Earl C. Brownlee Sheldon F. Sackett Publishers : I I i I n ; . i!r -JZ 111 : " " "i Do not keep the alabaster boxes of love and tender ness sealed up until your friends are dead. Fill their lives withx sweetness. Speak approving, cherring words while their ears can hear them and while their hearts can be thrilled by them Beecher. v A Good Suggestion T71ARL RACE, for a lonsr time city recorder, and whose in JCi terests in Salem are sincere andpunself ish, suggests that there should be a filing by the will furnish opportunities to to come So that there may be the proverbial "books in running brooks," and beauty in green grass arid flowers and all the other things that will delight the eyes and lift the souls of future residents f the "City Beautiful" which Salem will become ; is now wiell on the way towards becoming, above the average in this country, or anv country. Old residents here know that the east 58 acres of the "Bush nasture" is the Drooerty of Salem: given by a volun tary deed of bequest by members of trie Bush family heirs . of the estate of jthe late Hon. A. Bush. The use of this 58 acres for park purposes is deferred under the conditions of the beauest. Otherwise, the gift is in perpetuity and irrevoc able; conditioned only upon the use of the beautiful tract for park purposes, j ' This future park will be in the center of the coping teem ing population here. It will who will come after us, and to the majority of those now liv ing in Salem who shall continue to make their homes here So Mr. Race believes it would be the part of prudence and . in the spirit of forward looking business sagacity to begin to prepare for coming into the full inheritance that is vouch- sftfcni to Sil c to. There are a number of streams the waters of which, filed upon now, Blight lend themselves in future years to the further beautification of Bush park; with fountains playing and streams babbling and birds singing and green grass growing' and flowers blooming secrets of nature's story. Why not? I Why not a matter in hand,! with authority The state laws provide ways to I . the city, for thej park site belongs to the-city. Value of I F there is a reader of these ing the valui of irrigation him drive out to jthe West Salem district and see the bean and cucumber harvests going on there ; and let him note the won derful tomato crjop coming towards a great -harvests and all the other truck garden and other luxurious growths. Or let him inquire of iny hop grower in this, section who employs irrigation to insure and increase his tonnage. Orbf any -of the growers of fcelery and head lettuce and mint and other good money crojs in the Lake Labish section. The biggest thing that can possibly be done at the present time for" the future great wealth of the Willamette valley is the securing of major irrigation projects, looking to the application of water to every jslacker and idle acre between the Cascades and the Coast ilange, from the Columbia river to the Cala pooias. There ik in the use of water on the land in the dry growing months! of the summer pireoi weaiin ana pupuutuuu, a cuuuiry suouimuig a gicaici population thanj that of Belgium; yes, twice or thrice that number, and maintained in plenty. Chicago and Crime TJRESS dispatches say Chicago is aroused over its crime JL wave. Jusfc why it should set condition is? not clcear. -Of 760 murders committed in Chicago and Cook county in 1926 and 1927, one-third remain unsolved mysteries. Only ten 760 murders. Convictions for violence were oily 22 percent. Common sense and decency suggest that Mayor Thompson stop his bombastic America First campaign and. give 'some time to cleaning up his city. Such a man finds more pleasure in using his guns on Great Britain than on Chicago gangsters, and safer to threaten to burn books from the public library than to enforce the law. Presidents Must A SELF labelled liberal magazine recently gave cynical cast to an article about presidents and nresidpntial rAndidatps attending church. Its correspondent, who knows Washing ton, insists that much of the faithful church habits of Presi dent Coolidge, Harding, and other presidents have been ac- quired after thsy reached high office. The same writer as serted that Hoover suddenly became more interested in the inside of Quaker church in Washington and Smith more in terested in attending mass after the conventions had met. .What if this waiter is correct in his reading of motives? It pays high tribute to the place held by the church In American me that its political leaders how seldom a Irian may take part in public worship he wants positions of greiat public trust held by men who do. I Why not use public school tivities of the districts where house may be converted into an agency which will provide recting the spare time activities in the opinion of the United MV!.L 1 A A A.1 . wuicii uut wuy a tea mat mis ready being done in hundreds boards are more and more making provision