PAGE FOUR Tbm Naw OHECON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Friday lfaralfrt Mar 3. 1929 W$z (Oregon Statesman "No Favor Sicays Vs; No Fear. Shall Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Spkague, Sheldon F. Sackett, Publishert Chasus A. Sprague Sheldon F. Sackett Editor-Manager Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all sews dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper. Entered at the Potto f fie at Salem, Oregon, at Second-data Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Btttinett office SIS S. Commercial Street. Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Slypes, Inc., Portland, Security Bldg. San Francisco, Sharon Bldg.; Los Angeles, W. Pac. Bldg. Eastern Advertising Representatives: Ford-Parsons-Stecher, Inc., New York, 271 Madison Ave; Chicago, 360 N. Michigan Ave. Next, Mister! A "I Can Explain Everything" MUCKRAKING newspapers are diligently applying the smudge to the International Paper company and to a number of well-known newspapers in this country because the paper company, in its effort to insure a stable outlet for its newsprint has purchased stocks or bonds, in no case a A a . A. A V rwv- A . A. ? t Tl majority interest, in tnose paper?, ine in tenia tiuuai rapei company is amnatea witn tne international ttyaro-raecxnc company, which is in the electric light and power business, so the muckrakers are wearing their throats hoarse at the claim the power trust is breaking into the control of the ' country's newspapers. Anyone who is acquainted with many of the papers in which the International Paper company has purchased an Interest wouK! know that the company couldn't control the editorial policies of the papers. One of the papers is the Chicago Daily News, one of the trreatest independent news papers in the country .with an able and reliable editor and publisher, Walter Strong. We can easily see how from a business standpoint the paper company would be willing to make a small investment in the Daily News in order to be favored with its newsprint. Or take the Gannett papers, also mentioned as having shared a portion of their ownership to the paper company. Frank Gannett is one of the ablest newspaper executives in the United States. He has been acquiring very rapidly a number of the leading daily papers in the east; we can see where he could use some financial assistance from the In- A A 1 T" !ll A- . A " A lernauonai raper company wunoui in any way lying up to the power trust. (Frank Gannett is the principal owner of these papers, yet even he does not interfere in their editor ial policies. It is a settled policy with him to permit his ,eauors to nave a iree nana in snaping tneir editorial opin- rni T- . t a . t? a i r t a inno I nil a in k rr nocror rvn a rr Trxa i -annnTr nsnpra iw strongly republican, the other democratic. If Gannett him self doesn't interfere with his editors, what chance would President Graustein of the j)aper company have to control. As a matter of fact the chief power investments of the International group have been in Canada. Only recently they invested in,' a power company in New England. When a purchase was made in the Boston Herald and Boston Tra veler the announcement was promptly made public. Most of the papers where the International holds stock are lo cated far out of the range of their power company activities. We think it a poor policy for the newspaper press to be merely the end of the line for a Fourdrinier paper-making machine. But the American newspaper is destined to no such debased position. The newspapers of this country were never more independent, more fearless and less under the l 3 a: i l iuuiiui vl auvci luers, uaimera ur puiiiiciaus. Whose Ox Is Gored SENATOR WHEELER of Montana, one of the noted in quisitors of that body, is proposing a senatorial investi gation of the conditions in the textile industry. The south ern senators, all democratic, are rising in opposition to t . rri.: aa il :i iTiicctci s liieu Mates ttre nuw iu me sirine ueu, and they do not want any prying into their affairs. Conditions in the southern textile mills need investigat ing. For years northern mills have been forced to the wall because of competition from the south where workers were exploited, children ground in back-breaking toil, and oper ating costs thus held down. Now the workers in the south ern mills are learning how to strike, and it may be expected that they , will not forget this initial lesson. The southern mills have themselves to blame because of the strike out breaks. Over a year ago a group of southern bishops pre sented a report severely criticising mill conditions of labor. The mill men immediately went up in arms to rebuke the l-l J j.i ' a i ; i uiruuuiig ptasuus, iuiu inein meir uudiness was to save souis and not interfere in private business. Nothing was done; now the workers are in revolt. The whole textile industry in the east is in distress. Fa vored by high tariffs it has not been able to keep its own house In order. Fabulous prof its .during the war were taken out in dividends. The plants were not maintained and now many of them have obsolete looms and equipment. Style .changes cut sharply into demand. Price cutting methods brought only financial disaster. Marketing the products has been, handled through factors and commission houses who were interested only in volume of sales, not profits to the