4 1 1- r . SUNDAY MORNING JANUARY 0, 1927 , THE OREGON STATESMAN;SALEM:OKEGOHri, 3 on urea V-- laaaed Daily Except JfoaJa bjr - ' THE STATSS1CAK PtTBltUHIXO COHPAJfT - . 215 Soot a Commercial 8W Balata. Orro ; J. H.ndHfk fll Toott - AilreJfeaaea - . " i I' ') -Manager Manajriag-Kditor - City KaUr -' Society 4itar mcirsKa or tbs Tfco Associated Praaf it elrluafrely entitled to tha ae for pebUatioa of all new aUapatckr eroHitW to it or ot otherwise Credited In Uie paper and alM tha local ew pabhsbed aereia. - bvszvsss Keller, 33 Wareester Portland, Ore. Tkoaas t . Oirk Ca, New Tork. t28 13 W. 3li Jtaataeaa Offiea ,...33 ir 51 Society tditor.. 10S TKXtEPHOKES : Kalorod at tha port Offiea ia Balem. ' r . ' January , j27 i.e . , 1?J L"10- hInI.tht ta-thirst of, the fountain of the water of W1 trerrojnelh.Bh.II inherit these things; and I will be his God and he shall be my son." Jtey 21-S-7 WA MOTHER ONtY KNOWS A MOTHER'S FONDNESS" 'V ; . . "A mother is a mother still, 1J , - The holiest thing alive." ,.iHThe hope for the rescue of Leslie Brownlee, Portland youth of 20, lost on the slopes of Mt. Hoo since New Year's day? has gripped the hearts of a whole nation for more than a week . . .. ' ' , : And especially has-the hope that is almost without hope touched the deeps of sympathy In the breasts of the country's mothers ;'.;:, - -t For "a mother only knows a mother's fondness" - And the mothers of . this country have heard over the radio and read in the newspapers the story of the mother of the lost boy who went to the front snow line trenches imme-i-fi- -VP0.1 sundineT of the alarm, and there in the coih from which' the searchers have gone out"' she has labored day and night in helping, to equip them for their perilous quest. And when the weary hours drew out to wary days and hope faded, and the searching parties were called in, this mother and her husband, the lost boy's father, kept up courage, and the strongest of the volunteer mountain cr8 were heartened to keep on and on, even to the combing of the canyons to the depths of which they had to be let d&wn -with ropes Even to a last attempt to scale the peak. of the mountain ia the blinding storm. i "The cofd winds swept the mountain-height, And pathless was the dreary wild, And 'mid the cheerless hours of night A mother wandered with her child : . As through the drifting snows she press'd, i i ..The babe was sleeping on her breast." ?Thcse lines express something of another scene in the jrrt"poets mind, not unlike the patient vigil and tireless JaOrsf ine mother of Leslie Brownlee on the slopes of frowning Hood . -V : ';' louring the pat week there was admitted into the ranks pf, the Salem chapter of the American War Mothers a refined and retiring woman. When it was time for giving the new member of the organization her classification, it was suggest ed that her title should be "Gold Star Mother," meaning that tTshewas one who had lost a son in the World war i But she insisted that she was not entitled to that distinc ' tlon For nine long years there has been no news from the jflpny.' There is no record of his loss. No record of any kind. , He: is among the missing ' fAnd the mother will not admit to herself that he is lost. ;S5he j&till hopes that he is living; hopes still as she has hoped .for, nine weary years. So she does not wish to close the chapter of her hope by wearing the insigna of a "Gold Star Mother' And she is, in the ranks of the American War Mothers with the title of those mothers whose sons were in the service of their country and have come back home. Is :there a reader of this paragraph who does not pray that she may not have to change her classification? f i"Youth fades ; love, droops ; the leaves of friendship fall ; T 'A. mother's secret hope outlives them all." THE I "'What is the use of tinkering with the compensation law? ;if It how provides compensation for injured workers without exact Intr profit. The cost of administering it last year was 7.6 per cent. "For compensation of Injured workers .under private insurance, iPlfoflis are exacted. Profits have to be paid to a long list of function aries, and profits have to be paid on the investment. The cost of administering private compensation is 40 per cent and over. ' -"'It Is to gel profits out of injured workers and from the widows aid; orphans -of dead workers that changes in the compensation law ate proposed. Why force them to pay profits when they can have compensation with no profits to anybody? ? .This Is the Issue, and the only Issue, in the present raid on the workman's compensation law." H? )The above is from the Portland Journal oMast evening. There must be'no tinkering th the compensation law. There is no call for tinkering with it, from the great body of tfie people of Oregon; none from the workers in the factories an4 other j places of employment, in this state i "And there will surely be no tinkering with it; no i dotted tor t crossed in the law, unless it be for the purpose of making ititronger and more workable and more just, with a few touches giving the commission administering