PAGE FOUR TBai JQ7XGQ3 STATTSMAK, Catea. Qwgca Tccr Stasias : Aegtst U, 1P9 Wo Faror Stcots CT; No Fear Shall Awe." From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 J. THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Chakles A. Sprague, Sheldon F. Sackett, Publishert Charles A. "Sprague ... Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett - - Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper. . Entered at the Posloffic at Salem, Oregon, as Second-Class Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Business office SIS S. Commercial Street. Pacific Coast Advertising Representatives: Arthur W. Stypes, 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, CGO N. .Michigan Ave. Smoot Withdraws Sugar Tariff SENATOR Smoot announces he is abandoning his trom bone tariff scheme on the sugar schedule. Too much op position from the sugar Interests, he said. The Smoot pro posal was designed as both a tariff measure and a price-fixing measure. That way trying to carry too big a load. The tariff principle has been to fix a rate equalizing the cost of production at home andhroad; but the rate in the Hawley bill and the proposed sliding scale of Smoot's paid no particu lar attention to difference in cost of production. The tariff on Cuban sugar now is 1.76c a pound; the Hawley bill boosts it to 2.40c while the tariff commission a few years ago re ported the difference in cost to be 1.23c a pound. It is surprising to note the cial circles regarding the tanff. prising because big financiers tes affecting the prosperity of news letter from one of the large New York banks : The fundamental change that has taken place In the'position of the United States Internationally Is clearly illustrated by the present tariff discussion, for at no period in our history has the overseas as pect pf tariff legislation been so stressed, according to R, Whittlesey, vice-president of the Central Hanover Bank and Trust company. It is quite possible that our evolution during the pat fifteen years may not only lead to modification of tlie Hawley tariff bill, but that our traditional tarilf policy may be changed. "As In other countries the people of the United States believe that, home industries should be protected, but it has eome about that a number of our major industries are dependent on foreign sales, and In many lines export trade has become a factor of such Import ance that the ability to compete depends on its development and continued expansion," Mr. Whittlesey stated. ' This trad today amounts to between $5,000,000,000 and $0,000,000,000 annually, with nearly seventy per cent manufactured or semi-manufactured products. "The remaining thirty per cent of raw material- and foodstuffs Is an important Item In our national economy. Formulation of tar iff duties can no longer be exclusively centered about the protection of domestic activities, but must also consider how far such duties may hare an adverse effect on the foreign trade of the country. "Before the days of mass production and surplus output, the manufacturers of this country "were almost wholly concerned with the home market and foreign outlets had comparatively little im portance," the New York banker stated. "But with the technical and industrial developments of the past fifteen years, which have lead to a production volume far In excess of our domestic needs and have also created a supply of com modities that are popular abroad and have a wide market, our trad ing position has become such that it is intimately related to foreign demand and must, consequently, take cognizance of conditions that formerly were not operative. "This situation strikes home to all of our citizens, for it is quite possible that an increase in unit costs, as a result of decreased foreign trade would add more to the consumer's burden than any gain to be derived from slightly increased profits or wage scales that might result from import duties that restrict unduly the sale of for eign goods in this country." State Text Books NOW we are having a commission investigate state printing of text books. That is one investigation we do not oppose, if it is in the hands of sensible men, because we do not see how it could be otherwise than that an investigation would expose the folly of state publication of school books. A text book is not just so many ounces of paper and cover boards and ink. A textbook is a living creature, the product of an active brain designed to stimulate and instruct active minds. State publication of text books means either paying big . royalties to owners of copyright on successful texts, or put ting up with inferior quality of texts. The easy thing to do would be to sacrifice quality in order t8 make a showing of economy. In this state a heavy investment in additional plant would be required in order to handle the business of producing texts for the elementary schools; the actual printing costs would be as high as any place, and the factor of saving in publishers' profits would be too uncertain to justify the big adventure. Districts