mills. Wages have been cut from 26 to 41 per cent, and hours of labor lengthened except in Alabama and Massa chusetts. Production has been spaeded upv through the "stretch-out" system by installing larger looms. A long summer lies ahead of progress. The senate might spend a part of its time disclosing actual conditions in cotton mills, particularly in the southern states. How the dear public does like to be bilked. Even when is what happened m Portland when an advertised drawing for an automobile -failed to take place, and the people who had paid nothing for their numbers, became a riotous mob. ro doubt they knew there was a catch in it, and went to the scene of the drawing expecting to be let down. Figure it p,ut fnr vnnrsplf. nne chanro in fnnr hnnAroA tfcnnanri tn n-in the car; yet the public anxious-to-get-something-for-nothing took a half day off to be in at the final ceremony which didn't take place. A few months later and some one will come .'inlfmfr with snmp other crand srhprn lilf thaf and ihn twv. ple will fall for it. The sucker birth-rate has speeded up a lot since Barnum's day. Aiici icauiug ui mc aauiiis ujr lucac wuue cuuor, yos ty-iaced, spats-snamcea gunmen wno run tne .racket:' and congest the news columns, it is a real relief to read of an old facViiAncwl IriTlinrr Arvam in a' TTpnfnMrv trills era Turn nrnmon got into a quarrel over a bottle ox vanilla and used their fists. A fist fight never settles an issue in Kentucky, so the next day when they met at the town pump one woman fired five shots into the other woman's hndv. The dead woman leaves three children. - Sad, isn't it; but somehow it seems a cleaner shooting than the hired killings and ma chine gun massacres that have become common in the big y towns. ' Salem is arriving. We may let a street carnfVal operate ' on a main street hnt we have a. anankinff' new Hunt rluh. This new organization will help give the town It". As Doc Riley Unkk.l 1 J XV ! Sl.l iiuuwuu wuuia say, we nau uu new orsaiuzauon witn . cvfcau wuatcver uui is. joaype alter., a wnue tne oanxs vmfl to- O. i.. i ri 1 i ii knuj wuae uu oaturuay aiiernoons ana we can reaiiy recoru that Salem has arrived. BITS for BREAKFAST By R. J. HENDRICKS "Tide of Empire" . w s llany Salem people saw and en joyed that picture the showing of which closed last night at the El sinore theater; and it should have had wider notice s s s But It is mentioned here to point to the "California spirit" that ought to be emulated in Ore gon. "Tide of Empire" is a rep resentation of the early historic events of California, about which great enterprises have been devel oped In that state, attracting world wide attention and bringing swelling streams of money from the far corners of the earth. But the old Oregon country wa3 the mother of the state of Cali fornia. Marshall, who discovered gold in California, went from Ore gon. He was here two years be fore he went there. Sutter, build er of Sutter'iT Fort, near where gold was discovered, went from Oregon to California. Californi ans long ago built a monument to Marshall, and they have at large expense rebuilt Sutter's Fort. S ". Burnett, an Oregon immigrant, was the first governor of Califor nia, and without the Oregon settle ment of the early days California might never have belonged to the United States; nor any of the Ore gon Country, either. Or it might have taken a war with Great Brit ain to extend the limits of the United SUtes to the Pacific, if they had been so extended at alL "W Oregon was the mother of early California; but she has been much slower than her daughter in get ting the spirit that builds empires. But it is coming, however belated. m m The comprehensive leading edi torial in the Oregonian of yester day concludes with these words: "There is a modern movement to obtain larger official recognition for the importance of Champoeg as an Oregon historical shrine. It deserves to succeed because of many aspects rather than because of a few, and because it stands out above all other local civic ex periments in American annals. It merits due place among the forces through which the Oregon Coun try south of the 49 th parallel lat er became American territory without the payment of a dollar or the firing of a shot." s s s This "modern movement" will loom large with the events that wil lead up to the centenary cele bration. These events will tlx In the minds of the people of the United States, and of the world, the importance of what wasdone at Champoeg 86 years ago yester day and the acts that led up to that epocnal meeting, and the re sults, changing he course of his tory, that followed it; flowed from It S "b S The initial causes that led to that historic gathering of a few early settlers trace their way back through all written history and beyond and the results widen with the progress of the world, and will go on indefinitely U But the center of those epochal events was here, in the Colombia and Willamette valley a; at Salem; at Champoeg. Taken in the nar row commercial sense, there Is value in this historic setting far above the dreams of either the actors, or of the present day aver age citixea here. --. - 175 Dresses at $1.00 See A d on Page 7 Today There Is vast undeveloped wealth in the soil and the forests and streams and minerals of this section; large beyond estimate. But there is more than a rich gold mine, or a score of them, in the historic values of