Eabl.C. Bsownijeb Sheldon F. Sackett i - ;. ft-.., Smf.il. Oregon TUESDAY Aug. 28 Publishers St . ; I The joys and sorrows of others are ours as much as - theirs, and in proper time as we feel this and learn to live so that the whole world shares the life that flows through us, do our minds learn that Secret of Peace-- Besant. , - The 1 934 HPHE various conferences of the Methodist church covering tVia torrifnrv that was included in the Oregon Country have either given sanction to the proposed 1934 centenary celebration of "the coming of the missionaries of that great church to begin the works of civilization ana nnsuaiuvy -And the last general conference of that church at Kansas City took favorable action concerning tne project. It is high time that organized-work were begun prepara tnnr tr makinr th centenarv celebration the epochal under taking its historical significance warrants. The setting will be Salem and this district. Just below Salem, at Mission "RAttnm. flip first work was done. At Salem the first preten tious building was erected, to be used as a hospital, postof f ice, store, and for general activities and headquartersr And that building, the first dwelling house built in what is now Salem, still stands. . The beginnings of the first institution of higher learning ' west of the Missouri river were made nere; iney d.ossuhicu v into Willamette university. and became the outstanding foreign country to ordered government under tne s oiara anu Stripes, lies in Lee Mission cemetery here. The first white child born in the Oregon Country lies there. So do many of - " the men and women who aided in making early Oregon nis- ; tory ; who helped to keep the w T . . the Pacific ocean, and from tne oanaman wru w tuc fornia line, from becoming British territory. "There are contemplated early plans for organizing the mnvpmPn t fnr the nrorjosed centenary celebration. They should take on ambitious undertakings. They should look to big things , They should appeal to and expect the support of the whole great Methodist church membership, covering the wide Something outstanding in the way of a great pageant ought to be included. A memorial building should be among the things proposed. There should be a program for the pageant that will be worthy of being repeated every year, or every few years, perhaps, at first. Finally, this pageant should have a set of noble buildings, like those of the Mission Play at Los Angeles,! commemorating the missionary Vork of early California. A Time Without Veterans EIGHTY-ONE years after Winfield Scott's triumphant army entered Mexico City there are three survivors of our war with the southern republic. One Mexican war vet eran is living at 100 years of age in Missouri and the others, both 97, reside in Washington, D. C, and in Texas. A fourth veteran, a mere sprout of 102, died during the year in Ohio, the pension bureau at Washington reports. Salemites not vet in what we now know as middle life can remember when a whole carryall load of Mexican war vet erans turned out for Memorial day parades, Fourth of July processions and other patriotic occasions. None is left either in Salem or any place west of the Rockies. In a brief span of years at the most the last follower of Generals Taylor and Scott will be cone. Only three remain of the 116,596 who participated in the Mexican camDaicm. Thousands of the several millions who worp thp hlufi or the crav in , v live. Thousands of Spanish war veterans are in acctive life. 1 ' Hundreds of thousands of veterans of the World war are vounur men. It is startling to realize that see the time when the last Grand Army man, the last bpan ish war veteran and the last American Legionnaire will have answered his final reveille. And who the final survivor of each war will be is as deep a mystery as the identity of the unknown soldier who sleeps on the gentle slope of Arlington. It would be interesting to know if America can have a hun dred years of peace and if the United-States will be without . a single war veteran when the last survivor of the World conflict goes. There Are ,.-.JPHE Corvallis Gazette-Times - X Brooklyn lectured to some prisoners the other day on the unrighteousness of violating the prohibition law. ..When he Jiad finished, he learned that five of them had not under- stood a word he had said. They were all imported. Under the tuteleee of Tammany, it will not be long till these five are made into citizens, such as they be. Tammany controls liter .jdly hundreds of thousands of such European dregs. What is needed in this country more than anything else, in addition 'to our immigration restriction law, is a law to make it more diff icult to become a citizen with the right to vote. An Amer ican boy has to live here 21 years before he cair vote, yet 90 per cent of them know more about our government at tne age fnf 1ft and have lots more respect for it and its institutions, than these ignorant foreigners I citizens in a short time for voting purposes only. The Corvallis newspaper is if the state and city of New But in Oregon" and especially i criticism will not hold good. For, under the tutelage of zenship classes that have been i tamed on the average splendid of them have had a very good customs. The city of Bend isTinsrr campaign for a commission-manager form of municipal gov- t eminent. The preparation of under the direction of the Kiwanis ana L-ions ciuns tnere. - t Salem should take the lead 1 1934 centenary celebration, and there should be no delay. There is a vast amount of work The Statesman's 'Fourteen Points' A Prorritssite Program To Which This Newspaper i'-t;.: Is Dedicated H. A greater Sal great- er Opbcosu SL Industrial exnansioa and agricultmral development of the Willamette valley. 