r PAGE FOUR Tbe OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon. Sunday Morning. Jane 30, 1929 . : : : Mill City Man 1 1 t 'A'.j&&tonLsfz-- "Ill " "No Favor Sicays Us; No Fear ShaU Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chaeles A. Spkagce, Sheldon F. Sackett, Publishere CHASLES A. Spbague ... Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett - - Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of ail newt dispatches credited to it ornot otherwise credited in this paper. EnUred at the Potto ff ice at Salem, Oregon, ae Second-Clou Hatter: Published every morning except Monday. Business office X15 S. Commercial Street. Pacific" Coast Advertising Represent atjres: Arthur W. Stjpes, Inc, Portland, Security Bid. 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. Back from the Editorial Meet ALBANY entertained the editors of the state'Friday and Saturday, then turned them over to Newport for a frolic on the sands of the seashore. Messrs. Jackson and Cronise of the Democrat Herald aided by the chamber of commerce of Albany, left no stone unturned to show hospi tality to their guests from all over the state. A banquet, golf tournament, dance, bridge helped fill in the moments between weighty discussions of news-getting, advertising, circulation building and the general job of being community pack-horse. Albany was in most gracious mood; the ladies permitted a woman from Corvallis to win first prize at bridge. The banquet was unusually pleasant, largely because it was not "all-talkie," rather "much movie." Senator Willard Marks scored as interlocutor. The snappiest number was the appearance of the Lebanon "Snapping Turtles," a quar tette of lively girls whose musical skits would insure them first prize in any of Doc Riley's talent contests. And the strawberries, served on great platters, big as pullet eggs (the strawberries we mean) . They were from Lacomb which in a few years Has grown to be one of the great berry towns of the Willamette valley. The main address at the banquet was John J. Cuddy, director of "Californians, Inc.," the promo tional organization of central and northern California. Un der Mr. Cuddy this group has met with such singular suc cess that now they do not have to send out solicitors to raise their budget just mail out personal letters and checks amounting to over $300,000 roll baclu . t;ddy gave the Oregon editors the benefit of his ex perience in community advertiring. Large appropriations intelligently spent are what are required to sell Oregon to th world. Shoot the advertising in the east and middle west vhere the great bodies of people are; select the population groups you want to attract to this country. You have ev erything to offer that California has, make it known to the world: that was the gist of Mr. Cuddy's counsel. Saturday morning William T. Foster, former president of Reed college, gave the editors big chunks of his new eco nomic gospel. Foster, who used to preach simplified spelling when missionary to the far west years ago, has a new pro gram which has a lot more sense in it than the other. It is for the government and big corporations to increase their purchases and carry forward their impovements in times of industial lull rather than in times of prosperity, in order to tus tain employment. Part of what he said was new, most of it sounded just as plausible as simplified spelling. Introducing ''gentlemen of the press" Dean Eric Al len was on hand sporting a three weeks old Vandyke. Frank Jenkins of Eugene with a sickly mustache in the background. They are in training for the "Sunset Trail." L. E. Bladine of Iowa and McMinnville was warmly welcomed to Oregon news paperdom. He is enjoying a vacation with his son Jack Bla dine who manages "Bladine & Son" publishers of the Mc Minnville Telephone Register. Of course Elbert Bede of Cot tage Grove was there, Friday with three legs and Saturday v;ith four. Recently Elbert made his car straddle a Eugene hydrant and nearly drained the town reservoir before they could shut the water off. This time his alibi was that he was wrestling with a husky son. Suppose now the Gazette-Times of Corvallis and Portland Spectator will have a lot more to say about Bede's legs. George Aiken of Ontario was elected president. In inviting the association to meet in Ontario in 1932 he said they would get to see there the biggest dam in the world, the Owyhee. Albert Tozier of Champoeg told a lot of the history of the state and national press associations and introduced Frank Davey one of the founders of the old Oregon Press association. President R. W. Sawyer of the Bend Bulletin presided with all the grace and dignity of an Episcopal bishop. Astoria's-invitation for the 1930 meeting was accepted and Salem is, in line for 1931. Feeding Fires of Hate ALFRED W. SWAN has Written in the "Christian Cen tury" a study of the manufacture of propaganda, atroc ity tales, and similar material put out in the stress of war times. He refers to the famous letter attributed to Benjamin Franklin which purported to be the tale of Indian horrors perpetrated upon the patriots. In the Civil war newspapers both north and south charged the armies of the other side with the atrocities of "Huns." He cites an interesting ex-f-mple of how