TUESDAY : IQIINING, UGU.:T..2i, 1C23 O K. J. Hendrick Fred J. Teoza - , "Lee M. iierrimaa Aadred Boach - Iaraed Daily Except llonday by 215 South Commercial St., Salem, Qregoa - - Manager Managing Editor - New, Editor -' Society Editor W. H. Henderson Cirenlation Maaatrer Ralph It. K lot in j Adverbainf Manaier Frank JaskoeU MnarT Job Lpt. K.A;Rhotea . , - , lJvtatock .iot W. C. Conner ( jou Editor KXJlBrX OF TUB ASSOCIATES F3S - - - i.Ji.AMc,!it4aP.rM,U e,0iT'y tit!e4 to tho aie for pnblieatlaa of all bow t!Tw pubUaVod " ! " rwua araditad U tbi. paper aad a:T the local Busnrzss orncxs: . - . . Jhm KalJey. 83 Wor-ete Bid. Portl and. Ore,- '.'-. - iwny fayne. Bharoa Bldg.. Ban Fraaciaco. Catif.; KiKiaa Bid., Lea Aofelea. Cali. BoiM Ofnpa23 r MS Society Editorloa TEIFH02TS: Cirenlatlon Office. JM ; KewaDeparbeaatSa r 10S Job Department 58 J Entered at the Ton Offica la Salem. Oresoa. at aoeond ela.a matter. August 24, 1120 ' ' . '-- ' " ENLARGEMENT IN THE LORD -"My heart rejoice lli luhe Lord, mine horn la exalted in the Lord, mjc moith is enlarged over ihiae enemies, because I rejoice in thy salvation." I Sam. Z;. WHY BE A NOISOxME NUISANCE? Run the Salem sewage through a large sewer several miles into the country, and treat it and render it innocuous, and use part of it for, fertilizer,pumped as sludge directly onto the land, and the rest of it dried and hauled off and used as fertilizer and fertilizer filler, and it will pay a profit, and be of vast benefit to the Salem district, which must be made "one vast garden and orchard, in the interest of national con servation ' ... . Making this the most populous,' most wealthy and most contented section of the United States. ;i: Why not?' : ; . '( - Why be a, noisome nuisance, when we can be a bounteous ' blessing? . . v.,;,y '; . Herbert Hoover said in his Seattle speech Saturday night that the United States will have forty million additional popu lation in 25 years, and "we shall need more food supplies than pur present lands will ?afford.'f T - . , Let the people of Salem, and of the whole. Willamette valley, take this cue, and live fully up to their opportunities, by furnishing the vast supplies which nature has given them the power to supply , 1 r .."'" . Above any other country in the world of an equal num ber of acres. !'.'-. cent of sveetening power, taking bee tor cane sugar at 100 For Jerusalem artichokes grow in very large per acre ton nage, and a process for granulating the levulose is being per fected by the United States department of agriculture, and the beet sugar factories can be adapted to making the levu lose, after the beet crop i3 taken care of giving a whole yew run in making these two kinds of sugar. So there is likely to be plenty of business for all the beet sugar factories, and 'many more to be built in this country, if the sugar industry of the United States can have the proper tariff protection against foreign sugars. - Why should the United States import eight billion pounds a year of the wind and water, of Cuba when she has plenty of wind and water of , her own ?; Sugar is carbon, hydrogen arid oxygen, taken from the air .and the soil by the leaves and the roots.- ' ' - 0 .Why should the consumers of the Salem district pay high freight charges on their sugar supplies, when they can grow their sugar here? r-.-: i; t ; j :i:i.iX-: -yi Why should our canneries . not have the advantage of home grown sugar and the -cheaper prices they would get? And our barreling plants arid processing plants of all kinds, too? And our candy factories? - This would give them a chance to expand their business indefinitely, with this decided advantage over their competitors. , Herbert Hoover," in. his speech in Seattle last Saturday evening, August 21, declared, that ' water is ' our greatest undeveloped resource today," meaning for power, navigation and irrigation. ' The beet sugar industry here will mean a. vast irrigation program. This will.mean. the storage