3. Kffideat" repabUcaa gov eminent for nation, stat county and city. 4; Cleaa news, just optnloa ; and fajr practice. ' - 8., Upbuilding .... Oregou'a young lltaea industry. - 8. A modern city charter for Salem, .adopted after 'ma ture j consideration by all ' Yoterfc-'--r---:1"1" -- v 7 Helpful encouragement to Dec suirar growers . ana other - pioneers lu - agricul tural enterprise. 8. Park ' " -onnd de- -- ; f : ; -it - " : Celebration . hoArler! the earlv missionaries, leader who directed this then territory west or tne Kocnies to 3 f L.amJm 4- ItA foil- bur war between the states still children now born will live to Exceptions says: "A federal judge in who become machine made perhaps not far from the mark, York only are concerned. in Manon county, the above the Salem Y. M. C. A., the citi- turned out here have con- material for voters : and most understanding of our laws and through the preliminaries, of a the proposed charter has been in organizing for the nroDosed to do. veiopment for aU people. ft. OntrmHmtkm within capital dty urea of all state office and institutions., lO. Comprehrswfeu plan fotho development of the Oregon U. Conuerration of natural re source for the public good. 12. Superior school . fadlitieu, etuxmragrzaent of teachers and active cooperation with PT& Willamette ; university. 5 IS. Fraternal and social possible number of per- 14. Winning -ta -Marion -coun-; : ty fertile lands the high est type of dtixenship. CLICKS Pear season again and last night I we couldn't even draw a second i pair. More than one thousand new subscribers to the New Oregon statesman In 20 working days. That shows what Salem thinks of 1 Its morning paper. Was It really aUgators ; that chased that writer when he swam the Panama canal or was it snakes? Coolidge actually shot at a crane with a revolver and hit the bird. He probably, wore his 10-1 gallon hat. The Bend Bulletin suggests the hunters while away the time be fore deer season by shooting some of the cougers and bob-cats that take unauthorised toll of domestic animals. Any time Baker thinks its 10- story hotel is the tallest building) in Oregon outside Portland. Sa lem inrltes them to come and put I the measuring stick on its First National Bank building. Spoiled children, sagely says an alleged authority, are the fault of parents. And then who is to blame for the spoiled parents? Pretty soon the racation season will be ended and it will take more than a bad case of sunburn to attract any notice. That fellow who advertises "Time to get in your winter fuel" ought to be reminded that some Body always is taking the joy out of life. A big wind did much damage in Phoenix, Arizona. Now if it had blown in Los Angeles no harm would have resulted they're used to hard blows. Stanley Orne of the Oregon wins the steam-heated cuff links. He played the hero and brought John Barrymore from Canby to Port- und by auto when a fire blocked e actor's train. Just suppose hn had been forced to ride a lebean bus! Shudder! Shudder! Have you registered? According to Salem residents. the question of bobbed hair does not exist. Its a matter for the la dies to settle for themselves. Persons who live in glass houses ought to dress in-the dark. Our idea of something or other is a carpenter driving nails and pulling them out again just to get in a full day. It sometimes takes a fire to show how much junk a paper can get along without. If popular wish could put the Athletics in the lead and keep them there, that bunch of hard hitting Yankees would be beaten already. What Salem would like to know is, if the proposed new charter, as drafted, were adopted at the com ing election, who would manage the city manager. Opinions Of The Press Fruit sections of the state of Washington are in no humor to tolerate a railroad strike and the chambers of commerce and traf fic associations of Yakima aud Wenatchee have done well to urge the appointment of a fact-finding commission. The- orchardists are having troubles enough of their own without adding a tie-up on the railroads which will make it impossible to get their fruit to market on time. Yakima Repub lic Governor Smith repeatedly barked back to Thomas Jefferson, Andrew.. Jackson, Grover Cleve land and Woodrow Wilson for in spiratlon in his acceptance speech, and once he quoted the familiar. "Equal privileges for all, and spe cial privileges for none ' the slo gan of one of Bryan's campaigns. But he did not once mention the name of Bryan. And probably it was just as welL The late Com moner, would not have rejoiced to be mentioned with approval by anybody who had the suDnort of Tammany. Belllrfgham Republic. Phil Metschan, chairman of the Republican State Central commit tee, tells The Spectator that Her bert Hoover's speech of acceptance is the