THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21, 1924 . Iisned Daily Exempt Monday by i THE STATESMAN PTJBUSHINQ COK7A3TT ' , 215 South Commercial St., Salem, Oregon j R. J, Hendricks . . .- . . . Manager JoWriTL. Brady . . . . . i . . ' . j . . Editor Frank Jeakoakii . . -; . . . . . . . . j Manager Job Dept. ;t-T:. '' i : j ' MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS J ; : '"'Tile Associated Preia ia exeluaiTely entitled to the one for publication of all newt dispatch credited to it or not otherwise) credited in this p;er and also the local new published herein. i I : t 1 BUSINESS OFFICE: I j Thoniaa T. Clark Co, New Tork. Ill 145 'Went 36th St.,; Chicago. Marquette Build ing;. W. 8. Orothwahl, Mrr. (Portland Office, 836 Worcester Bids;.. Phone 6637 BRoadway, O. F. Williams, Mgr.) if. 1 TELEPHONES: Basinets Offlee . . . . . 23 Circulation Office . . . . . 583 Kewa Department . .23-106 Society Editor . . . . , . 106 , Job Department . . 583 Entered at the Postoffiee In Salem, Oregon, as second-class matter BIBLE THOUGHT AND PRAYER I Prepared by Radio BIBLE SERVICE Bureau, Cincinnati, Ohio. If parents will have their children memorize the daily Bible selec tions. It will prove a priceless heritage ta them in after years. October 21, 12-1 ---r'1 WAY TO LIFE: He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what-doth the Lord require of thee, but to do Justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? Micah 6:8. i PRAYER: O Lord, we know our duty, but we ofttimes hate it, aqd again find it too hard for us. Do Thou then make Thy strength perfect in our weakness, I I THE FEMALE BURCHABD OF THE CAMPAIGN iard and Davis Las country show that Caesar had His Brutus, Blaine his Burc his Miss Marburv ' And reports coming from all over the. the Marbury incident is stirring the women voters of the nation as nothing: else has or likely will. I The president of the Cool idge Non-Partisan League says thousands of women are joining that organization as the result of the criticism! of Mrs. Calvin Goolidcre bv Miss Elisabeth Marbury. one of the foremost women Democrats in the United States. 1 Miss Marbury! was a delegate at large to the Democratic national convention,' and, with Nor man E. Mack of Buffalo, represents New York iun the National Democratic Committee. : . Miss Marbury 's attack on the first lady of the land might pass unnoticed if Miss Marbury herself were not the recognized leader of Democratic women in New York state,! and one of the most prominent and influential women in politics in the country. Women from all parties have been led by her attack to support Mr. Coolidge for President. j j t 'Miss Marbury criticized Mrs., Coolidge atj a luncheon in honor of Mrs, John W. Davis, wife of the Democratic candidate for President. : Tlxis.luncheon was given by thejwomen District Leaders of Tammany , Hall. Miss Marbury was the principal speaker t 1 i j And Mrs. Davis lacked either the tact, the feeling or the political horse sense to rise to the occasion and bhow her disap proval of the sentiment, j j ..., Ine Marbury female found fault, with Mrs. Coolidge tor having, before her marriage, made her own shirt waists, at a cost of $1.69 each.-' She also criticized Mrs. Coolidge for having, after her marriagie, baked her own bread and (pies. jMiss Marbur dealt at length with the early married life She referred to general of the Coolidee for doinir her own sewinsr and bakinjr. this sewing and baking, and the farm life in Coolidge 's, as "milk pail stuff." ! The fact that Mrs. Coolidge before her marriage had re ceived the small wages of a country school teacher, and that the Coolidges had found it necessary to practice economy in their early married life, was not mentioned by: Miss Marbury. ", 'Miss Marbury is a woman of wealth. For many years she was financial agent for dramatists in this country and Europe, and has been twice decorated by the French government for her work (for French