I - . . . t : i .... PAGE FOUR -'-11 The OREGON STATESMAN, Salewtv Oregon, San day Morning Jnty 7 1929 '1 V ! inmj No Favor Sicays Us; No Fear Shall Awel , - From Firrt, Statesman March 28, . 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COi A. STEACLt, SliEU)0 FJ SACXETT, PubOshfrt Charles A. Sprague - : Editor-Manager t '; Managing Editor Sheldon F. Sackett llember of the Associated Press . . The Associated Tress is sxclusivtrv entitled to the publication ef all sews dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited tn this paper. bse fdr . Entered at the Pot to f fie at Salem, Oregon. a-SecoAd-Claa Matter, x Published every iaorning except Monday. Rwrinet office tlS S. Commercial Street. j j ,, Padfii Coast Advertisine Representatives: Arthur W. Stynes, Inc.. Portland, Security Bld& San Francisco, Sharon Bldg.; Los Angeles, W. Pac. Side. Eastern Advertisine Representatives: Ford-Parsons-Stccher," Ine, New York, 271 Madison Chicago, 360 N. Michigan Are. u Another Hip Pocket Seizure. smell a revolution in China; sates of Princes! and Poten- tlme getting inside the gates f J rray er r or Newspapermen FT1HE Mississippi Press association held its annual conven- 11 tion in Columbus, Miss., a few days ago. Even; the news v paper men are pious down south, so they called on Dr. T. D. Bateman, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of that city, to deliver the prayer at the opening of the convention. ! The reverend doctor must have ad rather intimate con- J tacts with newspaper men, for he predicts they will have a hard time getting inside the gates Of Paradise. i ; Here is his prayer, which assuredly must have been ad dressed not ko much to the Almighty as to his audience ' lj "Eternal God, our- Heavenly Father, -we ask Thy blessings upon these newspaper people, who are wont to communicate with the ends of the earth. They are people who can people who have license to enter the tales, but who will have a mighty hard of Ps ran tap ' "Hare mercy on these people who are tempted by j every devil from printer's devils!- to the devils of newspaper headlines.' And these same people who are so buy listening to the songs 'of the wires and the tongs of the jwomen, that ofttlmes the voice of God finds bo listener among them and no place in their hearts. "Have mercy, O Lord, upon these J people who have to carry all kinds of things in, khe, cause jot their newspapers. . H4e mercy, O LordV on these people' who are invited fto 80 nmny. lihoas and - banquets that they must sacrifice their j digestion on the attar of free advertising. f- ' r -, , ;- "Have mercy, Lord, on these people who are chased by the Co lonial Dames, W. C. T. U., Kiwanis, Rotary and Chamber of Com merce. Have mercy on these people who, have to hobnob alike with Jew and Gentile, white and black, democrat and republican, Baptist. Methodist, Presbyterian and Episcopalian, those who came over on the Mayflower and those who came over in the cauliflower. j j "Have, mercy, O Lord, on these people and help them in their dash from ballroom to church social and back to rum-runners, and who have to associate with anybody from Andy Mellon to Andy Gump. Any of them would .walk two ntiles for a good story. ' ! "Make this a good convention in Columbus. It is an easy mat ter to break into print but how will some of them break into the Pearly Gates? We pray-Thy blessings upon them and when they have done with newspapers , and stories 'and their careers are fin ished here, may they; have a finer story from St. Peter than they ever had in newspapers here. And though it is so hard for news papermen to get into the Kingdom may they receive a warmer wel come in the new Jerusalem than they do -in Columbus today. Amen." I 1. We would Suggest that a newspaper man be asked to give the invocation at the opening of tjhe Presbyteriaik Synod for Mississippi. . In that way the score might be evened up. ' i ' j i I' - : r !; ' Decline of Baseball : BASEBALL'S rating as the "national pastime is threat ened. Golf for instance undoubtedly interests far more people as players than does baseball. There are about ten million people playing golf this summer. 'There are nearly 2000 golf courses, and the numbejr is increasing-rapidly until itwill not.be long before every village will have a golf course. Some farmers are findings it more profitable Ho turn their land into conventional nines or eighteen than to raise hay and grain. j L I1 Then there. is tennis with about five million players. Its popularity too is growing rapidly and interest in such match es as that at Wimbledon now won if or the third time by Helen rWXUs adds to the favor of tennis With the public. : j ' Women are going into sports, and of course find base ball entirely too masculine even for the he-women of the sex. .Tennis, golf, boating, swimming, horseback riding appeal to women." And wherever thev cro the "weaker sex" is sure to trail after. That takes a good many thousands! away from baseball. k j j Baseball's decline in interest from the standpoint