most statesmanlike utter ance he has ever heard. The Spec tator is Informed by W. C. Cul bertson, chairman of the Demo cratic State Central committee, that Governor Smith's speech of acceptance is the most statesman like oration that was ever uttered. These statements are not so con tradictory as they sound; Mr. Met- scnan am not hear Governor Smith's speech and Mr. Culbertson did not hear Mr. Hoover's oration. Portland Spectator. Only in recent years hare our people stopped long enough to make this country great. Suc ceeding generations of countless millions of Americans will find the ragged sides of such peaks as Mt. Hood a healing and sooth ing lniiuenco la their lives. When that time comes fortunate indeed wui oe me man wno nas exer cised forethought enourh to nro- vide himself and family a home- sue in ine racinc Northwest. Mo- MinuTUie Telephone-Register. : ' A young man who was reared in Bandou has won the distinction of being the best soldier fa the state of Tennessee. Old Man Oregon Is justified la expanding his chest quite a hit -over this victory, and Bandon should be doubly proud.- Bandon Western World. "If we could only mow the lairn in 'winter and shovel snow la sum timer! Toledo Blade. r : - ; To 1 I . . - .1717 - 1 I I l dDCVor rn Y 111 S . z? I ill w x 'v i ii -v.. SA I I III 1 II v -V .J - I IAMTT THAT I - VrZ-Ti " TLVJ .r- - V-, - m7Zm. r ', X MEAT NAUS i r nrn mm a ii j ii x. v ss s s i t w nr- - r - yv m x x. x . 1 VX,. ScT - n mi hi . ! m j s m s r w r w ib- rab. --i - u I ir'-i. TP-P-1 - x. te ' M, I i i a -ail rHrV.fyryx i i . i Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talk From the Statesman Our Fathers Read August 28, 1903 The United States vice consul at Beirut, Syria, was assassinated Sunday, a cablegram received at Washington says. Miss Lelo Nicklin and LeRoy Gesner left yesterday for Berlin, Germany, where they will study violin under Hochschule Joachim. Fred Aschenbrenner of Dysart, la., formerly of Salem, has return ed here to make his home. He has purchased a fruit ranch east of Salem. W. E. Flnzer, the new adjutant general, returned to Woodburn yesterday. Two young women living be tween Salem and Dallas have Bits For 'By T J. Have you noticed them 'm S Or perhaps feasted on the strawberries now in the Salem markets? They are from the coast country from along the Roosevelt highway, which is do ing many things towards the de velopment of the long neglected territory along the Pacific ocean in Oregon. . Strawberries mature late in most districts over there; and most excellent berries are grown in some sections within sound of the breakers. 'm Also peas. Wonderful peas. Salem markets are now getting them from the coasT districts. Some telephone peas were in the markets here yesterday, that were grown within a few hundred feet of the beach sands, that "would do credit in size and. flavor and oth er qualities to the finest ever grown anywhere. There are roadside ntands along the Roosevelt highway that are offering home grown vegetables of a wide variety. The potatoes grown near the ocean, in, sandy soil, over in Tillamook county, are often of. the finest texture and flavor. One thing brings another. What the Roosevelt highway doing for the coast country, the propos ed highway across the Cascades, mrougn tne Hogg pass, will do for the central-Oregon territory, and the mountain districts be tween the Willamette valley and the sections on the other sMa When all Oregon is connected with paved highways, we will the better erallze the wisdom of the state builders who gave Oregon. Guiding By Mrs. Agnes Lyric PTNTSHINQ WHAT'S BEGUN It is a common adnit ratlin. leave unfinished tasks whbh have been begun. . We are all familiar with the man of the family who gets the porch half screened and lets the matter rest indefinitely. We know! the woman who enthusiastically! enrolls for a series of lectures on ly to cease her attendance after the first two or three. Since such habits , are fixed in early child hood - they cannot -but persist throughout life. It is therefore worthwhile .to train "the-child so that he will begin only such jobs as he la will ing and able to finish. The fouT year old.ambltiou to make a wire Another Weigty Problem : rr- 1 cleared enough from their prune ranch the past two seasons to lift a $1500 mortgage and build an $800 home. win ana Lloyd Mott are on a hunting and fishing trip to Ya- chats. W. N. Gatens, prrvate secretary to the governor, returnel yester day morning from Long Beach. John P. Jones, traveling pass enger agent for the S. P., was in Salem yesterday to join a group of 350 G. A. R. members who are going to the annual encampment. Miss Lena Cavanagh, who has been visiting Miss Wiggins for a few days, has returned to Turner. The Cavanaghs are planning to move to Salem. Breakfast Hendricks her motto, "alia volat propriis," or "she flies with her own wings." Oregon its the greatest empire of all the states, in diversity of re sources. W Beginning in the late afternoon Saturday, near the summit of the Coast Range, and extending to the Pacific ocean, there were gentle showers, lasting till Sunday eve ning. In the valley below the 500 foot level there was no rain at all. We are only 50 miles apart, "as the crow flies," but we live