of water for the dry season flow, which will mean more water for power development 1 And it will! mean the improvement of naviga tion. It will call for Still water in the Willamette from Port land to Salem, and afterwards on up to Eugene. t As so JAPANESE TRAFFIC RULES ? :', For the benefit of American and English motor tourists in Japan, there is posted in the largest police-station in Tokyo the following traffic rules which are captioned "Suggestions of the Road The rules are as follows: .V'Mi".f lv-K' 1. At the rise of the hand policeman, stop rapidly. - -- 2. Do not pass policeman or otherwise disrespect him. V 3. When a passenger on foot heave in sight,"tootle horn; trumpet at him melodiously at first, but if he: still obstacles your passage, tootle him with yigor, and express by word of mouth the warning, Hi. Hi V . ''',' v 4. Beware the wandering horse, that she sali riot .take ? fright as you pass him by J do not explode an exhaust blow at him. Go soothingly by. - I- , - 5. Give big space to the festive dog .that shall sport in ; the roadway, ' . ' . t v 4 ' . t " ! l- ' ; iS.' Go' soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon. - . r ;? ; ' , 7, Press the brakes of the foot as you: roll around the ; corner to save collapse and tie-up. - - . THE SUGAR INDUSTRY SERIES AriM n In PnncTnctnrt $"Corn!. Common corn goes into a total of 146 commodities, jnch as axle H rcase. sharing soap,: shoehorns, Tarnish: chair, cushions, gunpowder, face powder and incense. Aside from- these there is a market which if deTeloped could take care of , one hundred million bushels, "or possibly more, of each crop of this yellow product, which is now taking the place of wheat as the sUff of life: namely, the manufacture of sugar from corn. More than eight: billion pounds of sugar are imported Into the United States each year, and oar 'total natire production of cane and! beet sugar is only a little more than two billion pounds so that the market is undoubted. The American people are the greatest of all sugar eaters. In 1924 more than six teen billion pounds, or 14 S pounds per capita, 'were 'consumed JUereJ "A bushel of corn can be made to yield twenty-fire pounds of sugar. . On that basis, it eight billion pounds of corn sugar were to be manufactured, which is the figure for our annual imports of the commodity, 320,000,000 bushels of corn would find a new market. Should only. 100,000,000 bushels be conrerted into, sugar,. far more than the annual corn surplus would be taken care of and American products would be grown, sold, and consumed under American con ditions. i "But this is only one angle of the possibilities that await the farm it is only one part of the food angle, and farming is destined to hare more than the food angle before many years. The above is from Henry Ford's newspaper, the Dearborn Independent, of last Saturday. ; Tho figure for the consumption of sugar in the United States is higher than has been given heretofore; that is, for cane and beet sugar. It has been given at a little more than six million tons, or 12 billion pounds, instead 16 billion pounds, or about 111 pounds per capita, instead of 143 pounds. And a hundred million bushels of sugar riiade from corn would not replace as much beet or cane sugar as the Ford newspaper would have it appear, counting 25 pounds to the bushel, because on the basis of beet or cane sugar at 100, com sugar has a sweetening value of only 74.3 per cent. Besides this. the American consumers will have to get used to corn sugar, even when it Is granulated and made to look like other sugar before they will substitute even two and a half billion pounds of it annually for beet and cane sugar -. " And probably , by that time the American consumption will have been sufficiently increased to take that much more sugar each year than it is now taking 4 " 1: Eq the competition of corn sugar will likely not interfere with the beet sugar industry 'to a very great extent Especially as an acre of land, will not produce more than a sixth to a fourth as much -sweetening strength in corn Eugar as it will produce in bect sugar to say nothing of the superior indirect benefits of sugar ..bect growing over, corn growing. ' ;. 