of the general public dates back to the' "throwing" of games and Ithe scandals attendant upon those disclosures. "Young 4 America" for instance lost faith in its idols. Not is the ris ing generation playing baseball with the fervor of a gen- ; eration ago. Too many competing sports, and too few open spaces for ball diamonds have helped kill off the: gangr ball I teams from which the, big leaguers come. Boys can caddy, i they can swim, they tan go fishing and camping. So base st ball continues to decline. sua a rtjfifru. feat SrttMi rtu Iim4 , Lay Bfrp onus. "ON OTHER THINGS And the rest some' on planks, and some on ether things (rem the sbipj And ao It cam to pa that tbr tt Paul's ship had suffered ship- wreck, The prow had run hard; aground, "but the; stern began ta break: 9 irlth the violence of the waTea. Yonder was the shore aid aafetyj here death was certain xnere were no- uie-eavutg erews tq attempt, the rescue. It was every man for himself. Many swam to shore; others caught a floating plank from the breaking up ef the vessel; mad some made way to land "oa other things," What were these "other things" we wonder. Perhaps a bale of cargo; a broken mast or spar.- Luke, the narrator, does not tell us. We re main forever ignorant of those other things" which brought -.at vation to the remainder of those on shipboard. i It la so easy to he critical; of other things" which are used as vehicles for progress. In the so cial realm folk look askance at those who challenge social height! with neither blood nor monevL Other things," for instance a fine bran and even a pretty face, may not suffice to storm the citadel of entrenched "society." The banker-merchant-manufacturer triumvi rate has rather looked down 6a the rich who piled up sudden fop- tunes through motion pictures. chain stores or oil wells. The?e other avenues to success seemed BfTS for BREAKFAST j ? "Air Rights" I YITHO owns the air? i 1 f t That is coming to be a live legal question. There is the question of "freedom of the airj as of freedom of the seas, f The old doctrine was that the owner of a tract on the surface .of the earth, owned down.to earth's center and tip to the limit uof the gaseous envelope that surjrounds the earth. Seeking to j exercise this right, some propeyowners have denied air , ships the right to fly over their lands. It is a futile injunc ; tion because the airships keep on flying. Courts have ruled U giving rights for travel through the air without, regard to .ithe tenancy of the land beneathi The Federal Commerce Act ,makes free for travel the stretches t)f the air above a certain safety minimum. -J' ; t- i ' i ! f But we shall have new air laws. The growth of aviation is so rapid that it will have to be accompanied by protective arid cantrolling legislation. I v , Which illustrates anew Ihe folly of those who are for ever, deriding the, making of new laws, saying we have too ' many already and that half of those on the books should be c wiped out. We need new laws because times change. Old laws f of horse and buggy days become obsolete. Sometimes they vare repealed, oftentimes they simply fall into disuse because j human activity moves onto another plane. The automobile ( made-necessary a new crop of laws; and aviation will in its ! time bring in new measures to serve as' rules of the air. Omnipresent and Omniscient SENATOR Gould of Maine,' who seems to have trouble with hfs crane iuice and his recioes. until he "horsed it ud with y'i gooseneck tube," and got fine results, ought to switch to f tmlnue- the natoinal drink of Mexico. This is the liauor which U the government of Mexico is trying to combat. The difficulty . t . it Sm. !- ? 1 T7I "..! J ....1 J li -ULni ! 13 inai li is universal. ' xuven uuuiu cuuiu picpuc u wiwiwuv bothering about getting the bung open. Pulque is described 1 in a recent A. P. dispatch as. a sticky, milky-like liquid, which t . - a Iw . la. I comes rrom tne maguey piani wnicn grows wua or is cuui- vated. Getting the liquor, requires no machinery. All you do i . 4a tti. t1t rVi?yi ?oiW O'mAoa nivf ni mt et ! Ksticky juice. Then just let it set for fermentation. Its intoxi- 1 , eating exiect is suca tnat it buuicuuics uiucs ita auuiwa vi V cious and bloodthirsty. ;l z-- '1 X-r"; ."' . i . J : - The maguey plant would undoubtedly come under Sen 1 ator Gould's mantle of divine approvaL when he said, defend- h iruj his horsing up the wine kegs: "God Almighty put those v flowers and. Tines on tne cartnj tna lie lnienaea men to ce f nsed. Logical of course ; so we should play i with rattie ' snakes and dmtfba toadstools; because God Almighty put t. them on. the earth end intended; them to oe usea. Great boosters "m S Were the missionary leaders who Started the forces of civilisa tion in the Oregon Country. V Their descriptions would do credit to a present day real estate boomer and they were merely trying to prove that the country was worth taking under the pro tection of the stars and stripes. A strawberry grower near West Woodburn figures that he