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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1930)
X PAG3F0US r "No Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Atce." Front First Statesman, March 28. 18l THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Cbajuxs A. Sfxacuk, Sheldou F. Sackctt, Puo&Aer ' Cbabixs A. Snuccc - Editor-Manager ' , Shelcon F. Sackett - - - Managing-Editor Member of the Associated Press - The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the nsa fur publication f tJl news dispatches credited ta It or not other wise credited Is thUyaper. PaeilU Coast Advertising Tiepreaeatatlvet: Arthur W. Stypes, lac, Portland, Security Bids. ' San. Francisco, Sharon Bids.; Los Angelea. W. Pac Bldg. Eastern Advertising Representatives: Tord-Parsons-Stccher, Ine., New York, 271 Madiaoa Ate.; Chicago, 2(0 N. Michigan Ave. Entered ct tk Postofficrut Salem, Oregon, a Second-CUt Matter. Published awry mornf? except Monday. ButiKtt office 215 S. Cimntrcial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Mall Subscription Rates, fa Advance. Within Oregon; Daily and Sunday, 1 Mo. 60 cents; 3 Mo. 1.25; Mo. 2.25: 1 year $4.90. Elsewhere sQt-ceuU per Mo. or $5.00 for 1 year la advance. . - ' . - . . By City Carrier: 50 cents a month; 85.50 a year in ad vance Per Copy 2 cents. On trains, and News Stands 5 cents. , New Year FT1HERE will be the usual cron of rjredictions on business X during 1930 from bankers, - stock brokers. They will use many words to say little. No one ever succeeded in business by trying to decipher the oraeu ' lar utterances of the captains of finance. What one says is : counterbalanced by the words ityv The prophecies of all are '.thejr2nay.be, for business themes for phophecy. ' - Ajiother fact is this: most pi the utterances we read about will be from eastern capitalists, dealing with the gen eral" business situation. But we have observed that general -conditions by no means determine local welfare. They may affect it, but the local situation est map of national prosperity jression; in the darkest maps white zones of good business. i So far as Salem is concerned this commuftity can lace 1U3U with honest confidence, agriculture which forms the Willamette valley is in as healthy a condition as it has been in since 1920. There .are some sore spots, like hops and wool and mohair. But other conditions are reassuring. Grain crops tf 1929 were bountiful and remunerative. Dairying and poul try; production continue reasonably profitable. So far as fruits are concerned it may be said that the Salem district is in the best balanced condition for many years. There is an active demand for all the fruit Tot years growers were facing hard problems &f overpro- auction or restricted demand in loganberries, prunes, straw berries. In 1929 every fruit and berry crop met with ready sale. ( Moreover the pack is being shipped out freely into con ' sumption so there is little chance of a heavy carry-over. The growth of the cold pack process is increasing greatly the market for our fruits and berries, with every promise of steady growth in demand. ' What the crop yields will be in 1930 no one may yet ven ture. The price situation in most lines of production is whole some and gives promise of remaining so. The rest of the ulti mate result depends on the weather and on the husbandry of the farmer. Salem industries have their problems in the coming year. The lumber industry still scrapes bottom; and other in dustries have to face the sharp competition which marks most lines of business.' Salem people need to support these " payroll industries heartily and loyally, patronizing them, ad vertising them, responding to proper appeals for capital sup port. - No community may ignore "general conditions," but ev ery winning community is one that digs in a little harder and exerts even greater effort to command success when the forecast flags of business warn of squalls a&ead. This is sfl OOD morning, Salem, this is. 1930. Happy New Year ! New Year's Day is something of a neglected holiday. , The Chinese have the right idea: they make a grand day of all day long. Jt used to be rather a gay day in America, before the income tax forced an annual balance sheet and be fore certain legislation tamed the riot of greeting the new year. V Now we make New Year's a day for business. Merchants - pull their blinds while they take inventory, count the kegs of nails and the bolts of muslin and the bottles of library paste. In counting rooms bookkeepers give place to accountants who balance the books and prepare the tax sheet for Uncle Sam. t The formal calls on New Year's day. are now a thing of the past. Young men. about town no longer dress up in fash ' ion "plate style to call on the fair belles of the city. There ' are no beau brummels left, with top'hats and walking sticks. " If the men made a call it might be in plus fours and most probably would be in soft shirts and collars. i For our part we regret that business is moving in on New Year's Day. Why