7" .-i ,: ' : . v "' A greater competitor of thn 1 :t sugar industry is prob ably coming 'in hvu!oce, or crtk'.cke sugar, with 173.4 per 'the stars in-their courses fought again ? Siseray the beet leaf hopper, oFlvhite fly, iMf ighting for sugarac tories in the Salem district. There are 1$ jdle; factories iri tKe United States this year, practically all of them made idl by the beefcleajtiwppn And our tafrict4fe Immune' froni'lhe hopper; absolutely. " . . : :I- t . V-V 1 -.,', ' ' "There Is a? tide"; Iri'th affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune,', said Shakespeare. The flood tide of our opportunity to :get beet sugar factories is here; first for the Salem district, where we are ready with every requirement, and then at Eugene, Albany, Corvallis, and all the rest of the cities fa'hd towns in the Willamette valleyf- ' For this is the place for the next major development of the beet sugar industry ;lthe safest, arid hest place ,? And no other one thing that could be done would benefit this valley as much.-1 . - . '.:'' ! trtTTrTTCMrKTT? W I 1 I I Iff IMll "LJI I - t- r,3ineinini,. r. baTSs TrW' 'MMaW 0 yiwaw swV tt 'If W "T FOUTY-EIGHT i Sylvia left Steve In the morning. after . they had breakfasted to gether explaining that she was go ing to the studio and prefered to go alone. . It ' was natural that Steve should demur to v this, but Sylvia was obdurate. ' . !: "You couldn't help matters any. dear," she told him, "and would only be In the way. ' Take a look around our fair city. Meet me for luncheon here, e I're got to face the lions alone." - . -1 '. Face them alone she did. ' It seemed amazingly, queer" to be walking along the familiar streets, feeling like a stranger. She was a stranger, to most of the! persons she passed. Breakfast, with Stere, had been late, it was now after ten, and most of the people Sylvia knew, her friends and acquaint ances in the screen world, were at work on the Various lots. With the.; exception of a 1 camera-man, one or -two extra girls. sh saw -no body who seemed td recognize her. and eves they passed her with puz scled looks, as though not at all certain who she was.: Of this Syl via was glad ; knowing what Holly wood thought about her. sha cam to her meetings with vit,I raw and bleeding, v ready: to be : Intolerably hurt ' by , ereryr word. rery: smile. even every I; passing glance.: fX: . The nsuaj 1 busyi-hum ; perraded the corridors of the. big 1 gray stu dio building as Sylvia, passed the gates and hurried, to Paul Lamar's quarters.- She hoped to find him In, but. did not feel at all sure of it. Most probably he would be on the lot. "with "The Miracle of Notre Dame" under way.- Bnt toSylvia's delight, his secretary. Miss Ream, after surveying her with ' a. gasp of astonishment, cameback from the Inner office with the informa tion that Mr. Larmar would see her at once. i She found him. big, grave, more than usually serious,, standing be side his desk, his hat on, a riding crop in his hand. 4 j, I ' " "Sylvia, Sylrla," he said, staring at her sombrely, "what wouldn't I gire if you hadcome profession ally." ' , : . : W"h ''i "Why7: what do you 5 mean V Sylria asked as she shook his hand. "Is anrthn? the matter?"; " "Erery thing Is thej majter, child. I'm speaking to j you as a friend, so t know what I say won't go any further. This Moore girl ia drirlng me mad. i Charming, beautiful, bat oh, so dumb. I shall make a great picture with her, of course." He smiled confidently. "I always do that. But it; is costing me a shattered nervous system. Why, she can't walk Into a room without "being told how to do it, and as for registering3 anything pubtle any mental light and shade I might as well be dealing with a mechanical doll. " He threw up hla . hands with a ; whimsical groan. , "If you had been playing the part of Celeste, as you shouM have. I might have got through the summer without going to a sani tarium. ' As it' Lv I'm; ready for her !rest, but, oh, bo cumo" lie opened tlie door, and together they-walked out--V'.: i - ..