will net $100. an acre on his Etterburg crop; canning berries. There is nothing particularly unusual about this, excepting the fact that his herries have been grown on land that has been farmed for about 100 years. The land is in the area that was settled by the superannuated French employees ot the Hudson's Bay company in the late twenties and early thir ties of the last century; being en couraged, by the company to grow wheat for export to the Russians at their trading posts in Alaska, and to Hawaii. Also, encouraged to take Indian women for their wives, in order that the Hudson's Bay company heads might have a contact with the tribesmen, rela tives of the Indian women, for ends looking to peace and under standing, and perpetuation and ex tension of the trade la furs and pelts. , If land: in that section that has been farmed for 100 years, with out special attention in the way of fertilization, and without irriga tion, will net f 100 an acre in strawberries, what will It do under irrigation and with proper renew- 1 by fertilization and rotation and Intensive cultivation? ; V The reader will agree that the land must have been rich in the first place. It was. It had been covered with native grass as high as a pony's back for many hun dreds of years before the French settlers and the American immi grants came. The pioneers of no land around the whole world found a richer heritage than was open to the pioneers of the Oregon Country in the Willamette valley. The daedalian maze or Chinese puzzle made up of railroad rates to Interior points will nofHrouble the people of the Willamette val ley as much as now when the pres ent, program for river improve-J raent shaU have been; carried to the point of providing still water the year through In the Willam ette; or; even a channel depth suf ficient: tor floating barges and light raft boats all the year. There must bono slacking on this program. It Is the most Impor tant, project before the people pt this valley, uroagnc to its consu mation, both banks ot the Willam tte all the way up to Eugene wUl be available for wharves and ware houses with connection by water with the deep sea porta of. -the world, land almost as favorably situated as u actually on a bay front leading to the ocean. As fa vorably situated, excepting for a low barge cost and a small charge for transfer In the Portland har bor to ocean going Teasels. A lew- days ago, the Bits man spoke pt the great come-back of the cahe sugar industry .. in the south, ainee the introduction of the P. O. J. rust resisting canes. It was stated that I toanage.-u?f cans sugar . has mounted from nealj the vanishing point in a few yean to ISe.eee tons) a year, then iso.eoe, gad that it ts expected to reach X59,0 tons next year. Now own rvpurt ; m us leaning; su gar ssagaslne, -Facts About Su gar," trod New Orleans, saying the tonnage will be this year and probably snore. I It win gt to a mtUloa tool very p9-.-- l.. -.- uy k. j. mnuKHia I soon, with proper tariff protee ition, and thus be neck-to-neck with beet sugar production in this country. Even then, we will be im porting about five million tons of sugar. The people in this country who pretend to gag at an increase in protective rates on sugar should keep track of what is being done In other countries. Practically all of them have jacked up rates sev eral times lately. Germany is acking them, up again. The new labor government in England is proposing to make them higher they are already about twice as high as proposed in this country; counting the subsidies over there. Sweden has raised her rates. Hol land has increased, her subsidy to as high as 3.1 Q cents a pound. W Every European country is try ing to maintain or increase her sugar tonnage; especially the beet sugar countries. There are many reasons. Self sufficiency Is one. The maintenance of a proper rade balance anotter. But the great consideration is the funda mental importance that sugar beet cultivation has come to occupy In agricultural practice; their use as rotation crop : increases the yields of other crops. The indirect benefits equal or exceed the direct benefits. Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talks from The States man Our -Fathers Read i Vto the l old guard ot wealth, less worth ' The veteran politician torn tap his nose at some up start Who astride some freak issue rides iito power; i r Is Isfnot so in religion? Are not those donventtonatiy religious folk skeptical of the virtue of "other thlngsT which some people aelxe as religious supports? Prayer, Bible-reading, church membership and attendance, these are the cus tomary agencies ; for ' salvation. .Othe things" are apt to be re garded as of little virtue. So with labels. We have our conventional caurcn labels of denominations and of doctrines by which salva tion Lai to be attained. If mie uses other things ah! he does so at his own peril. ! v Paul and Luke did not scorn the, "Other things" It was an em ergency; better be saved on a bale of pagan cargo than drown tor lack of. an orthodox boat. Gain ing the shore i s the Important thing. The problem is one's indi Viduai salvation. On the ocean ot life there are storms and Ing his bicycle along the dock Where the Barker is berthed, when his wheel hit an obstruc tion and toppled into the water. Goebel, who was about to leave the ship, went ever the side and caught young Smith before he was dragged under the docks by the current. Other sailors on the Barker rigged up a grapling device and hauled up the lad's bicycle which had followed him into the water. ! 