The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 09, 1936, Page 2, Image 2

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    iAUE TOO
The OREGON STATESMAN, Salra, Oregon, Sunday Morning; February 9, 1936
Social iWdrfc'in
A Mail
'mmzaliono
f
Oregon Praised by
WE
State -County
System Ideal
Go inly .Discusses Pension
Outlook; Over 100 at
Valley Conference
A state-county system of organ
izing social work-in Oregon was
praised by T. J. Edmonds, region-
ia bis address to western Ores on
social worker who attended a
two-day conference which cloned
here last night. Edmonds was the
- featured speaker at the closing,
dinner for the meeting, Elmer H.
Goudy, state relief administrator,
presiding at the gathering.
Edmonds said the county relief
committees, , with members f the
county court ex-officio partici
pants, made- an effective organi
zation, to work with the state com
mittee in administering relief,
Free From Graft
The speaker sketched the his
tory of relief in the state and the
nation the last four years. He
praised the federal instrumental
ities as free from graft and de
clared that relief in some form
was to continue for years la the
nation. Edmonds said he thought
the social policy of ' the future
must embrace old-age pensions
and some form of unemployment
insurance.
At the close of the meeting.
Goudy stated that the state relief
committee was ready to handle
old-age pensions in Oregon as
soon, as a satisfactory legal opin
ion was available on the Oregon
pension law and as soon as fed
sral funds were made available
upon approval of Oregon's appli
cation tor pension moneys. The
stat must get pension moneys.
Goody said, by setting up a three
months' payment project and
making requisition for the money
required to handle the pension
payment.
Ovw 100 Attend
More than 100 social workers
attended the meetings here.
Hound table discussions were con
ducted yesterday morning at the
Marion hotel, Alice V. Maxwell
being In charge. At a subsequent
morning Bession Miss Loa How
ard. In charge of social service
-supervision for the state, spoke,
ier address being followed by a
noon lunebeon meeting where
Miss Aleta Brownlee. field ad
ministrator for the United State's
children, discussed social security
for children as Imperative if well
brought up youngsters take up
their place in society.
Misa Dorothy Gordon j of the
Marion county relief office then
conducted a tour of state -insti
tutions where the social workers
aaw Fairview home, the tubercu
losis sanitarium, the girls indua
triai school and the state blind
school. A separate excursion was
made to the state penitentiary.
Ex-Leader Victim
Of Heart Attack
(Continued from page 1)
litlcal career was rigidly govern
ed. President Roosevelt said he
, was "deeply distressed." -
. Funeral Will Be
Monday at Topeka
Senator Capper, also of Kan
sas, one of the first to call at
, the home which: Curtis shared
with his sister, Mrs. Dolly Gann,
announced the funeral would take
place Tuesday at Topeka. The
body, he said, would leave Wash
ington tomorrow night.
' For several days Curtis had
been Buffering from a cold. This
morning he seemed much im
proved, and, encouraged, Mrs.
Cann went -shopping. Sometime
- afterward. Curtis suffered a heart
attack. A frightened maid tele
phoned Mrs. Gann to return at
.once and called Dr. George E.
Calver; congressional physician.
Both rushed to the shrubbery
surrounded house in Cleveland
park, but the former viee-preai-dent
was dead before either ar
rived. Regret Expressed
by Many Officials
From the White House, Presl
" dent Roosevelt issued a state
ment: '."I am deeply distressed to
learn of the' sudden passing of
my old friend, Charles Curtis,"
the president said. "Whether they
knew- him as a senator, as the
vice - president of the United
States, or as the man that he was
ini his own right, his legion of
frjends will remember him, al
ways affectionately, - and will
mourn his passing."
"I was always fond of him,"
said Vice-President Garner. "I
was associated with him in the
house and then the-senate. He
was a fine man and a good
friend."
; Curtis' successor as republican
leader. Senator McNary of Ore
gon, praised him as "a quiet and
yet -successful republican leader"
Obituary
Garson
J'At the residence, 3 DOS Center
street. Adolph Theodore Garson,
T4, Saturday. -February 8. Sur
vfved by a son, James .A. Garson
of Salem; a daughter, Mrs. Ber
tha Wangland of Kristtansands,
Norway; two-sisters Mrs. Joseph
ie Tronnen of Vine, N. J., and
Mrs. A. Stump of Norway. Funer
al -announcements later from
Clough-Barrick company.