(To be continued). Copyright. 192S. Frederio Arnold Kammer iieiease by cejirai.rrea ,-sociu. Ealth & Watkina tor tire, serv ice at a lower cost, vulcanizing and retreading, tube repairing. It you hare tire trouble just call 44. Corner Court and Hlga Bta. I') Pearcy Bros. tiav the finest garden, lawn and cower seeds. Poultry supplies and fertilizers. Lowest prices. Seeds of high quality -178 Sv Com'I. St. ) ;yisit6r Reported 1 in Salem a Salem riaitor Monday. ; Arnold Vf'urk was in Salem Monday. He is a president of Grants Pass.-:" ;?.- Walter It'' Zowl, automobile" tires, tubes and accessories. Vul canizing that holds. High quality superior service. A trial makes customer; 198 S. Com'L . i) Army and Outing Store. Biggest bargains Is clothing, shoes, under wear, hosiery, gloves, valises and suit cases. -The working man's store, 189 N. Commercial.. , 1) MAM THREATENS WIFE JUIKJK CAUTIONS II. BOARD MAN TO CURB ACTIONS 1 A.' B. Blanehard of Portland was In' Salem Monday." Harry Sherman of Stayton spent Monday in Salem. G: Tennyson, residentof Can- by, spent Monday in Salem. . B. P. HerringsUd of SHverton Wisited Salem. Monday. A- ; John Morley of Silrerton visit ed Salem. Monday. Mrs. J. W. Brad en of Buena Vista was In Salem, Monday. Fred Rowley of Eugene was In Salem Sunday. Mr. and Mr Jett Blackburn of Marshfleld visited Salem friends Sunday. ' J. D. Adams of Albany was in Salem over the week-end. '. Dr J. L. Mott of Astoria visited Salem Sunday. . . Mrs. W. J. Mnlkey, Jr. of Mon mouth,' visited Salem Monday, Bert Pratt has returned from & two weeks'; trip, to Newport. . . , Mrt and I Mrs. J. i S Schell to Oakland, Oregon, , were- Salem vis itors Monday. . w . - " " Mr; and- Mrs. L.: R.? Waugh .of Aberdeeny-Wash-. . spent ' Monday !n Salens."! V . -. 'i Zeftotf- Borough, of Grants Pass was among the Monday night visi tors' in Salem. -.v--. Sam Colton'of 'Medford visited Salem Monday.: 7 i'Xi -GJ C. -Hogen of Pendleton was rs Salem Monday. ,? 't P. M. Ebrell and family of Pen dleton 'spent Monday night In Sa lem. .. " . i . Mr, and Mrs.- L. M. Jones of Klamath , Falls spent Monday night here. - Mr. and Mrs. II. R. Hogue of Eugene were in Salem Monday. 5 - John Bell, John -Barney; and James Barney of Portland were in Salem Monday. pc'Jp.'.p. Barry of Lakeview was KANSAS CITY, Aug.-23 (AP) Henry A. Boardman, 51, who, as a hangman hung so many fili- ptnos in the Philippines : in the Spanish-American war that he can't remember the' exact number, threatened to hang his wife if she had not returned to live with him. Today Judge Carline .P. Smith hung a 50 fine on the ex-hangman' and. cautioned him to curb his professional . activities until the next war, at least. 50c for your old belt on a new one. - This is a special feature for this week. For full particulars see : the windows of . the Scotch Woolen Mills, 426 State St. () O. W. Day, tires, tabes and ac cessories. Has the Goodyear, tires, the standard of the world. Mr. Day can give you more mileage. Corner Com'I. and Chemeketa. () FLIGHTS-PLANJtAVOREI? -mj -v '.":.! ; -.-.-: " f54,000 .IVQULD .-, BEUCOST sOP i PROPOSJED TRIP y ; . sTra, mm John-McNary Said to Have v Been Retained by Repub-- - lican Candidate . '--yC-;:..' : - v Reports were current here yesterday-that John H. McNary, prominent Salem attorney and brother of Senator C. L. McNary; has been retained by - Frederick Stelwer,-:republican candidate for United States senator, to repre sent him In any action that may be taken before the Marion county grand; Jury in connection with charges that Mr. Stelwer falsified his ' 'expense accounts -resulting from the recent primary election The barges were preferred " by U. S. URen, Portland 'attorney. Letters from Mr. U'Ren-purporting Jo tontain proof of his charges against Mr. Stelwer were received at the office' of. "District Attorney Carson yesterday. The district at torney f "has -announced that the charges." would be Investigated , by the grand jury when it reconvenes in Septem her. ' " Mr.