THE OHEt'ONT; S:iAN, SALE1I,- OHEGQN U JWEDXESDAY MOUNIKG, AUGUST-12, 192.- I v 5 1 : I'll , i: : S : 0 Issued Daily Except Monday by" . TEE STATESMAN PTTBLISHISQ COMPACT v Heaarieks -, Vanarer ,,i'rlJ. Tooae .-. - Manin(-K,d,wr ; C,K. Lo . - . . . City Editor Liiia ftmitk Telegraph Editor ;;.Adre4 Bunch. v- Society Editor-. Hi Bov'S Commercial St Salem, O-ecoa ! W. H. Hete'eiao - Clmtatioa Maaager Ralph 11 K.etxt& i 4u.'vniting Manager Frank 4aktai X..vr Tn npt. W.uiCeaticr . :. T-onltry Editor I WATER ITUXflON ENCOURAGING - " ' - , ; A very encouraging start' has-been made towardpure mountain water for Salem.' It will be the most valuable asset ever acquired by this city. With every step taken toward this acquisition, given' the same publicity which the .water company and the city authorities have freely given, there will be general support for the project. . : uxhbek . or -the associated peezr - The Ataariated Press la eaeluairely entitled to the m its ri ja n ilipatehea credited to it or .t otherwise credited tfcta vir &A.UaQ is oeai mi pabUbed herei. .-,.;"... ' ' . , , - - , ' " BUSIXES8 OFFICES Alhert Eyem. Sas Worrrgter Bid r., Portland. Ore. lpm r. CUrh. Co, K-n. TorkJ 128-136 W. 31t St.! Chfwi atA V Aataah. . .J. U"y f yn' Bhro" K'd. Baa Francisco, Calil.; Higzina Bll Loa Calif -, t itfidg. J 1 I i Basiaew Office 23 or 585 Society Editor -, ',ftn,-, TELEPHONES: , , jCircatatioa OfncJ83 Kewi. Dtrtment . .2S- -C .-,.108 ' - Job Departnient.......'.I." '683 Entered at the Post Office la Baletn, Oregon, ai aecond-claae viatU' ".-',5'.' August ia,'i025- ' - J ' ' , ANKND TO WOUItY,: Be careful fdr nothing:" bntcin? everything by prayer" and supplication with thanksglring let your requests" be made known unto Ood.; And the peace of God, which passetlrall un derstanding, shall kSep your hearts and mind through. Christ. Jesus. PblUpplans.il$,!jf.. , - r ,. ' . .' HTH US BID'S love:. Adele - Garriaon's TVew PImim 'of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE opyrght by , Newspaper! Feature Service ' ' : r1,.ee-'. REVERTING TO LOGANBERRY. JUICE , yThe Producers Canning & Packing Company of Sklem fs fust now serufinir out rhwlcs in f hn mamKan if . ,.- m . . - 'w) uiyuiVbO ,V1 fU.': iUj;4III berrv nool. ahnnt fiffv trrnwprs wlrt on 'c-TXAVtski,lw4i-.,.i.l Company . - And the checks call for five and five-eights', cent1 a "pound for 'the growers - '. " ' ; -n That is net to the growers. That is, each grower . gets tfcmuch per; pound for the loganberries he delivered to the "cannery 'of the company which he himself partly-owns ; beinr a stockholder .of Jhe company 'owning .'and operating the cannery. . 1 The company has canned the loganberries furnished by 1 its grower stockholders and has sold them and collected the fr-money, f or them, -arid .the growers havebeenchargedj. the expense of canning, including the overhead and all other items, , - . - t The- writer is pleased to take this as an illustration of 5. the feasibility of the project he has been; advocating, s to be organized oh an extended scale, for putting loganberry j uic? on the "market in a large way, and stabilizing the loganberry ft inuusiry. .- r, ; . - -. . . ' . . . . : i s ' The canneries of Salem paid five cents a pound for logan berries during the season just ended.. The growers' cannery mentioned has netted for its farmers producing loganberries fiveighths of a cent a pound better; though, of course, they ran the risk of realizing less. So the independent canneries paid about what theyt could afford, themselves taking the risk of loss, instead of the farmers who grew, the loganberries which they canned. , -' " The Producers' Canning & Packing Company-has been juccessful with other , fruits grown by "its-stockholders. In S IOOL DAYS By DW1G ii It fi JW . " r 4 ; CHArTEU.82 !a I THE THOUGHT. THAT SWEPT MADGE WHEN SHE SWV MAMIE. 1 !' J "VV-.ll! What did you find out?" .Moioer Graham boomed the Aura at un from the open door rt ; rbica cje ; was majestically trfcm4u. Jnnior; with his faTorite oy beat r ood just behfnd her and t noffcfl i bit maliciously, that she 3 iot 8v concerned over his tak inh. coid as she had beeni .when he ran out to..meet jqer when I took him out ia the ,'f'ar , a little while befort, ; . 4i1,H:r-; "Tht; ; Rirl ia coming oyer i right away," I said. least her mo ther tioraeed tnshe; would." ' 'What i sf-e siag toiiarge?" OehJud thi? was . pitfall into wh'h 1 i!d wt propose to fall, Ono ot Mdttbr Graham's unpleas ant chari-tif-rli'-Ica 5n her tendency to eva- .orotic iug an agreement antt tyen .