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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1926)
"VT THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON ; The Oregon Statesman Itioed Dally Except: afnd7 by ''A .1 . ' THB STATZS1CAK rVBUSHZHO COKFAKT !?.;; J - t Tfcndrtek . Mmr : J r4 J, Toos - V - - Mnf1-KditT : i ' M, II '.md i-v ,- City Kditar Am Bae . - . Society Editor Wi H. Hendcraos : Circulation Mafcara Ralph B. Kletiiac f AdTartiaiag Mtatftr Frank JaakMkt - ; - ,narr Je Dept. . E; A. Rketaa tllivaetack Editor MT-C. Cower - . , 's; FoaHry Editor ti;t V..U MIOTII OF THB ASSOCIATED FKESS ,1 f ' :' p Tfca Aaaaciatod Preaa Ja xeluslvalr aatitlad to tha for pobliestio of all 4Uvtekea craditod to it or oot otkorwiao croditod ia ttrt pajr ao4 aUa tio total i aw pabliakad oaraia. . . . , . . . i i- .-j - . ' t' ' - ; - - , - business orncES: ATaort Braro, S36 WorMtor Bldg Portlandj Ot. - -., Thoaaaa F. Clark Co, Nnr York, 12S-18S W. Slat St.; Clifear. Marooatto Bid.: Doty Payne, Shares BMg, Baa Franciaee, Calif.; Higtin BM. Loa Aasaloo, CaUi. BaalaoM Offi Beelety Editor .at or SSt 10 I TELEPHONES: 1 CIreatatioa Otnee-Sft Aate Contact Xditor.lOS KaVa DpartmaotI3 or 300 Job Papartmeat, U : Eatora4 at the Poet Office ia BeJeav Oraroa, as aeeoad-claaa matte. . : ? : As it stands now, the development which Ei H.' Harrimin planned is groing- forward, and it is making and will continue to make headways-likely very rapid headway; after it gathers momentum--; n??;. , j :, ,, yr- For destiny has i fixed this as the .greatest of Oregon's industrial fields for all time: It is in the! nature of things; in the- perfection, .of our natural advantages for growing the finest fiber flax and manufacturing: the! highest quality pro ducts from the' fiber. ' ' : r ': !h " " "' - - aBMWMafWaMaaWoojMMoaaoo"' SUNDAY MORNING FEBRUARY 14, 1926 Cits For Breakfast I . St. Valentine's 4ay " ' f ; fivu; : .. : V's . ' ' r For ours is the ralentlne .state of the tJnion. " 1 1 f Portland has a -woman circuit judge. ; And why not?., ' Women lay down the law generally. ; . Our prune- men ought to -hare a case en tucy A. Case,, nutrition specialist of the Oregon - AKricul- tural college, She tells them .to Vhorn the Spirit of God IsT" ,Gen., 41:33-38. - ; I - . v;-; r February 14, 102O i -; ' i? 8T1NDINO. REFORE KINHS "And PhTfth uM nntn Inianh Forasmuch as God hath shewed thee all this, See, I have1 set adpt a slogan, nd adyertise their thee orer all the land of Egypt." Gn: 41:39-40-414 f r V- fCl product jwmciif is a wonaenui food.. She says it has more iron than, the raisin, with the slogan. MTTva nti had vnn r Iron todav? And the prune has a lot of other ! - H OUU EFFICIENT" AND CHEERFUL IIATSmiCAPPEn i.i Including the deaf and blind, Salem and the surrounding I things that are good for the health Country 'liaye more than the average proportion of the physi- r 1 1 6 p6?,e . ' Ca?y ,l??aPi;fTr -5 : :- ; i"!'T;i:;;:-;M :":T:i "Say " with food," as well as i '.And 'observing persons here will agree that they are "Say il with nower'" 18 nohf' . . J . . ' , -- . . 1 suggestion of Miss Case that will among.the most efficient and cheerful of our people. . v ? h !;Lr to most ot of us t,, . oome years ago, a talented woman m: Salem, who had Whoi enjoy, our meals when they theretofore held a rather jcynical view of life' and things in are Well prepared. t J iwMrenpral J was trimno4i n ' arjfr1mf fnmeiA a nlaoa in 'ra: i; S -"a " r, .T. Iir: w r V." " The old Salem hotel, to b torn $ raiuus. ua ui pnymcaiiy. nanaicappea. one naa not wniie possessed of all her faculties and enjoying robust health been I in the habit of taking particular notice of those hot so for- J 4 fi ft down to be out ot. the way of the building boom of this city, could tell many tales, if its walls could speak. " ' How . many prominent their honeymoon The Bits for Break- Tn faof ay,a Koomo rroSof i.T,f v.. U fast man Knows oi some. jze with all the handicapped people as she was taken about, The people who, last year; and and she was struck by their-uniform; cheerfulness and their! the j year before, were saying Sar lem was orer building, nare an other -kvl ess coming. It Is build j tunate in this respect; bui there was an entire change in her; pioneers spent J' attitude, as the reader may well imagine, after the accident ; days there? T f !;.