--McNary would neither deny nqr confirm the report that he had been retaln?d by Mr. Stelwer. Mr. U'Ren alleged in his com plaint that Mr. Stelwer failed to include in his expense accounts certain monies paid to Charles. A. German 'and Ray Caldwell- O Hits rcr H?c2ZzZzt o I -O WASHINGTON, A5j 23.-r(By A.P.) -ecretary'DaTls otl the war department .' estlmatedJtbday that the proposed, flight around South America by "Are army planes would cost about 854,000. He said it would be a wise inrestmenti . "The purpose of this flight, . Mr. Daris said, is to strengthen the re lations already existing among the republics to demonstrate the-feasibility of aerial transportation and communication between these two widely separated nations. , ', --- Ira W. Jorgensen, i9 8. High St. Parts for all make of cars. Best equipped auto accessory store In this section. - Prompt and re liable service tha rule. -() r Doughton A cnerwln, '. Hard ware, 28S N. Com'L St. Hardware, BuUders" Supplies. Paints, Varn ishes. Give us a call, yonll find rr. prices reasonable. i) , nartman Bros." Jewelry Store. Watches, clocks, rings, pins, dia monds, charms, cnt glass, silver ware 'Standard goods. State at Llberty St, - ) SLIGHT TREMOR IS FELT NAPLES OBSERVATORY REGIS L ,TERS PAINT QUAKE J NAPLES Aug. 23. (AP.) The . Observatory here " registered an earthquake shock lasting sev eral seconds this morning. The center of the disturbance was re corded as, In the crater of Vesu vusi.The tremor was slight caus ing . no damage and : little alarm. It is "asserted that it was caused by a lengthy period of intercratal ac tivity ?ln the volcano.- - A warm cay yestcrcay . But wonderful harvest weather.-. If you have seen Moana, at the . Oregon, you noted Fialell, attrac- tive young native girl, daughter of a tribal chief, who acted as guide and Interpreter for Robert Flaherty and his family, while they were preparing the picture, tvint- nparlv two years. " s ' "b v -:; i ? 1 V.M K a 17t a h-ivfr f Ja.11w W trll W 41 "CI X3 were ready to leave. FialeUjfr-ant-ort r nmn with them. Shecame. She is their chief cook i ""cooks noW . . .. ..I... Hxe tne wen Known- womau " after many, many trials, "found tho way to a man's heart,' And , her English has improred In the good old U. S. A. " : v v ;; ; "Perhaps this is asuggestion to - some Salem family troubled with f the servant question. The Samoan ; people are a great people, for tho opportunities they have had. ' . -w v 1 E. E." Woods, 70 Norm iiign street, has a fig tree two years" old. 42 Inches high, that is'bear- ing 36 figs, little and big, young, and old besides the one on the desk of the Bits : for Breakfast man. It Is a white fig. Fig trees1 do not blossom. The little figs ; Just form as nodules and grow.; And they keep coming all tho season. . V tint no- Anmrn a tittto - PennAr. mint Alt In itia Vaw .Vnrlr mirtrnf was quoted at 810.75 to 812; a pound. In tho New "Vork Commer-; flat nt ' 1t ThtirsHav iu;ea, 91x.au 10 sis. 01111 migniy good, when it costs only. $1.50 to' 82 a,, pound to produee peppermint oil in the Salem district grower', has . the hay hay. ... . '. : . Again; If you have ; any doubt about the productiveness -of Irri gated land In the West Salem dis trict, 'drive-up there ln 30 to 45 minutes),' and see- the Kentucky Wonder beans and tomatoes and other crops being- harvested. Not so many years ago, that district was called Marion county desert. it is sromr to da c&iiea inn wanou county bread basket as.d meal ticket. ; - . '..'