in two different kinds of climate. V Some of the Oregon coast ' re sorts have become permanent towns, where people live and do buslnees the year through. Among the best of the beach hotel places is the Lake Lytle hotel, at Rocka way, conducted by Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Watt, well known In Salem, which is now kept open the year through. More than 2,000 acres of forest land in California were swept by fire recently the blate being start ed by sparks from a horse's hoofs, according to the report of the state forester. This is believed to be the first verified instance of an occurrence of Ihis kind, al- tnougn other fires, starting in this manner, have been reported. V A new type of wheel having two tires, one within the other, and said to be adaptable either to motor or trolley cars was exhibit ed recently. The outer tire is of solid rubber, the other, inside it, is pneumatic and is incased in a steel frame next to the hub. This arrangement is said to take the strain from the outer tire while the inner one acta as a shock ab sorber. Punctures are also eliminated. Your Child cage for his new rabbits should be diverted to the more suitable en-j terprlse of arranging their nest in a box, while his father makes! the cage. Ia this waj he Is spared ; the frustration which would hav j been his if he had attempteda j make the cage and he still has the pleasure of accomplishing his jhare in making a home for hiT pets. The nine year old girl. Inspired by her mother's skill, wants to embroider a difficult and tedious pattern on a luncheon set. It would take her several weeks to finish it. No child's Interest would last that long. She. should. . In stead, be given a simple design -sZ HALL. which a tew aays worjc win see completed. The child who begins too many things at once will, for all his fine initiative, reap only a sense of failure. If he tries at the same time to make a garden, build a raft and embark on an intensive Boy Scout career, he will do no .single one as well as he should. He must not be allowed to bite off more than he can chew. When once a piece of work . has been begun the child should be made to finish it, although he is a. little bored and would prefer the thrill of a new adventure. Such discipline is wholesome and is a realistic foretaste of what will be expected of him when he is grown. FOR LOCAL CHURCH WALLA WALLA, Wash., Aug. 27. (AP) Pastors of the Ger man aietnoaist cnurcnes or ine Pacific northwest were assigned at the closing session of the 24th annual Pacific German conference of the Methodist Episcopal church Sunday night. With the close of the conference looms the termina tion of its existence. A vote to merge with the Oregon conference was taken and the union of the two groups now awaits the vote of the Oregon conference accept ing the German Method Uts. The appointments, read by Titus A. Lowe, Portland, follow: A. F. Cramer, Rex, Ore., district superintendent; , H. Finbeiner, Bethany and Grand Ronde; G. A. Magg, Connell; F. A. Schumann, Rodney avenue, Portland; J. C. Mueller, Newberg. Ore.; F. H. Luecke, Logan, Clark and Oak Grove, Ore.; C. A. Wentsche, First church, Portland; G. S. Roder, Richfield ; George Kleinbach, Ritzville; H. B. Mann. Rocklyn and Davenport; A. F. Hilmer, Ro salia; E. J. Aschenbrenner, Spo kane; P. J. Sehnert, Salem, and J. A. Beck, Walla Walla. Rev. E. J. Aschenbrenner. who has been appointed to the pastor ate at Spokane, is the present pas tor of the German Methodist church here. NEW ffllTH I7IIE1ESI?E1S)(S)L? J7AL1EIHIIIJSES 889 NORTH LIBERTY STREET ... . We protect' the finest of firrnltuTo uid pianos 'and use precautions against moths and mice. We Invite yon to come and see our new warehouse. Larmer Transfer and Storage Co. .... 143 South Liberty Street Phone 930 A BYSTANDER WASHINGTON. Washington, the great unofficial or government employe bulk of it. is accustomed. if not resigned, to political impo- tency at election time. It has been voteless so long that few Washington ians proper would not know how to cast a ballot. It never gets accustomed, how ever, to being out of the political spot light or in the class of a tank town on the great party political circuits, despite each dose of that medicine every four years. It dis likes to take its political news out of inbound press dispatches, as it always reels it is the political hub of the whole. works. Just at present, the capital Is very much off the main line. Hoo ver is 3,000 miles away; Smith not as distant geographically, but very remote politically. Most of all, the absence of the president, nerve center of daily doings that touch closely the everyday lives of hundreds of thousands of folks, although these details rarely get beyond the city limits in the news, maes Washington feel remote and neglected. Perhaps things will pick up a little later. The presidential cam paigns may operate out of Wash ington to some degree, once the acceptance speeches are In and the fight starts la earnest; Or maybe senatorial smelling com mittees with political slants will liven things up a bit. They Argue, Nevertheless It is a curious commentary on this vaunted scheme of represen tative government for, by and of the people that the place where more folks vitally and