this valley, cen tering around Salem and old Champoeg, the unfolding of which is now only la the beginning stages. Marion county's limits at first ran to the California line and to the summit of the Rockies. They still run to the summit of the Cas cades, and the time is coming when her eastermost sections will pour vast permanent wealth into her lap, in forest, mineral, water power and other wealth. S "Anyway, we are not lacking in civility," said a Scotch resident of Salem to an old timer here. "That's true, but you must admit that civility costs nothing," was the retort. N SOUTH CALIFORNIA RASES SAN BERNARDINO, Calif., May 2 (AP) Southern California's first forest fire of -the season, which this afternoon was reported out after sweeping nearly four hundred acres of brush in day canyon, tonight still was being bat tled by a force of 125 men. A hot dry wind, which had car ried the blaze rapidly up both walls on the Saa Gabriel moun tains canyon, rose again late In the afternoon, demanding fresh efforts by fire fighters to confine the flames to the burned area. Predictions were ma'de that it would be entirely out by morning, the wind having died out this eve ning. The strong wind also was blamed fcr the start of the fire, fanning into vicious blazes smoul dering embers where a fire break had been newly burned over as a protective measure. For a time it threatened to shoot westward into timberlands of ths The Marie of Genuine Aspirin T ATES As"ranr an old - friend, tried and tra Urn ean unr bo a MUifartory tvbsti tste for eitaer on. Saytr Aspirin Is gensina. H is tat accoptsd aati ftote f or pais. Its relief may always to reliad on, whether used for the occasional toirtsche, to head-off t cold, or for the store serious acher and pains from neuralgia, neuritis rneunutisn or other ailments. It'i easy to identify Bayer Ainiria b: tto Bayer Cross oaerery tablet, Ir. the name Bayer oa the box sad tht word fenaof printed ia r$4. el MwiiMtiiiirlilf t liltqsow! Saa Bernardino national forest, but reports were made tonight that only brush lands had been swept. SOLON DEFENDS PASTORS BOSTON, May 2. (AP) For mer Representative William D. Upshaw, of Georgia, upheld the right of "ecclesiastical interfer ence with moral legislation in Washington," in a letter to Sena tor Royal S. Copeland. of New York today. THE TOLL OP REVOLUTION Mexico's civil wars and revolts have always seemed to possess comlo opera features, but a com pilation of totals shows nothing humorous in the situation. Mexican history since 1910 shows: Nineteen revolutions in 19 years. Two hundred thousand lives lost Hundreds of millions of dollars damage to property. In 1110, rrancisco L Madero headed a revolution against Pori- firio Diaz. Madero won. In September of 1911 the Lib eral party revolted in Baja Cali fornia, Coahuila, Vera Crus and. Chihuahua. The Liberals lost. In the same year Andres Moli na Enriques led a "social agrari an" revolt which last 15 days. In 19 IS Pascual Orozco revolt ed and was defeated. The same year Bernado Reyes revolted and was captured, and a little later General Felix Diaz cap tured Vera Cruz only to be de feated again. General Emiliano Zapata com menced revolt in 1912 which lasted until 1920. President Madero. who had seized the government from Pori flrio Diaz, lost his life In 1912 when Felix Diaz, Bernardo Reyes and Manuel Mondragon led a suc cessful revolt and Victoriana Hu erta was made president. In the following year Venustl ano Carranza revolted, conquered the country and became president Francisco Villa started a re volt which claimed 100,000 lives until Alvaro Obregon defeated him. Felix Diaz revolted against the Carranza government but fled in tow weeks. Obregon and Plutarco Ellas Callea then revolted and seized the government from Carranza In two weeks' time. Carranza was killed. In 1920 Pablo Gonzales re volted against Obregon and Calles. and was thrown out of the coun try. In 1921 Francisco Murgula re volted, was captured and shot. General Manuel Pelaes revolted but was forced to quit. In 1923 Adolfo de la Huerta revolted but was crushed. In July, 1926, with closing of the Catholic churches, six states became the scenes of fighting which still continues intermittent ly. In 1927 the Calles government destroyed the Gomez-Serrano re bellion in four weeks and the leaders we're executed. On March 3 of this year, the 19 th revolt was started by Jose Escobar. It is still dragging on in one state. Medford Daily News. ST. LOUIS MAN PICKED WASHINGTON, May (AP) Horace Paul Besor, of St Louis, was nominated today by President Hoover to be a member of the fed eral farm loan board, filling op the unexpired term of Commis sioner Eugene Meyer, who was resigned. Saturday Sunday May 4th and 5th I would like to make your acquaintance at THE GRAY BELLE CONFECTIONERY & RESTAURANT Have already made a few additions and believe you will enjoy a Hot Milk Chocolate Hot Malted Milk or Hot Ovaltine made in one of our NEW HOT CUPS. I. E. M. DOUBLE SEAL TOASTED SANDWICHES ARE TRULY DELICIOUS MADE RIGHT BEFORE YOU Besides our own Home Made Candies we have secured the Agency for the justly famous Golden Pheasant Candies And with each purchase of $L00 -or over AT FOUNTAIN CANDY DEPT. or RESTAURANT ON MAY 4TH AND 5TH WE WILL PRESENT YOU A $1.00 box of Golden Pheasant Chocolates FREE Sincerely, JOHN BLAKELY. P. S. 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