for the super-; visum oi civic, irecreauonai ana social activities, ii nas is sued a leaflet which will direct any school board toward ac complishing this end t - .Although he is past eighty, inventions, and jone of the latest is a safety lamp for miners, to reduce the likelihood of gas explosions. Its special feature is a battery on which Edison is than 50,000 experiments, , to state of efficiency. There is room for large capital to be employed in the bulb industry of the Salem district. wide. The Statesman's 'Fourteen Points' A Progressive Program To Which This Newspaper V Is Dedicated 1. A greater Salem m great er Oregosu , Industrial expansion and Agricaltaral ! development of the Willamette valley; Efficient republican gov ernment for nation, state) county and city. Clean news, , Jnst opinlost ad fair practice. I'pbniidiiig of Oregon's young linen Industry. 4. 5. 6V A modern city charter for- Salem, adopted after ma ture consideration by all voters. " Helpful eswonragemeat - to beet sugar growers . and other pioneers! In agricul tural enterprise. Park and playground de city upon water rights that beautify the Bush park in times be accessible to the residents and trees whispering tne giaa ... council committee to take tne to make the water tilings i do this. It is the business of A A V J Irrigation lines who has doubts concern for the Willamette valley, let season the making of an em- be termed a wave instead of a hangings resulted from the murders and other crimes of Co to Church dare not ignore it. No matter buildings more, for all the ac they are located? The school a community center and made facilities for organizing and di of the people, old and young. States bureau of education, m 1 1 - J ATA . may De aone pur mai ii is al of communities. Local school Edison is still busy with his said to have performed more improve it to its present high Make this known far and velopment for all people. 9. Centralization within' the capital city area of all state offices and institutions. 10. Comprehensive plan for the development of the Oregon ' State Fair. . 11. Conservation of natural re- - sources for the pubUe good. , 12. Superior school facilities, encouragement of teachers and active cooperation with ' Willamette university. I. Fraternal $ and of the of 14. Winning - to lfarioa coun- . ty's fertile lands the-high - - est type of citizenship. - j CLlCJiS 1 1 Clutching at a Straw "Oregon hors win prises la Cal ifornia" says a news item. Its cer tain they weren't "road nogs" as the California brand tops that spe cies. - ' Sometimes It Is just as well to rive the courts a chance to func tion,. For example those boy bur glars -have not yet oeen convict ed. Now Llndy Is Ashing In Ore gon, is the Lone Eagle reauy a -fish eagle?," Senator Robinson has been giv en a holiday by Arkansas: And af ter November the entire nation will give him another. New York democrats are dis posed to blame that cloudburst on the prohibitionists. That man from the John Day country who saw his first street car in Portland after nearly 60 years must have been waiting for one on the Alberta street line. A subscriber telephones in to say that "What Salem needs most" is a better, wates system. Ditto, ad lib LdUarabtree; actress, left an estate "of jmore than 13,000,000. Now' who will hare the courage to ask how the ladies of the stage get those diamonds and furs on week ly salaries of S50? Hare you taken advantage of that clubbing offer whereby you can get the New Oregon Statesman and the Portland Telegram for 60c a month? "Hail Hits Walla Walla" says an oregonian headline. Pretty gooa marksmanship, we call it The chances are fairly rood that the man who, according to a news article, "vanished in the river at Portland," was drowned. "The more we meet together," says tne Hubbard Enterprise," the happier we are.,Whleh does not go for bill collectors, so far as we are concerned. After all, life has its comoen- S vtions. The Hood River News hap pily ooserves that even if Al Smith is defeated he will be able to say that he got a box of Oreeon apples out of his candidacy. Detectives looking for the thieves who stole 50,000 cigarettes ought to be able to find them. There's bound to be a lot of fire back of all that smoke. The Statesman is willing to bet that man who offers a S25.000 prize for the best solution of the problem of making prohibition prohibit is not going to vote for Al Smith. One learns that 50-year old eggs are worth $25 a dozen in China. Just think of the fortunes we wasted on barnstorming actors in the good old days. Who remembers when the ladies fia "figures?" Perhaps we ourselves will scale Mount Hood when that tramway is built. Guiding Your Child By Mrs. Agnes Lyne it is admittedly a breach of good manners to make personal and critical remarks in public. Yet oicen grown-ups who are unfail ingly courteous and decentlv con sraerate or each other's feelings are neara to criticise loadlv and