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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1918)
r TWO. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 3, 1918. mmm Open Season for trapping Beaver in Marion and Benton counties on. LJKBES pays the highest market prices. Handle end atretch. your skins carefully they will bring big money. All furs are high, shipping to the nearest market means quick er returns. Send for Eaw Fur Price List today. - We want Beaver, Skunk, Mus krat, Raccoon, Mole, Otter, Wolf, Miai and other furs. E Liebes & Company Saw 1'nr Dealers and Fur Manufacturers. Dept. M, 149-151 Broadway,. Portland, Oregon SOCIETY And He Did R MUNITiON 0FACTOKY J. T jrf- AH SQTAEThH$ NEWlJ H1LL TRY ONEif. M. Y1S&. J l-M. 7 "I JUL .y;;';i..v mmwm Rub Musterole on Forehead and Temples . A headache remedy without the dan- fen of "headache medicine." Relieves eadache and that miserable feeling from colds or congestion. And it act at once I Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Used only externally, and in no way can it affect stomach and heart, as some in ternal medicines do. Excellent for sore throat; bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, con gestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, all pains and acnes of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, i mated feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50 The home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Myers, on the earner of Chemeketa and Cottage streets, was the scene of a pleasant dinner party last evening. The party which was original in ev ery respeet, created an unusually hap py surprise for the guests. Mrs. My ers, who had planned an old fashioned dinner party, carried the idea out in a very clever manner- The guests, who enjoyed the joyous occasion were th. members of an evening club to which Mr. and Mrs. Myers belong. Mr. and Mrs. David Eyre and Mr. and Mrs. Bomeo Gouley were additional guests. The monthly missionary meeting of the First Christian church will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30. A good program has been arranged for with the siibiect Africa, and with Mrs. r T. Porter as leader. "Over the top' jplans will be discussed. One of the merriest dinner parties given during the holiday season wa: the one given by A7.-8. Huth E- Sayer st her home on 1259 Chemeketa street The table was adorned with mistletoe and hollv used in an effective , man ner, while the rooms were enhanced with greenery' and the glistoning Christmas tree, gaily decorated. At ter dinner the evening was spent in a lovful manner with dancing and mu sic. Besides Salem relatives Airs, hay er had as her out of town guests, Mr and Mrs. Herbert Fnrrer of San Fran cisco, Miles Bradford from "Vaneouvor barracks and A. II. Fnrrer of San Die go. Mr. Bradford, who is in the avia tion corps, has been transferred to San Antonio, Texas. ! TRY IT! STOP DANDRUFF ID BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR profits or else likely go bankrupt with P II t I. 1 I in a eouple of years and prove a black vij nUC UI Ildijf Will Be Re-Distributed eye to the coram unity for many years to come. A list should be made showing actual pledges from growers t plant and contract for a period of years, the acreage of small fruits and vegetables of which there is not a sufficient sup ply. - FBEIG1IT BATES Figures should be secured on the cost of freight on box materials, cans, antrnr nr nt.her Kim- Hair Stops Falling Out v$$&tf,z on tne nnisnea product should be look mem Sunt, and Mrs. John W. Todd, at their home on Bellevuo street, enter taincd as their dinner guests last cv ening, Professor and Mrs. Florian Von Esehen and family. a. the church narlors. Fridav nf- teriuon at two thirtv the Presbyter- inn Woman s Missionary society will hold their regular meeting. The Woman's Relief Corps will have their installation of officers at the Moose hall, Saturday afternoon, Janu ary fifth. Many women of the'W. r. C. and tho old soldiers and wives en joyed a very pleasant social affair in tho form of the rampfire last Saturday w Mrs. E. L. Myers was the charming hostess at a delightful dinner party Tuesday evening at her home, on 9!;j hummer street. The affair was iu hon or cif Miss Daisy Musick of Portland. MiBS Musick is the week end guest of Mrs- Myers. Those present besides the host and -hostess were, Mr, and Mrs. 0. C. Corv, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Camp bell, Mr. and