3B ASE INJURED IN July 7, 1904 District Elder W. Pearce will conduct quarterly services in the Free Methodist church in North Salem. Miss Gertrude Gray and Miss Margaret Gray, ' daughter o f George B. Gray of Seattle but for merly of this city, are visiting at the home of Hon. J. H. McNary, on Summer and Center streets. Mrs. Eugene Breyman is home from an extended visit in Birming ham. Ala., With her daughter airs. ur. sneaecor, xormeriy miss Lena Breyman. i j The Eugene baseball club hasf just withdrawn from the Oregon gon State league, and it now looks as if the: league ; would be dlsj banded. - i Editors Say: OX WIDENING THE HIGHWA ! Washington has been . slowe: than Oregon in developing the C lumbia gorge as a tourist attrac tion. but our northern neighbo now Is going ahead wtlh construc tion on the Evergreen highway at a fast pace.' The Evergreen highway still Is inferior to'the road on the Ore gon side. The pavement extends no farther east than Camas, and from there the road becomes nar row and full of curves and wind Inland for many miles, coming back to the river a short distance from Stevenson. ; From there on, however; the new road is double the width ot the Oregon highway. i Aa entirely new roadbed is be ing constructed along the river from Camas east, that eventually will eliminate the inland climb oyer the mountains. When this 'is finished the Evergreen highway wtu have been completed to Lrle. I Present plans call ton construc tion ot the WIshram-Granddalles, section 'of the highway next. witr mc neavy i construction . wore Be tween Lyle and this connection to come later, it is reported. The his advantage the Wash ington road win hold . over the Columbia highway mill . be the greater width and the freedom from the thousands ot curves en gineers thought necessary, when they constructed a highway on the Oregon side of the river. The dls advantage,, at least for some years to come, will be the macadam sur facing given the Washington road as compared to pavement on the Oregon side. The macadam has hot been oiled and, while smooth, is exceedingly dusty when travel is heavy. It wfll be possible to make far tetter time over the Evergreen highway, when the Camas- Stev enson gap is closed than over the Columbia Tiver highway in Ore gon. AH dangerous curves are be ing eliminated in the new Wash" Ington road and this fact, coupled with its greater width, makes it possible to drive on, a faster schedule. Unless the Oregon highway commission takes steps in the near future to rebuild the road be tween Portland and The Dalles, a large share, of the tourist travel that now goes up this side of the river may be gained by Washing ton. The Oregon road was never Intended to hold the enormous traffic" that It now handles. It is far too narrow for safety, and with few exceptions it is just one curve after another between The Dalles and the Sandy river. The Columbia highway was designed- as a scenic road, and; en gineers never expected that iti would be utilised by huge trucks and buses, as well as a great vol ume of trans-continental traffic Such has proved the case, how ever, with the .result that travel down the Oregon side of the river has become so congested as to be actually unsafe. The Columbia highway between here and Portland has the repu tation among -traffic officers of being the most dangerous stretch of road la the state. While; we have not the revised figures to date, more than 70 persons have, been killed on this highway in ac cidents of various kinds, during1 the comparatively short period of years since its completion. And so long as the road remains too nar row and winding for safety, this toll will continue. o The Oregon highway commis sion has spent considerable money widening and straightening the lower Columbia highway, and is now engaged in ,a similar task on the Pacific highway. Such con struction is desirable, and un doubtedly is badly needed, but it seems to this ' newspaper that some attention should be1 paid to a road bearing comparatively as heavy travel as either of. the .oth ers, and xhe that is far more dan gerous to life and limb. . Even If only ithe more danger ous curves can; be rebuilt now. and the highway widened at these Points, it would help greatly in reducing the traffic hazard.! To fully appreciate how. fine a road is would be possible to construct down the Columbia river, it is on ly necessary to travel over the completed portions of the Ever green highway,! with Its fine wide roadbed and its gradual, careful