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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1925)
r " a -"1 V V; " - Inai Daily Free? Monday Vy" - m ctai-silix ruBLisazxci cosoijnr ail Boat Commeraial St, SM Oregoa . 2.3 i ::., M- Headrieka- re4 J. Too C K. Lta Maaaga! W. H. Hands ImU Smitk AUn4 Baaea. -CireaUtiom Manager eaagiag Editor 2 TUrpn H. f CleUiag Adrertialag Maaeger City KJlitoal ITHk Jaalkeeai Kmpr Jk Dept. - LJeetoek Kditor Poultry, Editor Teleeapn Editor i E. A. Btea -.-Society XdiMr lW. C Co PRESS KZXBEB Or THB AISOCIA' Taa Associated Prose la eelosiey entitled to taa !im for pnblleatloa at in aewa oUapatckea eroditel to it a Ht ataerwiae areditod la tkia papa sad slaa tae kaonl Caimar. Stop Ub'iM , BUSINE83 OmCli : .-. '. ?. r;.' . , : Tkanaaa J. Clark Oa, Bow Tare. 11-1S Wm lit ) 8k. Ckleaga, Xartaast 90 ' ' :i - - lag, W. B. Grotkwakt. Mlf. , rarMaa4 Offlea. Ml Wareeetor BMf, Pkeaa 6IT XtRoadway. Albert Byors. jUgr, in the case. Some faiths will-no doubt be shaken through the attacks on the Bible narratives but the" whole proceeoIng; is .a fiasco so far as its scope and purposes are concerned. f ff rut 1 " -A I j 1 .ii.n 1 ' - r J ' - ' :( -f xne wnoie case is lunaamentauy me act oi a young man deliberately defying the law of a 'state for the purpose of spectacular publicity. Real justice properly administered should require about an hour with the regularly constituted egal machinery of Tennessee m operation, to find Scopes guilty and sentence him accordingly. . , - Neither the theory of evolution nor the fundamentalist interpretation, of the narrative of man's creation should be dragged through the present slough of legal intrigue and sickening scientific verbosity. . , . Baal Haws Offlea Departmaat Jab Departmaat , TELEPHONES ! tt ar III dremlatleni Off taa II-10I Society dinar f. IIS ,.; ,1-' Entered at tta Poaioffloe la Balaa. Orafaa. hva aaaaaa-alaw atttor , LI :: -ii'.' 7? 1 ;'.; ., WENT ABOUT DOING GOOD: And Jesiis went aboat all Galilee, teaching In their lynasoxneaJ and oreachlnj: tbe Kosoel of ' the kine- dom, and healing, all manner of sickness and all -manner of disease among the people. . Matthew 4:23. ' j: ; A GIGANTIC GOAT INDUSTRY - probably half the 150000 Angora; goats of ' Oregon are within fifty miles of Salem. The number of milk goats in the Salem district' is increasing fast ) ' ,l '" But there is room for i vast expansion. Oregon i should have a couple of million of Angora goats; and more, and the number, of milk goats ought j to I run rinto ;the hundred id, mousanas in tine oaiem aisxnci, . . ; , Salem ought to be by long odds the greatest goat center in the United SUte.?fyjisj:the' best'goa'cpuntfy,' in'' the world. The first Roquefort cheese .factory; in ih United States; making the product from themilk of goats, is at Falls City, In Salem's trading district, jand tthis factory is a fSiccess and is pointing-the way to a gigantic industry ; : To'an industry that should be built up in this section to the. point of keeping about seventy millions of dollars' a year in this country; the amount that is being spent annually in the United States for ihe Roquefort cheese that is made in southern France. t v J j. Too much1 stress cannot be placed upon this prospect " The 'industry cannot be overdone, at least in .the present generation. The quality of the Roquefort cheese being made here at Falls City is equal to that of the article imported from .France, and the Falls City cheese is made under con ditions of absolute cleanliness;- It is an industry upon which oiir district may build with absolute confidence. The way is clear and plain. Ui; ; v. We should have condensed milk factories, using the milk of goats, and dried milk factories.; it, j - Nature has made this a