ought to be permitted to supply textbooks free for student use, because that is sound business and works a genuine economy. But the state is too small and the benefits too illusory to justify state publication of textbooks. Neuner to Washington? MANY anxious hearts accompany George Neuner to Wash ington, D. C, where he goes in response to a summons from the department of justice which it is thought may be for the purpose of offering him the position of assistant at torney general in charge of prohibition enforcement division. The' anxiety is among the prospective candidates for govern or, for Neuner, at present federal district attorney at Port land, has been prominent among those mentioned as possible entrants in the gubernatorial contest in 1930. Neuner is recognized as one who would be a formidable contender; and his acceptance of a post in Washington would cause a sigh of relief among others here who are letting the bee sting them badly. All Men Free and Equal? WE notice in the Sunday Statesmen that several were ar arrested on liquor charges last week. What was the matter 7 Were they scabbing on the "union ?" One chap was picked up with 10 gallons. The poor simp should have been arrested to think he could meet the demand with that quan tity. He should have brought in 750 gallons, rented a room in a hotel and he wouldn't have been molested. That is what gets us. The poor devil with a few quarts gets stuck but the big boy with the heavy gallonage gets pro tected. It's not fair, not fair. Nor do we see why civic hos pitality needs to be stretched to let liquor flow freely when crowds come to town. The law's the law, without respect to the calendar or the company. The Salem Statesman did Itself proud with a four section edition In three colors on the occasion of the legion convention. It Is well printed, well edited, well illustrated, full of advertising and alto gether Is a credit both" to Salem and to the Statesman force. Cor TallU Gazette-Times. Oh, we have a few hot day them, then the quick chance; a vauey 11 coot again, ana rresn, and few miles over the hllli and one orating, great ionic lor poay ana mma. iri a great country. Th Pantages family Is patronizing the criminal courts. The Mrs. It charged with manslaughter committed la driving a car while Intoxicated. The Mr. la accused of a statuatory offense against a 11-year-old dancer. More of the primrose path stuff, we suppose. change of attitude in finan Or rather it is not so sur are very clear thinkers on mat the country. Here is a recent each summer. Two or three of trash breese from the tea. and the people steo nor briskly. Just a reaches the great ocean, cool. Invig The ( ; . BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS Reverting to modern penology: In the first of her Beries of ar ticles being printed in a syndi cate of newspapers. Including the Portland Oregonlan, Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, ex-assistant United States attorney general, who bad charge of law enforce ment in the department of the prohibition statutes, said: "I had not been in charge of prosecutions under the prohibition law more than a few months be fore I discovered what many per sons have acknowledged: That hundreds of prohibition agents had been appointed through polit ical pull and were as devoid of honesty and integrity as the boot legging fraternity. I found that there were scores of prohibition agents no more fit to be trusted with a commission to enforce the laws of the United States and to carry a gun that the notorious bandit Jesse James. It was my opinion In 1921, and it still is. that the government is commit ting a crime against the public generally when it pins the badge of police authority on and hands a gun to a man of uncertain char acter, limited intelligence, or with out giving systematic training for the performance of duties that In volve the rights and possibly the lives of citizens." S S Mrs. Willebrandt concluded her second article, in the Sunday newspapers, with the following words: S "The first civil service weeding resulted in retaining far more well meaning but 'dumb men than those who were actually corrupt. The force has always needed, and still needs, systematic and extend ed training on such subjects as how legally to gather sufficient evidence, when papers can be seis ed, when a defendant should be put under arrest, what facta jus tify the Issuance of a search war rant, and under what circumstan ces an agent is Justified in shoot ing. There are, of course, many other subjects on which Instruc tions should be given before a prohibition agent is allowed to exercise authority. I worked hope fully with the training-school plan for months, but eventually it died in the mire of lnterdepart-1 mental differences of opinion, di vision of authority and responsi bility, and political interference with policies." . The words of Mrs. Willebrandt serve to confirm the statements made In the Bits column in two late issues, concerning the neces sity of having trained men (and women) in every department of law