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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1926)
THE OREGON! STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON ? The Oregon Statesman . - t. , Iasne4 Daily Except Maadar ky . THS STATE SUAN ?t7BUSKIXa COMTAXT SIS South CtfrnniercUl St. Balea. Of ton t K.J. HeaoVfcke . ..'.-. MkU-. ! ra J.TiiMi. MtMf ing-Editor U K UmlBM - ... - Citf EeUter I J. Smith - ' - felegraea I'ditar A4r4 Bone - ,, , Society EUr W. H. TUndroa &alpa H. Allotting -- Freak Jatkoskl ) E.A. Khtea -W. C. Fanner . f . Circulation ViHr Advertulag Manager Manager Jab Itopt. - . luveetonk Kdttor Poultry Ldilor ,1. , ?! a! 'i J "ItBlfBBR OF IHB ASSOCIATED PRESS T AMr-Uta4 lrea U exclueielr entitled to the. an for tab!ieatia ef ail newt CUpalckee crated it r Mt otherwUe credited in UU paper and alia tfc teeal ' '- i - BUSINESS OFFICF.8: : ' ' . " .... Alkeri Brera, 33 WwiW'BI4c4 Portland. Orat. " r" . ".. i. TfcMaaa V. C!rk Ce New Tork, (128-130 W, ttt (. ChWara. Manpiett BUr.r ftj Pajraa, skeroa Bid, Baa Ftaaciaca, Calif.; Higgiaa Bldr. Lot Angeles, Cant .i -' :? TELEPHONES?, f - i -' ,;:.-- ' ' .: - CirUtlpa Offiee583 NV rTartoieBt23 ar io ...lOS - ' - . f ; f Job Ueprtmant.....S33 Fttsa Ofttee.. Society Editor i aterdtf the Poat Office la Salenv Oregon, as aec-oad-elst natter.: ' - " aYwA ''"1" "" ' i " ----- i- - " OUIurATHETl' OOI "And the Lord appeared unto' him and said, Sojoara M thU.lan4, aad L will be with thee, and .will bleaa thee. Because that Abraham, obeyed my voice, And Isaac dwelt ia Oerar." Gen. 28:2-6. j j SHOULD BUIL1 A BIG SPINACH INDUSTRY Spinach is called the "bi'doin of the stomach;" it is both a . food and i a 'medicin a.ni so; general is its use becoming that it is beginning to be classed as a staple : .: ; !"! ' , For there are many people of good judgment who insist . upon eating spinach every-" day j f r C?!'":-; ''"' 'ps--'i : Ij We - had x c6n&Herafcle spinach industry in the SalCm district a few, years agoj joining up our ' growers with the : dehydration plant-r- i j K ; ; . , And no doubt the industry iin this branch of it will be i revived sooner or later, because spinach is a vegetable that lends itself well to dehyraioni ; . But, for the iron init, !and for,the vitamines and the vegetable -salts, spinach s coniing into more and more gen eral use; the tonnage of its supply is growing fast . And there l is no! reason Why ouirfarmers and gardeners should not" develop a caii , lo supply here, -to go: to distant points, developing a market jon a quality product, the-same as has been done with our celery and our head Jettuce, and is promised with our asparagus! 1 : ', ' ' vj, ' It is now very well recognized that the "production of spinach of a high quality n commercial quantities, and with sufficient tonnage to mak itjprofitable to growvis a fegecial ized industry. ,; It is like celery growing in this respect. jny . gardener; on almost any kind of: land f ound JNre caijgrow some celery, and he can grbw, kom$ spinach i ,1 But this does not mean celery or spinach that will sell on quality above the mark 2t pricejs for such Vegetables grown elsewhere. ' This specializatioti has been ibrought.to. sticcess here in the case of celery-r-and it can be brought to- success, the writer believes; in the icase otspinachjf :'fv..- If is no longer necessiaryj to jsay to the$ majority, of the readers of The Statesman ihai the eating 6f spinaclifreely is a very important requisite jFor health. Every kitchen or home garden 'should have some pinach, and wowcrppshould be raised, and some of it should be canned at homeor.the com mercially canned or dehydrated article ; should .be used when it cannot be "had in the fresh form. " j . 1"T - , Spinach, is nearly as' important in the dietary as milk ; and every up-to-date man and voman now I knows that a virile race cannot-be, sustained ithbut milk, nor healthy children, raised, nor old people kept in proper condition. . r0he of the greatest arguments in favor of spinach grow ing commercially in the Salem district is the fact that the spring crop will -furnish a cash return early! in the season when money is needed for the Cultivation of other crops. And, in the same way, it adds materially, to the net returns from any given number of acres o laiwi under cultivation. ; But we have got to lean to grow quality spinach, and a Jot of it to the acre; and this will tak4 special locations and specialized treatment and Specialized fertilization of the soil. - All this is worth while, because spinach will persist and I . ltamse wui grow -v; - - r t-- ,v - . t . And moreover it is a prosectjye valuable crop for green house cultivation, for ourj honie Imarkets, and for shipping fresh to the cities and toWns jup jand down the coast, and to the big ' city markets thrcghjut the country- ;J;".'