a simple news item may be altered and magni fied into a fearsome chronicle. Here it is, with his title "How curfew rang that night." "In August of 1914 the Cologne Zeitung carried this line: 'When the fall of Antwerp got known, the church bells were rung.' (Mean ing the church bells in Cologne.) "The Paris Matin then carried this item: 'According to the Co logne Zeitung, the clergy of Antwerp were compelled to ring the church bells when the fortress was taken.' . "Thereupon the London Times continues the fiction with this: 'According to what the Matin has heard from Cologne, the Belgian priests who refused .to ring the church bells, when Antwerp was taken, have been driven away from their places.' "The Milan Corriere continued the fabrication with: -'Accord-log to what the Times has heard from Cologne via Paris, the unfortu nate Belgian priests who refused to ring the church bells, when Ant werp was taken, have been sentenced to hard labor.' "And finally the Paris Matin took up the epic again with: 'Ac cording to Information to the Corriere from Cologne via London, it Is confirmed that the barbaric conquerors of Antwerp punished the unfortunate Belgian priests for their heroic refusal to ring the church bells by hanging them as living clappers to the bells with their heads down.' " It is of such stuff that wars are made of. Whenever A Rain Is Needed - - -A J II m l r U sr as m m ' u, Lay Sermons BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS In 19 IS the government paid the Federal Telegraph company $1,600,000 for certain radio patents in order to make sure they might not pass Into enemy hands. In 1921, about two weeks after he took office Secretary Denby gave the patents back to the Federal Telegraph company without receiving (a cejxt in return, retaining only the right to use the patents. Denby was certainly the. prize dumb-bell of the Harding cabinet: at least that is the most charita ble verdict one may pass upon him. This radio deal was not dis closed until a recent hearing before a senate committee, on inter state commerce. It is not the only instance in which the govern ment has permitted the radio business to become concentrated in the hsndsfbf one corporation which absolutely rules the industry with an iron hand. The Bishop Cannon episode provokes the old Question about when Investment shades off into speculation. -The difference is sim ple: if yon win yon are pointed out as a shrewd "investor. It you lose people call yon a foolish speculator. A sounder distinction may be given thns: to invest is to bay after a careful appraisal of values present and prospective. Togamble in. stocks is to buy quotations, regardless ot values, in hopes of a Quick" profit-turn. The bishop of course was gambling in stocks though he probably didn't know It, ap parently being the dupe of some skilled market tipster operating a backet shop. , - - . The "little tragedies" Like the one Mrs. Callin wrote about in Saturday's Statesman, are numerous in this section. This one concerned two car loads of famil ies arriving from Arizona (pre sumably Fords, though that is aside from the problem), coming to the North Howell district to pick strawberries; arriving two weeks before strawberry harvest was ready, and with a total cap ital of 55 cents. S That is as much as the average pioneer family had on arriving in the original Oregon Country by the covered wagon route. James W. Nesmith, afterwards TJ. S. mar shal, leader of troops fighting In dians, senator, judge, legislator, United States senator and con gressman, handled only three dol lars in actual money the first sev en or eight years after his arrival, and he carried a $5 provisional government warrant or order, part of his pay as a legislator, till it-was almost worn out, and then gave it away. V V There will be room, here for all the strawberry and other fruit pickers. The problem will be with us "If winter comes," which it surely will, in the shape of a rainy season. There will be an acute period o f unemployment here, made worse by the arrival each year of stranded people look ing for work (and .finding it) in our harvest season. S ". The all the year operation of the Reid, Murdoch & Co. concern will help some. But wo need more winter employment. We must get a balanced program between the industries on the land and those in our cities and towns. The op portunities are here. That is the biggest problem we hav This valley can maintain in comfort 10, '000,000 people, and will some day. Perhaps some of the Henry Fords and Westinghouses and Jim Hills and other leaders who will aid In bringing this aboat are among the children of the families of our ber ry pickers arriving each year in a stranded condition. "- . The Salem Y free employment office had 182 men and 32 wom en applying for work the past week, and found jobs, for 118 of the men and 18 of the women. Still more workers than work. The Bits man has been predict ing that the Salem district will be come the center of the greatest ed ible nut industry in the world, when walnut, filbert and chestnut trees will cover great areas all over the Willamette valley, and will fleck the foothills and reach to the very summits of the Cas cade and Coast ranges; and per haps other edible nut trees will be found