it more power 'of option; making some of the provisions of the law more resilient and less rigid. "No member sitting in cither house of the legislature has the right to speak in the name of his constituency with a demand for tinkering with this law. ' THE MAUFicTU THE EAST ...s;. en D'OF STATE STHEET ''i flloi K lPaUciiori, when he tomorrow assumes his place as gmcntur of Ogcn. will find the manufacturing plant at !tliccak Wd of state street j .Uierise called the Oregon Penily- LA:jrog concern; with every man 01 u vv rr.. Statesman W. H. Hmdraaa i CSrevlatia Man for Ralph H. Kletiinr Ad wtitinr Manager Frank Jaikoaki - Manager Job iept. E. A. Rhoten - - - - Livestock Editor W-C.Conner Poultry Editor associated rasas omezs Iff St.; Cklearo. Marrnetta Bid.; . Jok Department ,.?83 Hew Department 21 or 108 Cin-nlatien Of fiee....53 Orera, aa aoeoM-elaaa matter. RAID BUDDIE AND HIS FRIENDS WHY. VOU ORCHMARY i LlTTUB StCmCM VTlUf? FACE WOULD TURN , a jc-rAf?viM DDC FROM TEAM f" imfil 'WmlMk DO TOO -rVo Bieus WANr'"s : -acfak Zjf.i-&ip:i.--AZA MY MONCST OPlN'OMTwecuA . ' SZyimr$$&S Sfe "ff-:: M6 KB rT IS. IF THe PAIR ' i ' Apeir-'-i "SS XSC- ONE DOG. the sesupr woulp kmi ing; with the making of spinning and upholstering tow and long line fiber from flax straw going on in good order, and the threshing of the seed being done every day; with great stores of merchantable products piled up- in the warehouse And the lime plant, the shoe shop and tailoring shop and other industrial and farming and gardening operations being pushed under the faithful and competent management With the property of the state in good order; the machin ery polished and the wood work in shining paint, like a Henry Ford factory. He will find that the manufacturing plant at the east end I of state street gives fair promise of becoming entirely self! ,he days -when Mark Twiin used ! tirmnrtino- " t "razz" the weather of New Eng- ' ui'Pru"K . . land and his famous line - that i That, with good management, and with the addition of J. "Everybody always has compiain j some up to date machinery, it will be possible within his four ed about the weather, but ppar- . , , ... .. , ently no one has ever done any- year term to make the institution entirely self supporting thinK aboat improving it j To SO remain for all time j But during those intervening And capable of turning out as large a proportion of j ylrceacc , and endineering reformed men as any like institution in the world. And that ! is as important as taking the burden of its cost from the shoulders of the taxpayers, j There are many who will say that is more important by fat. BY FUCKEMCS SMIT Love! Money! On these twp hang most of the laws of existenccj. Opposltes in very essence, yet they have this one thing in common : i Each is, paradoxically enough, ait once th ecause and the result oti human endeavor. Either can be driving force or goal. f So It happens, not inevitably but often, that the two are rivals bidding for first place in man's consideration. He who claims that love is mor to be desired is likely to find th ''open sesame" to material gai eluding his knowledge. While he who declares wealth the greater of the two and con centrates upon piling up the sheckels pays the penalty for bi choice when in his hour of need he discovers the love he slighted has vanished. o A certain widow in our town labored from, dawn until dark sparing her strength no strain, al lowing herself no leisure. And a kindly neighbor, noticing the droop of her shoulders, the dark shadows beneath her eyes, remon strated: "Why do you work so hard Martha?" she said. "You have I comfortable . home, all paid fori Your boy and ybur girl are old enough to support theraselvei should the need arise. It seem to me you had better be conten with what you have. Relax an enjoy life a little. You can't take your riches into the next world with you, you know!" "Oh. but you don't under stand!" replied the widow. "I am not laying up treasure for my self, but for "my children. John left us enough to get along pnj but I never want my children to hsve to work. I want to lay up enouch to leave them well off!" ! Nor wonld she be . convinced against her will that there could he another rUde to the story. By and by-work and worry took their grim toll. A boy and girl were left a little .fortune tht weir In vested., might have fulfilled their mother's wfhes, but. foolishly iu8iidered, for they bad not been taught z( money's. i worth, actually' brought them, more harm than good. And that boy and girl. Shav ing little to .soften the memory of, a hurried. " harassed mother, short of temper. Impatient of In terruption, apparently Indifferent to their youthful interests and de sires." scorned her for their own shortcomings, blamed her for their i 4 That awfu' mug o' ycxks, Hfl?ES euOOiC COMiAiG. I'll. A Bi3 H WILL- HOUO vvi ME evil fortunes, recked not at all that mother's self-sacrifice. A legacy of riches! What did it amount to? Nothing! Exposed to the shift ing winds of chance the riches took wings and flew away. How different another legacy of which