great goat country; better even than Turkey or South Africa, f Our people should avail them selves fully of the advantages nature has given them. ' Angora goats have long. been, known to our people as . being of great value in clearing land. Late experiments show that they are of wonderful help in increasing the production . of grain crops. -H-! H N4;IJHHi !lMM;.;.:.4 . COMMENDABLE ; When costs of maintaining state institutions increase what a deprecating howl goes up. But the event of a decrease in the cost of the same institutions is received with the silence of a morgue. . An unusually good showing is being made wherein the Oregon penitentiary reports expenditures - over. $8000 less than its. allowance for the first six months of the present biennum arid other institutions are well within their allow- ances. v'-.;,' , . . t ' This condition is commendable. It is the goal toward which the heads of these departments of state service should strive arid(for it many if not all are striving. The wards of the state must be cared for in a humane and liberal vay. Arid to the resulting expense the taxpayer does not object. " r To those .who give of their best thought and energy in the service of the state and who render a favorable account ing of their stewardship The Statesman offers genuine com- riiendation.-' ; : -' -,i -. -. '' '"'"' wlti a rldlculpuj. little 'air of fin ality; She's Just-mad- 'causo ane cant bare her own way." " "yfk- Said Thatf :. 1 I stared at him In horror. Wltb aeannr babyish memory he had repeated a colloquy in which Dicky and I had indulged not long before when' Mother Graham was In one of her most trying tantrums. , I remembered now, scoring myself for underrating the sixe of my lit- tie pitcher's ears, that Junior had been building a block house while Dicky and I were talking, and that apparently he had been utterly ob livious to everything else save his play. Yet he jhad-remembered and. reproduced a sentence of Dicky's with almost his father's rery intonation. Mother Graham . dropped . the handkerchief and glared at the child. ' "Who said that. Richard Sec ond?? she asked imperiously. Junior looked at her with an air of detached deliberation, while held my breath. , "Said what?" he finally queried. and I realized with a great sigh of relief that the bomb he had thrown MUSBAi'S Adele Garrson's New Fhaao of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Copyrght by Newspaper Feature m . Senrice " The lsrcalites under Mosc used the kids of goats for their sin offering. The eleven curtains of the tent over the Tabernacle were' made of goats hair. ' Goats were before history was.. The city of. Angora, in the vilayet of Angora," Anatolia, Asia Minor, Turkey, now the capital of that country, has given the Angora goat of comirierce its name. t : : 4 The Angora goat; coming down to recent days, perhaps, from several different strains,, reached its highest develop ment in Asia Minor; until the pioneer, breeders of the Wil lamette valley engaged in the industry. ; y j . They have developed a higher type of the Angora goat than Asia Minor can produce. , , 1 .' ; The body of our Angora is larger, which means a greater shearing surface ; ,th"e mohair is stronger, from our 'Angoras, and It usually has more lustre. ! ' . I 4. ' .: The-manufacturers of mohair find our Angora mohair the f inest in the world ; arid th'e makers of Angora rugs and robes and chaparajos find the skins to be of the highest value .. ..The year long forage of this section makes the growth of mohair possible at aU seasons. ! ' ! r Arid the longer the mohair, above twelve inches, the more valuable it is. It has reached &' figure up to .$22 a pound, "'vfy M h t ; L 'I' 'jyivv-i 1::h"-i yj;; -k .