. Aiid the growing of a ! quality crop for car lot shipments would, also lead to a great and growing' demand from our canners, who could command:, a wide - market if they "could guarantee a strictly quality output. . 4 Salem is now bringing from outside markets some spin ach every day. -This is crediiabe to the good sense of our consumers: though it is the opposite, of creditable to our growers, who should be supplying all we can use, of the best quality, besides shipping jaway great quantities of itf and thus adding a large and steady community cash income."!! ''TThe vote in favor of "ommg the World Court was"7$ to lVwith three absent. It jwdiild Wve received 78 favorable i votes had the absentees been presfflt.Te,aentint . the ! thinking pople' throughou t .the! country is more nearly unani mous than'that. ! And thej writer Believes the sentiment is quite as nearly unanimous m avor of joining. the League of Nations, with and without reservations. . 1. If there is any one within! the purview of these printed lir.'ss who imagines that Salem id going to quit growing, or fail to crow more every" sf Uture year than the preceding oiie. for a long, long time,) he jwould better get his thinking cap on straight.! - ! " - 'X, .The little Americans Court' means opening the There are a good many mi are , spying entering the Vorld door to the League of Nations. lions of our people , who hope ; the horrible charge may prove true, and not be long doing it r --u -'r , ; . ' i .."h "i ?? . ' 3Iay we look forward to, a! time when some one or grpup of people may endow a theological school, a part of .Willamette University, with provisions1 that will not allow, that school to bandy itself for the embraces of strangers. , F ::T CHARLESTON IlECORD 4 ' HOUSTON. Texas, ! Jan. 2. ( T y Associated Press.) ' Two lloaston boys tonight established a tew marathon record forcon-tin-ona dancing--cl th Wiorbus Charleston whea. Cey cam-a to a stpj after hearing the official an nouncer shout "26 hours34 tnln utos and 35 seconds." Tto boys are! Howard Fhort and SamvLrter. MisDollie Skinner, 19. establish ed a "record for wc-r.n ef eight Lours &nd 48--iu.Iiite3, - - The Arizona Sheriff Tala ef kit adreaturaa, kla eoaraga, hia baaiar. bia keen LotUigtrnoaaa collected by Major GroTer F. Bextoa, "Tba Deputy (rom Tavapal County.' . Haw wltk BiraUe (ma ao4 motor car he brlsg iwltt aAd aor jnstic - ta (rUAoara. -: ; .' . -i Captain IL M. Joyce, world war hero, wore the " JIggest cowboy sombrero and .; ran the "dudeat" ranch in Arizona out at" the edge of the Coronado national forest between Guthrie mountain and Fjeddinjrton. 'way up in -the north east corner of Pima country, which stretches for 176 miles across the state. -; - h .; ivV IF Once a telegraph operator- and later commander - of men .-in J France, where he was massed. Can- ... - - - . i tln Joyce was a: stern, particular! man. i;. f. J Just before the war he had mar ried one of the prettiest girls ' In the San Pedro valley. viTaclons. fun-loTiag Lillian Johnson, daugh ter of one of . the best-kdown! cit tlemen In the valley, 1L L. John son. ' v ?' . - 4 Two; charming little children beautified . their ; live and - they" were very happy,', though .the ranch didn't pay very wetL" ffe Captain Joyce heard of the euc esa of , t'dude .. ranches-', farther north.: i These are ranches dressed Up to be real "Wild West", for the benefit of guileless easterners who want to see ,tuffM men; and! live amid pioneer days, which they don't understand have gone these 30 years. So he started one. He had the hardest riding cow boys, who put on all the pretenses of being early,: day cowmen; he even had a Carlisle Indian who momentarily forgot his ; polished speech for the pidgin English : of 0 years ago.t , y- ,v 'l He supplied the" doggiest 4('west ern" clothing, a "tourist" ever put 6n- wide - sombreros, - shaggy chaps, , studded gauntlets flowing handkerchiefs to wear about the neck, high heeled boots with mon strous spurs and even wickeder six guns than any cowpuhcher .ever put on his hip. - i? Wise slickers from the east came out, gulped it all down, bdught the finery that no present day cowman would be caught dead , in got themselves cohered with saddle sores, paid ten. prices for it all and went back east filled with western "color." V t The dude ranch was a success. Pretty Mrs. Joyce did her part. A skilled rider; she rode herd over the rented cattle with the super lative cowmen they'd hired, and then she'd come in and dish out flapjacks like a chuckwagon cook. It was great-fun for a