personally A New Yorker at Large -By Kirk NEW YORK The complaint is voiced by summer pilgrims return ing from Greenwich Village that the Montmartre of America is not what is used to be. The pat retort is that is never was and yet the Village has lost, in its current metamorphosis, a lot of the luster that it once had for visitors to New York. The sight-seeing busses no long- stop among studios, and the col lege boy patronage has declined dismally, lured to uptown centers of gaiety. Some of the Inns and the bizarre cafes have reduced or dispensed with cover charges In efforts to lure patrons from out side the Village, and several proprietors or once-popuiar re treats have moved northward. Sorburbs Win Favor Gone are many of the artists land writers who made names in Village haunts. Kugene O'Neill and Sherwood Anderson, to name but two, have left within four years. -Some of the Villagers, irk ed because their havens became too thronged with playboys and idol-hunters, have moved to West chester county or to Long Island like " the sculptor who lately quit the "Village in dudgeon, after uninvited guests at his studio not only kept him from working, but started a golf game in the living room with his prized malacca cane. Greenwihch Village has passed through many phases since it was a northern outskirt of the bud ding seaport of New York. It be came an art quarter first because of cheap rents. Half a dozen years ago exploitation began to attract visitors in numbers, seeking the! artist and his model in their na-i tive haunts. Apache restaurants sprung np to feed the gaping pil grims, and New England spin sters hastened thither to open antique shops. Now new apart ments are replacing many a land mark, and every time an old house is razed or.a back-yard gar den demolished, a- little of the glamour of the region passes too. The Harassed Motorist A driver's license is the first re quisite of the New York motorist and many a- new resident who has considered himself a capable anto- mobollst on more open roads gets stage fright when the time comes to take a test on New York streets. One applicant took the examl ination for a license thrice and failed each time. I can't understand it!" he told the inspector gloomily. "Back v . ' "K lr- r r-C- 1 'r .... r. . Vs i ' WASHINGTON Igrj (concerned-with the election m.i. come are concentrated than is the case lajwgcn cine in me country is just a political oystander, con- cerned politics. wholly with speculatire The usual beginning made by Washington political speculators of this vast unofficial group is: "What chance has Smith?" They feel strongly that the political "Ins" have a decided edge on the "outs" In any party struggle fo control, so it s a natural enoug starting point. Messrs. Hoover and Smit mignt wen oe surprisea ai me heated disputes that question can start, even in voteless Washing ton. Cabinet's Part Another thing about this hot midsummer in Washington is the way the cabinet scattered once the national convention matter van properly attended to. They van ished to the four winds, two of them, Mellon and Davis of Labor, going abroad; Davis of War to Honolulu; Hoover and Work to the political tall timbers and out of the sacred White House offi cial circle. Kellogg, as cabinet dean, remained on the job, but packing for a quick jaunt to Paris. New in the post office kept up office hours, dealing out ad ditional air mail contracts. The huge government depart mental family meanwhile n awaiting with lively interest an nouncements from' Hoover's polit ical poste de command or else where as to Just what part th cabineteers are going to play in the campaign, or the president himself for that matter. L. Simpson- home I've driven the fire truck for fifteen years." ' Speaking of motorists, "there's the one who never could remem ber about the city's one-way streets alternated throughout most of Manhattan Island. but never could recall which streets were for east bound traffic and which for westbound. Finally ho 'devised a formula for remember that the even-numbered streets were the east-bound streets, and now, whenever doubt smites him as he drives about the town, lit repeats to himself confidentially: "East is even, east Is even, east i.s even." And he Is like the frequent vis itor to the ciy who never could get in mind the difference be tween an American Plan hotel and one operated on the European Plan until he concinced himsplf that American plan stood for "All Paid" and European "Tlan for "Eats Plus." Bondholders to Confer In Salem The bondholders committee of the Warm Springs irrigation dis,-, trtet will hold a contrence in Salem today in connection with the proposal to reorganize and re finance the project. It was paid that the committee would outline some definite plan of reorganiza tion, which later will be present ed to the state reclamation com mission. Rhea Luper, state engi neer, will attend the conference as a representative of the reclam ation commission. The good don't die youn?. It Just seems that way because tlu-y Ket over It while youn: Sun ) Francisco Chronicle. The two unfortunates whose ev ery idle word may be used against them are the prisoner and the can didate. San Francisco Chronicle. 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