- U- ' That the Turks hoped to retain4 a monolopy on Angora goats ia shown by the fact that they made the shipping out of , their country of these animals a crime punishable by death, i, The people of Salem have long known the value of the goat industry to this section and city. For a long time practically all the pure bred Angora goats in Oregos were raised within a radius of fifty miles from Salem, ana ? this city was the pioneer mohair market of the Pacific Northwest. 6bats are profitable' on any of our farms-sand they are especially profitable as scavengers ; to clean up the land, and particularly to help in the clearing of brush land. There! will not be enough Angoras here as long as any one . owning land does not keep at least a few.. ... -; . r The late Wm. IL Egan, who was one of our pioneer goat breeders, used to say that the Angora goat was the only farm animal that worked for nothing and boarded itself ; and paid ' ! CHAPTER P 59 THE BOMBSHELL-REMARK JUNIOR THREW AT HIS : ; GRANDMOTHER - ! I am extremely fond of my mother-in-law. but there are times when I have to exercise all my self-control to remember that she la an old woman, not well and en titled to deference because my hus band ia her son. . For never in my life have I known a woman eo maddeningly autocratic as she is when in - her own expressive'-if nclent parlance "her,?.-.!trv .has 'been rubbed the wrong way That' I unconsciousfy must hare' mployed an unusually stiff brush upon the present occasion. I real ized when I saw tbe grim forbid ding took with which she protested my taking Junior in my arms be cause she fancied or - pretended to that I had a cold. If it had been an ordinary occa sion I might hare humored her, although I knew that I was in per- en all the precautions against pos sible infection from the city which : 1 ' jp : TIIE CLOUDED ISSUE "'In spite. of , the volumes of oratory; preparep! ? f or the Scopes trial there is , but one question mvolyedland 'that is defiance to the laws of Tennessee. The question of the value or t necessity of the law which Scopes defied does not. enter properly into the case at law, now, being tried. The iegisla tutc'of Tennessee passed a law prohibitingteaching in-tax supported schools a theory that man's ancestry fi the lower anlinaL The electorate of Tennessee are represented in this law and through the regularly constituted courts of the state are trying to enforce the statute, i i J -k -. The opportunity to emphasize the theory of evolution is seized, upon by ultra publicists and the law defended by. the most eminent figures onithe political and' Iegal horizon. The pubfiS is interested because of the prominence of counsel mn romt. THtwoMtxt tout feet health, and I already had tak she had prescribed .upon my unex pected arrival at the farmhouse. But I had not seen my little lad for many weary days, and the sight of his' grieved little face as he looked at me with wondering eye steeled' my resolution. I walked steadily toward my mother-In-lawf and stooping, swept my imall son into my arm;' ' , For a second I thought I would be engaged in a miniature tug-of- t ar. because, at my .toucn oi me child, her arm tightened around him. But the next instant sh re leased him. Her face, .however. was black with anger asshe con fronted me. "I'll ! take the responsibility, Mother." I said, placatingly. but firmly, before she could speak. "I haven't the slm of a cold, and took the fnnlier precaution of spraying my nose and throat be fore I came down." . " Mother -rahan Is Teartul. "I have nothing . whatever, to say," she replied, with the awful dignity which is hers when she is mortally offended. "But please to remember that whatever conse quences there, are, are entirely up on your, own head. I have done only my duty in warning you, I could hot have it upon