4
. . Thompson . .
At the residence on Salem
" route 1, February I, Orva Willis
Thompson, aged (8. Survived by
widow, Marie T. Thompson; sis
ters, Mrs. Olive Gilson. of. Leban
on and Mrs. B. Atteberry of San
Jlego, CaL-. Funeral i announce
ments later from Clough-Barrick
company.
Food Rushed
v x- - - ,
hmo. .f SHWVKiW(M.-yjiA." ...
wamiw.. w.vr .-.-VvXL'WaiaaaaaiJLiii.u,.'.;..
.rja-Wti'"' S X ' " JvC"
. v '' , " ' :
ate iwk . r. , r Xv, A-
- . ' - "
,-"- rtTiT -'- fir-
Heavy ice in Chesapeake bay naarooned 1,600 persons on Tangier Island off the east coast of Maryland
and threatened them with starvation, but emergency rations were
and a "popular and efficient pre
siding officer when he was 'vice
president. He added:
"He was an able and loveable
character."
The present democratic leader.
Senator Robinson of Arkansas,
called the Kansan "an outstand
ing factor in public affairs," while
Speaker Byrns said "He rendered
long and distinguished service
to his country, and was a splen
did public servant," whose "death
win be universally mourned."
Britain to Blame
Mussolini Claims
LONDON. Feb. .-(Sunday)-
W-The Sunday Observer In an
interview today quotes Premier
Mussolini as aayiag the British
"have tured a colonial war into
what may be a world-wide dis
aster."
The interview was with Sir
Arnold Wilaon, a member of par
liament.
deferring U the now dead
Hoafe-Laval peace proposal, n
Duce was quoted:
"I had already drafted a cau
tious formula of acceptance as a
basis of negotiation . . . when
the nws came that you gentle
men in London who had praised
Sir Samuel Hoare so highly in
September had dismissed him
with ignominy December 19.
"Aa a direct result of your
action much Ethiopian and some
Italian blood must be spent. You
have prolonged the war. A great
responsibility lies on you."
Blizzard Carries
New Frigid Wave
CHICAGO. Feb. 8.-;p)-A bliz
zard, whirling along a wave of
8ub-reTo cold, howled out of the
west tonight in winter's bitter
est assault of the year.
Racing 38 miles an hour across
eastern Iowa bound for the lake
states, it plummeted temperatures
20 to 30- degrees, paralyzed Tail
and highway transportation, and
added from two to six inches of
new covering on the two-foot of
snow already on the ground in
that state.
Additional deaths, a general Interruption-
of traffic schedules,
new misery and suflering were
reported all over the plain states
as the mercury dropped under
zero as far south as Texas.
Hill City. S. D.. saw the col
umn fall to 52 below.
Fraudulent Bonds
Arrive From East
PORTLAND. Feb. 8.-P)-Fifty
81.000 bonds of the Northwestern
Electric company received here
today are fraudulent, John Dier
dorff, public relations officer for
the company, said tonight.
Dierdorff said the bonds were
sent from an eastern bond dealer
to the Title Trust company, de
pository handling the change in
Northwestern Electric bonds
which extends their maturity date
ten years by consent of the bond
holders. 1 The public relations man said
the 11,000 bonds were printed In
blue the color used for the com
pany's 8100 issue. Originals were
engraved. He also said typogra
phical differences were apparent.
Institute Proves
Valuable, Report
An unusually valuable teachers'
institute was held yesterday at
Woodburn, Mrs. Mary L. Ful!:er
son, county school superintendent,
reported when she returned from
the meeting. The ; topic was "Vis
ual Education." The use to which
a motion picture machine -was put
In the Wood burr, schools waa
shown to 180 teachers who at
tended the conference.
- E. T. Seed of, Oregon State col
lege was the principal speaker at
the afternoon session. Hia topic
was the privilege of the teacher.