Mrs. F. It. Vance, L. V Hopkins and the guest of houor, Miss Musick. tt Miss Mnrjorie Blnke, who attends Oregon Agricultural college, is visit ing with parents on 0 Uui'ii street. The Misses Ada and Laura Boss, teachers in the Amity high school, have returned to Amity after visiting their family in Salem. www The ' Saint Agnes Guild will meet this evening at the Episcopal rectory at seven thirty. Tho evening will be spent on Red Crost work. HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD REGISMTION ASKED (Continued from page one) of exemptions on account of physical disability lower there than in tho east or Pacinc coast. South Dakota, leads the list, while Pennsylvania wus the most deficient iu this respect. The New England states in general aud New York made a pour showing. Tho fighters of today are superior to those of the civil wur, the report states, for the percentages of physical exemp tions in tho sixties was about 32, or 3 per cent more than today. The love of the foreigner for tho land of his adopt iu u is shown by the fact that there are more thun 7(,UO0 aliens in the national army. Trey are volunteers, for it was neccssury for them to waive exemption granted all alioua beforo be ing accepted. A remarkable patriotic fervor exist ed in Oregon, where, the report shows, that for every 100 men taken in the draft, 154 volunteered. Tho other states range down to (53 volunteers for every 100 drafted. Says Cream Applied in Nostrils Opens Air Passages Uight Up. lllsMUll. lCllCl 'UO YWllblUK XUIU clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. Jo more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for brent lit night; your cold or catarrh disappears. (Jet ft small hot I In of civ's Crenm Balm from your druggist now. Apply a nine oi mis iiu,;,unt, antu.ic, healing cream iu your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inllunied or sncllen mucous membrane and relict conies instantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed up nith a cold or nustv catarrh. Gets Thick, Wavy, Strong and Beautiful Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus- trious aud beautiful as a youug girl's after a "Danderine hair cleanse Just t.y this moisten a cloth with a ;it'!i Dr.ndorino and carefully draw it h.-or"h vour hair, taking one small f'-fnl ft a time. This will cleanse tho hair rf dust, dirt and excessive oil and in v'ft n few moments you have doub led the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every par ticle of dandruff; cleanses, purities ami invigorates the scalp, forever stop pin'' itching and tailing hair. But what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use when you will actually see new hair fino and downy at first yes but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soi't hair and lots of it, surely get a small bottle of Knowlten 's Danderine from any drug gist or toilet counter for a few cents. WHAT A COMMUNITY (Continuod from page one) There are some kinds of shooting that no forbidden in our army even in the trenches. To "shoot ten francs" is verboten, as it were. Keaehing tho third line trench, the major turned not toward his battalion )iast, ns usual, but to the right to in terview Sammy Hmiff. Sammy's fellow shootsmen saw the major coming and got away. Just then many things happened all at once in the third line down to the "left" of the communication trench. About twelve German shells banged where the mnior would have been walk The married men loom up in tho new 1 lla it , hadn 't turned to stoo ttu army in greater force than was expect-! crapshooting. Thev threw mud on the ed, more than 163,000 being in the sor- battalion but nobody was hurt. The vice. major looked at the bursting shells and 1 1 i at Sammy Smif f. Then he picked up QmifT QuroJ M-iInr'e I ifo I the hones' and put thera iu his pocket. uumi uanu majvi a ui., .You mi(!,lt nave bw, sellteiiced to to year, there must be steady employ ment for them for the larger portion of the year. A canner aould not afford to hire three or four men for a year and 1 ay out a year s wuges for only one oi two month's work. A cannery, to be mado profitable, must be able to run from May or June until the first of January, and unless the output during tiiut period is enormous, a longer run is to be desired. As with expensive but efficient machinery, their use is ad vautageous only for a very large out put, and is most economical for tlu largest output. To give you an idea to what extent cannery