my con science to do less, even though I am only the child's grandmother, good enough to : leave him with while his parents are gallivanting around the country, but not good enough . to have anything to lay when his life Ms endangered by a frolish mother's stubbornness." Having thus amiably demonstra ted her intention of keeping sil ence, she put the familiar hand kerchief to her eyes, while I re sirned myself to the flood of tears which I knew would follow, jun ior, having coered my face with moist .kisses ,dnr.ingj his grand mother's harangue, now looked at her curiously. j "Granzle don't feel bad when she cries," he announced at last. Lbdge Roster FRATERNAL OfcDEB OF EAGJLES. jaal t n4 3rd Wad. W. O. W. Hall. S. M. ' Willrt, Bw'T, Trf. H84-B. dress fabrics and summer suitings. In recent days it is being made Into ' a great , Tariety of woven goods clothing materials, uphol steries and draperies as well as more delicate fabric of women's wear. Mohair goods, speaking generally, are; dependable and lasting. The world is coming to know this, and for this reason t. Angora goat is fast coming Into his own. Not long since dealer in these animals brought from South Africa, where the " Angora coat is cock' of the walk, an Im portation of 11 animal, selling them at auction In a little town In Texas. They brought a total of $34,235, or an average of $292.60 a head.; ;. The- lowest- price, was $110 for one animal, and, the highest 1100 for; tme-, animaL Four of these fine goals 'came to Oregon. The Angora goat will not live and thrive on brush alone. any more than sheep wilt live and (fatten on weeds alone. But brush is one of the Items- in me ioaaer bill of an Angora goat, and Ore gon has much rough land well adapted to pasture ' goats. . In brushy land where sheep will lose their wool to every trailside bush and -thorn, these goats will live the year round and keep their full PaaUaaad avary asaraUc atMam 4y) al Bm, Ua capiUl at Orm 1 was wholly exploded as far as he was concerned. Unless the sen tence he had uttered was repeated to him. and he was quizzed about its source, he could give no further information concerning It. This Quizzing I knew his grand mother's dignity would not allow, ffieece8 tUl shearing time. Many at any rate, before me.' But that she jsuspected me instead of Dicky of originating the remark Junior had.; only too -palpably echoed, 1 saw; In in the malevolent look her eyes flashed upon me. -And I was well content that she had made the mistake; . - t : She would be angry at "me, ful after a while with a pholosophical ly realized, but she would forget Jt reflection concerning the cautious ness Of "inlaws" Just enough to remember the many criticisms of me she must have uttered ' since my marriage to her son. But If she had known that her own idol ized son had uttered the slighting remark, her fierce but worshipping old: heart would have been sorely wounded. As I waited to hear what , she would say next. I resolved that even if I had to shoulder the blame of the remark myself, she should never know the true origin of Jun ior's little speech. (To be continued.) Bits For Breakfast I - More and more goats , ;i - t w ' That Is what the Salem district must have Angora and milk The Angoras to clean up the brush and make the land richer, andj the milk goats ' to ! build , i gigantic Roquefort cheese Indus try here. It can be done. 1 and must be done. It will bring us millions of outside dollars annu ally, for what is now largely going to waste. !' s Goats go with all other kinds of live stock. , They make the going better for all other kinds. They work for nothing and pay their board, v and yield a profit to boot. Said the Portland Telegram In its Issue of last night: ."The snow white, long-fiber, marcelled outer