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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1925)
THURSDAY MORNING OCTOBER 15, 1025 9 1 INDUSTRIAL OREGON PRODUCES QUALiTY PRODUCTS The advertisers on this page are OREGON FIRMS. Each takes pride in putting 'ORE GON QUALITY' into its products, j hen you buy their goods you are assisting in a mutual ly beneficial co-operation to bring bigger payrolls, more capital, more people into Oregon. You help build bigger towns and cities. You increase and stabilize the markets for Oregon farm products. ! ! . 1 Your success is inseparably interwoven with theirs. Every dollar you spend for their pro ducts will influence the future of Oregon to your mutual benefit. Ask your home dealer to supply you with x j ! This cnt is used by courtesy of the 'This cat U used y courtesy of the ; Associated Industries, of Oregon. Associated Industries, of Oregon. TUP. OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON 1 T. A. Livesley & Co. Largest Growers, Shippers and Exporters of PACIFIC COAST HOPS j A Offices: Salem, Oregon and San Francisco, California I HOME WET WASH LAUNDRY Can take the Wash Iay out! of your heme Call 171 -U' Price 75c and up; 1356 B Street I Special $2.50 Schwayder Suitcase for $1.00 j Capital Exchange 342 North C-ommerclal 606 U. S. National Bank Bid. Phone 859 , Res. Phone 469-J DR. B. IL WHITE j V " : Osteopathic Physician and Surgeon, i Electronic Diagnosis and: Treatment -. ' (Dr. Abram'a Method) j Post System For Fet Salem Oregon Keep Tenr Mo-ty la Oregon Boy Monnauate Mado at Salem, Oregon CAPITAL MONTTMEKTAIi WOEJLS J. C. Jones a Co., Froprtetera Ail Kindt of Muuiavtntal Work Factory and Office: 2310 8. Com'L. OpposlU X. O. O. T. Ceaetety, Box SI one 889. ' SALEM, OREGQ1T OREGON FARMS BY RADIO BY SHIPMAN (Continued from page 6) try, In whatever vicinity they were campaigning. KGW. at Portland, was open to all authorized party leaders at all times during the campaign. - . i :- J tThe Hoot Owls j The Morning Oregonian of Port land is one ; of tbe oldest coast newspapers!. It came . into radio V The industrial center of the United States is rapidly gravitating to Oregon because of the marvelously favorable conditions and prodigality' of resources, us like the first pink of an opening rosebud. . Every dollar spent for "OREGON QUALITY" products stimulates it into full and refulgent bloom. VALLEY PACKING COMPANY 2?i2E I T Some Observations by the 'Typical Man of All Work 1 i on the Average Farm (The following is the current installment of the News Bureau of Animal Husbandry, under the heading, "Our Hired Man.") I'd like to meet the feller at the dairy who counts the bacteria. Some job! ; . ' I . The boss says every dairy farm er oughter keep t a diary not xbont himself, maybe,, but about his herd. ' ,, ! . - I remember the time I used to think a hale of hay on the head and a bucket of water in; each hand was balanced rations. ! Says , the boss, "Come i .cold weather, we'll have heaps of time to give the milk cows a grand Cleaning." Huh! I notice that once ; clean. cow is lots easier to keep clean right Along, f When I asked the boss; what .was he ; laf fin' at. he said, "Jim Henkin's wife asked him for a new far coat. Mebbe he'll put hh machinery in the shed this winter. " He'll save enough to pay for the coat." Funny how every October I get MM HM EAGLE DAMP " WASH Try Our MiDamp Wash ,25 lbs. for 75c , Additional Pounds 3c per lb. R. H. Wolter, Prop. Cor. 16th and C St. Phone 1892 DUNSMOOR BROTHERS 2218 SUM Telephone 2230 Painters and Decorators Interior or Exterior Work Wi ipecitliie on Interior work. Let na stow yon Mat work wt aavt done. after the war, when it took Dick Haller, erstwhile New York re porter and later Oregonian news writer, as director, opening ; in May, 1922, with a fifty-watt sta tion and enlarging the following November to 500 watts. Haller had heard of various comedy clubs on the air and was talking to tbe news staff about it. "Let's start a club out