will sometimes go in ( ro- lding vear around work for their ex perienced help I will cite a few of the the operations of the cauuery be longing to the Eugene Fruit Growers Association, which is managed by Mr. O. Holt, who is rapidly becoming the "Heinz of the Northwest." I his factory begins on gooseberries in May, strawberries in June, cherries, logan berries, rnspberries, peas, beans and ther midsummer vegetablas in .imy and August, tomatoes corn, beets, mash ed potatoes, turnips, pumpkins, sm-.skIi, green prunes, piuuis ana appies m oep .ember. October, JNovcnioer aim uif.oui :or. and during the months of January to Mav the experienced help is yut tc running tho box factory in cunnoc- ion with tho association, cutting una milking up boxes during the nuict months for tho coming rusn soascn. Some of tho men are also put to oper n:ing the spray plant in coiuiDCtii.ii with the association. Tho JMigen ) t viut irow association has in tho one associa ion a smaller duplicate of what Salem, the laisest fruit and vegetable pro ducts district in tue liormwfsi, uas iu ts fourteen to sixteen privately own- d plants. In addition to operating a niiiierv. spray plant auu oox iuciory, they also run a L.ogun berry Juice piaut n ait tunnel evaporator, a cider and vineirar plaut. a bottling plant, aud dried fruit packing plant. They also an loganberry juice and unferuienteu pplo juico. To succcsstuliy operate a hint Cf this kind requires a highly skill d mauairer. a " jack of all trades," in other words, in charge of tho operat- ug department, aud also a highly de veloped sales department, and in these very departments lie the greatest weak nesses of cooperative canneries. ThiB can be easily proven by anyone inter ested enough in the subject to look into it. Of all the cooperative canner ies in the northwest there are only two which have reached any size aud mado any success of their venture. I refer to "the Puyullup & Sumner Fruit Grow ers association of your state, and the Eugene Fruit Growers association of Eugene, Oregon. It is noticeable that the managing heads of both these as sociations have been with them for many years and have grown with the business. A change of management in a cooperative cannery often results dis astrously, as highly trained specialises iu this line are almost impossible to get, and a manager without previous exper ience in that line is likely to make tua same mistakes on a larger and more dis rstrous scale as the former manager did when the business was young. Of all the canning business done in the United S'ates oulv about $3,500,000.00 worth of business is done by cooperative can neries, according to a bulletin put out by the United States bureau of com incce, and about half of that business is done by one association, the Pnyal ln;i & Sumner Fruit Growers aasucia iion. The nueleas for a by-produets center is usually a canning plant and a vine ed into and a rate as low or lower than existing competitive points should be secured if possible to do so. A table should be made showing railroad ser vice, both freight and express, on the various lines running into the place. The more railroads going into a plaee the more it is to its advantage, as it gives a large feeding radius for the plant. GlxADE OF EAW PRODUCTS It must bo understood at the outset that, with tho possible exception of a vine gar plants the grower should under stand that the new factory is not to be figured as a place to get rid of culls. The opposite is the case. A factory in these days of severe competition, long nauis to market, and heavy supplies of low grade raw material in districts closer to market, must have the vory lest, and every eare should be taken to produce the best; The better the grade of goods put out by your factory the more it will sell and the more you can grow for it. A fruit products plant to oe successful nowadays must coop erate with and have cooperation from its growers to the fullest extent, in order to make both their own business and that of the grower a suecesa. Any plant whieh does not look after the growers interests will sooner or later fail from lack of support, and on the other hand any community which does not look after the interests of its plants will sooner or later be with a bankrupt plant through lack of market for poor grade goods. The interests of the grow er and the packer are interdependent. One cannot succeed without the other. POWEB, WATER, FUEL. The next thing to be looked into should be the