we read! No gold and silver and precious jewels, but . affection, was be queathed in a will drawn and filed according to the law. The letter that companioned this unusual document read: . Dear children, I've just made my will, and this is to tell you what I want done with my little personal belongings. Don't keep anything just because it was mine; they are just things, and worn and shabby at that; love doesn't neeasuch things for remem brance. "... Thing of me alive . . . and -near, and loving you . . . "Love one another. Hold fast to that, whether you understand one another or not, and remember nothing matters except being kind to one another and to all the world as far as you can reach." Legacy ot love. A legacy that time cannot with er nor rust corrode nor the fate ful breezes waft away. Precious beyond measure such inheritance. "Remember nothing matters ex cept being kind to all the world as far as you can reach." This brings to mind a little phrase we've long remembered: "Next to the verb 'to love. to help is the most beautiful verb in the world!" Love or money! If choose you must, which seems to you fhe more worth while? Keeping Cool Aids Memory Claims Professor Smith PHILADELPHIA, CAP.) If you want to have a cowl memory, keep cool, is the advice given stu dents by Dr. Edsfar Fans Smith, former provost of the University of Pennsylvania. . The formula, according to Dr. Smith, who is one of the Vorld's best known chemists, ha len re sponsible fr his own ability, to retain names. "Tbrf trouble with most forget ful people Is that they become ex-; cited when I hey attempt to recall incidents 'out of the baxy. past." said Ur. Smith. "We have fno bet ter example than the col lego stud ent. -'If he could look upoif an ex amination paper as calmly as he regards "matters of life." he prob ably would have very little trouble. Fear and excitement get him mud dled all because ho doesn't keep cooL" - BY ROBERT L E El SCIENCE L Take Tip From Mark Twainj and Change Climatic) Con- ? ditions in Rooms i B E. B. CRESAPi It may seem a far cry j back to ; .nii naTi; AllAUt: jafiU .11111 one or the mechanical wanders of This are of wonders is the mech anical control of air, or scientific ventilation. The fact of the matter is thSi the ventilating engineer of today can'create any condition of weath er.'or climate wanted. He plays wkh air like the par golfer or star pitcher plays his ball. He con trols afr directs it curves it dominates it. Mechanical venti lation, electrical air control, man ufactured weather or what you please, has. been reduced to an exactscience. - Do you want j-our home,- school, theatre, factory or office torrid, frigid, arid.- humid or like an ideal, balmy day in exquisite June ,5S degrees wet bulb tempera ture? If so. the ventlating engi neer can fill the prescription in every detail. Until just two or three years ago, theatres and .other public gathering places closed every sum mer because of the hot werfther and resultant low attendance. What is happening now? Elec trical air control carries off heat and cools the theatre. People go to many theatres on the hottest days in summer to keep cool! Thus, the theatres are turning a serious liability into a solid asset. One of the unhealthiest places in the world used to be the "little red school house up on the hill." Here children were packed into sCuffy. odorous tooths, with ab solutely no ventilat--i except the occasional spasmodic opening of a rattling window that was quickly closed when cold drafts brought chills and jhivers. Thousands of children caught bronchitis, tonsil itis and all the other tis's and isms because of a stupid system that vitiated . their little bodies with dead, fouled air and annihil ated their resistance to disease. What is happening now? Many cities and states have passed se vere laws compelling mechanical ventilation of schools. An arous ed public sentiment has become crystallized against the wicked. cras attitude that . our children are not worth spending a few ex tra thousand dollars on in the' protection of their lives and health. ' . - Public schools in Detroit, St. Jouis. Chicago. Coltfmbus. Bloom Ington and scores of other Amer ican cities are now equipped with immense air washing machines ! and all the other equipment necessary to properly clean, tem perature and ljumidify the pollut ed air of our cities. Elertricai" control of air or air conditioning plays a major role in almost every ramification of. mod em life. It is used In hotels, greenhouses, hospitals. depart ment ; stored, warehouses, cold storage pUiftK: printing establish ments. WJthout it. mass produc tion in industry as we know it tody. jvouid.be Impossible. 