-' '" "'" ' ' ! " . .! ' . . . ' - ; " , - ' - ! fa of -man Vnnvi - ! if . iv " -: ' Ereryone knpwB the conditions today are a Tast improvement "over those old! boozing, open., saloon days.. : VV- " We wonder If any one really be- lteres the granting of .the use of light wines and. beer would lessen bootlggiotf and. riolatlons of the liquor lawstv I, s- , It la dollars Itoi doiiKhnuta that it would only make . present con ditions worse. Light wines would persist In ' .becoming' " ; "hearr wines and the. desire, for. some thing stronger would be Just as great as ft is now and made the easier i to t illegally proride ; and supply. Illicit; stills and bootleg ging was iot: Uncommon eren un der the old saloon regime. Long lire Volstead ism. j , - . ;f Wj. C, CONNER. - These three ladies are candidates in the Oregon Statesman Prize Contest, and today are among the leaders m the great race. Booster? Plan to Sell Maine! to Southerners PORTLAND Headed by Got. 0e r 1 s mu J - - - - - - j 1 , . 7." f I ' - - A . 5 . , rNv, - i X . 1 Y 1 I i wet Mnm 1 1 iiiwii In yiui... Ik t I '' Miss Alfa Lrtle of Woodborn. i Mi9S 'e Sampson r of Salem, - ... , Xlna willIalM of Salem the1 leiulep in the whole contest to- Oregon, Is another young lady who Oreiron, Is anotbeV yonng ; lady Misa l,ytU started working has been arfnK some rery fine who has "f ' Jt vnHr' r th a litt l nuuw TtM. lllic Vli juw i ibere is . -M i f .n i twimr her bMt ta these ext few days would pot her L Jm arizes. among the leaders on April 10. H 1 -j - S I I :i , ? i i I it : ' . day. just a short time ago. still time for beginners to -come to thej top. win one of the valuable prizes. She raks snpportr of her friends. filtering of extra heary - oils - and have become in her trip through phersto berries, ruit- and Insects. Ralph O. Brewster, a 154 citizens will leave - on fa'; twenty-day pil to: , sell; Maine to the ingifaster than ererj and yet mod ern! homes to rent are scarce. AFFIDAVIT OF PRBUDICE IS FILED AGAINST JUDGE (Continued from par 1-1 almost universal efficiency in i various lines. And so it is generally with the physically handicapped. . 1 "To Wind old Milton's jrayless orbs a light ' divine Is givn, ' ; ' And deaf Beethcjven hears the hymns and ' harmonies of heaven." M i. Edison; the wizard of the electrical world, makes up i forLJ. 'J tn his; deafness, by a sharpening;. of his, other faculties. He There they were found gailty and hears the music of Ws tklking machine through his teeth, were sentenced by Brasier c. God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb -f S?u;ft3n 'i1 ??ZV IS "f , -1 i-'- i I -s of ! $500 . and- Jail terms or zire. And the law of compensation, when one faculty is lost months. They also appealed to nrimnflfiwl. trirniio'i'a fnnoa r anA maVao mri rr;.;nnt 1 the circuit court. - The case was jthe other faculties- I -1 pj: 'ilr . UL, heard before Judge Kelly on July 151, The jury could not agree and I So there are cases innumerable, everywhere, in which was dismissed by the court. jf The l eaaa comlne ' before - the circuit Many of the world s piost useful men and women have, facture of liquor. I? I like Paul of Tarsus t carred constant thorns in their sides, pn NoTemberj i. Dixon. An- I and have! notwithstanding gone on