authors. She maintains a chateau at Ver sailles, France, and is famous in Europe for her entertainment of Old "World nobility and royalty. j Miss Marbury 's criticisms were printed in the newspapers, and immediately women of all political affiliations began making protests. Many of these were Democratic women active in politics with Miss Marbury. Mrs. Marion S. Rockwell, in an sTtva t latf at 4 4ViA itrrtTnan r T Vt VqtJaiq1 TamnnroriA Pliilt enf V V AA V. t IV A lJ bllU VV UUibU J- - U ItViiai iVUiVVl Ubl VlUUj out forththe following: ; 1 j ' "Since when has it become necessary for women of supposed culture and refinement to make sneer ing allusions on a publio platform to the humble 41111 Itlimnla 1 1 f Ck 'UrVsieVi llOa It A An 1 Ail ltf nllN Pinci dent land his family! Can it be possible that our 1 Democratic party is so short of political; ammuni tion I that it must stoop to criticism of (the first ; ladyfof the land, for the making of a blouse and v.. having knowledge of cooking and making use of 5 that knowledge! Both of these accomplishments ' -appeal to the truest type. of Americanism.! The pity is that there are not more to follow Mrs. Cool " idge's example." j , j j ; MrsJ Victor S. Allen wrote another publiclanswer to Miss Marbury, as follows: i' . "Every true; woman no matter of what party or affiliation must have read with indignation the ' lurj cast on the first lady of the land by Miss . Elisabeth Marbury. 1(1 ; j"Mrs. Coolidge 's apparent effort in all pictures , ' to all but eliminate herself has been evidenced since her position naturally made ! her a public figure of interest. And had Elisaleth Marbury been a mother she would have noted the magnifi cent spirit with which Mrs. Coolidge has 'carried on j despite a gnef-ndden heart, since the death of her beloved child. Each tinip 1 ' )imv 1 Keen lipr pictures, since Calvin Jr's dath, her proud, beau i tifid face, calm and smiling, the tears have rushed , o(my eyes and I have felt a tightening around ; my heart, knowing full well how terrific an ordeal slm was undergoing for her public. We other mothers are free to creep away and indulge in the 1 outlet that grief brings, but not so our gracious1 isplendid first lady of the land, j j j j j"I can only excuse Miss Marbury's unwarranted attack on this splendid, woman by: realizing she nas never known the heart ache of the! loss of a child J' Miss Marl Efforts arc now being made to minimize the import of i Marbury! words. Since the stonn pf. protest aros, MisS lury herself has said she was jesting. This explanation. without any withdrawal, has not lessened the protests. -.M-i' H . ; . J:j . j Lai Follette made one supreme mistake hi this camiaign. He; particularized, lie showed how the. Constitution of the 1 United States should be destroyed; making a gesture if not uniieq oiaies snouia oe aesiroyea; maKing In killer, a tirvt stfn tnunnli hiikluvwiu f A.i.l I.,. .. .!....,...... I - 1 .......... jmhi nt out utaii'ii government ' ownership of utilities inelhdmif the railroads. .kL.i. .....i i ,......,.t. i i. ........4 ...:iu i i - . . i ... "imii wvum tiii-uiw r. inr cjiuiitry un 1 1 1 X 1 1 taxes. Ill all ' his career heret w awn iu iiit- ivrii iii.i iniiiiiirai ruin, , .. - ...., . tofore. La rollette has gotten Vy through generaliz-le-stepping and passing the Wick, i Particulariziu' PLAYTISIB f A-man remarked on the streets of Salem the other day that Pres ident Coolidge could not be very or he would not take a day, orf to go to a ball game, such as he did recently. .The fact ia that President Coolidge is thus illus trating our best national life." We 'r "not ' werk "nl f'Tst W nn?t play some time. We need this playtime. I . j; r f ! In England people congregate in j public places familiarly called the "pub. The American Is al most weajed from the North Am erican equivalent of the "pub," he does not habitually, sing, once he is out of college, and he has no consuming desire to sit in the sun. If (Anything, he would se lect the shade. True, he has his baseball, golf, automobile, radio, and the movies, but none fills quite the part in his national life that the activities mentioned fill in the lives of the nationals of other lands. Is American genius a little weak In the invention of play? It is a factor in (the standard of living that seldom is given much con sideration! The New York Herald Tribune sees something significant and commendable in the fact that President jCoolidge took a few af-1 ternoons off in the midst of a strenuous presidential campaign to see a few games of baseball and talk seriously about play, declar ing that pne of our major prob lems is to learn how to play. In line! with this statement comes the announcement that 35, 000 children leave the New York city schools every year when they reach 14 iand go out to look for work. Play has had' a small part in their Jives and they go upon the treadmills of toil actually handicapped because they are leaving school so early. Play Is not going : to play a large part in j their lives, it is' ob vious, j Intelligent recreation ought to be an important develop ment of industrial civilization. I It is not as yet, and the question of how 110,000,000 people are going to find proper amusement has not been solved. BUSINESS KTHICS I:! - We make a good deal of fuss about thejlack of morals in sports. The fact is that considering the magniture of sports it has a mighty fine record. Baseball 13 a national sport and yet there has only heen two scandals of any size in recent years. One was when a game was sold three or four years ago and theother was this years when a player turned down an offer to throw a game for $500.! The last Was a foolish thing because games could not be thrown 4s cheap as that. We could get a good deal of encour agement jTor better business con ditions wjhere men are not help ing each other as they should Hugh S. Fullerton tells us that in the filial quarter of a mile re lay in an Eastern college meet, one runner accidentally tripped his competitor as they rounded into the stretch. He instantly stopped, waited until his rivai had arisen and come abreast of him. The race was! resumed, the offending runner winning by a step at the tape. He was disqualified, but as he left th'e track a torrent of ap plause poured down upon him.' A certain financier led the cheering, declaring fit the finest sportsman ship he had ever seen. But that evening 4n tne train one of his friends jestingly asked him why such ethics -would not apply to business, J and whether If he saw a business rival trip and fall, he would stop and give him a chance to even up. Then the financier got mad. I But th question will not down. If it is Junfair for a player, on the nine :to bribe a shortstop to throw the game, why is it con sidered good business ethics to give a commission to a represen tative of ja corporation to throw a contraej. for his company? Men who would scorn a football player for a delfberate attempt to knock an opponent out of the game would use just as unfair means to crush! their competitors. All business, his and little, will lower itself to levels to which any de cent sportsman would not dare to stoop. Good sportsmanship seems at times to be i practically an un known quantity in the business world. j CAPI'KITS VIEW In a personal letter to the edi tor of the Oregon Statesman, who invited him to come to SaJem to make an address. Senator Arthur Capper has declined the invitation, but says:' "I ami making speeches every day now and find1 the president very Ft rang wherever I go. - My judgment is that he will carry Kansas 6y upwards of 100,000. It would! not surprise me if La Follette hould run second here." He says he dors not anticipate any trouble at all in securing his re-election, and says that it i up to us in I Oregon to tako care of Senator jMcNary, which we will certainly) do. IiST TWO WKKKS Two weeks from today the Am erican people will cast their bal lots. , There is every indication of a large I vote. Furthermore I the American people like Coolidge bet- lierjt ft ejh oret bcyp";o n l!i ea r 1 ; The Game-Is Never Lost ' J f ; i i - . ' - ' '- 1 ' : I i ' si... : ;;v ! ' ! H'll " feT , -: - : -f-i;'-'. " 1 ' I '' .