source of power, water and fuel. Can neries for instance need lots of water and steam heat. Some other factories, which do not need steam in their oper ations, could get along with electric power. If there is a sawmill close to the proposed site oft-times the saw-1 dust which is a waste product and is burned, could be utilized by the fruit products plant, thus cutting down the fuel cost, which is a heavy item in a cannery or evaporator. CLIMATE. If- possible a chart should be made showing the climatic conditions, such as range of tempera tures of the various- months, amount of rainfall, etc., and in districts where irrigation is practised this is a decided advantage, and should be pointed out Three large investments in Oregon, one of which was a sugar factory, have not paid interest on the investment on account of the failure of the builders of the plants to look .into the moisture supply for their raw products for the hot summer season. LABOR. One of the hardest things a cannery has to contend with is mi gratory labor. It is necessary in a case of this kind to break in a new crew each year. If the town seeking a plant has plenty of labor which can be had year after year and is close enough to a large city to be able to secure a sur ficient supply of transient labor to care for and harvest the crops, it is a point in their favor. No matter how many acres you set out, or how much money you invest in a plant, if you can't get the products harvested- your efforts are wasted. Another thing to consider is the attitude of local labor. Is there a disposition to demand unreasonable wages, unreasonable hours and iu the case of a cannery are there plenty of women in the community who can work? A cannery needs a great deal of female help in sorting, washing, pealing, etc. It is almost impossible to get this kind of w6rk done right by men or boys. SITE. The cost of a site is also look ed iuto. All the available sites should be carefully gone over and a survey made showing advantages and costs. Sometimes the furnishing of a free site or giving a cash bonus will secure a factory, especially if a competitive point is under consideration by the prospective plant. A survey of tho available sites should be made and op tion secured on them so that the price cannot be raised when the people de cide to put a plaut in. Our eommercial club did this for a plant which loeated in Salem this summer, saving them sev eral thousand dollars, this act being a strong inducement and evidence of co operation, as a number of other cities were after tho same plant. FINANCING. The attitude of local banks often has a great deal to do with location of a plant. If the bankers are friendly and offer their assistance as far as good sound banking principles will let them go, it creates a good im pression. High interest rates and a backward attitude of banks has lost many a town a good payroll and a good outlet for its farm products as well as opportunity tor extension of its farm ing interests. To operate fruit products necessitates the borrowing of huge sums of money to cover expenditures for raw products, cases nails, cans, car Washington, Jan. 3. Every acre of tillable land in Italy has been requi sitioned by the government and will be re-distributed equally among all the people, according to official Rome ca Dies. Cost of purchasing seed, fertilizer and implements will be borne by the government, it was stated, and all ex peases of persons cultivating the sci will be paid until the crops are har vested next summer, (scientific mstruc tion will be given the farmers and highly specialized and intensified farming will be insisted upon- The dis tribution of land is gratuitous. No charge ever will be collected for the land, it is said here, but the govern ment will see that products are di verted so they will be of the greatest possible value to Italians at war. The step taken by the Italian gov ernment is regarded by officials here as highly significant and the opinion is offered that the action will perma nently solve all production difficul ties. "It is an idealistic socialism," one official stated, "and will arouse the highest spirit of patriotism among Ital ans because of tne altruistic spirit in which the action is taKen. IS E Department Did Not Keep Pace with Production of Raw Materials Washington, Jan- 3. Blame for tho delay in clothing for soldiers in train ing camps was passed back to the quartermaster general's department by Charles Eiseman, vice chairman of the supplies division of the National De fense Council, when senate military probers resumed hearings. "If the quartermaster general's de partment" had kept pace in getting uni forms made, with the raw materials produced, even with a margin of seven weeks," said Eisenman, "all the men would have been fully supplied." Eisenman declared he was never in formed as to the number of men to be equipped, but was merely told to pro duce certain amounts of uniform cloth. "When you call out more general than we are asked to provide for, something's going to happen, and it did happen," said Eisenman : '- Net Contents 15 Fluid Drachm lis Mj) ! 