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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1925)
TIIE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 14, 1925 ! ; ?! - TBB STATESMAN FUBUSHUfQ COHTAMX Iue4 Pal 215 tteatb Couwcrcial ht balan, Oreg&a )"r4 4. Toa. C. JC. Lofaa 111 Baita- .af aaacer W. H. Bnil 4aded Buiiea.. -UBKf Eitar , RaJpfc H. Kltiag. &.itar l rrul Jaakoekt. .TeUfrapk Zdlts? i E. A. Ktiotea tieeialy Ur W. C. Cmiw- ..CircaUtioa Waaaer -44ertiaiuf aleaafer kit aaacer Jab lut. Livestock Editor U Poaltry Editor XXBK Or THX ASSOCIATED FBKBS TTka AaaoelataA Pnaa la anlaiinli n t It t iha f. nKiit. -v . if lUpaieaoo ereoiwl to U ar a( ataarwiae eradito4 ia taia papaif aad lae laa local aoa pabUakad karat. . II , business orricz: : Tao T. Clark Co, Saw Tors, 141-145 Weit set St, Chic a pa, afarqaatta BtlM . . tog,- w. s. OrotawakL Mgr. l i Prtlssd Offlca, tit WoreoaUr Bid-., Fkona 637 to Roadway, jilbert Brers, Vrr. Baalaaaa Office . Mv DepartaMSt TELEPHONES '"' . St or S8 Cirevlatiea Office - 2S-10 Society Editor j. Job Department ......... fill BBS latere at te Poatoffiaa la Salem. Ore-, aa aoeaa4-eHa matter Jon 14, 1025 ' I TRUST AND WAVER NOT: Trust fn the Lord. heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. Proverbs with all thine 3; 5. -H OUR FLAG Margaret Sangster Flag of the fearless-hearted, Flag of the broken chain, Flag in a day-dawn started, .Never to pale or wane. Dearly we prize its colors, With the heaven light breaking The clustered stars and the steadfast The red, the white, and the blue. Flag of the sturdy fathers, Flag of the royal sons, Beneath , its . folds it gathers f Earth's best and noblest ones. Boldly we wave its colors, Our veins are thrilled anew t By the steadfast bars, the clustered! The red, the white, and the blue. "FOR YOU A ROSE'? through, bars, is tars, The Rose Festival opens tomorrow in Portland. This event began as an annual rose show twenty-six pears ago and was organized under its present name in 1907 i The effect of this unique annual festival! event lasting an entire week with the opening of the roses in June, has been of great civic and esthetic value. It has. f timulated the planting of a profusion of roses in and about! Portland and has fostered a deep interest in floriculture .inj jgeneral. As an advertisement of Oregon climate, JSoil and civic, domestic taste it has few if any parallels.! "pfor you a rose in Portland grows" means more than a welcome to the metro polis. It signifies painstaking care; homes imbued with the love of the beautiful, and civic progress on trfe part of the general citizenship and particularly of those whb give of their time and energy in encouraging the care and gjrowth of roses and other flowers. j - And to those who give of their effort ini the planning and to those who bear the toil and responsibility in the con duct of the Festival highest commendation isj due. It will be of value to all Oregon for the metropolis toj:ontinue thus the exercise of the spirit of altruism in making her own and thousands of other people happy and apprec iative of the floral beauty of the whole Northwest. SCRATCH-FOOD FOR JAIL BIRDS the Multno profit to the proken by the (jr $21,824.25. . "Keuy Jtsutte ' operated under direction o mah county sheriff's office yields a substantia county. For a six month period in 1923 there were prisoners 14,865 yards of rock whichwas sold i The fixed price was $1.50. a yard. The net profit was approx imately. $9000. , The product was sold to the county road department and to private interests at a price Which did not interfere with free labor. j 1 V In the operation of 4his plant by prisoners bf the county is an example of what may be done and should jbe done in all strictly penal institutions.. Prisoners who are aile bodied and serving time should be required to earn their orn living and should receive a compensation for their work f at the support of their families or other dependents. The amount received should not be large and in the case of single ipen might be placed to their account after costs to the county-have been deducted. It is ridiculous to force law-abiding! citizen tax payers to pay for the prisoner's food and clotmng while ?he lies in jail. , And, too, there is no