that will flourish here. Figs will, certainly. s s "United Purity News" is the name of a creditable weekly paper published in the interests of the 138 grocery stores that in one way and another are linked up and co operate with the Willamette Gro cery company, Salem's big whole sale house, under the direction of Theodore Roth and his associates. E. Russ of Halsey, Oregon, con tributes an illuminating article o chestnut growing to last week's issue of that paper. Mr. Russ says that when the Roman armies marched into Asia Minor they cam to a town called Kastanea where the found a nut which they named the Kastanea nut. Hence the name; Kastanea cor rupted or shortened to chestnut. They, sent great quantities of these nuts to their families at home and scattered them about until a large part of the woods of southern Eu rope are weir stocked with chest nut trees. In Corsica a third of the wooded area consists of these trees. (That island was the birth place of Napoleon; the man who made monkeys and cannon fodder of millions in pulUng his ambi tious, political' chestnuts out of the fires of war; changing the course of history; remaking the map of Europe.) s w s Like the walnut and filbert, the chestnut tree lives to a great age; one at Tatworth, England, was a boundary nark 700 or 809 years ago; one in France la 100b years old, and one on the south slope of Mt. Aetna, Sicily, Italy, U about 200 feet around the trunk; one of the gigantic trees of the world. A peasant in southern Europe is said to be sure of enough to eat if he has three or four full bearing chestnut trees. They grind the nuts for hog and cattle feed; and the hogs eat them under the trees, like mast, or acorns. Also, the chestnut is a good table food, making a nice soup and a good mush when ground coarse and white flour when ground fine. Qhestnut dressing for roasts meats is a delicacy. 'm The largest chestnut tree on the American continent is perhaps In Connecticut; 55 feet around the base. The Willamette valley grows fine chestnuts. Dexter Field, pi oneer here, named his farm out beyond the end of Center street, Salem, Chestnut farm, and he set out a number of the trees, which may be seen by any Salemite in a drive of a few minutes. Gecond and third generation members of the Field family are leading grow ers of vegetables under glass, like cucumbers, tomatoes, etc. Mr. Russ writes that he has at Harrisburg three chestnut trees that have endured the winters for 20 years, and they have- borne a full crop annually for 12 years, with no off years; 'the only thins I raise from the ground of which I can say as much," he says. They came into bloom this year June 10; no danger of frost. He pro poses to test many varieties, for pollination purposes, and to cross pollinize and develop the best. He thinks boiled, roasted or steamed chestnuts make the finest of hu man food in the edible Tiut line. It will grow where oaks will, but will not stand much water; needs drained land. "Ten years after set ting out the trees," says Mr. Russ, "chestnuts can be raised for a le3S outlay than wheat, and the nuts are not likely to sell for less than 15 to 20 cents a pound for the next 50 years." S While he lived. Dexter FleTd used to predict a great future for chestnut growing in western Ore gon and he was a very success ful farmer and gardener, and a student and an able writer on agri cultural subjects. Knight Pearcy, Salem walnut and filbert expert and nurseryman, has predicted that chestnut growing will become general in this valley, and that these nuts will be the great stand by in the fattening of swine, as they are in the countries of south ern Europe. Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talks from The States man Our Fathers Read June 30, 1004 Captain Murphy is determined that all members of Company M, Saiem, shall attend the annual na tional, guard encampment at American Lake. General orders for movement of troops have been is sued by Adjutant General W. E. Finzer, the movement to include Third Infantry, separate battalion from southern Oregon, Battery A, of Portland and Troop A of the Cavalry from Lebanon. A hundred rods of the Halls Ferry road has been graveled re cently, at a cost of f 400. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Cross have returned from an extended tour of the east, where they visited all the principal cities and spent some time at the St. Louis exposition. Read the Classified Ads. Fb4is True Vatoea 'Surety there Is ne enchaatment acalnat Jacob, nithr la tber aay U vtn&tloa aaainat larart : accordlmr t this time It ahaJl b said of Jacob mo f Israel. What hath God wrought i Numbers 24 :Z3. For a generation and longer or ranixed religion as embodied In th church has been on the defen sive. It has keen forced to con tend with sealous scientists, with critical nhllosonhers. and with self-satisfied pleasure - seekers. Critics have threatened to break the authority of the Bible, to rid dle, the creeds and to weaken the moral codes. The church has many times seemed to yield ground, sometimes wisely, gener ally grudgingly. The attacks have come from historical re search and from scientific inves tigation. At times it seems there Is little left of the Bible, of the church organization, and of relig ion Itself. In this