Superintendent B. W.. Dana of
Woodburn. la charge of schools
there, waa boat tor the institute,
the second Of three held through
out the county during the school
,year.i
to Marooned Islanders by Blimp
1ftsjsfcgiiariWli.
Salem High Tops
Stadium Matmen
Wins Seven Bouts, Three
By Falls; Even Break
on Northern Trip
TACOM, Feb. 8.-(i!P)-SaIem
high school grapplers, Oregon
state wrestling champions, tonight
defeated Stadium high school, or
Tacoma. 21 to 14, In a dual meet
here. The Oregon team took sev
en of the 10 matches, three
of them on falls. Stadium was
able to score only one fall and two
decisions.
Tonight's victory gave the T3a
lem youths an even break in their
northern irip. They dropped a
decision to Lincoln high school,
Washington champions, here last
night.
Tonight's summary:
107 pounds: Tom Mio. of Sa
lem, took a decision from Roy
Hoahiwara, of Stadium, with a
time advantage of 9:30 minutes.
- 114 pounds: Lany Sal to, of
Salem, decisioned Ted Simpson, of
Stadium with 1:31 advantage.
120 pounds: Bill Hickey. of
Stadium, decisioned H. Kaneko,
of Salem with 8:32 advantage.
128 ponnds: Reginald Rogers,
of Stadium, decisioned J. Oslond,
of Salem, advantage, 5 minutes.
137: Don Dilley, of Stadium,
decisioned D. Thompson, of Salem,
with 4:34 advantage.
147: D. Donaldson, of Salem,
took a fall over Nel Gillespie, of
Stadium In 7:55 minutes.
157: D. Raymond, of Salem,
won a fall over Hack Snyder, of
Stadium, in 6:57.
167: E. Aker, of Salem, threw
Frank Tangora, of Stadium, in
7:2-8.
177: Hugh Shannon, of Stad
ium, threw W. Willard, of Saleuu
in 3:25.
Decision on TVA
Promised Monday
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8-(T-Government
officials expressed
confidence tonight that the su
preme court certainly would an
nounce on Monday a decision
probably split In the Tennessee
valley, act case.
They pointed to the 53 days
that will have elapsed since argu
ment of the dispute over the gov
ernment's "yardstick" -program to
measure the proper cost of electri
city to consumers.
Other new deal cases this term
have been decided from 20 to 34
days after arguments. The "gold
clause" cases, last term, required
only 39 days.
But only the justices and a few
trusted attaches knew definitely
whether an opinion would be
forthcoming on right of the gov
ernment to sell power in compe
tition with private utilities.
Plutocrat Caught
In Net For Hobos
YUMA. rlz.. Feb. S-(Jt)-C.U-
fornla s transient blockade caugnt
a millionaire in its net tonight.
Much to the chagrin of Los
Angeles police, George Holmes,
discoverer of the 13,000,000 gold
mine at Mohave, Calif., was their
victim.
Toung Holmes, who spends
mnch of his time with his father
here, decided to walk across the
Colorado river bridge and visit
friends in Winterhaven, Calif.
Dressed in old clothes, he did not
impress guardians of the border.
Not until he was Uken to the
fingerprinting stockade was
Holmes recognized and allowed to
leave.
Townsend Improve
-GLENDALB, Calif., Feb. 8.-
-Dr. Francis E. Townsend check
ed out of a sanitarium here this
afternoon after resting several
days to overcome a cold.
Warren Powers
Insurance
202 Oregon Builging
Phone 5522
brought by bump.
Holman Explains
Finance Anomaly
MEDFORD, Ore.. Feb. .-()-
state Treasurer Kurus c. Holman.
here today replied briefly to a
statement Friday credited to Gov
ernor ChaTles H. ' Martin, in
which the governor stated, "Per
sons familiar with the state's fin
anciai condition know that we
have a deficit of more than a mil
lion dollars, with an added prop
erty delinquency of in excess of
IH.OOO.OOO."
"Certainly we have r book de
ficit of over a million dollars,"
Treasurer Holman said, "but we
have 111,500,000 actually in the
banks, and had more than $14,
000.000 a short time ago. True,
that money is all obligated for
certain purposes, to be used ill
tlmately for the purpose for
which it is Intended.