-' md the left; good Ulrich A Roberu, realtors, 122! N. Commercial St., know property values and make for you profit able investments. Will both, save and make yon money. ( vvS-ilVxV'i-i).VnirW'y?liliTriWV,rll '.........v. .......L..vv...vvAv,.aA..j.iiaa - the padded cell right now. He bent the riding crop between' his powerful. hands until it seemed in' danger of breaking. r" ' v 1 .Sylvia smiled at hfm'Vfstfutly contemplating a shattered dream j "I haven't come back -expecting that the woman who took my place is going to.be thrown, out and the big part given to me. Such things don't happen except: in popular fiction, r. But I did come back to fight for" my good; name,. Mr. La mar, and. I'm wondering if, any thing has, happened to . help .me. You see, I ,came .to you f ,rst, be cause ...you know everything! and M '...."-.' c "I wonder." Paul Lamar inter rupted.: .-"Sometimes I am . con vinced I don't know anything. But if you mean about your particular affairs. I'm as ignorant as a cigar store Indian. Haven't heard, a blessed thing, except , that Sydney Harmon has disappeared.. '! pre sume you know that," .4;; v v if ''No, Sylvia told him,'' unable to keep a note of disappointment from her voice. "I didn't. . If he Is gone, I'm - afraid I'm up against it.' His wife hates me. And Jean Martin won't waste any time, try ing;' to patch np '"my reputation. It's1 Just like- aiblankr iiwauy Mr. Lamar,' a blank ' sterner ft,wall : I can't ' climb If see tvef it---and I cant 'smash it 'downed I came ba'ck to light, bnt-what am I go ing to f IghtT WIndminst 1 Like Don Quixote? There doesn't seem to be; anything else, does there T' "Fight away. Keep on fight ing. : That's all anybody can do. If I see any chance to help, I will: A good many people in Hollywood believe In you. If I were in your place, the first thing I'd do would be to give an interview to the newspapers! tell them the public-" you're back to. fight for. your rights. ' Set up your ' banner - you'll have a lot of recruits gath ering around yott Tell the world what ; really happened that - night you ought to have done so long ago and dare Mrs. v Harmon jr anybody else to dispute it.." Dare her to go ahead with her divorce suit.' Sajr you'd like nothing bet ter than to -go on the witness stand and tell the truth. Carry the fight into the enemy's ; camp amose mem out. . start some thing-" He waved his riding crop menacingly anonc nis nead, like a broadsword. "That's what I do. when I'm attacked Hit back: With all my might. Everybody loves a good fighter. Go to 11." Sylvla caught his enthusiasm;" "I will," she said. "You're per fectly right. I can't tell you how 1 inanKtyou." 5he put out her hand and Lamar bent over it with the grace of a sixteenth century courtier. "Lady," he said, "I pledge my nana ana heart in your service. Right now, however. I must rnn along and continue the delightful experiment of tryi silk purse out of say that. The poor child la trying v If: ! MM A' Op all 11 Is ' V i - J7HEN Jack climbed the beanstalk, he got a new con , cep tion. of his needs. No Jonger , would just a hen do, but a golden-egg hen. No longer just a harp, but one that stood by itself and played.He didn't know what he wanted till he saw somethijig better than what he had . v . though he labored hand oyer hand to get hold of, that point of view. !'t rutr SV 1 -r-s j. Advertisements'" -give you a high point of view without - any climbing: at all. They; spread world products before i,youservnnts.;to;:,ser you, ? conveniences to please prices low because so many thousands are using the same. . Tliey give you a new conceptiotf of what you'd like to own. No longer will a watch or.food chopper do but the highest improved watch or food clippper. ' No longer just a radio but one of purest transmission. They make you change your mind about what you started to choose, and ' choose something more pleasing at no higher price. They help you see the whole field of satisfying wares. They lift you to fresh joys. f ' : Read the advertisements Honest facts arc in their news the delightful ing to make a -no, I mustn't f i