to glorious achievement.1 drews and Johnson appeared be- I Has the reader ever! heard about Rythmic, the blind fore circuit judge u h. McMahan. i r-' , - I .4-'- ... charged with possession of a still, I race. horse! He-was one pf the greatest horses of his time a fcharge on whtch they were in- i and ran first in many a trotting race. But his eyes failed dieted by the" grand jury after be- CinA K irradualtv otow WiriH ' -A nartinllv Wm1 hnmhoo tng bound over from the justice '..;, ,- . , i .'r, .J 7 . , court. ' Here they were found guil- foohsh and panicky. Rythmic got an extreme case of neryesj iy. DIXon and Andrews were sen- In fact, he became what horsemen call an "outlaw? irritable tenced to pay fines of isoo and to I and uncovernahle. . T.ikftl t.h innnr Hmnnir. in tVio trnnht! serre thirty days in Jail, .while ! "neither could any man tame W' That is. for a time. . A f.0".!?."1! 7" I youngXellow who loved horses jand trained them became inter Attorneys for the three men again ; caicu iu Ajrbiiuuc ouu ueaii maKing ume personal visits iq j , . V! ; i.;- --n i . nri!. t j i.j.ji ' iM i. J I preme court. ; . ! . ;. f1",'.!8 Juuuiy wuresjue , ,Th Mount Angel still, which l soothed the stricken racer. and gradually gained his condi- was said to hare been in opera i dencar Sooa he was permitted to stroke the quivering fleshlt,on on tha Walker farm for less , ..jW.w ri.U , - .s C2j than a month, Is figuring strongly ?'JT..UU."U a" "iB -' I In the testimony in the Hquor ; down the paralyzed forelegs, carefully helping. the knee' to I bribe-conspiracy trial now. being , ; bend, and day after day, little by little, got the' terrified conducted in the Portland wnru i axuxiiai vu .wuere ae cuuiu ue jcaunousiy unven oy vne reins ! a few yards at a time about the stable lot. Rythmic's owner, 1 seeing this young trainer's influence over the horse .which none other could secure, presented him with the blind animal, ,s' to dd with him as he liked. Rythmic, blind as he was, weni I on the track again. His loved trainer drove him, and it was ! 4 a sensation in the sportiijg world when Rythmic won the big j race that summer on the Grand Circuit.-!: .T The great blind steed's remarkable performance inspir and Mrs, party of tomorrow grimage ' South. "'' A special train will carry the boosters through Florida, Georgia, the Carolinaa, ; Loujsiana and Vir ginia during which many stops wiU be made to attract the thou sands who winter In the south land to J spend the summer in Maine,,' not only for recreational pleasure bat;! also for industrial inrestment. ; j' - ' The party ' also will learn first hand what the South has to offer that" would bej of benefit to Maine. Stops will be' made In Washing ton and NewlYork;en route. The . - . .1 l M 1 &T inn ia DeiQK mua in coajuuvnuu with th4 general Maine DeTelop- ment Program upon which the state has been working for the past year. ' I? '. Richmond, Atlanta, : Miami, Tampa,' New" Orleans, Soutnern Pines, .jSaranaah, Montgomery, Coral - Gables. Jacksonrille and many other cities bare made ex tenstre preparationa for entertain ing thejparty. At each ity an exhibit car con taining products, of Maine's in dustries wilL be opened .to the public. ! - j- -4,r - EDITORIALS OFTHE PEOPLE AS camtpa4a for tala aart SMat arart b alcaad by tha writer, bmu V wrtttan aa-aaa ataa mt taa apx anly, an SBaold not 1m loagar Uaa 189 word. - ; 4 t the following lines from Ella Wheeler .Wilcox: j , ;f ';U ; . ,The record was jthis; when the day was done : -! : ' . i ,.js lit, 'Rythmic, the' great blind conqueror, won. ; -- j He sped in the Iarki though the sun rode high 'j - In the cloudless larch ot an August sky. - ; He knew not wneife-his feet would fall j' To the eye of his driver he trusted aH;J i j And he trusted the ihand on the line, and knew The hand on the whip was Jove's, hand," too. x Strength 'and cAurage faith and speed . These won the day for the brave, blind steed. Christ is your iMaster; His whip is kind; .t ; -Trust in His wisdom though dark be the night, '"Arid the hand of your Saviour wiU guide you arigh' Faith arid courage,! and an even pace. . , With God's eye guiding; wiH win the'race." V. :!4 , v- U ... , r WHAT JIIGHT HAVE: BEEN ! r r .