enforcement, from the police man or constable to the judge who sits .on the bench of the high est tribunal. Well meaning but "dumb" men are as dangerous fo the rights of private individuals In , any other branch of the service of law en forcement as they are In the one that concerns the administration of the dry laws. c N Intelligence and Judgment that come from correct training aa weU as from natural endowments are Important all along the line. Therefore, as the Bits writer has long contended, penology and criminology should be taught as regular courses In oar Institutions of higher learning. In order that lew enforcement may be raised Ce the states and dignity of e pro fession. Not that the rules which govern these natters may not be learned and understood throagh other training than should be pro Tided in the schools. But there la not likely to he provided the great body of officials needed through other channels of training. S V . So. far ma we can. now see, there First Actual Road will necessarily k be laws against crime for many generations, and the necessity of their administra tion. It is not creditable to the supposedly most- advanced coun try in the w-orldthat this charge per capita is the greatest In the United States. There is no other subject that so much needs the study and action of high states manship. There is no phase of our life that needs so sorely the ad option and practice of laws and rules that square with a first class order of Intelligence. 'm We are now Just muddling through, chained to the festering body of the dead past. Crime is costing altogether too much in money and the agonies and tears of the innocent who suffer with the guilty. And there is altogether too little hope for the regenera tion and reform of the guilty, through methods that are dis gracefully outworn. S Let It be said, to the credit of Salem, and that of the American Legion, that the state convention of that body in this city last week was conducted in such a manner as to cause no serious accident in the handling of the great crowds, the automobiles carrying which on two or three evenings filled about all the available spaces in the buildings near which the splendid procession passed, in the longest display of the kind so far witness ed in the capital city. Also, be it said that the people of Salem did wonderfully well in accommodating and welcoming the many thousands of guests that crowded the city and suburbs. Oh, yes, the Bits man heard the many Idle stories about the impor tation of great quantities of booxe and the more idle ones about the gutzllng by men and women of the wares of the supposed army of bootleggers. S There was some drinking. Per haps even a little among the wom en. But the amount of this was insignificant, when compared with the whole number of sober and or derly people who came and went throughout this city and its sur rounding country during the con vention. S "It was the most orderly Amer ican Legion convention yet held in Oregon," said a member to the Bits man; the said member hav ing attended all the conventions of that organisation In this state. It is a fact decidedly on the right side of the leadger that Sa lem could so well take care of and handle such a large convention, attended by so many thousands of the friends of the delegates. Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talks from The 8tat man Onr Fathers Read Angest IS, 1004 The new No. I, four roller Cen tury press for the Statesman of fice has arrive and wUl be erect ed within the next few days on the cement foundation that has been ready for sometime. Steps are being taken toward unionising the barbers of Salem. A year ago local barbers were thoroegaly unionized, bat trou bles since that time hate com pletely disrupted the organisa tion. Talk of bringing Silver Creek by direct conduit to supply water to Salem Is gaining ground and surveys will be made at once, says Manager Welch -of the electric Ught and water company. Welch says that his company may pur Test chase the Salem Water company. however, he does not believe the latter, plant has a monopoly on water service for the city. GENEVA DEADLOCK BLAMED Oil BRIU 12. (AP) The breakdown of 10. (AP) The breakdown of the Geneva naval conference was due to British cabinet orders to England's conference representa tires that Great Britain should not retreat from her demand for a total cruiser tonnage of 600, 000 tons. Rear Admiral C. L. Hus- sey, TJ. S. N., retired, said today at the Institute of Politics arma ment limitation round table. George Toung, labor member of the British parliament, disput ing the admiral's statement, said the British had been willing to limit cruisers of real fighting val ue, but demanded 600,000 tons Of small cruisers as a police force necessary for the patrolling of the seas. The seas must be policed, he declared, not only for the benefit of English interests, but for inter national interests and England would be "delighted to share the Job with America" If she wished to accept half of ft. Rear Admiral