while, but sh$ tired of having. to be in this false position always, so-much alone amidst the gay crowd.',: ; ..i.Captain Joyce had to be away at I times, attending to , .business, i Jess Whitely, a dashing young el-' loir hired as a movie cowboy, used to "'hang around t her ' kitchen" add chat 4 after the flapjacks were cooked. -1 He knew many stories; was wittyand she found It pleas ant to listen to his chatter. - ' : He, willfully or otherwise,; took' her tolerance for Interest, and be gan, to press her with attentions. Captain Joyce, stern westerner of the old. time traditions, killed him. The story came into Tuseon at night and Sheriff Walter Bailey got out his big Sttadebaker . and two deputies and raced through the Coronado mountains and f or- eats, -up canyons jvand: across gulches occasionally , " on the wagon trails and once in a while on a good road in 42. minutes., a record for the .32 miles, to this flay, - ' ,;4:i . - ' ,:K Joyce -was gone-fno-: one , knew where. ; It looked j like he old story, so-Bailey started ansall- his Hear over the mountains,' looking night vvigU in Santa Cataline for hinu . But "the captain ' had one' to Wilcox and given .himself up, and a 'deputy brought him back the next dayv: ,;; yy.-l-- The trial ; gripped .all of Ari zona. - Lillian; Joyce, . the pretty little wife, . lef t ier I children with her father, came Into Tuseon, and, told a - story of , the, success. r or Whitley's efforts to f possess her which , won a j manslaughter ver dict for her husband. Had his weakened condition after the War not caused his mind to go blank after his first shot: causing him ot fire another shot Into Whit ley's body where he fell, he would have been acquitted. There isn't a single man in. AH- eona who -believes a . single word of. the story of her yielding to Whitley which Lillian Joyce told from the witness stand. t Her aged father sent word, dur !ng the trial, -. that unless, they stopped her story, he'd strap on his old six shooter and come down and clean out the courthouse. It was a sacrifice i even greater than those made by the hardy pio neer women who fought with their men to conquer the west years ago. She collapsed ; after finish ing her story, and was in a sani tarium for months. Big. hard-riding Walter Bailey, sheriff of Pima, joins every man In the country ' In hoping for the quick passing of the years - that will release Captain Joyce to join his little family on a new dude ranch. That is the great. Open spirt of the great, open; west. SLEUTHt WAXTEIK i They want aj Sherlock Holmes, out, in Greenlee county, Arizona, who can answer this: question: When you kill and skin some steers, how can you itell what caji cass each slimpsy hide belongs to? How, can you . fit a. hide Jack 'onto the critter vyot've.f just r,sk inn ed (Continued on page C.)' In the free, open spaces! Stage travel is a joyous experience, j On hot days a cool breeze' fans you as you glide along; on cool days and ; evenings . our., stages ' are comfortably heated. You may enjoy to the utmost every bit of' scenery you pass through. Ask your ticket office for a list of beauti ful trips on, or! in connection with,' our lines. , . a i. : OREGON STAGES 185 NORTH HIGH r ; ; PHONE COd Ko.5. CASH TALKS . "! 1 i ...... .. i ; , ' "'- " ' - .1... .. ,1, . .,., ' ' " .t A (.J-::-.-.-.. i:;- i. . - - v L. t?0 Price cut to $5950 1 On Highway 3 Miles North 21-4 Acres Ground. ; ! ; BECKl?-& HENDRICKS f v ; 189 North High Street 1 f h HeUig" Theatre Lobby . l! .... .! . 7 . rTHUnsnAYlORNlNGANUATtYlQa! 1 n - : . It takes ' r - X?MSM:j1 l::' in all three Associated GasoHne has back of it a ypry k ( ( ; definite i de a?.of nianufacture ; its dis- W tinctive boiling-point range, a smooth .' gradation from initial to end points.That ! V is the technical reason for Associated's ! distinctive and sustained performance. When you use Associated you get an . ; ideal cbmbinatioh of these three results: f l satisfactory quick - starting 2 a full stride of power, 3 mileage. Associated Gasoline is always associated with "more ' miles to the gallon." AS S O C I AT ED OIL Sustained Quality Prodwctsv v MOTORMATES CYCOL MOTOR OIL for thorougli lubrication at low ' -V- tost; It cushions the moving parts of your motbr. Gomes : ! : only in one quality in grades . to fit your motor needs. ' Y6u?rel 'fcsrtt "Used Aui f I 1.1 - 4--5.-, . 'C T I , j.- ...r, ,, .,. n. ..,. , ...t,,.! I.;-'----..-. gglpig -:- 7v - . '---f - I- 4-. J ' - .... r" :Tr,-v ;.i-'::.r:--.i :'".' Dplla-Whesii Mvesfc r, i Ml. a InfTDtn; Everything mi. Automobile Should I Be Man Be Form rl in the Classified Section of This Paper SEE PAGESEVEr I '- -. - '. -. - - - - ! . 1 - . B I-" 1 u - i A 3