- ' . ' " ;" .i ; ! 1 BOB SoARPAN - . i " Ji - : : j I' ij - i . , "- T : - l" I Until the Whistle Blows I I f of him. He 13 absolutely intact in spite of the strenuous effort to pick him to pieces. He is a calm, deliberate leader.. He stands out a great figure in this age of little men. He has been serene and dignified. The American people are warming up to Coolidge foe cause they like that type of man for president. He is a regular 100 per cent American and his wife1 is typical of the very best in Am erican public life. ' ! THE HOHSK Of course the ' automobile 13 a great machine but tho horse still stays with us. A harness maker who is something of a philosopher appends this fine attribute to a horse in his advertising. 1 "O Horse, you are a wonder ful thing; no buttons to push, no horn to honk; you start yourself, ho clutch tolip, no spark to miss; no gears to strip, iio license buying every year, with plates' to screw on front and rear; no gas bill climbing up each day, stealing the life of joy away no , speed cops chugging in your reair, yelling summons In your ear. Your inner tubes are all O. K. and thank the Iord they stay that way; your spark plugs never miss and fuss. Your frame is good f0r many a mile; your body- never changes style." ; if. - A I that take . time and the "women fhouid regard their just as seriously, i! citizenship FJCAXK I'. WALSH If there is a inan'ln America more despicable: t han - Senator Wheeler that man is Frank P. Walsh a man bf great ability but wasting it. : He is trying to prove that the jrrpublicans have a $10,000,000 slUsh fund and will stop at nothing to get his proof. But Walsh's measure has been pretty well taken in the middle west and he couldn't make a charge, even if it were true, that would bo accepted.; J I The completion pf tho paving between Albany and Corvallis is a matter of considerable Interest. Corvallis needed! that road very much. There is a great school located there, lit addition to it being a good town,; and that school needs to be In fcloso. touch with ail parts of the world. The road is the last link. ; On election day the women should have no social affairs. They should devote the day to politics. Men do not think of hav ing 5oclalrtherinr3j?njlhatdiiy I SC0TTS MILLS I Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rich and daughter Lar Verne, left for Ocean Park, Washington, where they expect to spend three weeks as the guests of Mr. and ; Mrs. I. D. Worden. j I Mrs. Marie Philip of Salem visited her parents!, j Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Myres Sunday. Miss Loraine- Hogg spent the week-end with her parents., Mr. and Mrs. Allan , Bellinger and small daughter were Salem visitors Monday. J Mr. and Mrs. H. Magee went to Molalla Monday : where Mrs Magee had her tonsils removed returning home Tuesday evening accompanied by Mrs. Emily Mc4 Cown who has been visiting in Molalla. " 'j Born To Mr. and Mrs. A. A Gersch, Wednesday, I October S 1924, a son. I I ! Mr, and Mrs. Chas. Shepherd and family visited friends in Mol lala Sunday. j h J Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lawrence were Silverton visitors Monday. Quite a number! of members of the Odd Fellows lodge attended a meeting of the Silverton lodge Saturday night. j i Leo Hettwer of! Mt. Angel vis ited his parents at.! Crooked Fin ger Wednesday afternoon. . Mrs. Almond Rich visited her parents in Silverton Tuesday. Mrs. Kate. Landwing and daughh ter. Mrs. Alvina Saston.' of San Pedro, Cat., visited relatives and tie: b.u au-. m b . . mm 1 w - n . JUL?!? e S s c friends In Portland the first of the week, . - ; j -. Mrs. John Waibel and two chil dren have been 'Visiting her grand mother, Mrs.; I Geo. Wilson. MrsJ Waibel is moving! to Willimina, Ore. !'''