more effective deterrent to petty .crimes than the assurance that conviction meaiis work--for the majority of those who defy; the law hate Work. Many of them get into wrong-doing as a result of trying to. get a living without work. And, further, hard world is a kind of physical culture which promotes both! health arid morals. and cities jail uuua Marion county, Salem and other counties should cooperate in the matter of requiring thei to "scratch" for their living in the construction; of roads or in some other effectivej fruitful way. A WINNING DECISION President Coolidge was importuned tto take part in a movie production by appearing and handing a fake diploma to an aspiring, screen star.' It would have been al great adver- .tisementf or the said aspirant for honors" and? ladvertising. ' ine rresiaent retused pointedly to-allow.hi3 hiiii cice or himself to be thus degraded by being used as a Vcheap John" means of advertising for the said aspiring twinkler. We have no evidence that the said . individual ever won anything which would entitle him to a lake diploma from the navy. The, President raised ; himself immeasurably in the estimation 6f the people by his refusal. There seems to be I an armistice 'pending between the higher educational forces of the state. The public awaits patiently the report of the reparations committee. Salem will be appropriately represented And Portland will be pleased during the rose show with her Salem guests--The Cherrians. : j ' It requires more than farms which rent for only enough money to pay the taxes to make the farmer optimistic. Breakfast Sliced Bananas In Orange Juice Waffles with Maple Syrup Buttered Toast 'f Coffee and Milk . . .... .Luncheon . . . . . . . . Salmon Souffle Creamed Potatos Head Lettuce with Salad . Dressing Bread and Butter Home Made Strawberry Jam Iced Tea or Cocoa t Pinner . Jellied Tomato Soup Croutons Coddled Steak Mashed Potatoes with 1 Brown Gravy -Creamed Peas Baking Powder Biscuits TODAY'S RECIPES Waffles -r-.,Beat yolks of two eggs; add four tablespoons, of cream, one cup of milk, two tea spoons baking powder, flour to make thin batter and lastly beaten whites of two eggs. Bake in vry hot waffle, iron over steady fire. Serve with butter and maple syrup. .v f Coddled Steak- Take about two pounds of round steak an inch thick, salt, pepper and flour well. Have ready one small 'pnion, chopped fine and two tablespoons very hot. Put In the meat to brown evenly on both sides, then put in enough hot water to make a quart of gravy. ' Add salt, pep per and Worcestershire sauce to taste. Cover tightly and simmer steadily, until the steak is tender. The meat must be basted and turned frequently. Serve on a hot platter with a small quantity of Itravy and parsley or water cress. The rest of the gravy serve In boat. ' , Salmon Souffle One can of sal mon, two eggs, one cup of cream or rich milk. Remove skin and bone from salmon. Pick fish fine, drop in the yolks of eggs and mix well. Add the cream or milk and the egg whites beaten to a stiff froth. Mix lightly and put In but tered pan. Bake, twenty minutes in a quick oven. Jellied Tomato Bouillon Three cups tomato, three bouillon cubes, one onion, one bay leaf one and one-half teaspoons minced parsley, celery leaves or celery salt, three teaspoons gelatine, a few pepper corns, few sprigs of thyme." Sim mer the tomatoes, onion, bay leaf, and celery, with seasonings until quite soft and5 strain. There should be three cups of the juice. Add the minced parsley and bouil lon cubes. Soften the gelatine in three tablespoons: cold water and dissolve in the hot juice. Season to taste with paprika and salt. Garnish,, with finely chopped green pepper.;; f. ; . ; ; Rhnbarb Ple Prepare rhubarD enough to fill a pie Opiate full. Then plunge it into the boiling water for. ten minutes and rrain. Line the greased pie plate with a good short crust, put in the rhu barb, sprinkle with two cups of sugar in which a dessert spoon of cornstarch is mixed. Put on the crust and bake in a medium oven about forty minutes. Insomnia Conquered, Says . Young Cheshire Inventor LONDON fk)nly the old fashion ed folks will, go on counting phan tom sheep as an inducement to sleep if half of the claims are realized of the inventor of a new machine