here," said Edgar B. Piper, the editor of the Oregonian. What would they call It? Someone suggested the Hoot Owjs, to roost on the Oregonian tower and hoot on Friday nights. A degree team was the next step and eight Portland business and professional men, chosen for in dividual ability, began their week ly publicity plan. They initiate with lodge orders, they boost their city, and stunts and pranks of the vaudeville order fill the late air on Friday nights. .. t Occasionally they have the per sonal aid of the Righ Reverend Walter Taylor Sumner, Bishop of Oregon. The bishop delights his followers by playing such tunes as Annie Rooney and Sidewalks of New York on a circus calliope. He even opens an occasioal radio vesper' service with a calliope hymn. The Oregonian estimates, ac a hankerin to plough corn. Ever since I learnt to do things ' without bein' told, I like my boss es better. TOKYO'S TRAFFIC DANGEROUS TOKYO. The number of traf fic accidents in the busy streets of Tokyo are rapidly increasing, ac cording to the metropolitan police records. During the past 12 months, ended in March, there were 6423 motor ..car accidents in which 81 persons were killed and 3496 injured. Tnere were almost as many bicycle and wagon ' acci dents. In tram car accidents 76 were killed and 1925 injured.',; EIGHT CHIES in! coin Thousands of Dollars i Paid Out for Dairy Products and Employes Wages Marion county has eight high grade creameries runnlne at cap acity and adding material pros perity and .wealth, to the rarions communities Vhere located and to tha state in reneral. . Three of these plants are locat cording to letters received, that! 300,000 listen in on the Hoot Owls each Friday night. Out in Oregon they enjoy bld fashioned music, and letters often request familiar songs 'of yester day. A popular group is the four Walker brothers, old-time fiddlers from the Forest Grove. Opera stars have sung over KGW at various times. The Oregon Agricultural college realized the value of radio for broadcasting farm topics about two years ago. In March, 1923. they first went on the air with lectures over a small station in the physics department on the college campus at Corvallis. In October, 1923, at the invita tion. of Dick Haller, representing the Oregonian, the university ex tension service began broadcasting agricultural lectures and farm topics from Portland, ninety miles from the campus, every Tuesday evening. On Friday afternoons a special home-economics series was broadcast under the direction of Mrs. Jessie D. McComb, state home-demonstration leader. The schedule for 192 4-5 began November eleventh, with a fifteen minute lecture on animal husban dry by H. A. Lindgr'en. Every Tuesday these programs are given. not more than fifteen minutes each in length, covering such sub jects as landscape gardening, crops poultry, boys' and girls clubs, markets and marketing, agricul tural engineering, farm manage ment, vegetable and flower gar dens. Radio Alfalfa Doing; Fine A Silverton farmer writes that he has seven acres of radio-raised alfalfa which is doing fine." A man from Halfway says that farm ers will listen to radiocasts when they won't read books on the same subjects. A Hillsboro farmer writes that he farms enough in the daytime and doesn't wish to continue at night on tbe radio, so he enjoys the Hoot Owls. A stockman from Aurora mentions the valuable talk on swine by Professor ,LindgTen. A man from Albany especially mentions the bee culture talks by Professor Scullen and Professor Kable's engineering features. Gene McDonald, of Chicago, president of National Broadcast ers, said the other day:' "Radio is the greatest mechanical educa tor the world has yet known. And the farmer as he learns its value, will sell his hogs to own one." And won't that same farmer sell the next carload at better prices because of his newly acquired radio market service? Canby Paving work begun on Oregon City-Canemah section. L0AXS Mad Oa Good City Proparty Lw rata, aa7 payment plan; all