111 iiH 5-5ew or tin 1 . - n . , . i 1 v: T II LGUHOl.-i run !i A&opfahkrVcoaralio;iwAs !" ,m;inimjiheFood bvMula- linthebtonsanajjwvo I Theretryfromotin$Diges1fon i r.r.itwrf.ifncandKCSl.WlluuB 1 neither Opiam, Morphine nor Mineral, nur JaiptmSu jttxSnM 1 Remedy for Constipation and Diarrhoe"; Rnd Fevcrfchness and j; resulting theref rCTnjnjnfancy TacSimile Signature0' The Centaur Gpmpk NEW YUluv.. '. For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of: VV.V In Use For Over Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. TMC CENTAUH COMPANY. WCW VOHN CITY With Our Boys at the Front - Mrs. Salem, teresting letter from her grandson, C. E. Stanton, who is in England with the 31st Aero Squadron, TJ. fcj. Army. He writes: "Dear Grandmother and all: I re ceived the letfpr that, war Tviit in witii "There are plenty of shoes and if , 10ther 's, and was very glad to hear irom you. .cverytmng is just aoout the same in England. We have to drill about one hour every day. You j need not send me anything for Christ mas because I will get plenty from the others. I had my life insured for $10,000 annOO to mother. 4. 000 tn f-i Elmira Holtzclaw, of route 8; has received the following in the sizes are wrong that's not your fault, nor mine," said Eisenman, when asked to explain the shoo shortage. - Senator iS-elinghuysen demanded to know why the percent of wool was re duced in uniform overcoat cloth and blankets. "Because our supply of wool is linv you know I am 'all in one piece' and on the move. I am now in southern France but am going to travel by aeroplane Thursday to northern France. Will stop at several towns and will be about two weeks on the road. Am going to send you a telegram Christ mas. This will be all this time, with lots of love, as ever LEWIS-" FARM LOAN BOARD (Continued from page one) employed freely in the making of farm n , mortgages in the past are being kept ited," said Eisenman, ''but we got $1,000 to Mildred, SO JhCJ JtilJ alj gej 'n more liquid and available form on material that was just as warm. some money. I made aii auotiucii7 aj account of the war conditions and a "I have been informed that General per montn so i can gave a little, great deal of local capital heretofore J3Sl! tWV'C ihl wcig" .fu.r! Everything is scarce over here. You loBWsd to fannors has been diverted m iui uuuevs iig mci , cannot buy sugar tor lova oi mosey to the yaTd than the British cloth." j Tea ia 50 ccnt8 per 2 ounces.' v.- Frelinghuysen asked if a sufficient supply of blankets was available on time. "Yes, if blankets and clothing sup- of tho factories have to close? Also, is there a likelihood of a failure of sup plies, such as boxes, fuel, etc., which would necessitate the Koine to lone dis tnnr.es at a heavy coat for these com modities! POSSIBILITY FOB EXPANSION. A very important factor in the future of a business is the availability of more supplies on short notice in case of a rapid expansion of the business. This, of course, depends on the availability of more land suitable to the product to be raised. A cooperative attitude of the growers, etc. It is readily seen that the larger the business grows the lower the pro rata overhead operat ing expense become?, and the factory will be in a position to pay more money for their products, thereby in creasing tho prosperity of the commun ity- COST OF BUILDING PLANT. This is in the case of extra heavy plant in vestments given considerable consider ation. Cost of labor, lumber and other building materials are determining fac tors ia the cost of a plant. Ouce in a while an old plaut can be used, but of ten they are so inconveniently arrang ed as to be too expensive in operation, and it then pays to build a new plant. 