emphatically the short comings of a cdim. w- John sits at dinner. In the pres. ence of guests he is sharply re minded that there is egg on his chin, that he is chew with his mouth closed, or that he is spill ing his soap. If John doesn't care how he eats, this sort of rebuke will not change his attitude. If on the contrary, he is trying his best to master the complicated ritual of knife and fork and spodn, the sense of failure thus In. duced will only add to his diffi culties, a Little Betty riding on the street car is harshly reproached for wip ing her shoes on the dress of the lady sitting next to her. The pass engers stare. This reprimand in the presence of strangers will either humble the child's spirit or render her callous, ready to let future recriminations leave " her untouched. Billy's poor school report Is commented on in the family cir cle. Before his brothers and sis ters he is singled out and asked to account for himself. He is shamed in their eyesxand made to feel a culprit. The immediate rebuke, -publicly ed. Perhaps Betty must be dealt able method of discipline. Im provement In Billy's school work will have to be achieved by subt ler means. John's manners need to be slowly and carefully train. ed. Perhaps Betty must be dealth with on the spot. Bnt the correc tion ought to be tactfully made in such manner that no one else is aware or it. For correction never achieves its aim when It injures the child's self respect. Bondholders See State Engineer If embers of the - bondholders committee of the Warmsprings ir rigation district held a conference here Tuesday with c Rhea Luper. Slate engineer, fat connection with the proposed reorganization of the irrigation project. It Is not like ly ' that a definite plan of reor ganization will be adopted for sev eral days. The district embraces approximately 12,500 acres of ir rigable lands and owes more than S2.000.000.TOf this amount fl. 6(0,000 represents bonds Issued by the district. L iM- , . , If - " ' II At 11 I ,. II ii . rvi Kr rMvsnrvx "v-v ii II C 1 T i . MlWM Al IHIMfll V I I f llnnnniAinni nun Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talk From the Statesman Our Fathers Read August 29, 1903 Rev. W. C. Kantner and family returned yesterday from Newport. S. S. Train, the Albany post master, is here for m short visit. A large party of surveyors is at work at Nobile, laying lines for a preliminary survey for a railroad to tap the timber belt along the Cascadia range south of that place. Assessor Charles Lembcke and deputies today will finish the work on the big Marion county assess ment rolls. The Salem Military band will Bits for By R. J. That's a good idea To file on a water supply for the future Bush park, so as to make it the most beautiful park In the country, without excessive cost. W And. by the way, it would be"a good idea to file on mountain wat er for the city's whole supply. Sa lem should own her municipal water supply. Ought to do it now, or in the very near future. W i This will cost a great deal more jhan It would cost when a former mayor vetoed thesordinance the council passed, after a favorable vote by the people. " Also, it will cost a great -deal more than the sum that would have sufficed a couple of years or so ago. But it will be worth it. The longer the matter is put off, the more it will cost. Every new 1000 of population raises the val ue of the franchise, according to the just rulings of the courts. But that is another argument for early action. This argument will always be good, so long as Salem is a growing city. And it will be a growing city as long as any read er of this paragraph shall live and perhaps for several hundred years longer. Salem has a great bean cannery. How big a cannery, putting up a high quality, product, do you think Butcher Boy Directs Hunt For His Own Love Letters LOS ANGELES. Aug. 23. (AP) Three ardent love letters. written by Leo P. Kelley to Mrs. Myrtle Melius shortly before her tragic death, today were thrust by KeUey himself into the opening day of his trial for her murder. The secret hiding place of the let ters in the palatial Melius home was revealed by the accused lover of the society woman when he was taken there, with his trial Judge and jury, to view the scene of his admUted five years illicit love- making and of his asserted crime. Officers who opened the letters, found with a photograph of the handsome young butcher boy In a false bottomed drawer of Mrs. Melius dresser, found them to contain fervid expressions of Kel- ley's love for the then wife of Prank Melius, wealthy sportsman. During the official court tour of the house Kelley himself, smiling and' at ease, whispered to a news paper reporter: - "Look In that bureau. Two of the drawers have false bottoms. Under them you'll find something Interesting." Captain of Detectives Ray Cato was notified and drew forth the photograph and under It the let ters. The dresser, containing the ev- a visa r i m (HHIIIH