may one not put off for a week or two finding out just how far he fell short in his business expec tations for the year? Why not have fair frolic for the day, like the lawyers do, who keep no accounts and worry not over an income tax? There is no chance. Business is incorporated nowadays- and the books must balance. Hie head office calls for instant reports; and perhaps the banker is asking for '- a new statement. . --- , j So one tacks a new calendar on the wall, turns to a fresh page in his daybook, and gets ready to open tomorrow morn ing with "business as usual." f Black Magic : IT was surely "black magic" that robbed us of Cooke Pat ton. Some evil genie has tricked us. For Cooke. Patton was - not old enough to go. Life still had zest for him, and he still had rich, stores of playful wizadry with which to regale his public Friendly, kindly, known to all; it seems some illusion that he has been called away. One would fain say "presto" and look to see Cooke step out again from the wingj onto the stage of life. Ah, but death is no friendly trickster; he practices no gay deception. He smites, and no magic wand -, may loosen his cold grip. H3 closes eyes in sleep, and no mag ic words may break his spell. :.. , V ; n 3 . . 1 Cooke Patton had lived in. Salem atl his life, until he seemed a part of Salem: an institutidn like Ladd and Bush . bank; or the court house. He knew everybody; t everybody knew him. Faithful in his business and devoted in his home, her developed legerdemain as an avocation. Generously he . used his skiU. Many are the towns of the valley where Cooke Patton displayed the conjuror's art to the bewilderment of his - audiences. He was not just an amateur ; -he was a student of the art of hallucination and did his work with professional skill. It was on such a mission community that he s ffered a : f The death of his sister, Mrs. J. DMcCulIy of Hood . Rit-r from the shock of the news of Jier brother death, doubles the ,tragedy,anji orrow ;for the Patton family. The host of friends who have known the family for many years grieve with them and extend the comfort which time-tested friends may give. , Happy New Tear, Sips. . y - 4 Prophecies business men. politicians, and of another in equal author cryptic and mystifying, as well trends are always treacherous finally governs. In the whit there are black spots of de- of "hard times there are ur general it may be said that real foundation of wealth in the and berry ctods of the valley. 1930 of goodwill to a neighboring fatal stroke. "'" Tie THE I 'i .in " BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS' ' Happy New Tear! This should be a good year for Salem; and so should be all the years for this city and Its trade territory. H Salem Is entitled to a balanced and steady (not to say a rapid) growth. Its foundations are well laid. They rest on the combina tion of soU and sunshine and showers that make this the land of diversity and the country of opportunity. Salem has had from the begin ning balanced growth. There Is no city in any .land where there is opportunity for such general employment for aU the members of the family. Our canneries and packing houses make up a part of the endless chain that connects' with the frait banrests and the other harvests of the Industries on the land. The faster the acres in Intensified cultivation expand, and the greater the per acre ton nage of crops becomes, the more people will be required In the city to can and pack and process and manufacture and merchandise the larger supplies. V Every new ton of strawberries, tor Instance, contributes to give work to more men and women la the cities; more men and women in the canneries and processing and preserving plants, more driv ers of trucks to haul the product, more workers in the cold storage plants, more hands in the rail road switching crews; more and more and more it is endless, the need of more workers, directly and indirectly employed in the country and in the towns, includ ing the "butcher and baker and candlestick maker," In all the lines of business and trade and the professions. m S A man who recently made a tour of the whole country came back to Salem filled with new hopes. lor the continuous and ereat growth and prosperity of this city. . He raw no other. city with the balanced prosperity -of SlVUS hi Lai. . . s --.., He learned to appreciate ; by comparison that this is an Amer ican city and an Orderly one. No foreign element here, iso race question. No lawless class. No racketeers or hijackers; few Boot leggers. No labor troubles. No single great Industry the failure or dnll days of which throws the whole trend of life and living out of balance. Salem has a hundred strings to her bow to sound out the music of prosperity and eon tentment. I In 1930, Salem's people should Increase and renew their faith in their , etty and Its potentially pro ductive trade territory. ;,, They should teach their children and tell the stranger that this is the land blessed above all others by nature's bounties. The spirit of