1 believe 1 have enumerated in the preceding practically all of the factors wiich affect the placing of a fruit pro duce plant in a locality and if the lo cality has the natural advantages in j its favor and possesses a strong spirit of cooperation toward the industry, it thing is awful high here. They save all their scraps and use them for dif ferent purposes. There is a big cathedral 1400 years old where I am. King Arthur's round table and his big chair are in it. There is a big statue of Alfred the Great, and upon the hill one-half mile because of more attractive interest rates in other fields. "All of this had thrown a tremen dously increased burden upon the fed eral reserve system. Not only has the reduction in the amount of available funds for farm loans increased the de mands upon the system, but it has mul tiplied the difficulties under which it operated, because the. capital which the from the cathedral is a big prison or , federal land banks lend to farmers is dungeon and a big scaffold where they : procured by the sale of farm loan bonds used to hang all the prisoners. There i and the sale of these bonds has been is a great stone wall around the town i interfered with by this abnormal situa about 20 feet thick. Lronwell s sol diers stacked the cathedral and smashed out one of the big windows, and they have put it back in pieces. It is the second biggest cathedral in the world. "Well, I guess I will close for this time. Tell Arthur and Walter to write. Give everybody my best regards. Your grandson, C. E. STANTON." In Aeroplane Service. Mr. and Mrs. I J. McAdams, of 245 D street, received yesterday the fol lowing letter from their sc-, Lew?3. who has been promoted to the position of serceant and is ou active duty in France in the aeroplane service. He j bond issues to twenty times their capi- tion." In addition to recommending Secre tary cAdoo to purchase $100,000,000 worth of farm loan bonds this year, the report urges that the maximum loan limit be increased from $10,000 to $25, 000; that denominations of the bonds be changed from $25 to $20 and from $50 to $40, "to eliminate the fractional cent in computing interest," and to amend the existing law so that a bor rower may pay any or all of his indebt edness on any interest date instead of after five years as now. The report recommends amendment of the present act to allow joint stock land banks to operate in more than two states; to increase their limit of t.il stock instead of 15 and to raise the authorized interest rate from 5 to 5 1-2 per cent. (This is not to be confused with the six per cent maximum interest rate al lowed federal land banks.) It is shown that during 1917 fanners A short note to iet cooperated in forming 1,839 associations granted charters uy me uuaru ami uu has been stationed at a large aeroplane factory in Paris which employes over 20,000 workmen, but his letter indi cates that he has now been transferred from this point and is "on the move," as he says. He writes: "In France, Dec. 10, 1917 "Dear Folks: FsraPPfl fjnh'inff rPnalhr "ve ,a"l! flir g!"1,!ing," said the m-!fctr plant. After the establishment f tons, labor, fuel, etc., most of the mon- a j i ir. "Hut 1 m letting you otx tins; a. canning plant aud a vinegar plant :t:ey for which does not begin to come time.- :t:u community crows, other piauts or, buck until after the iirst oi uctoner .noua kinds will spring up as tiny nd there must be an unfailing sup are needed. A commercial club, or a ! ply during the rush season, or the oper- , By J. W. Teglor (United Press Staff Correspondent) I With the American Army iu France,! Dec. io. By Aluil) hamiuy bmiff ai-i most got five days in the brig for sav-1 ing tho major's life. j His name really isn't Smiff, but j we're calling him that just to baf-i fie the bodies. When Siniit's battalion is iu the treuches, the major makes it ' a practice to visit every foot of the' Sector every morning before breakfast.! One morning recently he had just com-1 pleted Iub tour and was walking backj along tho communication trenches, near) the battalion post, when he heard some one appealing to something to "come you seven! " The niijnr walked toward the voice, whieh issued from the third last trench to the right of the communication trench. Tho battalion post lay about 100 rards to tho left of the communication! trench. Get the geography right because it has part of t!:o story. 