designed to relieve in somnia victims of all their bothers. This novel contrivance 'which was recently patented by a young Cheshire inventor after four years of experimenting, represents an attempt to adapt the science of chromopathy, or relief by colors to the treatment of sleeplessness. The user of the apparatus, upon going to bed. places the sleep pro ducing machine, which in many ways has the appearance of a wireless receiving set, upon a near by table, and presses Intermit tently at a switch which .is' held in his hand. This causes rays of 12 different colors to flash from the machine In a pre-arranged sequence, and it Is the effect, of this combination of colors upon the retina of.'ihe eye that , is sup posed to induce sleep for even the most restless, persons. ' Many stubborn cases of -sleeplessness are declared to have been overcome 1n periods varying from 1010 to 15 minutes and further more, the Inventor contends that by the use - of his apparatus he is easily able to put an ordinary person to sleep at almost any time during daylight. The rays have inventor, on the eyesight. Rural Simplicity Marked Duke of Rutland's Funeral BELVOIR, Eng. A. farm dray drawn by four gray horses served as a hearse and gave an air of real rural Impressiveness to the funeral "recently of the Dnke of Rutland at Bel voir Castle.- The casket was covered with the duke's own flag as lord lieutenant of the county together with his cocked hat and sword. j - Country workers . from his estates walked in a procession to the chapel and to the mausoleum where the body was placed. . iTCIUES , Two young lawyers, both trying to make reputations as orators, happened to be pitted against each other in argument. Both spoice at great length, and In closing the second speaker re marked that he was sorry to find his colleague on the wrong side for there was every - reason why they should agree. "We were brought up , together, studied to gether, and we were 'bora on ' the same day. -"Did I understand you. to say that you were born on. the same day?" asked the judge. ' "Yes," came the prompt reply. 'On the very same day?" "Yes, sir." - . : "Then It must have been a very windy day." ' There was no doubt he was an expert at "telling the tale." And moreover, in this case, it succeed ed very well. : "It Is a sad story, my man," said the lady in furs as she hand ed over a florin, "and I feel very sorry for you. Are you married, by the way?" v As he pocketed the money he replied: "Married, lady? Married? Do yer fink for one moment I'd be depending on outside support If I was married? Not likely.. A man received the following note from his actor son, who had joined a touring company: "I have made a great success. Will you send me $5 to pay land lady? Your devoted son, Algy. "P. S. Since writing this let ter I am ashamed to ask you, so I ran after the postman and tried to get It back. I pray It does not reach you." . The son was surprised when he received this reply: "Dear Algy. your prayer was answered. - The letter did not reach me." i An American prelate, discuss ing the -. strata - Into which the church of today seems to be di vided, told this story: "There's a certain extremely rich church of New York which is accounted the - most exclusive in the United States. One day a Negro called on the rector and an nounced that he would like to be come a member. The rector,, non plussed, played for time, touched lightly on certain difficulties, and, after intimating that. Sam might not feel 'quite at home, suggested that the latter ask guidances? rom above as to the wisdom of the idea, ' In a week Sam came back, ra ther gloomy. , i. , "Well," said the rector, "how do you feel about it now?" "Well, suh, ah done ask de Lawd about it; and be Lawd he said dat he'd been a tryin' to get into yo' church so long hisself dat he don't see how I have any show at all." Did You Ever Stop to Think? By E. B. Waite, Secretary Shswneo, Okla Board of Commerce THAT it is strange that a pub lisher should be " compelled to solicit advertising. THAT it is stranger still that he should have to offer any reasons why a business should Je adver tised. , i THAT is especially so in the case of a business man who imagines he Is a business man. : i THAT the business man vio thinks advertising