coat of the Angora goat, a fiber known in trade as mohair. Is said to be the best wearing high class fiber made Into any fabric on the face of the earth. For many, years mohair has been woven Into lining for men's coats. Into serviceable Lccal Rate Fcr Chisified Adycrtixb z Ona Hi Daily ar BaaJay . t aaata pmr word I eaat par ward aaata par ward Thraa timtt .. . Six tiaiva Saaday , SO aaata par ward I Ia ardar ta aara taa mm taaa aaa tlaia rata, advartiaaotaat atast raa ia eaaaacativa icaaaa. . Ka ad Ukaa (or Uas tsaa SI arata. v Ada raa Suaday aaly aaargad at aaa-Uaa rata. ! Advartlaataaatt (ept VParaaa la" aad "81taatfca Waatad") wiU batakea avar tha talapaaaa If taa dvortiaor ia a aubaenbar to paaaa. Taa Stataavaa via roeaiva advar tluBUta at aay iiaia af Ua day ar night. Ta laaata propor elaaifia aiaaa ada aaoaid Va 1 Wara f a.-aw TXIXTEOn 19 ax IIS Money to Loan On Ral Kttata T. K. TO&O (Ovar Ladd Bosa Baak) BEFORE TOU LEAVE T0U3 HOME OK CAR HAVE IT -, Insured Properly Phaaa 161. Backa Headrieka, U. B. Bank Bldr 4-7S-tt ah Oregon farmer can add to his net income very appreciably by keeping a band of these 'hardy cloth producers." Cm nTCMES a The story Is told of an engraver In the government printing shop at Washington who, when the first $20 yellow-back gold certificates were issued, received his salary Id these new bills and decided to take a trip to New. York. . I When "paying his hotel bill he handed the clerk one of the yellow DLKK.W3 HOT K4 backs, whereupon the clerk turned It over several times, then refused as politely as he could to accept it, saying that he had never seen such a bill and thought it of no value. '.'Why." Bald the engraver, "of course it's good; I. made it my self." "That's what I thought," re turned the clerk as' he rang; for the house detective. A young 'American who. was bi cycling in southern France was pushing his machine up a steep hill, when he overtook a peasant with, a donkey cart; who was mak Ing but little . progress, although the donkey was doing his best. The benevolent . cyclist, putting his left hand against the back of tbe cart and guiding his machine with the other,- pushed so hard that the donkey, taking fresh cour age, pulled his load up to the top successfully. The summit reached, the peas ant burst into thanks to his bene factor. "It was very good of you. in deed, monsieur," he protested. "I should never have got up the hill win oniy one aonaey: ' i AUTOMOBILES I , WE WRECK 'EM Part foe ail eara. Wo aU for lea. Ort oar prieoo trailer. . 8aUa Aata Wreckiaft Co, 402 S. Caitrca Street. Phone 3159. Ia3tf SCHEL.LER ACTO WRECKJXO CO.. will boy yaar old car. if Beat eaia pn paid. 10KS jr. C(im,mil St. ljlJtt AUTO REPAUlIXa GOOD 8ERVICE FAIR PRIRCE. KED- LXR k LEBENOOOD GARAGE; Gen eral repairiar. aeceaaoriaa. .tiroa. Mfllar aad Sootk ComaioreiaL " Pkoaa 54. i - Sa36tf BmaaaanMiMaHMHHEaM I . AUTO TOPS ' 5 FOR'- RENT Apartments S3 ITRJC1SHED APARTMENT TOR RENT. 543 Caart St. Phone 1057. Z3jlS FOR REIfT APABTMESTS. 110 MTL aiaa u ". - 23jl9 rURXISHED ROOM APARTMENT. dowaataira. 115. 41Z a. 21t 8t. - S3jis ATTRACT1TE LARGE USrCEJtlSHED aparUaaat, 1311 Coari. S3jlT FOB REST APARTMENTS 191 X. Coav KICK I BOOM APARTMENT. PRIVATE antraaca. , 654 Ccater. Pkaaa 1314-W. 3jiS FOR RENT Rooms 25 PLEASANT BOOM. CLOSE IN. PHONE 415-W. 25il HOC8EKEEPINQ OB SLEEPING ', 817 &. Cksrca. 25j24tf PRINTED CARDS, SIZE 14 BT 1V4" vordiaa-, "Boaaaa- ta Brat." price 10 eaata oaca. Statemaa Buiaeaa affica, (Toaad floor. FURNISHED BOOM WITH BATU FOR raatlenaa. ' Strictly aaodera koaja. roar blocks from CapiuL Phoa 1 994 J. j ijl7tt BOOM FOR RENT IN MODERN HOME. - throa blacka from atata kaaae. All roavoaieaeaa. GaaUomaa prvfomd. Pleaaa lira raferoncas aad iddmi A. car Statesman. . 