W. L. Rogers, TJ. S. N., attacked Mr. Young's state ment that a large number of cruisers must be maintained as an international police force. Pirates and raiders of interna tional trade are a thing of the past, he said, and such a force for patrolling the seas Is not longer a necessity. We print letter heads, business cards, posters, signs, booklets, al most anything In our job shop. Call 500 for prices. I was In a run-down con dition after a miscarriage and it left me awfully weak I could not, eat enough and I could not work. A friend told me to take Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I got good results from it I took tour bottles and have gained eight pounds. You may use this letter as a testimonial If you value it." Mrs. Joseph Caladaptm, rpj Florida Ave nue, Amsterdam, N. Y. I'iM" li, IftiWifslii Lydia Pinkham Vegetable Compound For Sale at Nelson Hunt Drag Store Corner Court ft Liberty, "Tel. 7 i " i V mm tU(p Editors Say; BARBABY OOA8T AN SWILL TOWX RMBtlv soma writer made the diacererr tnnt San Francisao'a old Barbary Coast tiad lost all of the character which made It famous or infamous the world over taat U Is now quite a drab and prosaic place where garages, juaenrooms and warehouses form the jrows which once were made no ef gar ish dens of iniquity, gilded pal aces of pleasure, au-mgnt aance halls, saloons, sailor boarding houses, brothers and honky-tonks. He could have eome to Astoria and miila nomewhat of a similar diacaTerr. for Barbarr Coast w hat m. hlfarar edition of the Swil Town of Astor street which a for. mer generation knew. Barbary Coast was known as the wickedest place on earth. Sailors were rob bed, beaten and shanghaied, and every form of rlee and crime was rampant. As a hell-hole. Swill Town was a close rival. We hear great tales of the old San Francisco and the old Astoria which developed these breeding beds of carnallsm, and the telling is sometimes accompanied with a sigh of regret that such colorful places have vanished. Time has a way of gilding bygone things with romance and glamour, but Bar bary Coast and Swill Town were not romantic to those who knew them. They were horrible, and those who are disposed to think that there are signs of moral de cadence In the present age should reflect upon the days when such villages of vice were allowed to flourish unchecked in the midst of cities. Astoria Budget. NORTH SISTER Many a person sitting in a com fortable easy chair at home and reading of the feat of the Eugene Obsidians In putting twenty peo ple on top of the grim old North Sister will wonder how folks get that way. There's no explaining it any more than there Is the fact that many a person will risk pneumonia wading In an Icy stream to catch a fish or shoot a duck, or go stunting with any av iator that will take him up. or play bridge till card combinations haunt him in his Bleep. No mil lionaire stops with his first mil lion and no mountain climber stops with his first peak. Everyone measures his strength and skill and courage against some obstacle or hazard, mental or physical. People are just like that. In a country as beautifully mountain ous as ours, it would be a shame If there were not many to respond to the lure of the hills and the challenge of the peaks. But a word of caution should be spoken about the North Sister, particularly. The fact that twenty people were taken to the summit in a group does not mean that anybody with strong legs and a good heart can do it. The North Sister is a veritable ugly witch when it comes to climbing. She is thoroughly bad and treacherous. Many experienced mountain men, after making the summit, have ventured the sober opinion that the peak ought to be fenced off. Of course, thai couldn't be done, and if It could. It would only be an added challenge to the adven. turous. The thing to remember about the North Sister is that any body proposing to climb the peak should ponder well before he starts. He should not attempt it unless he has the company and help of experienced guides. He should not attempt It unless he Is assured that his party Is well equipped for any emergency that may arise. He should not think of it unless nerves as well as mus cles are fit. For that matter, the same warn ings apply to considerable degree to all the other mountain peaks. The chief value of the Obsidian organization Is that since people will do these things, it is develop ing and providing a competent la e Precerlption for COLDS, GRIPPE, FLU, DENGUE, BILIOUS FEVER and MALARIA It Is til molt speodjr remedy knows. n yu.ija.fc KB MAMflVS ru.us.fc4ie bWOLKMnii. squ as smobaou inuiitt 666 wmmt tfaK f Wodtow-Wa Do Your Next Washing New Water Action Washes Cleaner, Quicker, Safer. Costs only ! Yl cents an hour to operate. Free parts and Free Service Guaranteed during life of machine. u Demonstration Now On Oco It Today leadership. They art teaching people not enly te lore the hills but to approach them with respect. If ytur boy tor your girl) shows symptoms of "mountain madness' don't try te hold him back. If he Is small, let him learn the rudi