J i ... - ; . - . v, 4 THE OREGON STATESMAN FWMY. KOTEMBEB IS. 1P1. . S f The Oregon Statesman v Issued Dally Except Monday by i TUB STATESMAN 1'UDLISHtMJ COMPANY 2 IS S. Commercial St. Salem, Oregon . MKMIJEH OF THE ASSOCIATED I'll ESS ' The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication Of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper tad also tie local news published bi-eln. R. J. Hendricks. . Manager Stephen A. Stone. ... Managing Editor ' Ralph GloTer. Cashier W. C. Squler . Advertising Manager Frank Jaskoskif Manager Job Dept. DAILY 8TATESMAN, served by carrier in Salem and suburbs, IS cent a week, SO cents a. month. DAILY STATESMAN, by mall. $6 a year; S3 for six months; SO cents a - ? ; month. For three months or more, paid In advance, at rate of $5 a year. 8UNDAY STATESMAN, SI a year; 60 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. WEEKLY STATESMAN, issued In two six-page sections. Tuesdays and Fridays. $1 a year (if not paid in advance, $1.26); 60 cents for six . months; 26 cents for three months. TELEPHONE: Business Office, 22. j 'j Circulation Department, 683. g Job Department. 683. $ Entered at the Postofflce In Salem. Oregon, as second lass matter. had a preliminary training as news paper reporters. The kaiser never thought of that. Los Angeles Times 1IKKOKS ALL. You never can tell. The professor of romance and language In the Uni versity of Iowa has Wen cited twice for bravery on the fields of France. We have been showing the world that anybody can be a hero. SALEM OUGHT TO KEEP WIDE AWAKE. Salem oueht to keep wide awake. C Every legitimate line of progress ought to be encouraged. Business and manufacturing should be pushed. - t The largest possible employment for labor ought to be provided, f here and hereabouts. . Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo announces a policy of con- Ctinued credits to Europe during the reconstruction period, in order that the hungry people of the war-torn lands may be fed, and in order that they may get their idle millions to work building up the countries laid waste by the ravages of war. - . The food and the building supplies and the raw materials and manufactured articles they will need from this country will, for a ttime. have to be bought on credit. . But it is in line with enlightened selfishness that our country 'should extend the necessary credit. - It will make for good will that will keep the commerce of this country growing indefinitely. Lloyd George has already announced a vigorous reconstruction 'policy .on the part, of Ureat Britain. There is to be no lagging anywhere. , There is to be a world boom, and the communities and cities that are alive and awake to the situation will be the ones to profit most t So Salem must keep wide awake. There will soon be more and more people to do the necessary work.- They must all be found employment. . 1 More loganberries ought to be set put. , More land oueht to be cleared. ' Dairying and live stock raising in every line ought to be speed 1 ed up. - : ' There should be more work for the canneries and fruit packing concerns, and for the dryers. We should get more factories. A linen mill, for instance. This can be done nowr with plenty of footloose experts from the demobilizing armies of Europe. ' 'There is ar great future for Salem, if she will reach out and take advantage of every opportunity. The women of Germany are appealing to the women of America, "They say they have been starving "for years, " and no doubt they 'have. But they need not worry. General Foch looked out for that, .in two paragraphs of the armistice terms. And Herbert Hoover i looked out for it. ; And President Wilson has given his word. And 1 ' the British, French, Italian, Serbian and American delegates are to . meet at Pans, and hurry the matter along. The whole world wil ' exert every effort to keep any from starving anywhere. , . . . V The Yanks, who showed Europe how to speed up a war, .will now , show her how to get a move on writh supplies for the hungry. Ger many will have another surprise of her life. TAKES TIME. Under six months of government operation the railways show increas ed running expenses of nearly five hundred million dollars, only about half of which is represented by the