25j28tf FOR RENT BOOM SUITABLE FOR todenta, wit atoepaif porek privilce. - Xvorytaiar. madora. Boforaaeoa ar ra- - quired. Addraaa room, caro 8U tetania. FOR REXT Hoasea 27 HOUSE FOR BENT CLOSE IS. IN quira Bote! Arso. 27j26tf SEE US FOR TOP AND PAINT WORK. O. J. Hull Anto Top Paint Shop. Rear fire department. $-a!6tf HELP WAXTED Female 13 WANTED VOCNO WOMEN FOR TEL- epkone operating., expertenco not re quired. Paid while learning. Apply Chief Operator, Tie Pacific Tel. A TeL ., Salem. 1323 WAXTKD Emptoyment 19 FOR QARDEX PLOWING, BASEMENT difcinc and tam work, pkooa 19F3. I - - . lml4U rOTJNO WOMAN WISHES , HOUSE keeping country -or city, country pre ferred. Lone men ' need not aaawer. Bo 40 enre Steteoman. 19)16 FOR REXT 21 TO! LEASE BEST BUSINESS LOCA tion in Salem. See B. Macy. 203 Oray Block. i-' 21j8tf FOR RENT 8TOREBOOM ON atreet. Inquire Hotel Ary0. STATE 21j28tf PRINTED CARDS. SIZE 14" BY 7" wordinf "For ' Bent." price 10 centa each. Statesman Ba tineas' Office, oa rrod floor. SHOW JUDGES XAMED YAKIMA,' Wash!. Julr IS C. jVinceat of Moscow, Idaho, was today named judge of horticulture and E. ' F, Qalnes of Pullman, 1 Walt for D.W. GRIFFITH'S t Master Picture HOI FOB RENT S-ROOM MODERN HOUSE wita fall basement, aad paeed atreet . aad car lino. 25 per month. Phono : 2190-J or call at 395 N. 1SU St. . : -.27jl3 FOR BENT DWELLING, AT 1052 Sac 'laaw; 20 per moata. Call at States man basiaasa affica, ar Becka.ft Hea drieka. ,. .: . 27aS'J FOB BENT ' T-room ood plastered koasa In nortt Salem; 2 klocka from street ear. t-B trees aad garden. I30.0O dot moatb. Ulrick aad Robert t. 123 'No.' Com'l Pkeao 1384. - '. - ' ' 27jl4t1 FOR REXT Farms ' 29 rOB BENT I ACRES .WITH BCILD- inja, miles out oa pared road. 12. r. L. Wood. 341 State ft. ' 29jl7 WAXTKD SliAcelUneoua 35 WOODRT. THE AUCTIONEER BUT1 aaed faraituxa for cask. Pboaa 611. ' V . ISart HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR UREII store, tools, famitoro. 8tiff'a Used Goods Dept, appasita caart aaasa. 35m22tf CASH PAID rOB FALSE TEETH dental gold, platinam aad discarded , Jewelry. Hoke Smelting aad. Refinery Co Otaero, Miekiraa. .- 35j27 WANTED PRIVATE MONET FOR farm loaas. W bare seraral applica tion oa kaad. ' Hawkiaa It Roberta Ine.. 205 Oreroa Bldr. S5dt4tf FOR SALE 87 FOR SALE 8ET " OF " GOLF CLUBS, balls and bsf. Tel. 1S5S-J. 37J1S WRITE 37jl5tf HOU8EHOLD FURNITURE. 2304 care Statesman. LANGE RANGES COMPLETE LINE Peoples Faratiora Store. 271 N. Com. . merciaL STsl ' FOR SALE OLD NEWSPAPERS. TEN ceats a handle. Circalation departmoat Orecoa Statesman... 37tl Trespass Notices . : For Sale Treataaa Notices, siis 14x9' larkea, firiatod an rood 10 oaaeo caarass beer ng tao words. "Kotieo Is Hereby Gi ea Thafr Troapasaing is Strictly FarWd den On Theso Pramiaoa Under Peaalte af Proaacatioa." Price 15c aack ar for 25c . Statesman Pub. Oa, Salem. : Orer". ... - 7att Wash., was. named judge of agri culture for tbe Washington State' fair to be held here September 1 1 . o 1 20.- . Eugene: Clay Products Com pany to install 120,000 machinery for tile works. BILLY'S UNCLE WHT fxj-vo WANT rniSTER jM A TRAMP AND GuirJtSS OAO ON eCCOurT.OF what fib L vvEAK FROM - sj H G C R . 4w t ! HAD A Qitt TO .fit. cri o attw Bjr Charles McHIancs COME MOVNO f-ki0A r - HII IwtiCAMT SPARE i ll ' ! "ni I 1 1 ANN TMiajG tlTMtn.LJ 1 VEV viSYf W wU.; r II 1 r. it rsr wot . e i j i t - i n t - i i at I 1 - ww W w am7WBBKL I I I M a SJ W w .ansn II r AA.mmmKmmmtmmmmmammiiamm m rJL-f- 4-tAT, for r,vr LU..F.?n 4, ' J .7 .. . . . 1 7 m m w " A ' JL . - af l I I P4a - I I t , i . eX JsW- na. m nn a a m m r m m. j. - . s m m wm m m : am a m rrnw naan fx , : 3 ,' i t-.v t. i I -V ' i fc"- -V ' - .r - issainaai.m.1 a .1 mmmnBmmannn,sa,B "',"""aTamaamma ;;vl; :,;--v ..: . . : i : r - "" " . . !..; ; ! ' ; . ' '