paid by and of year. Fana loans, large or small tracts. Private aoney. Sea ma first; yon will it bo farther. - G. W. LAFLAR 4IO Oregon Building DAIRY Perfectly Pasteurized Milk and Cream Phone 725 ed in Salem. They are the Marion, the Capital City Cooperative and The FaJrmejfnt. Others 'are the Jerrerson Creamery, at Jefferson, Silverton Creamery and Ice Com pany; at Silverton, Silver Falls Creamery company, Mt. Angel Farmers' creamery and the Hub bard Creamery. t 'Thousands of dollars are paid out; through these organizations for dairy products each week and large amount of money are also paid to employes i who establish and maintain homes. All indus tries are stimulated .br the cream ery business and in this phase of Industry this county Is surely f arored. There is howeyer, still QUA! MILK FOR SCHOOL CHENHES ! j Gives Stronger Bodies, More Alert Minds, and Resist ance to Disease The value of serving) fresh pas teurized milk to public school children is no longer a debatable question in view of the results at tained by many progressive com munities all over the ! United States, Canada and New Zealand, where they have carried the work far beyond the i experimental stage. The reports of; the results obtained show a high; degree of success in every instance, i Dr. Ira C. Brown, medical in spector of the public j schools of the city of : Seattle sys: 'The city of Seattle is rated as the healthiest city in tbe jworld, and the milk consumption undoubtedly has something to do With- it. In 1914 the consumption of milk per capita of this city! was 14 of a pint, wherein now; itj is .74 ol a pint, nearly a one hundred per cent increase, andi this corre sponds to the period in which we have been furnishing i and teach ing the children the value of milk as a part of the diet for all ages.! The result is a healthier city, a better school, an increased attend ance and a more receptive student, together with the upbuilding of childrens' bodies, thus rendering a greater resistance I to j disease. This is our answer to the question, 'Why milk In public schools'." I j ; Its Wonderful Effects In Seattle Dr. Brown j started serving pasteurized milk in tbe schools. The children whose par ents could affor it bought milk checks, the poor children were given them by the nurses so that they did not appear; objects of charity, the money fdr the latter coming out of the general school fund. "Within six months of sup plying milk tbe teachers found that the efficiency of jthei children had increased twb And j one-half per cent, restlessness and 'fidget ting seemed to disappear, the condition of acid mouth jwas cor rected and mothers reported nor mal appetites were regained. In fact, they became perfectly nor ma children and the j only change in their daily life was the addi tion of pasteurized milk to their diets." In Other Cies ! Huntington, Indiana, was a pio neer in milk feeding to school B.RAND ?AC.0N.ANg1kA5 KEXXELL-KLUS 1 i ! - Specialists j in . Portrait Photography Studio: 429 Oregon Building Square Deal Welding Works Ox-acetylene and Electric we specialize on cylinder blocks and aluminum cases, heavy cast iron, steel tanks, boiler and fine welding, springs, frames and fenders. I j ii ; ; If It's made of metal we can weld it l I rbone 864 349 Ferry St. j Salem, Ore. Butter Nut Bread . :'v,:t : L - ! i; "The Richer, Finer Loaf CHERRY I CITY BAKERY room for more dairies and, dairy! cows. And with the Slogan "Im provement in the: quality of dairy -fllL Ji lL California Garage GUY HICKMAN, Mgr. SUPER SERVICE STATION MOTOR SPECIALISTS Free Crank Case Service High Pressure Greasing 1000 South Commercial Street Phone 1987 Cylinder Grinding By Expert Workmen With High-class Tools DONERITE SHOP 349 Ferry Street, Salem, Ore. WINTER ENCLOSURES Stationary Tops, Acta Top Repalrtne Oar prices will ples yon In Alley Bck of City Tin Dept. O. J. HULL AUTO TOP & PAIXT SHOP HOTEL BLIGH "A Home Away From Home" $ 1.00 per day and up j Frank D. Bl'gh NEW SALEM HOTEL Where Hospitality