Salem is justified in being , add becoming more intensely loyal to its home land than the spirit of California, or any other. , 4 We need a new birth of loyalty to our own city and our own coun try. There aro a thousand ways to show it: to justify our faith. There Is nothing too good ror Sa lem and for its back country, how than we show our faith t Here are some suggestions, out of a tuilUoa that might with pro priety he made: work to get a corporate form ' of city govern ment. with a eity manager.' Work to get the highway over the Cas cades, by way of the Hogg pas that should be renamed that Vin- to pass. Work to get a county ag riculturist, in the county of all in Oregon that has the most In dividend forms and the greatest need - tor and - waara the right kind ot a mas . can do the .-mm BTTfNMW. fiataa. 0-to- T7rfaW Maxtor, iktorr VMM YOUNGER GENERATION MssaBanesaaw I ; . i most rood and earn his salary SO times over eaah year. 1 W Work to 'hurry flax and linen developments; looking to a $200, 000,000 annual business that Is coming, and may he much speed ed by cooperation. Work to get a mountain water supply, with pow er generated all the way down, that may be sold to pay part of the Interest on the bonds; a devel opment that would in time pay for itself, while giving as low rates as the present, or lower with attendant benefits that would Jus tify the cost in many ways.. V Work for still water in the Willamette; making Salem what will-amount to a deep sea port. Build wharves and docks, if nec essary, by establishing a port dis trict. Work for irrigation, tiU ev ery acre in the whole valley has the ; use of this crop insurance, that win render this Willamette land one great orchard and track garden and green lawn and ver dant field, supporting 10,900,000 happy people, where only a third of a mUlion now live. Is "a "a Work for more factories. The limit of the prison population ca pacity will be reached next year with 10,000 acres of flax . Wo should have independent thresh ing and scutching' plants. They will nay now, if properly man aged. "Machinery and pedigreed seed guarantee this; and there is a possible outlet for paper board or paper string or chemicals to be made from the shires; taking care of the only present waste or partial waste. With an upstanding leader, this may be done cooper atively, nearly all of the working capital to be furnished from the farm reuef fund. Where is the leader? The farmers can realize more than the state pays them for their flax. Thist would lead to more spinning and weaving, and to I specialty mills. The possibui- ties are almost too big to imag ine. The Miles linen mill is now paying affair rate of interest on PROSPERITY IN FAIRVIEW 1 REFLECTED BY RESIDENTS ! f ' ' 1 ; : New Paint! and Repairs Brighten Homes and j Farm Buildings During Year i FAIRVIEW Dec 31. Prosper ity has been evidenced in this -community by the numerous new roofs and fresh coats of paint that are to be seen. ' This- as a post ure indication that the farmers who for the past, tew years have had a rather discouraging time, hare- retained or at least renewed their faith inr the soil and intead to "carry on . ; During the year H. R. Jones, who owns and operates the old Blrdsal farm, has remodeled the. house by covering the outside with shingle giving an English effect. He also rebuilt the pruae drier and painted the house, drier and other buildings making a de cided Improvement In the general appearance of the place. This farm, , by the way," hag a water system. The water Is piped from a ! hW-eide spring which insures' pare water for domestic purposes as well as sufficient pressure for irrigation of the lawn, and, gar den. ' . ' k . Dent Fane Attract " Probably one of the best look lag and well kept farms la tat community is the SlO-aere farm owned by E. E. Dent, who . was reently appointed as a director of the Federal Farm bank of Spo kane, and whlck is operated by his son. W. T. Dent. . .As seen from the crest of Ankeny hill the farm with Its "houses, barns and silos all painted a,. snowy white with rooXs of red present an. im posing TifW. . . j at least three times the original amount of its capital investment. Is "V Wo can get more paper mills, more paper converting plants, and furniture factories. More and more all the year trait processing and preserving plants. We should have chieken canning plants, and turkey canning. We can speedily spread poultry Industry money to S2S.00O.00O annually. beating iPetaluma. We have a better poul try country than California has. The new state office building will add to state money expended on payroll accounts that will amount to the equivalent of a good sized factory. Wo can add many factory payrolls. Irrigation will bring beet sugar making, and invert sugar making, from arti chokes, in the same factories. This will speed up dairying as nothing else can, with all its attendant benefits. li . H If we should grow all we may grow on the land, and manufac ture and process the finished pro ducts of the farms, we would have