- lIf Mrs! W.P. Lord yera living, sh could give the detafl 5 I concerning the fact that EL; H. Harriman, thecolpssus; an Editor Statesman: - 1 ' i It , would., certainly make horse laugh to read the reports of the booze' propagandists these days on the great Increase in ar rests for drunkenness and viola tion of the liquor laws under Vol- steadlsm than during the good (?) old" saloon days. Who ever heard of a drunk being arrested unless he became riolent and hbuslre In the saloon days? Ton could count 'em on the streets by the dosens in-any town or city and no. atten tion was paid to them if they only staggered and reeled about and 1st other people alone. J If every drunk or possessor et a bottle of booie had been prompt ly Arrested in those days as they are today, there ; would t not .hare been half bnough Jails ii in the country In which to have eon fined them. .1 . " ! ' ilt they ; had been arrested nd fined only $6 each for the offense at that time, the sum In fines would have aggregated a thou sand times more annually than the stiff fines of from 1 25 to f 500 do. today. ' . ; ; There never has been a single It has always been a trouble mak- ef in the factory, mill, home and every where' else; a breeder of details concerning the fact that EL' IL Harriman, the colossus and : wizard of the railrdad-worldi during-his last days,' vvaj)ilai-1 pUntm - argument presented in ning-the development ox the! flax and linen industries in xne wvor or noose ana never wm De, -.Willamette valley MlRq : 1 i . And had Mr. 'Harriman lived there would. have been t different storvi He had t made and "caused to be pursued idleness and poverty and a curse - investigations 4hat' convinced him of the great possibilities ft;!,:'1 ! of the industry here' lie got the vision, and he was prepar- j Today, with our great lautomo- t in" to follow and to pursue it on a gigantic scale.4 No ohe bile traffic and operation bf big would hiW doubted hh! ability to brinsr quick and successful um development. He was a man ef dynamic action ase "3 P1 '-regulate iu use,- it would prove tiberty Loian Yestages Senfto Smelting Pots Washington THe last re maining material; vestiges of Lib erty Loan drives thousands of surplus; badges, buttons' and med als . which were awarded by the government for meritorious work in- the collection ; of .war funds are being eradicated via the smelt ing lurnaces at ine wasnmgion Navy Yard. After the war these insignia were returned in; vast numbers to the Treasury Department and the method of disposing of them long has been, a problem. A plan fin ally was evolved j to melt them and it j is regarded as likely that some of thei metals may be divert ed into the1 channels of the gun factory.. i ' f; "' other fats ; is the latest ! use. found for: milady's beautiful hair. The supply of women's hair be ing totally inadequate to meet the demand of the manufacturers, it is now being mixed with hair ob tained In China from the fast dis appearing "queues" of modern Celestials. The carding,' spinning and weaving of human hair for the manufacture of cloth is an indus try just established ! here, but which has made great strides. The cloth or linen obtained from very close weaving of hair Is virtually untearable and is in demand by refining plants and distillers of heavy -oils, which require that the cloth used as filters be subjected to a very high tensionj Several washing operations are required before the hair can . be sent to the carding room. There after it. is handled just like wool and woven on special looms Wonderland, might consider this creature somewhat' unusual for, again quoting the Nature1 Guide Service of Sequoia National Park, the little animal has a diet rang ing from' mice, lizards and I go- LEAGUE PROBE; ASKED Feb. 13.