-agly t-j criticise the rrrr-oct ue.v, X harei tccured. . t irai?.,"t lfc!t thut question VO'l. i 4td 4acc'jarinely. "You will know d mticb better than I chit the ts w.tii." x I , 1 kxeY iLa.1 in this instant Mo ther Graham longed fori the days when . mothers-in-law . j had the right to punish recalcitrant wires of their bans, but she is too shrewd to show anger when bested, j With a superior frostiness of mien, ship ping me to some point near Perry's last venture, she gave me j what Dicky terms the "once over." Mrs. Tlcer Is Placid. fI'm surprised that you had so fact, it has madei a record of conspicuous success, over a per- jingiy,, and then she turned, back iod of several years - , I into the living-room, wUh Kather- And " (rnurnntnorl iha oamo cftTisorvafiuo wanwomorf 0 ine.and. me meekly following In juaAMf) jkunitMifyvu iv vv4mva uvv wtu, vilivi we 40 I - . . , . . i a very safe and solid concern. ' ' - tov bear, brought uo a noisy rear, What has been done in a way of considerable magnitude hinging at the top of his voice what v.. ai : i v j - i i - um eviaentir aeemea a luiiaov. -- iiir t 1 1 u rrirwu m i"j ri via iwtiiu v r r s iuvivcs nr'Jir riv tti -j n i - f ., . t , ----- Mrs. Ticer; seated primly by the similarly organized, to include a large number of our farm- Urindow, r08e as we entered, a trib- ers nroducinz loffanberries ' . .1 ute which she never tails to accord v.! maw ilnna nn'tn Mower oranam 8 years.;, u is a profit; including canning, barreling, freezing, and in juice mistake ior deference to her s perior' so-.lat position,' and in her eyes it vailly makes 'bp for her neighbor's ether Independent ways, "Will Mamie come?' she asked, and Mother Graham scarcely wait ed .for my assenting !; answer to snort contemptuously: " j " 'Mamie!' Where in the world did they pick np that fool name? I bit fny lips, for. Ji knew that Mrs. Tlcer had a favorite little niece who answered to tire same diminutive, but there was no hint of even annoyance in her voice as Bhe answered placidly: '. "I guess it's the first one the- thought of. Her own name is su long and twisted nobody over herq could pronounce it. I imagine the girl chose it herself when she went to school." "What Is Your Name?" ' , . ' v Katie put her head Into the liv ing room at this juncture in . the unceremonious way which infuri ates my mother-in-law. f ; ;. j ' , "Mamee, she; here," she an nounced, and with an encouraging "Coom along, vunce," she propell ed, into, the room a Ught-haired. blue-eyed - wisp of a girl, who at first sight , justified Mother-in-law's continent that "she looked as if a breath would blow her away." But a closer look at Mamie gave me an impression of wiry strength and tlrelessness. gave me .some thing else, also which set me ran sacking my memory. To my cer- tain knowledge I had never seen this girl or any of her people be fore, and yet my eyes went back again and again to her pale face. trying to remember where I had seen features strangely resembling hers." , -f , , - "Dis Mamee, eferybody," Katie announced.' Don't be scared," she admonished the girl. "Nobody goln' to eat'you." . - That Katie's' admonition was un necessary. Is aw at once, as I thihlt aid my" mother-in-law. The girl" had a timid shrinking look, but 'Underneath it there were both composure and alertness, which I conjectured, had their roots as much in her own nature as they did in the knowledge and poise she had gained, from working for American women. , "What is your name?" my mo ther-in-law asked, loftily Ignoring Katie's introduction. 'Mamie." She pronounced .the name quickly, wunoui me pro longed, emphasis ot her mother and Katie. I don't - mean that ridiculous name, 1 mean your own in your own language." . I saw a flicker in the light-blue eyes which Interpreted to me a obstinacy equal to Mother Gra ham's own. ' . I can't say my name in your language," she said, speakinp slowly and evidently applying with pains the diction - she ' had learned in - the country district tf r" 7 ' ' .: ,.,'"r 'i i CocHTtv votn rcxeei again (f 1 fe : . iV ' i 1 r ): . And they now' call Florida "The Sunporch of. the Nation." Los Angeles will probably come for ward clhlmlng to be "The Ham mock of the Universe." Subsidies to those who produce. doles to those who do not produce. will soon put Great Britain in tho poor house of nations. Craftsmanship, the handwriting of the imagination, the pen that writes the history ot