hold a concert at 3 o'clock this afternoon; the extra one given be cause that last night was so short. George D. Goodhue has return ed from eastern Oregon where he has been Belling cream separators. He sold a carload and a quarter on his last trip. L. D. Gibson, Polk county hop grower, was in the city yesterday. . The Rock Point grain pool of 70,000 bushels of oats and 5,000 bushels of wheat has been sold. Bidding was quite active, fall oats going at 31 Vz cents and spring for 30 cents. Breakfast Hendricks Salem could have without irriga tion? . S - Many things Salem can do, and ought to do, to make this a bigger and better city. But the thing that will do more good than all the rest put together is the secur ing of major irrigation projects. They will bring a string of bene fits too. long for the counting. U u And major irrigation products are like the grace of God. We can have them by asking for them. The same thing applies to beet sugar factories. V V Americanism: One grocery store three filling stations, five ready-to-wear shops for women. S t S The question Lo be decided is whether there are more Smith re publicans or more Hoover demo crats. - Press a button and soapsuds, salt water, scented water or other toilet preparations gu,sh from a spout in a bath attachment a Cal ifornia inventor has introduced. As many containers as desired can be connected to the arrangement and they are installed in a conven ient position for use while bath ing. S An admiring friend has pre sented the Governor or New York with a St. Bernard dog. Let's see. That's the dog that goes out into the mountains in the snow with a bottle -of rum tied to its neck. tdences of the Illicit love affair, was located in Mrs. Melius' sec ond floor bedroom, the room in which she is declared to have been mutilated and beaten to death, and where her nude body was found. The visit to tbe Melius home In the fashionable Wilshlre boule vard district,' was one of the open ing acts in the trial of Kelley. af ter the selection of a Jury of six men and six women. Data Sought On Salem Air Port Information about Salem's pro posed municipal airport was be ing gathered in this city Tuesday by A. B. Dean, representative of the Portland Cement , association, the data being desired principally in connection with, a series of ar ticles about airports which Is run ning in the association's publica tion. Mr. Dean also has offered to the local airport commission use of all the pertinent data which his company has collected on the subject, for '-' the - commission's! guidance in planning" the airport here. SOUTH NEW YORK. Aug. Z&. (AP) The New York Times tomorrow will say Senator Pat Harrison, of Mississippi, who represents the southern states on the advisory committee of the democratic na tional committee, says the south is being floded with antl-Cahtolic and anti-Smith propaganda. "I never saw anything approx imating in bitterness and in its character the campaign that is now being waged against Gover nor Smith In the south," the Times will quote the Senator as saying. "I will not say that it has been launched and is being main tained by the republican national committee, but if not, somebody very close to the republicans is sending out the false and mislead ing propaganda, based on misre presentation and untruth, with which the south is now being flooded. "Pamphlets sponsored by the women's Christian Temperance Union, and the anti-Saloon League and other organizations, attacking Governor- Smith are reaching us daily in great numbers from good democrats in the south who have been receiving them though the mails. The mails are being flood ed with this stuff. Some reports already found through an investi gation pertain to an alleged oath to the Knights of Columbus. "I do not know who Is paying for it, but I know that people are getting them who do not pay for them." "As soon as hte people of the south who believe in fair play find out and we put the blame where it belongs, they will fall from this republican ticket like leaves from the trees in autumn." E BELIEVED WRECKED SEATTLE, Aug. 28. (AP) The Victoria-Seattle monoplane which vanished Saturday is at the bottom of the sea with the five men and one woman who were aboard her, was the growing con viction of searching aviators to day after they had scanned vir tually every square mile of land on which the plane might have crashed. While other fliers marked time in the absence of any tangible clues, Alex Holden, forest 'patrol aviator, whose father. Dr. D. B. Holden, was aboard the missing craft, continued his search from the air today. Lieutenant Com mander J. D. Price of San Point made a reconnaisance flight in a naval plane with a photographer, and Percy Barnes, air mail pilot, went over the territory carefully on his regular run to Victoria and back. Coast guardsmen were combing the waters in the vicin ity of Washington and Oak har bors, while shore parties were searching the