"It Is my notion that these
funds should not be frozen, but
should be liquid, as private funds
are, and so administered that they
may be made available for pres
ent uses just so long as they arc
on hand when needed, for the pur
poses for which they are obli
gated."
Majority Opposes
Inflation Scheme
WASHINGTON. Feb. f. -(iP)-
President Roosevelt and his fiscal
advisors today canvassed the
background for an administration
tax bill at a closed-door confer
ence which coincided with the re
ported collapse of one wing of the
congressional Inflation, drive.
After a poll of the house, Rep
resentative Boland, the democra
tic whip, reported that only 94
of the 317 house democrats had
signified themselves definitely in
favor of the 83,000.000,000 Fra-
zier-Lemke bill, designed to re
finance farm debt with new cur
rency. Both Boland and Speaker
Byrns asserted the measure would
be "slaughtered" If it came to
vote.
A late afternoon White House
conference, attended by Secretary
Aiorgentnau and Daniel Bell, the
acting budget director. . revived
previous reports that the Roose
velt tax plan might be sent to the
capitol neat week.
Four of Escaped
Convicts Caught
BEATTYVILLE, Ky.. Feb. 8.-
V7-rour of ten convicts who es
caped from Frankfort stat re
formatory in two days were cap-
iurea witnout violence at a farm
house near here late today by Lee
county officers.
Sheriff Charles Blount led the
iui uiuccts wno sur
rounded the farm home of rw
Coomer, father of on of the f ugi-
"es, xtenry coomer. The others
are James C. Morris, Clarence
t-rawiora and Dexter Anderson.
They were held in the county lail
at Beattyville tonight.
The four captured escaped early
7 oj mreatening and
bluffing their WAT Dftfit ntHamn
guards. Six others who escaped in
a prison truck today were still at
large tonight. An Intensive hunt
for them was under way in the
woods near Monterey, Ky.
Smith Hatchery Moves
FALLS CITY. Feb. 8 The H
Mather Smith hatchery has been
moved to Dallas as that location
is much better for commercial
hatching. He will use his farm
here for brooding purposes.
Mortgage Loans
on Modern Homes
Lowest Rates
Hawkins &
Roberts
T Inc.
Budget PoUcy
Has Limelight
Wharton in Position
to
Direct Finances
in
Adequate Style
(Continued from Page 1)
cold storage until November and
permit the 1935 regular session
act to be in force.
This act will probably satisfy
Washington's initial requirements
for matching Oregon's old-age
pension funds. The age limit is TO
instead of 5 aa provided in the
referended act but the federal act
permits, states to wait until 1941
before pensions are begun at 85.
The 1935 act has a requirement
that makes residence in a county
for a year a prerequisite to a pen
sion; the federal act makes only
state, residence a requirement:
nnder the 1935 regular session
act the county and the state took
a claim on any property which the
pensioner possessed; the federal
government wants to share in any
claims on real estate the pensioner
owns since it -juts up halt time
pension money.
Uncle Probably WH1
Wink at Discrepancies
With 1936 an election year the
presumption is that Uncle Sam
will wink at these discrepancies
and furnish Oregon 50 percent of
the money put out for pensions.
leaving the 1937 legislature the
chore of revising the state's pen
sion law to suit Uncle Sam's re
quirements.
So the skies are clearing for
old-age pension applicants In the
state. Old .Man Oregon -has an un
touched million dollars for pen
sions appropriated in March. 1935
and not used heretofore because
the late Senator Huey Long nsset
the pension appropriation in the
federal senate. And the 36 conn
ties hare approximately $1,000,-
000 set up for pensions in 1936.
With state and county putting 'up
an aggregate of $2,000,000, and
with Uncle Sam furnishing an
equal amount, pensions will be
larger if the state relief commit
tee sees fit to grant more liberal
payments. .
The news story that the state
treasury had f 11.500,000 cash on
hand Just before the sales tax vote
was taken, was not designed to
convince citizens that Old Man
Oregon's Impoverishment was so
acute another special levy was
needed. Governor Martin, sensing
the political lnad visibility of pa
rading the treasury cash position
to citizens, countered last week
with a statement that the funds
in the treasury are all pledged
and that the state in reality has a
deficit.