civilizations. The craftsman is the" man whose supreme joy is in his work. Whether he harnesses a waterfall, invents a new coal loader or halt soles a pair of shoes, he prides himself on how well he doe9 it. As such a worker, he is related to those who first harnessed steam, who lavished their lives anony mously on the great cathedrals, or who first molded copper Into bit lleaxes. It Is the craftsman's pro ducts that arc always prized above all others. . , - j- i U .a form. ; , - - r- There is a chance here for a 'man with a vision, with honesty above reproach, and with organizing ability f a rare order. , - Such a man can make a large place of usefulness for him self, and he can be the means of stabilizing a whole great industry, and thus conferring immense annual benefits upon the whole of the Salem district, and upon the state. : i TRAFFIC OFFICER NEEDED 0- ABYIGIEI Fl school. "And my m6th'ef people don't like my name, -I- mast some home." - - ( To be continued) CITY CLERK VANISHES OLYMPIA MAX IS SOUGHT B OLYMPIA. Aug. 11. (By Assd- ciated Press.) Following a futile search throughout the northwest by -relatives and local police to lo cate City Clerk Ray R. Tucker who disappeared here August 5, an appeal was sent tonight .to authorities of the Pacific coast to assist In locating the man. - Tuck er, a veteran or the world war. was last seen last Wednesday. iiemoers of nis lamny were un able to cite any reason for his dis appearance, and officials reported that his records and accounts aa city clerk were-ln proper orderi IT'S YOUK OWX STORY ..There is a beautiful theory preached by Emmerson, that there is one mind. common to all Indi vidual men. ... j "Every man Is an Inlet to the, same and to all the same," he Said. L - . . j 1 "He that is once admitted to the right of reason is made a free man of-the whole estate. ; "What Plato has thought, he may think: . . . j -What'a saint has felt, he may feel;'; - - . .. '. - - ! "yhat at any time' has befallen ajiy.vmaji, he can understand. "Who hath access, to1 this nnl- versal mind is a party to all that is or; can be done, for this is the only and. sovereign agent." Of the works of this mind, his tory ;i3 the record, i ' Its genius is illustrated by the entire series of years, months. weeks,, days, hours, minutes, sec onds. " ' And thus It-la said that man is explicable by nothing less than all his history. - If we believe with Emerson that there Is one. mind common to all men. then we believe that without hurry, without rest, .the human spirit goes forth fnom the begin ning to - embody every ' faculty every - thought, - every emotion which belongs to it. In appropriate events. - ; - J "Always the thought Is prior to the fact." ' Emerson "said. - i "All 'the facs of history pre exist in the mind as laws.. 1 . "Each law in turn is made by circumstances predominant, and the limits of nature give power to but one at a time." A man is the whole encyclo pedia of facts. The creation of a thousand for ests is "in one acorn. j And Babylon. Egypt. Creece. Rome. Gaul. Britain. America, lie folded in the first man. I Epoch after 'epoch are merely the application of man's manifold spirit, to the manifold, world. ! - " "The world exists for the edu cation of each man," Emerson ob served. There is no age or state ot so ciety or mode of action in history to which there is not somewhat corresponding in his life. . j If you would .know yourself,. read history. It's your .own story. t. people. They are In circumstances In which they will appreciate kind attentions from the people of Sa lem; Will not our good people let them know that Salem has a great and sympathetic heart? I. . ';'. ; " - '. Some Statesman readers are go ing to be surprised. In the Slogan pages of tomorrow, at the extent of the seed business of this dis trict: and more especially Its pos sibilities. If you can help the Slogan editor, please do so, today. r ' s . A vacationist sends as souvenir Card the menu of the hotel at wh'ich he is stopping; sends it to a -friend at the writer's elbow, and writes: "Wish rou were here Noting the prices, the", friend says be Is darn, glad he is not. j " I j.' W . t We are to have electric weddings henceforth: Jt is jto be Tn the fourth anniversary. Did You Ever Stop To Think? I lhawaoo. OkJa, Board of Cowew That the interest hotel and r taurant men have In the communi ties they serve is a force that moves them ahead. That hotel and restaurant men always radiate a spirit ot opti mism and progresslvcncss