does not pay. needs the services' of a brain spe cialist. , ! THAT advertising through the printed page renders valuable service. ; THAT if a business is to be a suc cessful business, it must be an ad vertised business." . THAT in order to grow and pros per, business men must grasp every-opportunity to do so. THAT a whole lot of business men do not realize an - opportunity when they; see it. THAT a business man has a very comfortable feeling when through truthful advertising he has won the confidence of the buying pub lic; - THAT confidence of the public means satisfied customers. THAT satisfied customers mean more sales, 5 THAT more sales- mean more prestige for the merchant. PRESTIGE MEANS A STEADY GROWING BUSINESS. KEEP YOUR BUSINESS GROWING. The prisoner was being cross examined by counsel for the pros ecution when the judge Interrupt ed. ; ' "You say you dined at the Ho tel Metro. What did you partake of?" The prisonejp turned to reply: "Beefsteak, your honor," he said. The judge laoked stern. "On your oath?" he said. "No, ,your honor," . he replied, "on a plate." j- Robinson was well known in the club as a vegetarian. The members were hardly surprised, therefore, when his friend Jones burst into the billiard room Vne evening and announced: "Robinson has been true to his vegetarian principles.". - "What's he done now?" they asked. "Haven't you heard? He's run away with a grass.widow.'V in Inatead of being at the foot of the rainbow It is In the human heart. As the spring la so shall the streanT'be. A pure heart; a contented, spirit;'- an , approving conscience brings this blessing. Not what one possesses but how it is possessed makes for happiness. The rich man robed 'in purple may not be as happy as the poor man ciad in rags. Happiness is found in liberty and not in license. AVild oats sown in prodigal youth never yields a harvest of happiness in old age. Happiness is the wages of piety; peace; purity; power; and perfection. The "blesseds" of the Master may be the "hap pies" of the man who follows in His. steps. The Bible teaches that happiness comes , from faith in God's providence; discovery , of wisdom's way; obedience 4f Christ's . commands; charity to earth's poor; submission to heav en's discipline; endurance of un- just persecution; fairthfulnesa to eternal reward. Let all hearts ' seek and find this priceless pearl of" happiness. : lXa. fills ! It .4 a4 4lo wliir boua.1 Mated ai Sluo Mboao. Tu m aiaw Br or j The Oregon Statesman first with international, national, state and . city news. ' Subscribe to It, then renew your subscription. Every ! Qualified Voter IN School" District No. JM . Should register his or 1 her choice .' ... tOT School Director at-the election to be held tomorrow MONDAY, JCNE ltth from 2:00 to 8:00 o'clock p. m. Polling place 220-2H South Commercial St. Office of Assoctatctl Oil V. v- . Let t hut rirnr h J. C. TIB BITS "The Squafe Deal Candidate" A Life Lines BY FRED TAYLOR Happiness. 'Happy are ye if you do them," The human race hungers for happiness. By all forms of serVrice and sacrifice, man has souiht for this "fountain of youth," this "elixir of life" and when thought attained has cried "eureka." ' But happiness comes not from without but from with'- The Town Is Not Going to the Dogs The Undertakers Are Advertising: In 1909 and 1910 at my advent Into Salem, I was a liber al advertiser in both local papers. U Pressure was brought to bear from; an association of . (which I was a member,' claiming that advertising was un ethical and that I must discontinue it if I wished to keep my membership. . v " How Times Do Change For Perfect Funeral Service Call Terwilliger Funeral Home 770 Chemeketa Street ; Telephone 724 (Watch for my advertlsoment'in next KuncLiy'H fitatesman. ) V'' i ii . . ; if ii m m It's Your Jivky- 6:4Sfo&; f or School -DirciLor MONDAY, JUNE 15th Vote For FRANK: E. NEER A man fully qualified to render public service and not handicapped by selfish interests nor seeking personal nrofits. Paid Adv. I I I II H II. m r:- : -; . ' ' " IN OUR OFFICE ! ; - -x I -r-wTTZTiX " . nEAH f BUTT HoW'tN VOU WetGKS ; . (91 I 0 ) 1 ISIVSIt ) V WOWMUH EACH StVlr4C,OU ) 1 DOROTHY DARN1T I By Charles J.IcManus r-tt3TfR! CAN Vou TELL. . HE WH ERE 1 "THE DEPOT ? I "1 . i " '