increased wages allowed to employes. At the same time freight and pas senger rates were advanced an aver age of about 25 per cent. The net earnings of the roads fell off more than 60 per cent If this gait is to keep up the original stockholders of the roads would be glal to have the government take their holdings off their hands. There no fun in being share-owner in a government operated railway. It is pretty hard as yet to figure out an advantage to any one save a few employes whose pay has been increased. EX1R A Special . Tallies at the Bi Closies ' Out Sale COl'KAGK IS COMMON. One of the soldiers from Camp Kearny, who has since been in the fighting in France, in the course of i letter to his mother, casually writes: "l never knew courage was so common. Everybody seems to have It." That Is what discipline and com panionsnip co to nature. Many a man who, in the solitude of his lone ly-soul, adjudges himself a coward turns out to be a hero under, stress of circumstances. But the turning point of the war was when the Amer icans in goodly numbers appeared on the front line. Toe boys had only trained long euough to find out that they were not cowards that is. each one had found that, after all, he was just as brave as his comrade. and from thence to rashness is but a step. Courage Is common with any wholesome, right-minded race, when banded in a just and honorable cause, i Table Napkins Old Quality of Splendid Irish Linen. Redactions from Old Prices. $s.00 Napkins, dozen $4-00 $4.00 Napkins, dozen $3.00 $.1.50 .Napkins, dozen $2.63 $2.73 Napkins, dozen .$2.38 $2.50 Na pkiiiK, dozen $1.85 $2.25 Napkins, dozen .$1.68 $1.00 Napkins, dozen 90c COMBS EXTRA SPECIAL 35c values now 39c each 25c values now 19c each 20c values now 15c each 15c values now 12c each WOMEN'S UMBRELLAS $2.00 Umbrellas ...$L39 $2.25 Umbrella $1.69 $2.50 Umbrella .J $1-M fcl.OO Umbrella $2- $4.00 Umbrellas $3.44 $5.00 Umbrella $4.44 COO Umbrella . A $5.25 $8.50 Umbrella $7.25 $11.00 Umbrella $8.95 Men's Umbrellas also Reduced. MEN'S UNDERWEAR $1.50 Woolen Garments. .$1.35 $1.40 Heavy Fleeved. . . . . 98c Otbcr extra value 75c-59c Rint. DRESS GOODS $4.50 quality $125 $2.50 quality $L25 $2-00 quality $1X3 $1.75 quality $L25 $1.50 quality $U2 $1.25 quality CSc 1.00 quality ?5c 75c quality 3c 5e quality 3$e Silks also Bednced. Boys' Overcoats and Salts Greatly Reduced. Men's Golf and Negligee Shirts for LESS Men's Sox Men's 75c Woolen Sox now 60c Men's 50c Cotton Sox now 35c Others. . 3 pairs for $1.00 Others 25c and 15c pair WOMEN'S GLOVES i .... $1.50 Silk Gloves, pair... $1.35 $1.25 Silk Glove, pair... 75c Silk Gloves, pair. . . 50c Silk Glove, pair. . . 98c 59c 45c Kid Gloves $125, $1.75 and $2.50 Pair yyyj " v I CORNER COURT AITD COMX STREET, SALE!! t BITS FOR BREAKFAST Over the top, or coarse. S Orer the top for the war .workv I A SOCIAL VAYI 1 By Mint EL GRANT. TilK Young Women a Christian as sociation o( Willamette nnlrer slty heldJta rcognillon services Thursday af trnoon at Adalenta- hall. The freshman girls who were to be Now, unscramble the ensemble. Let the Yanks come home, where 'they are needed. Also ' the nation lias been nude 'safe from the Democracy. '- Rioting- by Syndicalists in Copen hagen. Something rotten in Den mark. ; ' ' . - f Hereafter Hungary expects to .make Us own goulash from iU own recipe. ... -' .There are plenty of European sol- diers ' who need the Jobs to do the guarding., v , British and Indian troops on guard. They had no doubt arrired from Mes opotamia by way of the Bagdad rail road. It is pretty certain that Gen eral Allenby was preparing to go to Berlin, in case there was refusal or delay In signing the armistice. And that he could have accomplished this task easily and quickly. Paradoxically, if yon give till it Ln,., ,.,JL,i ...u. wieti',tlt0;1;.Ihis;inou fel d zi when It quits hurUng 8intle nle tune of a dreamy t t c. . u.m . melody, which was played by Miss MnCle.vm aVed 8lX blUi?nS bT FTd CampbeiL The girls took no telling how much more.. She can wUn a y w c A M,M gi afford to loan at least that much to dyB NlcloU pre,ided at the meeUng. Europe, to .help get the people over The fre,i,man girl, were given red there on their feet. . nr hit nmltinni whih w.. .' , y ' aPn tnIr dInty frocks. About 40 The appeals of the hungry Ger- were bidden to enter the Y. W. man women are pathetic. But they & x. are nnneccrsary. Our people knew ' they were starring, and they were A , ready to feed the hungry the moment Tly ,'Tei7 dti1 WM tna th flehtin .tonned wedding of Miss Fannie Chamberlain Up in Custer county. Idahb. theylSorel 5' Chamberlain and Horace are trvinr to keon out thA fin hv'w . wnicn was Solemnised tian church Thursday afternoon when Miss Emma Caroline Hersch became the bride of George Allen Hall. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Ice land orter. The bride was attended by her sister. Miss Lily Mary Hersch and the groom was attended by Adam Hersch, a brother of the bride. The young eonple will make their home on a farm near Macleay. . The wedding of Robert 8. Fisher of Dallas and M1ss Esther Luce Of Mount Ayre, la., was solemnised st the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Hay ter in Dallas Tuesday afternoon. The wedding was a complete surprise to the many friends of Mr. Fisher. The wedding was the culmination of a romance started while Mr. Fisher was on an extensive tour of the east two years ago. . Mr. and Mrs. Fisher left immedi ately after the ceremony for Port land where they . will- spend a few weeks. Flour restrictions are off, and the amount of sugar raised to four pounds' a month. Everything will ,be off soon, and' nature will be al lowed to take its course. - - 2 With the next senate close politi cally watch 'Battling Bob" La Fol ilette once more emerge from privacy tthat was heartily appreciated by the country, Into the spotlight This is "a hunch and it costs nothing. Los Angeles Times. If it Is true that Queen Wilhelmlna of Holland wished to extend hospi tality to Bill Hohenzollern, and was restrained by some of her people, it plainly shows that there are wiser heads In Holland than hers. If the deposed assassin is to live in Hol land at all, he most live as a private Individual. And no doubt Germany Will soon Insist that he be not al lowed to live there at all. $ General Pesbing yesterday placed yon the breast of Marshal Foch the distinguished service medal of the ignited States; the first of these med hals to be conferred. But Marshal i Foch does not need any medals to Tproclalm him the greatest military commander the world has produced. ftAnd he is as simple in his taste and hearing as he Is great in Intellect and 'Judgment and mercy. f When the allied fleet arrived at onstantjnople it was greeted by niiii rib mm November XI to It Unltad war fund campaign. ' November IS and lurrUiui, r.... t trlr meeting- at South Salem Friends church. November It to S3 International M'liuin anew, roruana. November 10, Wednesday .Annual tns or Willamette chapter. Red Ui Thursday ThanVrvinsr day. M-flnn Clunbr rrn Show. " "n1"" December IS. Wednedr Chrlitmas Decembr 21 to l Christmas holi days In Salem schools. ' It the suggestion of Secretary Lane that arid and cut-over lands in the United States should be turned over to the soldiers after their return from the war is to be adopted by the government there should be a firm foundation of education laid. Agri culture Is becoming a complex in dustry under modern conditions. Only the most skillful or the most fortunate can make a living from a few acres. The cost of converting the 260,000,000 acre of land in this country into equipped farms will be enormous, as we count sums of mon ey in times of peace. IT HAS COME. The jazx band has been Introduced to the highlands of Scotland. Tbey always knew there was something worse than the bagpipes, and now they know what it is. LKADS ALL THE REST. Now would be a good time to sit down and make a list of the things we have been told would win the war. Among them it might be well to include the name of Marshal Foch, THE IXKY KINGS. . The king of Siam has taken to writing articles for the newspapers. All kings would be better If they I force of arms. If this could be done everyone would be justified in get ting a gun. W It will be a reciprocal arrange ment. "America will feed hungry Europe now, and Europe will later feed the hungry American tourists. S There is a likelihood that the Ger man Socialists will prove as differ ent from the Russian Bolshevik 1 as an American laboring man is from an