.;"' f Miss 'Enid Lamb who is teach ing in the ' Stayton high school visited her mother and brother over the week-end.! : , Mrs. Ellis Nickleson and chil dren and Mrs. " Ivan Smith and daughter visited relatives near Sa lem Saturday! and Sunday. Miss Vera Moser of near Sil verton is visiting Miss Dorotha Shepherd. Mi i RESPONSIBLE FOR ILL HEALTH Oil ES or other rectal or colon j disorders may be responsible for your general ill health. My non-surgical treatment of these dis order hat been taken by thousand of men, women and children from all parts of the West; my unprecedented success enabling me to confidently GUARAN TEE to cure your Piles or refund your fee. Qend today for my FREE, book on Rectal and Colon disorders, j Every sufferer should have K. CHA DEAN, M.D.Inc 5Trf ANO WATN-OPPOSfTE COURT HOtSK V, PORTiAND.OAECON r 1 r Sunday School Teachers ? To Hold Meeting Tonight The Sunday ; school teachers meeting at the Salem, public li brary will be rheld tonight at 7 o'clock. Rev. W. C. , Kantner will speak on "A High Calling" at the general assembly at 7 ; p. m. J . ' i . Mrs. G. X. Thompson will have charge of all teachers using j the uniform lesson, and Mrs. Mclntyre will have ! charge of the graded work, especially those teaching classes below the ages of 12. The purpose of the class work is "The Best Method of Teaching the Lesson for ext Sunday."j All Sunday school teachers who would like to help, others' and be help ed by' other teachers to raise the standard of Sunday school teach ing, should attend these meetings and take part in the discussion. W. R. Stanton will be chairman of the meeting. Classes have also been organized, at Stayton and Turner and; another , class will be organized at Woodburn. In the mean time, it Is sugges ted that if you do not see a soli citor, and want to make a pledge to the new building, you: might send it to either newspaper office; to The Statesman or the -Journal. The Statesman would: be glad to REPUBLICAN TICKET rr Pridiit ' CALVIN COOLIDGE W For Vies Prldnt CHARLES G. DAWES : For V. 8. Ssnstor In Congress CHARLES L. BIcNARY For Beprssantatlvo in Concrsss W.C.HAWLEY For Secretary of Ststs SAM A. KOZER For Stats Treasurer THOS. B. KAY For Justice of the Snpreme Court HARRY II. BELT PERCY It. KELLY For Attorney General I. H. VAX WINKLE For Dairy and Food Commissioner J. D. MICKLE For FubUc- Service CommlssloBer EDWARD OSTRAXDER Bepresentatives . 51AKK McCALLISTER " LLOYD T. REYNOLDS OTTO J. WILSON Ons to be nominated Toy " County Central Committee For District Attorney JOHN II. CARSON County Ticket For County Judge J. T. (Jap) nUNT County Commissioner ' JOHN II. PORTER Sheriff- Clerk O. D. BOWER U. G. BOYER Treasurer - D. G. DRAGER Assessor O. A. STEELHAMMER School Superintendent MARY L. FULKERSON Becorder MILDRED R. BROOKS Surveyor B. B. KERRICK Coroner ' , L. T. RIGDON " Justice of the Fsscs, Salem Dirt. P. J. KUXTZ. Constable, Salem Dlit . AY. E. DE LONG Justice of the Fesce, Aurora Pi it. GEO. E. KNAPP f the 1 r. Justice of the Peace, Silverton Dlst. L. BROWN acknowledge such pledges, and send them . In, and no doubt the Journal would, too, gladly. ML , 1 1 1 1 La Grippe Influenza Pneumonia Keep strong. Be ; r healthyand free from winter complaints. Hill's Cascara Bromide Quinine is the quickest acting, most dependable cold remedy. What Hill's does for millions it will do for you. Get red box bearing Mr. Hill's portrait. tLLVPrice 30 cents. CASCARA" QUININE W.H.EILLCO. OQ-VDSJTBOrx. MICH. Renew Your ! Subscription Today USE THIS COUPON The Oregon Statesman, Saleni, Oregon. Enclosed !f ind $3.00 for one year's subscription at the bargain- day rate. By Mail Only Name ....! Address i... R. R. ...Box This rate aDolies to renewal as well as new subscribers by mail. Subscriptions started when desired.! This offer closes on November 1st After that date the regular price of $5.00 for mail subscribers will prevail.