need of a Salem of a million peo ple to finish oft our rounded out balanced prosperity to the faU. Too many? you say. Figure ft for yourself. The possihiUtles are here. To mention one: We have 0 possible essential oil products In commercial demand, besides peppermint oU. Get this: In no other section of the earth's surface has nature done so much. ShaU we say it? And man so little. But that little has been dona welL What is needr ed Is more faith, more work, more vision, more expansion. This is by inheritance the land of plenty. We fall of our destiny if we do not go in and possess the Inheritance. W S And our history. Here is a re source neglected more than any other. It is bigger than a gold mine; than many gold mines, for the leads will ever run out. They are limitless in space and time. The truth of all this, and the use of it, the Bits man is engaged in making more plan, and in helping to bring to pass its small begin nlngs, that will grow to accomp lishments, in good time, almost beyond imagining. The original farm house, whleb Is an old land mark, and tt occu pied by W. T. Dent, has been, re modeled, a basement, bath and many other modern features add ed making It a most comfortable and pleasant home. Just across the road E. E. Dent has recently built bis home. TUsJiouaa waa designed by Mrs. E. E7 Dent and Is probably the only house in ex istence in which the plans were tally carried out by the contract ors. - v Modern Howse Eajoyed ; The house Is modem Inavery respect, including a watersystem, bath, furnace and Is wired for electricity . : v . , ' Mr. Dent also built a modern barn and ehicken house. The ehlcken house has all of the new est features and has a capacity of J00 fowls. ETGEXE BIBLE SCHOOL " LARGE EUGENE, Ore., Dec 31v (AP) There are 1,1 IS ehUdren participating In the week-day Bi ble school work in Eugene public schools, according to Mrs. Casper hi. Wood of .the community coun cil of religious education which Is ropervising?be workv The chll dren have given 20 churches as their affUiationa, whila 193 chil dren listed no church affiliation. ; If your Statesman is not deliv ered as tt should be, please notify the office, phone 500, Growth and Development of Poutoy climatic and Soil Conditio I . ens and rairoftv Nora 1 Mr. Conner,, as editor of the Northwest Poultry Jear- saL owned and published by The BUteiman Publishing Co.. has the necessary infor- mation to make an accurate account af tha Watery and tutura of thi poultry Indus- try. His article 'herewith Is Interesting and dominating. f By W. a CONJfER j Considerable advancement and progress has been made in. the poultry raising Industry for the Salem district daring the past year. Those largo and weU es tablltaed hatcheries and poultry breeding farms and organisations like the Lloyd A Lee Hatchery and Poultry Farm; the WIMam etta Valley Hatchery of W. E. Park: the Salem Chlckerles, C. N. feednanu manager, cooperative poultry-breeding and selling as sociation; the MaUos, Hatchery, and the Dr. R. E. Duganne Hat chery at Independence with Us Salem branch known as the Talem Petland, have all grown and ex panded, the past year and are pre paring to take care of a greatly increased business for the com ing year. New poultry farms are being developed throughout this Salem district at a rapid pace, some of them by new comers to this dis trict and others by farmers who are "taking up poultry In connec tion withjtheir general farm work and not a" few who have been en gaged in fruit growing or other lines of farming in this district. - This constant and growing de velopment in the poultry business of this district is due to about three Important factors. First, comparatively moderate priced lands and . ideal climatic condi tions, together with the easy pro duction of green feeds the year round, so important to the health and vigor of the growing poultry flocks. Second, the home supply of baby chicks and stock and ser vice rendered to new poultry rais ers by the large, well established local hatcheries and poultry breeding farm managers. Third, the constantly Improving local markets for all poultry products and the well organised and ably managed state poultry market ing association with headquarters at Portland, which Is known as the Pacific Cooperative Poultry Producers. E. G. Dixon, manager. which association, secures for the commercial poultrymen the high est market price for their egg product at all seasons of the year. has a large membership and Is al ways pleased to enroll the names of new . pvultrymen who wish the association to market their egg product for them and thereby save the trouble of seeking a local or city market for their eggs. An other feature that makes the poultry business the more attrac tive is the ability of any person to familiarize himself with the business in t short time through personal visits to the various well established poultry plants where all information they are seeking can beobtained. or. they caa visit the poultry department at their state agricultural college, take