atmosphere of criticism and of doubt people quickly lose sight of the great contributions which the Hebrews through their religion and the . Christians through their faith hare made to the welfare of humanity. It is charged that the Hebrew and Christian faiths contain large ele ments carried, over from pagan ism. Suppose that is true. It is also true that these faiths marked a great stride in advance of the crude paganlstic religions with which they were surrounded. The Jews were monothelsts and their God a God of the spirit, while all about them the crudest idol wor ship prevailed with hideous prac tices all in the name of religion. On the foundation of a purified monotheism Christianity built a religion of love, of ministry, of service. It was not a religion of sorcery, of enchantments and div ination; but in its finest revela tion i .religion ol spiritual uplift. True isome pagaa practices crept into the Christian ritual of wor ship, hut they were alien to the true genius of the gospel of Christ. That is why Christianity has sur vived competition with other faiths, persecutions, invidious philosophies. It is easy to nourish our doubts, to feed our skepticism and to magnify our disbeliefs until we shut out the great affirmatives of (ftl IT is only sensible . . . OF course it is es sential to dose the tiny pores of your face and throat after using a cleansing or an emollient cream, or else you leave them open to the coarsen ing attacks of dust andexposure. Dorothy Gray's Orsngi Fltwer Skin Ttk is a mild astringent which should always be patted on freely, in place of water, as the last step in your morning facial treatment, just before you apply your finishing preparations and powder. Ow FUwtr Skim Tntk gently closes Che pores and stimulates the skin, leaving it protected, refreshed sod cleanly cool. At mr Tailet GJi Deftrtmemt J $7f lS Capital Drug Store Tel. 119 405 State J. H. Wfflett Can You Beat this at Home? q a Breakfast 25c to 50c Ck Lunch 25c to 50c K-5J Full Dinner (Chicken both noon I w auu ctciun& L II 3UC Sundays) Hotel Argo Dining Room 345 Chemeketa St. Si M Oouqh-Muflffon Co Htetory of Salem andtye State o Oregon OW that we have traced the development of our state down to comparatively modern times, and thus laid a comprehensive background of facts, we shall turn to a consid eration 5f local events, and fit in Salem'g own history with that of the State. Permanent This first article on Salem's history will appear here one week from today, and we trust It and thosa which follow will prove fully as interesting as those which have gone before. HILE pur little his tory of Oregon is ended, the Clough-Houston organization goes serenely on. We have our ideals of service to main tain and our plan for the fu ture must be carried out. The Clough-Houston Company is one of Salem's permanent institutions. CLOUGH-HUSTON C? SMCttstMe9trM temt . )UHncttVeJuneral Sem'ce jmoNE l2o Christian teachings. Particularly is this tru at the present period of philosophic unsettlement Hunting for dross we " miss the tine gold. Seeking for shells we ignore the pearl 01 great pnw. After we purge historical Chris tianity or Its paganlstic accretions, it still remains supreme In its eth ical teachings and In Its spiritual implications. Christ is still the unapproacbed Master 6t the race, so we may say with the poet: "If Jesus Christ Is a man, And only a man, I say. That of all mankind I. cleave to Him. And to Him will I cleave alwaj. "If Jesus Christ is a God, And the only God. I swear I will follow Him through heaven and hell. Through sea and the depths of air." MEN BOLDER A Boston man slapped his wife as she slept, according to a di vorce petition. The men are get ting a little bolder all the time. Ashland Tidings. Hurt by Horses y , MIL CITT, June 29. J. J. Fel ten. who recently moved onto the Frank Wflde place suffered a painful accident Tuesday. Mr. Felten was moving some mahcinery from a shed with his team when the horses became frightened and ran against the aide of the shed, pinning him be tween the wall and the binder. One leg.was broken and mangled. He was taken to the Silvertoa hospital for first aid and treat ment and later moved to a Salem hospital where they eauld X-ray the injured member. PICXIC AT MCKREALL RICKREALL, June 29. A Sunday school picnic was held in the RickreaU grove last Wednes day. At noon a lunch was served and In the afternoon the chil dren went in swimming in the creek. Baseball and several oth er games were played later. WHISKERS GROW LONG A careful canvass among Eu gene males yesterday disclosed tha soma whiskers are now lonp enough for the wrnd to blow through. Eugene Register. 1 HOURS OF REAL ENTERTAINMENT 10 1 SEPARATE PROGRAMS BIG DAYS At CHAUTAUQUA Starts in Salem July 10th SAVE OVER HALF with a SEASON TICKET Ho will put the Hamilton Beach Vacuum Cleaner in your home Price has been cut from $64.00 to $ 41 Now You Can Afford die machine you have long wanted a high-grade cleaner combining: Motor-Drirea Brushy Powerful Suction, Beating Action, Sweeping Action, -BalL-Bearing Motor ' Never needs oiling. Save $23.00 At this unheard of low price, you save $23.00. Surely you can come to our store to save that, pr We4fc2Y send for a demonstration T7 22 M 1 I ' V 8 fflttm 340 Court