ments' in one ef the Scout or T. M. O. A. camps. If he Is older, let him become an Obsidian. There's no cure for "mountain madness," bat it can be restrained till it is only a milder form of Insanity. The Obsidians cannot guarantee safety to those who join their sports. The time will probably come when, like the Mazamas and other famous mountaineering or ganisations, they will have to con. front and surmount disaster. Mountaineering can never be any thing but a risky sport. But with uch an organization as the Ob sidians many a tragedy such as the Ferry and Cramer mystery will be prevented. Play safe! Eugene Guard. CHARIVARIS It seems as tho Medford is look, ing for a fight with Salem. Med ford has a chip on Us shoulder by claiming to be the center of some industry whereas those who have been reading the Salem Statesman for many years know that Salem is the center of all in. dustries. But Medford Is now laying claim to being the center of the charivari industry, the most asinnine of our American traits, the indulgence of in which ought to be sufficient evidence that the culprits are fit for the insane asylum instead of the penitenti ary. To be sure, the Tribune, which boasts of the matter, spells it "shivaree," which is perhaps the only way it could make the asses who participate in them know what it. was' talking about. Here is Us boast: Medford Is the shivaree center of the northwest, and Is the only city of 15,000 souls in all the land that submits to this form of hick ishness without a struggle. Every time two souls are made one with in a 50-mile radius of the Jackson County Bank, Fords and galoots and tin-cans are assembled and proceed to ram np and down the Main Stem, nntll their lungs and gasoline give out. As the grooms are too meek to put a stop to this form of social devilment, it looks like the Humdingers, Inc., would. The newlyweds are lashed to the prow of a red hot auto, and while parboiling serves the groom right who lacks enough gumption to re sist, the bride has done nothing to merit torture. The driver of tbe nuptial car is always equipped with a cowboy yell, which he un. leashes with gusto. The shivaree entourage has the right-of-way over funerals, fire engines, and the common variety of traffic, and If they ever have a wreck. It will be a dandy, as they always go like 60. It Is time to call a halt, if somebody in authority can say "Whoa!" Shlvarees come und er the head of disorderly conduct and unnecessary nuisances. Cor vallis Gazette-Times. THREE GIF! IS PUN NEW YORK, Aug. It. (AP) Arrayed in khahl colored breeches, leather puttees and caps with badges on them, but also wearing Hp rouge so they won't be mistaken for motorcycle cops, three young women have set out from New York in a light motor truck to "go places and see things." In remote corners of the earth. They headed for Alaska, with n me Evergreen Paulus Bros. Packing Co. Corner Trade & High Streets Let the New ss iil i iem. 340 COURT ST. Harriaburg. Pa., the first sotp. The party consists of one Ger man baroness, counsin of Count Brandenstein-Zeppelin, whe is a director of the Zeppelin company and son-in-law of the late Count Zeppelin, one motion picture act ress, and one girl reporter. The baroness is Chrlsta von,' Brandenstein, the movie actress. Miss Nada de Namur and the girl reporter. Miss Margaret D'Angelo of Ottawa, daughter of a former officer of the Northwest Royal mounted police. They plan to pay as they go partly by selling souvenir buttons and partly by writing stories for newspapers and magazines. And they are going to take a seven reel motion picture. FORTY ESCAPE US ELDRIDGE, Calif.. Aug. It. (AP) While a 1300,000 fire des troyed the north wing of the muin adminitfation building at Sonoma State Home for the feeble minded, about 40 youths, between the age3 of 16 and 20 years, escaped, officials reported after the firs had been conotrolled. Six additional escapes, with their clothing turned inside out t. avoid detection, were taken In cus tody by deputy sheriffs, shortly after the outbreak of the fire. Possible shortage of war faced the institution. Dr. F. o. Butler, superintendent, said, due to depletion of the reservoir's re sources in fighting the blaze. Charles Attleson. district fir warden for state institutions, ha l visited the Institution yesterJ.;. and recommended additional fr s protection for the heme. T, equipment had been requisition I by Dr. Butler this morning. Sr.- :- NEVER wait to see if a headache will "wear off." Why suffer when there's Bayer Aspirin? The millions of men and women who use it in increasing quantities every year prove that it doesrelieve such pain. The. medical profession pro nounces it without effect on the heart, so use it as often as it can spare you any pain. Every druggist always has genuine Bayer Aspirin for the prompt relief of a headache, colds, neuralgia lumbago, etc. Fa miliarize yourself with the proven directions in every package. SP1RIN AedrfB ii ta tnda mart of Barer Uaoufactur ef Maooteetica'-JJatar of Sillrylinx-td UK BURNED ! Wk A- li Wv A SIM