a short course in poultry raising Or get helpful information and ad vico from the college poultry ex tension service and county agents, The reading of poultry breeding bulletins and poultry margarines will also be helpful to those wish ing to engage in the poultry busi ness or who may hare already be come engaged in the business on a small or somewhat extended scale. Moderate " Outlay Required too moderate investment re quired to establish poultry breed lng yards or a smau commercial egg plant and the quick and con tinuous returns therefrom, ready cash markets, at fairly remuner atlve prices, if their business Is conducted efficiently and econ omically, as any other successful business must be to bring proti- 'Resolve Dr. Copeland's New Year's Wealth, 'Achievement, Succes- What Doe a Man Cainf3 Who Win These and Has Not Hedth?-Dctermine Today to Strive lor e Sound Body, I - By ROYAL 8. COPELANi U. D. United States Senator from. New Tort rormer CmmUoer f Health, Xev York CUf. THREE hundred years' ago tomorrow, young children, the first born at Plymouth, vera celebratm New Tear Day. mtk aU . ita rificaa, Hfo to them was-just as sweet at tt is to our chU. dxen, bora three eeatarUs later. ' r"'' -M- trr ' '---:'? On this u ?n.?,Jtt ER GCPBJtZX. been but twa tainzs of. itnS SS and the state of your soul what else really mJtteSt - ; ; Wh' f man profited If ha shall gain the whola world aad lose his awn soult What ia a man profited if h T,vv t. Jiirf8 Boa, land aad eesxeae. if t nAm M k. VM not nealtht - j ' 1 have sttthlng, but praise for aS raa wenderrol acalevementa of the past. X am eager for those things -that make for progress and the w tare of the race. But, Ct my coun : trrmen, why are wo So BestectfU 9f the Individual and wblle heattk; Industry bound in ftaiem Here Are Ideal for the Profitable Prototiotf of Chi-; Turkeys on a Large Scale Basis table returns, makes the poultry business attractive to ail tnose who bare a llttlo capital to lnrelt and wish to enjoy an outdoor life and small tract farming. For this class of poultry men or farmers the Salem district offers naranalled ODftortnniUes. as this district, and in fact, the State as a whole is far behind other dis tricts and neighboring states in the amount of poultry and poultry products produced. It was shown conclusively a recent large poultrymen'e meeting and ban quet held In Salem, that there Is room In this Willamette valley and state for scores Of - poultry- men to establish and operate lirr and orof liable commercial egg farms or plants, aa well as high class ' poultry breeding farms. - Btulness in Its Infancy Tha business, in tact, la this district and state, ii only in Its in fancy as compared to the extent of poultry Industry in the sister states of Washington and Cali fornia!, whllo the f advantages here are equal, if not even far superior'to those of either of the states mentioned.' While the poul try business is growing and de veloping in this district and state. it is on a rather too conservative basis. The unusually favorable opportunities and advantages warrants far greater and more ra pid development in the poultry in dustry in, this district; Larger Paved Roads Out From Salem Very Extensive 270 Miles of Paved Roads in Trading Area Whife 1050 Miles of Macadam Are in Salem Territory Salem 1 credited with having more miles of paved road within a radius of 25 miles than any city of similar aise in the northwest. During the past year there were 270 miles of paved roads within its trading area and 1050 miles of macadam. Dirt roads in the country are rapidly becoming a curiosity. In 1929 the county road forces completed 4.78 miles of pavement and 37.11 miles of new grade and macadam or gravel surface. The total expenditure on . roads was $513,476.91. A like expenditure will be made during 1930. Many Projects Finished The largest project completed during the year was the Rosedale-Fairview-Buena Vista road, which was graded and surfaced for S.33 miles. Other road grading pro jects of the year wereiv - Stayton-West Stayton. 1.19 miles; Pacific highway from Brooks to Lablsh market road, 2.52; Gervals-Slmmons church Macleay, 3.S0; Llvesley-HaUs Ferry-Independence, 4.50 miles; Highway-Reform school - county line, 1.96; West Woodburn,Ger-vals-Checkerboard, .32; Mt. An-gel-Gervals, 4.23 miles Monitor SUverton, 3.C1; Sliver ton-northeast, 1.41 mUes; Siegmund, 2.84; Mehama-Taylors camp, 2.14; AuhviUe-8haw, 2.40. Pavement was laid on tho Sa-lem-St. Paul road for 4.13 miles and on the Spong road for .S5 miles. State Standards Followed All roads were constructed to state market road standard, with a 24-foot roadbed and a f-lnch gravel surface. . The county road budget as pre pared tentatively for 1930 calls for the expenditure of approxi mately the same amounts. Some 3175,000 haa been allocated for county roads, bridges and terries; 3138,000 for tho general road fund and road districts outside of Salem;. 