ly banked curves. Oregon could build a similar road on thla side of tha rlvr a little at a time as the commis sion's finances permit. No further widening or reconstruction should be scheduled elsewhere ' la the state; however, nntil some steps are taken to remove the more dangerous places along the pres ent upper Columbia river road. The Danes Chronicle. ; l raw con ST. LOUIS, July 5. (AP) The list of Injured in a collision of a Burlington flyer from Kans as City and a Frisco suburban train at the Union station here to day, mounted to 36 tonight. : All of those Injured were men who occupied a smoking: car en the rear of the Frisco train. All are St. Louis county residents Eight remained in hospitals to night and seven of them were believed seriously hurt. ! The collision occured early to day just outside the trainshed as the suburban train, hauling i a large number of commuters to St. Louis to work, and the Burling ton train backed into the station. The steel observation ear of the Burlington train stick the side ot the smoker coach, turning ; it over on its side, the next coach I en the Frisco train was derailed but none on it was hurt. wrecka, there fit stress and strain. Som taay find passages in life boats; (others nay catch planks that may bear them to safety. For . many all that may be left them. are -other: things,- wnat they are we know not. The important thing Is that 4bese titer thlnp may have buoyancy enough to earry then through deep waters to sure footing on dry land. - Cruisers Not to Be Named Until Later This Year WASHINGTON. July f-i(AP) The I five cruisers : for which eon tracU have "Just been pet by the navq will remain nameless for several months to Come, al-' though! Secretary Adams has re ceived ! requests , from practically every city, and many towns, for the privilege of having a' ship named after tlrem. In about five or six months, the secretary said, .the selection of names will be made. At pres-" ent the ships are designed by numbers, the five being numbers ship- 32 to 36 inclusive., itlnhia! Savings and Loan Assodaibn A Salem Institution Organized in If 10 Place your savings with us Let us finance your home on weekly or monthly payments 142 South Uberty i5treeb 6ld Folks Say Doctor Caldwell wa$ RiVht Read the Classified AdsJ Tlie basis of treating sickness has not changed since Dr. Cald well left Medical College in 1875. nor since he placed on the market the laxative prescription he had used in his practice, , known to drui:gists and the public since 189!:, as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. ' i " Then, the treatment of consti patin, biliousness,'1- headaches, mental depression. Indigestion, soui stomach and other indisposi tion i that result from constipation was entirely by means ot simple veg stable laxatives, herbs and roots. These are still the basis of tor. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which. is a combination of senna! and other mild laxative herbs, with pepsin. Tne simpler the jemedy for con stiD&tion. the safer for the child won a i 4 tV halt., fnr ' the general health of all. And as you can get results in a mild and safe way by using Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin, Why take chabcas with strong drugs? A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syr up Pepsin will last a family sev eral months, and, all can use it. It is good tor the baby because pleasant to the taste, gentle in action, aad free frm aareotics. In the proper dose, given in the directions. It Is equally effective at ail ages ..v..':' -:-x X -. AT, ASC I fitd it especially id- c . All drug stores have the genei ous bottles. We would Ue.giad to have you prove at our expense how much ; Dr. c aid well's : Syrup Pepsin, can ; mean to yo i : and yours. Just ; write your name and; aldress in j the special coupon yon see at the; end of this announcement, and lend for a bottle to try. This com plimentary bottle asl forwarded. I Drenald without charre mV nv Elderly people will ; kind. ' ; ' ; i; Astoria Lad is Rescued From Grave . in JRiver ASTORIA. Ore.. Jaly. lUf AP) Smith. 11. - of this ; city. was rescued from drowning in the Columbia river i tonight by by Harry Goebel. boatswain's mate on the U. S. 8. Barker. The boy, who cannot swim, was yid- Maiim unaillfltty cdU ai TTFIfl J nK.'. i T1! t Qigjuu uyiraueir TTp.lB(-ARp that old piano! The day , I 1 J of modernization is here, an the piano business, as in many others, you ! get. finer quality, mew design, more util ity than dollars hare ever bought before.; The outstanding example in our store is tie GuibraenHoxne Study model Upright, nationally priced at $275. Petite, daintjf , eharxning in appearance . Delightful tone quality. Genuine da Pont , Da x : Hnisbe Fall keyboard. (BUJILIBIKLARISrBRI A IT Y P IS , A M Dj f -- ST It t EF O li tor alCalbrsauesi ; .Uprlgbj Ptaae) : TWO SIZES Asnimoackflafa f pUylheplatist le ' yousaf The toncli ejt the Cedlaniiassa wSl Step tm. eamd in$pee ipnARraps cvcqyi noziE ' - " s i " J- i-ii t-f- - ;