'Ob h-h-ho-o bah-hee! Shootcha ten rani'"," said Sammy Smiff 's voice. Cost About Ons Cental and dont need any su0ar-55yj L5 V - rff if i i if - W1 vv fruit growers association, which islatious of the iilant will be greatly re- si metimes a farmers eommercial sdub, tarded and sometimes injured. It is of enn be of great assistance in bringing j tvu necessary for local banks to finance outside capital into a community ti the raw products and packing materials build a plant. Our association, the Sa-j entirely or get outside connections to low. Fruit I uion lias neon me cause oi;Belp carry the load tl.e location of over half of the enor mous fruit and vegetable products m I'ni.tries in Salem, Oregon. First a survey shtsuld be mad-t This survey should include a number t f thiugs, and 1 will take them up in the order of their importance. AVAILABLE -HAW PEOD'-CTS -A !iit should be made showing practically all of the fruit at present ia baring which would be available- for loag time contracts. Any plant which wotld come into a community would hardly do on the prospects of one year's run. They must have assurance of a steady supply of materials year after year for a period of year. Any factory busted in a community on a basis of one year's SALES MARKETS COMPETITION. It is apparent that for a plant to be successful it must be located so as to be able to compete favorably with other districts from the standpoint of cost or its raw products, and also the rate of freight to the sales market, quality being equal. The final cost laid down to the jobbing point is the determining factor iu making sales. Your plant must be ou a competitive basis. OTHEK PLANTS; TBS RISE OR FALL OF WHICH AFFECT THE BUSINESS. This is a factor taken in to serious consideration ty the pros pective factory owner. Will there be enough raw products to supply a com petitive plant already there when the business will either exact extortionate time for expansion comes or will one r,He Tiad Wn rrmted ha nt. nf 1 1.9S3 other associations are in the pro- need, there would have been littleness of organization. Loans amounting shortage in anything, - said Eisenman. to $105,13ti,529 have been approved. is net a hard matter to induce capital "In some camps there were eight or Ov.mg to delay in iormauou ui to come into a community for the pur- nine blankets for each man and in I associations, however, the board esti pose of building a fruit products plant, other camps there was not one blanket i raates that a 'ear heace, 14 ,ma-v recon?" Any community which is two faced per man." mend amendments 10 ue i-w. enough to think that all they have to do is to get outside capital in and they can stick them whenever the opportuu ity affords, figuring that the plant is entirely dependent upon them, is made up of people who don t deserve to grow. and who don 't grow as one move of that kind will finish their career. "Then the quartermaster's depart- tln? 0 more nlre" "'""V V i " ment was to blame in the way it The report states that one-half of routed supplies " he was asked. Neglected Colds bring Pneumoni a CASCARA R QUININE Tb ok! family remedy in tablet Urn m if i1 . sure, easy to take. No opiate oo uaptectsaat efter cfiects. Curve cold ia 24 hours Grip in 1 days. Money back if it fa-Is. Get the (enume box Wtta -v'T.Va Htll' nurture on it , , At Any Drue Stee "I should say so." he answered. A SUCCESSFUL REMEDY All things succeed which really de serve to whieh fill a real need, whk-n prove their worth. The fact that the ffainous oldV loot hnd herb remedy, Lydia E. , Piukham 's Vegetable Com pound, has for three geaeratiens been relieving women cf tlr.s country from the worst forms of female ills and has won such a strong place in oar Ameri can homes proven its merit beycuj the question ef a doubt. It will "well pay any woman who is in aed of such a medicine to trv it. if.irm loan bonds for the first six niontns lis taken under present arrangement by !a syndicate of bond houses, the other half being offered to the public direct. Without the bond houses, it admits, She land banks would be inadequately financed during the first six months but because it does look with favor ou ' a permanent arrangement with these houses, recommend that the treasury be allowed to enter the buving field. For Health, Comfort Lasting Qualities, Wear NC BONE COESETS MISS LYONS Phone 958 409 Court -Jt A'oj Ftiris iriYA AVj Features. "ELU BGNWET3" t I .-5J---K r- ' ---'. .1 . .1 1 , . . ... i jj w., . '. pca-iTri. curable ; ,.iaHiMiijirfflinmN1:, .-.. far: u-rscDau. Ctii, jc V, Jo nntu c. tinaral-y arlsptrd tor tuitty ce c- I yr a', r d tt'i crrry "piu Wm" tr? m J vA cuce cf !eer acd LESKE3 WKTIA & CO. tS BWwy. Kew Y-rk