'Mr conditioning is vital in (he manu facture of ca&dy on a large scale. It Is imperative In the volume pro duction of . bread, corn flake'a, yesst. robber, chewing-, gum. tex tiles, drying tea, gunpowder. D WEATHER TO photograrares and a hundred oth er things too numerous to men tion. Huge blower type fans are used in the rery bowels of the earth to ventilate mines and "minimize the danger of coal dust explosions. The ventilating engineer condi tions the air in four mills to pre vent explosions. Sucb modern giant as the Holland. itnnl un der the Hudson river and ithe Lib erty tunnel that ploughs through (he small mountain that split? Pittsburgh ., would be Impossible without m mechanical ventilation. Proper ventilation by mechanical ueans nullifies the menace of car bon monoxide gas, the deadly poison poured out from the ex iiausts of millions of automobile. Fundamentally, the ventilating expert manipulates four factors to nrcince exactly any type of weath er desired. They are: Tempera .ture. humidity, cleanliness of the air and effective distribution of air or air motion. These can be controlled automatically and it variations are wanted they can be controlled automatically. Like a chain that is just, as strong as its weakest link, each of these facr tors is indispensable to health and comforti Is your home or building too drv or too moist? One extreme lUSi av a mum THE SALES 2V TIMES THOSE OF ANY OTHE) SPECIAL OFFER To acquaint you with Acme Quality, we are making a special offer for a short time only. It makes the kitchen Hundreds of tests have proved that walls, ceilings and woodwork have a marked psy chological effect on those coming under their influence. Bright, cheery surfaces tend to enliven keep up one's spirits. Those that' are dreary and dingy have exactly the opposite effect-1 'at--terribly oppressive. In the kitchen a cheery, inspiriting atmos 120 North Commercial or the other is created by the rel ative humidity present or the amount of water-vapor mixed with the air. There are? times when humidity is more important than temperatures The temperature may appear all right,-but you may be decidedly uncomfortable .be cause there is too much humidity. If the air is still, yoia will feel uncomfortable. Why? Beeaose air motion carries away body heat and moisture, t - How many tons of tlfrt-and dust do you suppose, the air; of otn American cities carries each day? How many buekets. if dirt and dust do you breath each year? In -ptrial experiments, it was re vealed that one public school in Brooklyn removed one bucket or "fve pounds of dirt every school day from the air entering the buildinjr. This dirt was taken each day from tb residue, left in the air washer. ' ' f 5 hail, Km'Kxras fAli, Revenues of the tour great rail ways of rngjand has fallen by 2." millions sterling during, the six months coal -stoppage. North ' JJend1 Orders received for 140,000 cedar railroad ties for Japan. MAKES BAKING EASIER That's why the use of Calumet makes it possible for you to divide your baking time to mix your dough when you wish and to complete the baking when it is ! most con venient and it provides thoroughly depend able protection during every stae of mixing and baking. . i You get best results 1n a moderate oven, but 'ou may bake in cither a hot or slow oven Artth safety. - j Calumet's Double Action gives you a baking powder containing two leavening units one begins to work When the dough, is mixed, the other waits for the heat of the oven, then both units work together your guarantee against failure against waste. !. j :or more than 38 years Calumet has been, aidfog miUionsohousewivestoprod palatable, r.utxttloua bakings at less expense- with the least effort without a penny of. loss. ,i Use slip found in can to seccre a beautiful cook book. al ii VfORLD'fi GREATEST I ring with aepcnaaoie dc trious family Varnish. Let us tell you more about this remarkable paint. Ask us for color . cards free. We will g1adly;conSult with you on mny painting prob lem. Before buying any paint for any purpose, get our estknata. SALEM riARDWARE Famous Autographs Part Of Notre Dame- Library SOUTII BEXD, Ind. (AP) Autographs of famous men, many, of whose signatures to state pap- -ers changed the trend of history, form an! interesting section of the library'of the University, of .Notre Dame, j . . ' ., The collection was assembled by Paul jByrne, librarian, who has been several years arranging it for exhibition. Among the ex hibition Among the examples of. warrior jchirography are the siena tures of the Duke of Wp'W, C.eorge j Washington, X$&4f S. Grant. Marshal Focb and General William T. Sherman. Statesman are represented by Charles I Caroll. a signer of the Declaration of Independence; James d. Blaine. Abraham Lncoln and Daniel O'Connell, Irish ora tor and patriot. In-the literary frroup are the autographs of Henry Wadswortu Longfellow, John Ruskin. Fitz green Halleck and Bayard Taylor. Kfnir Henry TV of Enciaccl. is another tion. sign.ure in the collec-. Eugene. rost office receipts ! for 192fi exceed $135,000. a. BRAND Clip the Coupon J music I J phere is of all places the most necessary. For here women spend hours, seven days a week, in work that can become deadly monotonous. Aerie Quality Interior Gloss Finish is the answer. It lightens the kitchen and brightens the cook it makes .the day's work seem shorter and more joyful. And it is always j I, - j . . m cause re comes xrotn tne illus of Acme Quality Paint and - r CO. Telephone. 172