land between the two harbors. While Oak Harbor residents re ported that the lost plane was seen Saturday night flying low, aviators generally . clung to the theory that she neves-got that far south, but crashed lnthe Strait of Juan De Fuca Just off Wash- ingon harbor. Coast guard patrol boat 272 from Port Angeles began dragging operators there late to day when an oil slick was discov ered on the surface of the water. The possibility that there may have been seven persons on the plane instead of six arose today when Ernest Eve, president of the British Columbia Airways, oneraUl ling the missing shop, said D. So- l vex, avy r - had MISSING Ar New Yorker at Large By G. D. NEW YORK. Down in Cort- landt street, between lower Broad way and the west Manhattan wat erfront, loud speakers lilt ail aay an impenetrable din. They are the raucous heralds of radio's bargain - row, where vacuum tubes and A batteries and j trickle chargers are . vended Just as fish are hawked in South street or frnl tand vegetables along the teeming-curbs of the east side. Four years ago a radio dealer onened in Cortlandt street a branch outlet for disposal of sur plus goods at cut prices. Other shops followed, - and today prob ably no equal area anywhere con tains so many radio wares. It centers In the single block be tween Greenwich and Washington streets, where 18 dealers in radio equipment have crowded out ev erything "but a,pet.store, a lunch counter and a cigar shop. To The Highest Bidder A distinctive feature of Radio Row, next to the pandemonium of its belchine loud speakers, is its auction sales. Several shops dis pense goods only under the crier's hammer. By ten in the morning every store-front set has been turned on. Half an hour later the auctioneer comes to the doorway, gets a knot of loiterers about him and holds aloft a big package. "Here." he proclaims, "Is a standard radio accessory of use to every owner of a set. Its value is $4.25. To it I will add this book let on radio engineering and a copy of this popular magazine. Five dollars and seventy-five cents worth, and it goes to the first man with courage enough, with fore sight enough, to say 75 cents." It takes some haranguing to find a bidder. Finally a bystand- . M er, to hasten me snow aiong, oi- fers 75 cents. Then follows a A Washington Bystander 1 By Kirk L. Simpson : WASHINGTON. British Ad miralty dislike of the 8-inch gun cruiser, dear to the American naval heart, and presumably of Washington plans for building up the cruiser fleet with such ships, must have played an important part in connection with the Fran co-British naval limitation deal. Despite with holding of the details of that deal from pub lication, it is clear enough that cruiser limitations are in volved. - The London-Paris deal may, and no doubt does, provide a face saving escape for France from the global tonnage impasse at Geneva. She seems ready to trade actual limitations by tonnage of certain types of submarines for accept ance of the principal of global tonnage limitation. -. n other words, the project now put forward is that the universal arms limitation treaty toward which the Geneva conferences have been painfully struggling should allot each naval power its due number of tons- of warships without any restrictions as to the type or class of ships to be built within that total tonnage other than as to size and armament which would identify each class. Simultaneously., however, agreed building programs to run, say, ten years would be worked out which would in fact tlx the tonnage for each power in restricted classes for that period. Where IT. 8. Comes In So far, no difficulties for the United. States would be involved, although It all looks like merely beating around the stump the original Washington plan of limit ing by tonnage each category of taken a bus to the flying field in Vancouver and might have gone aboard. - A report from Victoria of the crash of one bf the search planes today proved unfounded. Rehearing Date Is September 10 Rehearing of the case involving an application for the establish ment of a grade crossing at Ada, Douglas . county, will be held at Roseburg September 10. according to announcement made by the public service commission Tues day. On September 11 the com mission will conduct a hearing at Coqutlle in connection with the application of the Coos Bay Boom company to discontinue its fran chise. Tobacco Concern To Observe Law The Union Tobacco cpmpany. . - with headquarters In New York, today informed Mark McCaUtster, state corporation commissioner, that It would comply . with the "blue sky" law. The company un til recently gate stock coupons to all purchasers of Its cigarettes. The corporation commissioner rheld that this was a violation of the state corporation laws. The company was ordered to desist. ' The democratic national com mittee has made It plain that cam paign contributions of a . dime will be acceptable, v To us exper ienced