3175,000 for market roads; and 322,000 In special road district funds. Tho county will also receive 3270,000 from the state for market roads. The county road building pro gram for the coming year has not been determined. Two projects to Win After alL ft Is rut the year or the generation la which we lire that determine our happiness. It Is tha spirit with which wo face life that de termines our contentment of mind. New Year Day nrery newspaper In North! America wHl record tha achievements of the year Just caded. Every paper wCl record prophecies of tha year to com. : 4 - They wd talk about inoner, about Indention, about discovery, about polities. Tha acta of Congress, Wall Street, tiT World Court. Dis armament, the Eighteenth Amendment.1 aid a thousand ! ether thfcgs wSl ongasa tha serious attention of able editors. Columns will bTwrit- t??i2f.t OHT wswU" each aad all of these matters. . .... ttyV these art not the J01 ftkli Tid tomorrow, next year, and from tha bHnnfn a -). " VTTr ' mm wwy What Is better for you and for tha aaUan tbaa to be rlca. health and vigor? - -.- , , - ; . T a ramarkaU. extent tha physV e&3 kaaKa.haa t oe wtta the mind. That aU saytag from Xn&tna Jnv aalla as worthy of serloia-Oieught M 1A flocks should be developed and Ufore of them, that tb output of poultry products may become of tar greater tbUmo airf) attract more attention from i marketing agencies, sring greater returns to tho pduhrymen and Improved; and Increase local feed and supply facilities for large acale ; opera Great FosuKtaikm ts Laid Tae foundation has been laid tor a great aad growing poultry Industry fa 'tals district and It should be encouraged In every , possible way that it may develop more rapidly into tho largo prof itable proportions that tt haa la many of the leading poultry dis- tricts of oUf sister states' of Idaho, . Washington and uaiiiornia. One branch tt the poultry basl- ness that Is showing unusual ae titity la this district U turkey raising. Several hatcheries " la this district are making a special ty of dayjold turkeys as well aa ' day-old chickens and the Improv ed new method of feeding and falsing turkey on smaller tracts, is making turkey raising far more sate and profitable. - Tha rolling ? foot hill districts of this -valley are proving- ideal for turkey, raising, where excellent' drainage 1 is provide, and plenty of good range Is available. Turkey rais ing la sure to become? tn fact hat already became, one pf:thf largo prof itable branches of the' poultry industry of the Salem district. which are likely to obtain favor able consideration, due to. tha, fact that "surveys were made on -them during the past year." are: Fern ridge road near Stayton, miles east, and Union hill road near Silver creek falls, S miles. Frank Johnson Road Master Work of the road department is carried on under the direction of Frank Johnson, county road master, and H. S. Swart, county engineer. Mr. Johnson succeeded W. J. Culver, who died in August, as roadmaster. He had been dep uty under Mr. Culver for many years. Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talks from The States man Our Fathers Read . Jan. 1, 1903 , ; ,The, federal grand. Jury which v "has been engaged for a number of weeks at Portland in investigating various phases of the IanH frauds unearthed In this state by Col. A, R. Greene, returned indictments against Senator John H. Mitchell . and Congressman Blnger Her mann, who aro charged with oon- . spiracy to defraud the government ' of public lands. The Greater Salem Commercial club which has dona a great deal for tho development and growth of Salem, has taken on new Ufa and activity and now has a mem bership of more than 200. E. Ho ler Is president and J. O. Graham Is secretary. , The Oregon Statesman Issued a 32-page annual edition today. A feature of the paper Is an eight page section containing small pic-r tures of scores of the better1 known homes In Salem. Industries of tho city are reviewed, as wett as schools and - other aspects of the town and county's develop ment. ... When you order Tha States? man it Is delivered to von br tha little merchant In your neighbor hood. . Health Message sound sana ts ai sound body. There Is ce doubt thai the sound body is Bkahy to gov eraed by a aound mind, la saaay in stoeei, avO thonghts and wicked deeds may be traced t phyaieal dla : iam . To detemtna b enmvata WaRh fii one of the best resotutlona. Let aa WBUK resoiva today. 1 Anawcra te lleahh Qnerieaj a a a-Whai cansaa flamed and bloodshot crest . A Hart your tyas axaamtd by a specialist, tt Is probable rs ara sutfertag trosa ayeatrata. ; - ' , ; ' MRS. T. C Q. Is It dangerous U 5 ffuPPly of sugar la the SL if J odlth curable? win tt be neceasary ta diet tar all ttma If this lt1fi extstsf . Ataa, tut tha- exttat af the troobts actermlnea tha Cree af w-jpertxeaiaent should rtflLbB,lt Plnant. Whether r?. SuTao tS5Sg- alaared sq deyead upon tteaariotta. aeaa af tha in&lviJuaJ 'eaaa, itS SssWarW? tW t3, I feet Incase taareiah " aJr? wm nperCuout aLwf0 ohastt? Ctet redact the heutt irelsh ahoct 123 toeoads. aaax-wt. in crerty balaneea Cct te wairt- fMitft mK tac