Awaits You New Building, New Equipment, - Best Located George Crater, Manager W. C. Culbertson, Proprietor children. Three years ago the Huntineton County Anti-tubercu losis society asked for permission to give milk to undernourished children of poor families. When investigation was made it was found that the children of the wellto'do, were undernourished also. Weight charts were pub lished, publicity given the work and milk furnished to all children The health and mentality of the Children increased steadily. Organized millk feeding at Readiv. Pa., started in Decem ber 1921. Scholarship and de portment improved and tbe next year the number of contagious diseases among the pupils drink ing pasteurized milk were reduced from 42 to 9, indicating that the milk diet enabled the children to resist disease. In South Bend, Indiana, fresh pasteurized milk was furnished to 800 undernourished children the first year. The sale of Christmas seals by the tuberculosis league supplied a fund from which the Eat a Plate a Day Ice Cream Sold Everywhere ButtercuP Ice Cream Co. T. M. GREGORY, Mgr. ! 240 Senth Commercial Street SAUKM Salem 80,000 by 1930 RICH I REIMANN Real Estate and Insurance 307-3OS Oregon feldg. v,;- .Phone 1Q12 animals .and dairy products" the - i creamery business and the dairies iwm continue to prosper. Weatherly FHOBUGTS'' poor children were supplied with j milk. The children became in tensely interested in building up 1 ttfeir bodies. ' In the Great Metropolis In New York city it is estimat-1 ed that there are 216,000 under nourished children, rich and poor alike. The health department, a few years ago, made tabulations on school children and found that with practically no exceptions that children receiving plenty of milk were the most' active. At about the same time infantile pa ralysis was epidemic in New York, and the health authorities were exhausting every means to pre vent the spread of the dread dis ease. After it subsided Nathan Strauss, the well known phjlan- inropisi. in a pubuc statement said: "Not one of the 2500 chil dren being fed on pasteurized milk given out regularly from my eight stations contracted the dis ease." In Still Other Cities Los Angeles reports that the milk drinking children are two years ahead of. the non-milk drinkers in their school work. Fresh pasteurized milk is supplied to 53,000 children. In Philedalphia, Pa., a milk lunch furnished in the school re placed dust covered pretzels for merly purchased outside the Blaesing Granite Company Roy Bohannon, Mgr. City View Cemetery Salem, Oregon L. B. D0NBMOOB Salem Wicker Furniture Manufacturing Co. We SU Diroet Genuine Battan Beed Quality Furniture Bepairln;, Beflnliliinj, Upholstering 2218 Stat St Salem, Oregon F. W. BLISS AUTO TOP SHOP Removed from 311 N. ComT. to 245 Chemeketa St. FOR SALE AH Kinds of Wood Prices Reasonable PHONE 652 Septic Tanks that save jmore dirty work and doctor bills ready to install, proper ly design e4, and reas onably priced. .We make tKis kind. j - ; ;! " I J ' j " : ! Oregon Gravel Co. Hood at Front Street Salem I ' 100 Service 100 Auto and Tractor I Repairing - We Know How Wahsoma t ear Swrvtct Station T Old Tim Gm One Mora GENERAL OAS, CLS AJfD , ACCESSORIES EES V ICS A itipl tin ef Oroeeriti, Ooafaetira try. Mult and Lunches anytima, Tk Ckef XHOW8 HOW NORTH COMMERCIAL OARAGE GROCERY!! AKSEKSOH, ADAMS ft 8Z7TKA 4ie-ii v. coMrcui a. Am 17T - - school grounds and . the health and energy of the children im proved considerably. Health tables: showed increased weights and fewer absences on account of ill ness as a result of the addition of pasteurized milk to the diet. In Portland. Oregon, pasteuriz ed milk is furnished in some of the schools, where it is handled. by the teachers. In Ringhampton. New York, the. Mothers' club and Red Cross take charge of the work In Pittsburgh, Pa., a dairy engaged the janitor to dispense tbe milk, furnishing it free to the poor children. Greater numbers of schools are serving pasteurized njilk lunches