Both the governor and the state
treasurer are right the state has
a deficit and it also has a large
amount of cash on hand. The def
icit never troubles Oregon when
it is only $2,000,000 or less for
it is a deficit based on the pay
ment in full of all appropriations
after collection in full of all esti
mated taxes. Actually there Is a
lag between the time taxes come
to the state and the time the ap
propriations are met. Moreover,
the state has nearly a score of
funds apart from the general
fund In which moneys pile up.
The veterans' commission Is in
funds now with Its collectioni go
ing higher and higher and with a
carryover of moneys in Its treas
ury from its refunding issue of
two years ago. The state highway
commission, always prudent fi
nancially, keeps several million
dollars on hand to assure prompt
payment of its contractors and to
meet its bond maturities prompt
ly. The commission, with Its big
construction program, must ad
vance considerable money for en
gineering work before it secures a
return from Uncle Sam. The state
treasurer has a great advantage
over' any county treasurer; he is
paid his real property taxes in
full, when due, and must not cut
his financial cloth according to
the amount of taxes actually paid
In to the sheriff by the property
owner. 2nd add budget 9
Balance Healthy;
Source of Pride
The state's bank balance is
healthy and a source of real pride.
Where other commonwealths have
issued bonds to handle relief;
where treasuries have resorted to
short-term financing for current
bills; Oregon has gone ita con
servative way, paid off the short
term warrants it issued for the
general fund, Incurred no bond
ed debt for relief; and aside from
$265,000 in two per cent deben
tures on liquor income (which is
running $1,800,000 a year) the
state is financially strong. Us
veterans' bonds are being steadily
amortized and itg highway obli
gations will shortly be down to
$20,000,000.
And Oregon has spent directly
out of state funds for relief since
the depression began consists of
the $1,000,900 highway bond Is
sue, a $1,000,000 appropriation
by the 1935 legislature and ap-
THE SPA
Exclusive Showing
JVett? Ideas in
Heart Boxes
MovingStoringCrating
f V t Larmer Transfer: & Storage ;!
PHONE SiS
W Also Handle Feel Ou,CoaJ ad Briquets and Hist
proval of the expenditure of $5,-
00,000 from liquor commission.
profits and taxes. Of the direct'
appropriation $295,000 remained
last week, enough to run the state
for several months while $2,900.
000 remains In the liquor reven
ues appropriation. This will be
more than enough to carry the
state until the 1937 session meets;
it the commission cannot make
cash enough to ta'xe np drafts
from the relief commission, the
treasurer can issue more of the
shori-term debentures and bay
them from surplus fund- in his
hands.
Here and there at the state
house: Robert W. Ruhl of Med
ford, Pulitzer prize winning edi
tor, can have a job on the state
board of higher education
Leif Flnseth of Dallas finleb.es his
term in March and while he pre
sumably would like reappoint
ment, Ruhl is a friend and sup
porter of the chief executive, and
can have a higher education Job
. ... or any other . . . which he
wishes. . . . Ruhl is not in the
least anxious for a state position
having shown no desire for a
state highway commission post . .
... a Harvard man. erudite as an
editor, cosmopolitan in experience,
he is considered an admirable
board member if he will accept
the post. . . Ask any member of
the state supreme court fer an off
the record expression and he will
quickly aver that court jobs
should be appointive with court
members removable only for
cause or when a specified age ia
attained .... running for office,
especially a non-partisan office
where party support can be
sought, is not a pleasing job for a
justice who is expected to disre
gard political connections during
hia term on the bench .... how
ever the six-year elective term Is
still operative in Oregon and the
court members up for reelection
Justices Campbell, Kelly and
Belt, are renewing friendship
about the state as a part of the
duties of any man who must hare
votes to keep him in office . . .
Major-General White'g recent se
curing of three additional units
for the Oregon national guard
evidence anew that the commani-
ing officer of the guard for Ore
gon as well as the northwest
is strong with powers that be and
well-able to keep the state's
guard organization at the top in
comparison to guard groups in
any other state of the union . . . .
the recent resignation of Jack Al
len as state liquor administrator
has not weakened the commission
a whit with Governor Martin . .