political observers that can mean only one thing. The demo crats, are trying to get a contri bution from the elder Rockefel ler. Spokane Spokesman-Review. ; Hlstorv is the comnlement of poetry. Stephens. Seymour peroration on the benefits pres ently to accrue to this brave trail blazer who has taken opportunity thus by the forelock. Interest u planed, necks crane. "Now," says the blandly, "we'll take auctioneer this inside and see what the man got for 75 cents.". The crowd tfoops Inside and the auction la on. The man w4io sot a bargain lingers in vain to see what, his grab bag holds. It u laid aside and designedly forgot ten while the auctioneer calls at- teniion lO Oiuer siuiica. - rHs ernoon the sale has grown spirit- ed. But tne mornings urst m.i. der has wandered away, anJ 5iu package lies unopened on the auc tioneer's table, destined to ni.-n another day's sale. Competitive Harmony Outside in the street, the babel of the loud speakers has gained volume. Men shout to make them selves audible an arm s reach away. Automobile horns sound like erace notes in the muitison- ous chorus. The rumble of pas.s lng trucks sinks to a whisper and the thunder of the elevated U stifled. But daily an old grind organ woman draws her battered box to the curb and begins to twist its handle. Only once in a while, when the clamor of every loud I speaker dies away simultaneously. can be heard for a fleeting split second the banging tinkle of her tunes. But she unheeding, grind away as though all the street were dancing to her music. Republicans are saying that Al Smith lacks experience in national affairs, which, of course, would not seem to a democrat nearly as erious as a lack of votes. Chica go Evening Post. combat ships. But the London Paris deal goes further and cre ates new categories not only of submarines, but of surface craft It clearly foreshadows a new Ad miralty drive to limit the number of 8-inch gun cruisers and leav construction of 6-inch gunners un restricted except by the general global tonnage total. And there the shoe begins to pinch for Wash ington. That's where the three- ; power conference coiiapsea wiin Washington and Tokyo returninp. a polite "No, thank you," to every different formula designed to reach the same end. What seems to have happened Is that London did a littl dicker ing with Paris to obtain at least a degree of submarine limitation Big, sea-going subs would be lim ited; little coast defense U-boats would not. But to offset that con session under which France coull arm herself with small subs ennu?h to make things difficult for the JJrltish navy in the evenfcl of a clash, the British retain an ace in the hole by reserving he right to build small cruisers, de stroyers and other small types of anti-submarine craft ad lib. The only type bf cruiserto be limited, apparently, would be the Anieri can favorite 84nch gunners and the London-Paris deal seems to b leading up to a new suggestion that they be placed-In a special class of offensive warships. Cruisers Important Right there the project steps hard on Uncle Sam's toes. Ameri can naval opinion holds tho 8-inch gunners to be about the only typ of cruiser valuable for American purposes. For one thing, they alone would have fuel capacity sufficient to afford protection., self sustained, along American ftado routes in any sea, a factor th London Admiralty probably does not consider vital because of Brit ain's far-flung net work of fuel ing bases. ST. LOUIS. Auk. 28. (AP) John J. Raskob. chairman of the democratic national committee, predicted upon his arrival here late today with a group of eastern democratic leaders, that Governor Smith would receive 309 of the 531 electoral votes for president. Naming the states which he thought Smith would carry, Kas kob's formal statement prepared enroute to the notification exer cises for Senator Joe T. Robinson at Hot Springs. Ark., claimed also for Smith at even chance to carry electors. other states having a total of 57 Raskob. who will confer here with democratic-leaders of eisht middlewestern states before pro ceeding to Hot Springs, Ark . Wednesday night, claimed for Governor Smith the "solid south.' inclndlng- Kentucky, Tennessee and Oklahoma,-and New York. New Jersey. Rhode Island Wiscon sin, Arizona, Colorado, Maryland. Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mon tana, Nebraska. Missouri. New Mexico, and Nevada. There seemed little doubt, Ras kob said, that Connecticut. Dela ware, Indiana. North Dakota. South Dakota and Wyoming should be classified for smith. HOB DECLARES 8KII1 EftSY VICTOR Americans are cents per capita poorer than they were a year ago. We don't see how this could happen under a republican admintst ration, but np doubt DrmH Work will explain it pretty clear- "V Iy and then explain his explana tion. The New Yorker. It Is as natural to die as to be born: and to a little infant, per haps, the", one Is" as painful fc ths other,- Bacon. . si ) I 1