each year and all re port the attainment of splendid results. It pays. , i I lei n jc Done in Salem In both the Highland and En glewood grade schools, the chil dren were last year, helped. -tn being given' a milk idiet. Tbe same thing has been done in the Lincoln grade .schdol. This work is to be carried on again this year, in at least the Englewood and Highland schools, Perhaps in .others, j It is under stood thatjjthe county health de monstration project, being carried on for five years in Marion county, will cooperate in this. Geo. AV. Hug. superintendent of the Saleni public schools, says this milk diet has had a wonder ful effect in, improving the school work of the pupils here. MARION CREAMERY IS BIG CONCERN (Continued from page 7) a payroll of 33 people, and oper ates 12 trucks in collection and distribution of dairy products. This is the concern established and operated by F. G. Deckebach. Associated with him are his sons, Fred C. and Frank Deckebach. .Auainxt All Comers A large part of the butterfat received by' the Marion Creamery at Salem is made into butter, un der, the brand "Marion Butter," and there Is no finer product turned out in this country. The milk is run through their condensing plant at Salem and goes to the ice cream trade, most ly to Portland. Tje condensing of the milk saves a large amount on freight charges. Clieese Factory, Too The Marion .Creamery people bought in January, 1924, the cheese plant at Amity, the one for merly owned and operated by the Oregon M ilk league, a cooperative concern. This is one of the best, equipped and largest cheese fac tories on lhe coast, and the Mar ion people are making there a big and fine output, under the brand -' "Alarion Cheese." Its quality is PHONE 934 for Cherry City Gleaners 231 NORTH HIGH DIXIE HEALTH BREAD Ask Your Grocer , Wt Art Oat After Tv KUUani Wt trt now ptvlaf over throo qnarttrt of a adults doBart a yen to tat dairymen of this atcUta for milk. t'Marion Butter" i .s" -riM the Best Batter More Cows and Better Cows is the crying need , Marion Creamery. & Produce Co. ' 'Ulem. Ore. . rhoae 2123 WQuvuldvc ' JCAtrwractic did for rem As a matter of curiosity,' if you are simply curious,' let us ehow you what many laddies lay said concerning the-results' we have obtained for ( nem tfy "oA cairo practie methoda. v Tbein testi mony gratis. , 1 ?yj,2i Phone for appointment Dr.aii:Scott;bic: 256 North High Street Phone 87, or 828-R If Von Want A Home Built To Your Notion, In a restricted residence District Consult John Williamson I.OKE STAR SERVICE STATIOW, N. Capitol St. Plana 620 tec a and will be kept up, to make" a proper-running mate for the high -quality of "Marion Butter." Both ' cheese and butter are sold all over the coast. V Dairymen and farmers ..gener- , ally in the Salem district are re-"' alizlng that the cow is the bent thing on the -farm the most :1m- , portant thing, not only in provid ing the regular cream check, giv ing direct profits, but also in main- ' taining and building up the' fer tility of thes soil, on which aft crops depend, and in mothering : swine breeding and -poultry rais- ing. . , - , .. . The Marion creamery always pays the top market prices for butterfat, and it is sending out in every direction milk tracks to . gather -up the cream and milk. They are anxious to secure new customers and to encourage the' increased production of those they already have. s .f u The plant of the Marion Jream-- ' ery -ig complete for carryrngr on their, manufacturing and shipping, and it is capable of handling an Increasing volume rtf business. World markets are opening before Odorless Gearing 6 Hour Service Free Delivery . PHONE 934 Overland - WiUys Knight ; Oakland Sales and Serrice .1 ' ; ' ." ' ' VICK BROS. High Street at Trade - Gideon Stolz Co. ,, JIannf actartrg of " " Dependable Brand Ume-Sulphnr Solntion - - Tito arand yt tan defend ob foe' . panty and toat. Prices upon appllratioa . : : ractory stir cemtr ef " "' Itaaw ut WU tu, -. Batata, Ortgaa - t