Arthur McMahan of Albany, board
chairman, continues to be a
staunch friend of the administra
tion and the key man In the ad
ministration of the Knox act . . ,
the Salem capitol committee is
centering its present vork on as
sisting the state in securing title
to Willson park .... heirs are
being contacted to secure quit
claim deeds to the property now
held In trust by the city . . .
Paul R. Hendricka. city attorney,
and Ralnh Moody, attorney for
the commission, are preparing the
necessary legal forms .... an in
terestinz development in rate cas
es which have come before the
utilitla commission here and trie
interstate commerce commission
at Washington ia the figU of
trucking lines against material re
ductions in freight rates on rail-
rnari servinr the Medford ana
Marshfield areas William P.
Ellis, former secretary of the ntil
ities commission who has sought
hnndreds of rail rate reductions
through the years, appefip for the
truck lines in a case Shortly to
be heard at Washington and pro
tests railroad rate reductions a3
unwarranted and made with the
purpose of driving out truck com
petition .... rates ottered by tne
railroads on gasoline are less than
half what prevailed before truck
competition bes;an .... Frank
McCulloch. utilities commissioner.
will sit with the interstate com
merce commission in hearing the
argument at Washington.
Ro.ffnnfl
11V llUUli
Re -Paint! f
with our
N. H. A. PLAN 5
(Act Expires Apr 1)
Just Phone 4642
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Easy Phone
184 N. Liberty, Satem, Ore.
Milk Control
Law Is Upheld
Decision Comes in Suit
of Four Producers;
Fault Overcome .
(Continued from page 1)
A digest of Judge Lusk's opin
ion is as follows: .
"On constitutional questions
the courts go far afield in search
of facts, consulting government
bulletins and reports, authorita
tive .writings on social and econ
omic uubjects. and many other
sources of information generally
regarded as trustworthy. Here the
evidence was supplied by testi
mony given at the trlaL That ev
idence in essential particulars is
uncontradicted, and abundant!
shows evils in an unregulated
milk market in this state which
the legislature might deem neces
sary to correct."
"The milk industry is a basic
one, intimately related to public
health, and is peculiarly sensitive
to such evils as flow from unre
stricted competition. Being highly
periahable, milk which is market
ed for human consumption, other
wise known as fluid milk, must
be produced and in the hands of
the consumer all in the space of a
few hours. That not sold for hu
man consumption goes for manu
facturing purposes, and brings a
lower price than fluid milk. It is
known as surplus. The demand for
fluid milk fluctuatea from day to
day and from season to season,
and the dairyman, in his endea
vor always to have a sufficient
supply of fluid milk, not infre
quently finds himself with a sur
plus on his hands, which must be
sold at a price materially less than
that which the same milk, produ
ced under precisely the same con
ditions, commands when sold for
human consumption. Out of the
creation of this surplus arise the
same destructive competition and
some of the same unfair trade
practices disclosed by the legisla
tive investigation in New York.
with resulting demoralization of
prices, injury to producers and
dealers, and, since milk is an es
sential food, threat of injury to
the public.
That the law was beneficial to
the industry of the state and that
the orders of the board and the
establishment of minimum prices
tor producers worked out for the
benefit of all was observed by
Judge Lusk in his comparison of
this suit to those recorded in oth
er states upon a similar legal
question.
"The mutual protection consists
in a stabilized market brought
about by the minimum price and
"IN ONE WEEK, VAN-TAGE
STOPPED TEN YEARS PAIN"
STATES FOREST RANGER
if
My Awful Stomach Cas
and Kidney Pains Are
Cone, Thanks to Van
Tage," Says Mr. Thorpe
10 Years of Other Me
dicines? and Treatments
Had Failed to Help Him.
Remarkable statements from
all ever this section praising and
endorsing the "Mixture of Na
ture's Medicines," known as VAN
TAGE, continue to arrive in this
city where this Amazing Formula
Is being introduced and explained
to the local public. -dally by The
Van-Tage Man in person. For in
stance, the following remarkable
statement has just been received
from Mr. Joseph L. Thorpe, of 954
5th. East, Salt Lake City, Utah,
a former Forest Ranger of this
general section. Every suffering
person in this city should read
this statement. Find out what
Van-Tage can do for you! This re
markable statement follows:
Stomach and Kidneys Kept
Him in Awful Pain
"For years I had been a great
victim of gassy, upset stomach
and .kidney pains," said Mr.