- f WASHINGTON, ( AP ) Charging the j Anti-Saloon League with exercising an "insid ious Influence" over the treasury department in the appointment of prohibition enforcement officers, Representative Britten, republi can, Illinois, today introduced a resolution to investigate the ac tivities of that organization. y. Known variously 1 from v;osia Rica on the south lo' Oregon on the north as California Ring-tailed Cat, Miner's cat, Cooncat, Band-tailed cat or, In Mexico, "Ca comixtle," At can j easily be tamed and'mide an . affectionate .house pet. It has striking black and white fur. -eye. large, taiid and expressive" and Is Pf $sed ,ff nature "bold and lnqulsltlre. . In national PMM y r" tected but elsewhere the are sub ject to tfftPPinf ar decreas ing fn number so rapldlyjthit they itvatv ttt disaDPear are unless shielded by the those law. say in charge ;oi m wH u nature service. . 1 J - m f mi zr -Tr 5 ' 1 I . J '' a, . I ThouxU li.VAt Jokt Brooslyh -Mrs. K. J?ummr writes -p:se tske oOiK ihai I ran i write again I Have txn troublK) iih what I thought Rheu matism I laughed when -someone suageMed thai I try Csrjers Lull Liver PtlhTlor Thever Ihoiifhl thai my trouble wasronstipation About i hre months later I fojd but that J am a new -person. I sjp Ibaokiul to "vpu for h help ou pfll he done! tor nie and m fnfrnds 7 " . v Carter's Little Llwr Pill rmov., the !iNntil"Mlon, poiwn tforn ih, sy tem i Not haWi forming , irureits. It rd icaa- i. Nearly three-quarters of the women and girls employed in fac tories in Japan are j engaged in silk- and cotton spinning, accord ing to estimates, says Miss Pearl Forsyth of Indianapolis. ' Miss Forsyth has been engaged in V. W. C. A. work in j Kobe. The wages are small and to supple ment them the factories own and Operate dormitories. The gov ernment has become interested in these dormitories and is conduct ing a short normal course for mat rons who have charge of them. Manufacture Strong Linen From Human Hair Mixture AMIENS,! France The manu facture ot strong . linen for. the Protection Is Urged for California Ring-Tail Cat I SAN FRANCISCO A cat with "an almost human facial expres sion of kindliness," which after all is not a cat but belongs more properly to the racoon . family, is In danger of extinction unless giv en the protection of legislation banning trapping. Even Alice, blase. as she must UNJ s ay: Fib aye r- as p i ri n i 4mnk Unless you see the "Bayer Gross" on tablets, you are not; getting the genuine, Bayer 'Aspirin proved safe by; mil-! lions anil prescribed by physicians over "25 years for i ,' : Colds . HeadacHfi ' Neuritis Lumbago'; J Pain 1 Neuralgia " 5 Toothache " 'Rheumatism ! DOES NdT: AFFECT : THE HEART Accept only Bayer" package which contains proven directions; . Candy Tajer . boxes ! of 12 tallets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Drc-rjiets. IS Buster Brown AB(omShoe' Spring Sliowiirig Of the New Beige Color Kid Pumps r 3 See the New; Styles; Colors and Com binations ' For the New Styles Come to Buster Brown' ; r e HosierV:tOMatch, f I CT-Z! a xTHINK OFilT 30x314 Massasolt Cord T 30x3 y2 Oversize Fisk Premier Cordl.. JT xj . Aiassasoit Cord..i.:-.:... i32x4 f Oversize Fisk Premier Cord: t"1 ..$11.95 .!..-.. ..$16.0 OTHER SIZES AND TUBE PRICES IN PROPORTION SMITHl. . c?r W A TFf ii ? to, ,v ; Court at IIiSh Street Phcna 41 ! i la-calanity, i-irla ! I Ct trt Bairs cf Ercr Lsc?ctrt t UcaceUci:: "it f E&'"7'lca-t4