which helps to build towns into citioj and keeps the wheels ot industry moving forward at a rapid rate. That hotel and restaurant men know there is only one way, and that way is forward. That hotel and restaurant men are fired with the Joy-of service. That hotel and restaurant men. in massed formation are maklns the road of progress and prosper ity for their business, and sweep ing on to their goal. Hotel and restaurant men are men who have won clean victories before; . men whose lives arc an open book to all. Hotel ana restaurant men find It both business and pleasure tr take an active part in the uphold ing and betterment ot the homa city. Hotel and restanrants that are steady advertisers have a -steady business. r Bits For Breakfast ' I Normal weather S - Which means theiinest summer climate on earth. ; , "c Mrs. Nathan Starkey, her three daughters aged 8. S and 3 years, and her baby aged 7 months,, and her late . husband's aunt, . Mrs. Boye, are at the Salem Deaconess hospital, and her son, age 10, is at the Salem hospital with a frac tured skull. All are either suffer ing from fearful Injuries or are shocked with grief and nervous strain. The bodies of Mr. Starkey and the twin baby aged 7 months were sent to Santa Crpz last night for burial. This all comes from the automobile accident on the Pacific highway, south of Salem last Friday. These are high class TONY Horse DUKE Dog ami VsmWiki in 4 W i Mi 0 Starts Friday CHICHESTER S PILLS I I St I Alt rmfwim a . 4 I II rl..aital.SdHl.UntliH Protect Your Health Don't let that summer cold get the best of you. Get a bottle of Schaefers Herbal Coush Cure All Prescript ions filled by men who know bow CCHAEFER'C J DRUG STORK The Yellow Front The Penslax Store 133 North Comitxt-t-Lal Phono 197 StrtMt r r r Salem grows and with it come additional demands and rcsiwnsibilities. Before the advent of the motor vehicle .traffic, officers, to. protect pedestrians from traffic accidents were few. Menl women and even children were quite safe from vehicles, in crossing from one street to another or from ; one side to another of the same street. The. street cars gave , warnings at all crossings and drivers of horse-drawn vehicles were accustomed to turning aside or stopping, even,ib save the life or limb of the youngster who darted, -out in front of them or the confused grown-up who was in a hurry for ttahome or market. But thoso days of safe and calm proce , lure have passed away and with -them a host of luckless ' travelers who were unable to adapt themselves to the greater i "limits of speed of the myriads of gas'driyen vehicles'which ' "2arted against them from somewhere at the crossings. " " Motor driven vehicles are increasing every day; so is the .number of. them driven oh Salem streets until the1 orctinarV tcty of our citizens demands additional traffic protection.' ' 'Vraffic congestion ati State 'and Commercial ; streets should b i lessened and both lives and vehicles now in extreme.danger : a ring1' "rtish'' hours should be protected. Business should ' and could be expedited also by prompt arid decisive direction of traffic' by a traffic officer at this intersection of streets. : : ' A special traffic officer should be assigried'-to this duty with hours from ten to twelve in the forenoon and from four to eight-o'clock during the afternoon. Such arrangement is "approved by Chief of Police. Minto and ; by traffic officers Euwartls and mcKman, it ls repuncu. ...... ... K; ; Tlic unusual decree of traffic congestion at the intcrscc ' i tion of Stale and Commercial streets is caused by theerossing 1 of card diagonally 'at this point and its central business loca ! tiuii. Blockade of traffic from Ferry to State street is com i.'moaaipon the loading and discharge-of passangersthis - intersection during the. hours mentioned here. : Tho creation of a safety, zone for pedestruura is here - - impoydbh under rulings of:.tho public; scmcc' commission. Durir ' special days includiiair HinrAtettr I . been provided at" this place. But every dayiow is"a .ZtvJ l day co far us the amount of traffic is concerned, 1 1 1 1 I BILLY'S UHWJE 1 . ;' : . fJV ' :f - ; , ! ' " I DOOtnYDARNIT , : I '? I . -i ' i ! By Charles Mcllanus I ir. . " TTT ' . . . : ,. , . tt-tu " r t -f ! ' . ' jr-nn ' . ' a i "1. ... . vAlW WHATS BA3Y CRYIMGJ J HE .WANTS V? , WHATS XHERE J THE MAM M4 COULD NT VOO We5! OuT THE r5& J WHERE WAS HE? 1 1 OUT TAKiis J. , R AB0UT rri "1-0 GO T k W " HAN wiTHOOT -22U WALK fe tUrps mw$ -imt yvM