Thorpe. "Finally, about 10 years
ago, this got so bad that I had
to give up my work as a Forest
Ranger here in this vicinity. I was
simply weak and useless. It was
hard for a man like me to hare
to stop work, as I had always been
a hard, active worker, but when
a Person's system gets as full of
poison from upset stomach and
sluggish kidneys as mine did,
there jut Isn't anything else you
can do. My back pained me so bad
over my kidneys that I was irrit
able for days at a time. And it
seemed like all my food turned to
gas Jn my stomach as quick as I
ate it and this awful stomach gas
would press up Into' my chest
around my heart and almost shut
off my breath. I certainly was a
miserable man if there ever was
one.
Pain and 3Iisery Stopped
bj Van:Tage .in Week ' -
"Now, all this time, I kept tryi
lag medicine after medicine; but
nothing helped toe, so I dldftt
know if I would ever be any bet
ter. Then finally I found Van
Tars. Will gay that In one week,
time this medicine stopped my
pain, and misery. The kidaey pains
tn my back have disappeared, and
ft also worked the fas out of my
stomach and now 1 can eat' my
maala and not ' suffer ' Afterward: '
the pool; the-otcrdens consist in
the contributions'' the plaintiffs .
are required to make out of pro
ceeds of their sales, much the
larger portion of which flows from
the minimum price fixed by the
board for fluid milk. The plain
tiffs (in this case) are very mnch
in the position of the bank which
insisted that it did not desire the
protection the law was Intended
to provide: though, it may be said,
their position is even less tenable
than' the bank's because they are
claiming- the benefit of the mini
mum price, while seeking; to es
cape the burdens which the law
imposes. -
"If it be true, as I think It is,
that the police power extends to
the regulation of the milk indus
try to cure an economic malad
justment and promote the public
health, then there would seem to
be ample authority against the
plaintiffs' contention that the ex
actions complained of violate, the
14 th amendment."
See the Thousands of
Valentines
Salem's Most Beautiful
Array!
At Needliam's
Here yon will find Just the
right Valentine for Sweetheart,
Mother, Father, Sister, Boy
Friend, Husband, Aunt, etc.
The selection ia complete and
Is priced at from
lc to $1
Valentine seals, paper napkins,
luncheon sets, tallies, etc.
See ear new monogram
med place cards and tal
lies. NEED HAM'S
BOOK STORE
463 State St. Phone 5802
MR. JOSEPH L. THORPE, a
Former Forest Ranger of This
Section, Who Says: "VAN
TAGE stopped JO years of
misery for me, ia one week's
time:"
It is just beyond me. Here I took
all kinds of medicines for 10 years
without any benefit, and then
along comes Van-Tage. and stops
my suffering in a week. I used to
be a Forest Ranger, so I know
something about Nature, but , I
will say that the nan who makes
this medicine certainly knows Na
ture himself, and that is why his
Natural Medicine helps so many
people. I am telling all my friends
about Van-Tage."
21 Herbs in the Van-Tage
Help You in General
1 It Is the Natural Herbs In Van
Tage which enable it to produce
the great benefit described above
by Mr. Thorpe. Herbs act almost
like magic on the weakened hu
man system. , They cleanse the
bowels and clear gas and pain
from the stomach organs. They
enliven the liver and relieve bili
ousness and sick headache. They
invigorate the kidney action and
stop night rising and backache.
VAN-TAGE contains 21 Herbs. It
is a marvelous mixture of Nature's
Ingredients and is helping people
who thought they were hopeless.
So, If you are a sufferer, don't
wait any longer. Remember the
cost of Van-Tage is small, due to
the Immense - volume la which It
sells. Get this-Amazing' Formula
-TODAXatid start taking It!
The VAN-TAGE Man is now
here daily meeting crowds of peo
ple and Introducing and explain
ing thii Remarkable Compound.
7
ST
Oa Sale at :
- Fred Meyer -
17N.- Liberty St -