the fellow who doesn't care , what dollars ara worth, just so there are 'plenty cf them. Is still strong. And so II has been from the beginning c! the world. i The high sign of the loganberry ndustry stability is to sigh up. Truth needs no press agent. Wjth so many good men in the field, it is golnar to be. a hard matter to decide on making the choice for school director. - Delvers In literary history now assert that Lord Byron did not have a club foot that; has gener ally been , accepted as the truth. We know nothing of Byron'a pedal extremities, hut ' his poetic feet were just about the right thing from any point of .view.' ; i bps? I. TubBoys and GirlsNewspaper i Tha Biggest Little Paper fia the World LOAD 3 OF FUN - 1 I Copyright, 1823, Associated Editors. Edited by John II. JHer. f I CARTOON MAGICMiss Hollyhock ! The forces of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, head' of the Chinese government, are hard pressed again. Dr. Sun's Sun may set -again, as it has done many times. . But it has so far al ways risen in due course. There is no man in the Orient who has had a f more checkered and t spec tacular career. . . f , .BUSINESS METHODS V .. - r The Presbyterian General As sembly consolidated sixteen ot its commissions and committees Into tour boards. The church Is get ting its Ideas of efficiency : and economy before the ' politicians can get around to fit. This does away j with Quite a bit of the over head and some lost motion. , 1 A HORSE APIECE The - Hindus are sending mis sionaries to California. Thus does the bread we cast upon the waters return after many days. We sent missionaries to India many, years ago and now that the people are in conditlen to reciprocate they are prpud and happy to do so. We may not be assured of our need for missionary service from the orient, out we may lend our kindly appreciation ot the spirit In which it Is sent. Trading mis sionaries may lead to other am iable and profitable contacts. Los Angeles Times. I FUTURE DATES I Joa 19, Bandar Ocwapwy F Imtm for MUeaal tnard teamtmeat. Jas 11. 4 U Mdar Waaura H Walnai Grawars to meat la Portland. Jaaa 18, Saturday Caanty f graduation ; axerelaaa. ! . Aadltoriom ot BaU high . aenooi, 2 o'clock. tv . . Xano IS. Wadaaaday WHlazneUa Ual ' "varalty eonBaacamant. . , .. Xaaa 14. Taaradar riaa day. I ana 18 Satordar, Marion eoaaty Ann. Jana 18, Kaadar Opaalng, Daily Va cation Btoio aencou , , - j day aeaool picaU. ; fan IS to Sa Chaataoqaa at Dalta. Juno 20. Wadnoaday Pomona Graac XeotiDC. at Turaar. .; - - ana Jl, Tkaraday RofloBal Hod Oaat aoniaraaco In Salana. ana SI. Taaraday rifty-fint raaaloa of Orron toer fs Fcrt!al. 1 ! 9 1 . :. -. ... ; A hollyhock makes a fine dress, with Its flaring skirt All you have to do is to add the lines shown 'in the series of key pictures, and you have a girl to fit the dress. Tie and Dye Your Own . Scarfs . ' .. ... .. t . Girls, make your own Dean- vilie scarfs.' Those rainbow tint ed kerchiefs with their softly blended designs lend the French touch to almost any style cf dress. With ' care . In f ollbwln r these - directions you can tna.s.a ybur scarf In just the color cora- blnation that you wa&t, and tt a ' small cost. too. ' - ,Any light-weight material ta cotton orv silk, georgette crers, crepe de chine, .cantoon crepe, cr voile, may be used, but It mr:t be while orr a very light sha j.- Cut the material in a thre - cornered piece' about eighteen' la ches otf each side; Tie" kccU tightly in each corner about e!U Inches from the edge. Prepara the different,' shades of dye yc wish to use In making the deslra and keep them hot. , Dip ths scarf in cold water arid squeexe It out well. Now rut It ; in. the . lightest shade ; of dye that you j Intend.; to,ruse, . a very pale- green or yellow. Rinse well In cold water.-'Leavo the knots Itr and gather the materUl . la bunches. here and. there by run ning a thread In a circle about two or three Inches across and drawing up Very tight. Dip in the next darker shade. Continue this process until youHave made your design as varied? . as you wish; v.; ' : . - -; . . ' Remember to rinse well in cold water after each dipping, and do not remove any of the knots or gatherings -until - you - are all through. Picoting makes the nicest finish for the edges. (the short STORY, JR. THE ROCKBOUKD &IAIDEN Jean's bobby was looked on as "I queer, : , , But, strange as her play might ::;: :.: appear, : ' r; She proved to the rest - i i That her hobby was best " 5 When i time : tor vacation drew h iV nearr . ' 1 Her father had been a geolo gist; that Is. he had made a study of rocks. He had known a great deal 'about them, too, and I he had taught Jean as much about them as she could understand. When she was a very little girl he had taken her for Jong; walks with him, -and every walk had been a lesson in . the rocks and soil of the part of the country they were In. 1 . 4 When her father died and she went to live : with her aunt in Weston. Jean realised how . lone ly! it Is possible to be. After a while she cheered up and went to collecting rocks again, because it seemed to bring her father near er, somehow. Her aunt fussed around the house, but Jean was stubborn, in her Quiet way.j .i After a .while Jean- began to like Weston more. -It was a col lege town, and as She had al ways" lived in a college: town, yshe felt- more at home there. Then, too, the girls were very nice to her. They, liked her, though they thought she was queer. She didn't like to sew. She wouldn't knit, a sweater, didn't know a thing about- making', candy, and wasn't Interested In reading nov els. ; Once they were reading the poem ."The Landing of the Pil grims. . in class. , They came to the line "stern and " rockbound coast 5 Jean giggled. ; After wards she explained to Kitty Her cer that she guessed that de scription ''stern and rockbound" fitted her. After that the "girls teased her and nicknamed ' her the "rockbound maiden, he cause she - was always bound' to collect rocks. 1 S -j- :.:-'::): 'fi - - As time for vacation drew near all the girls began talking about their plans for the summer. Some of them were planning a camping trip" for two weeks' or more. They tnviti Jean, hut she shook ttr out in the mountains or by .a lake. I lore It. Aunt Jane says she's not planning to go any- where this summer; so there's no chance." 1 ' .' "Earn some money,; they err ed. "We are.1 f'Not a thing . I can do.. Can't bake anything te sell, can't knit, can't take care of babies. : .I'm afraid poor daddy never tacxt me anything-useful." : She trl:i to blink back the tears. - The last day of school Jean came late. She rushed Into just as the bell was ringing. ll:r Cheeks were shining. "Kitty l" she cried, grabbing her t it friend. "I'm I'm rockbound far the summer. - "What are you talking about?" "Professor Jones, the geolog! t at the colloge, was at our hoi::: last night to see uacle. I shor: htm some specimens I had tr. ! we got to talking. He Just c:".: ed up Aunt Jane to ask If I could go with htm and 2Jr Jones to North Carolina to str rocks for the summer." - - - t, ""r...-. c:ti't tr.zTZ '