I. W. W. That's the impression. Let's hope so, any way. x, S . Of course those American air planes can be used for the delivery of the malL Nothing is ever lost. It would be a move in the right direction if, after the war, we should follow the program as to foods that circumstances now made it possible and necessary to compel. We all have been the habit of eating too much. Exchange. Not so long ago the physicians were warning the women against the wearing of veils, claiming that they harbored germs. Now some of them recommend the wearing op masks to keep 'em out. . It is hard to get away with the docs. Los Angeles Times. We have now bid a fond farewell to the "daylight saving" humbug un til next April. Then, unless, some thing fortuitous intervenes, we shall be urged to victimize ourselves into the belief that we are given an added hour of daylight by taking it out of the moring and putting it in the evening. Los Angeles Times. Bloving day is about to set in among the central powers. t Jk -j IIARLEY 21 IN. DEVON 2H IN. COLLARS ctocTT. rcaeoov a co.. we. waei Thursday evening in Portland at 7:45 o'clock at the home or the bride's parents, in Irvington. The Rev. E. H. Pence of the Westminster Presbyterian church officiated and Mrs. Warren . E. Thomas played the wedding march.- Soft tunes were played during the ceremony. ' The bride was given in marriage by her father. United States Senator George E. Chamberlain, and was at tended by her sister. Mrs. Charles Donald Wood, (Carrie Lee Chamber lain), as matron of honor, and' Miss Nancy Holt. Miss Paulone Wolfard. Miss Cornelia Tevis and Miss Miriam Reed, were charming bridesmaids in airy and dainty frocks. Owing to the epidemic only rela tives and a few intimate friends of the married set were bidden for the occasion. At 9 o'clock the guests departed and their places were taken by a nnmber of the members of the yonnger set. who were bidden to spend 'the remainder of the evening In merry-making and dancing. Tne wedding was to have been a brilliant church affair, but owing to the quarantine, the Diana were changed. Both of the young peo ple are very popular in the social set and have been the Inspiration of a number of social gatherings during iue past ionnignt. Miss Mildred Tsylor has returned to Salem from an extended trip to eastern Oregon, accompanied by Mrs. E. R. Webb, whom she has been visiting ror the past month. Mrs. Webb was formerly Miss Amelia Tay lor of Salem. She will remain In Salem a few weeks as the guest of her sister. Mrs. George O. Brown, after hav ing spent the past few days la Har- risourg. returned week to her home at SO North Sum mer street. She accompanied Mr. Brown as far as Hsrrishurg while he continued his trip to San Francisco. Mrs. Brown was the house guest of Mrs. Lloyd Shlsler. Clyde B. Clancy returned the rirst of the week from Tacoma where he witnessed the peace celebration on Monday. He was the guest of his psrents while In Tacoma. - Mrs. Thomas Sims of Portland, who has been entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Mott. returned to her home Thursday. A quiet wedding was solemnized TWO MEN HELD IN COUNTY JAIL Cartwright and flattery Ac cused of Stealing From SundinV Store France, writes under date of Octo ber t to John II Farrar. He writes from American Red Cross Military hospital No 1, Psrls, where be hss been confined with a German bullet hole through his shoulder. Lieuten ant Compton. before orrerisg his ser vices to Uncle 8am. was general sec retary of the Salem Y. M. C A-. as everyone la Salem knows. He was everybodys' ehnm. but an especial chum of his was Mr. Farrar. Fol lowing Is his letter to Mr. Farrar: ''Here I am with a nice hole through my shoulder which some nice Hun machine gun slipped to me. as a souvenir up on tne nampsgne front on the 4th Inst. "I have by ''quivering system" pret ty fall of gss also: but I'm rearing to get back and at m. The going was awfully hard on the last front, but we went Just the same. I have a little difficulty writ ing flat ' my back, but trust you 11 be able to read It. Saw George Wat son yesterdsy. I went down town In a taxi. ...... "Well, I must cloeee, old boy, and get to sleep. Be good, write once In a while. Think yon owe me a let ter or two. Regards to all the Sa lem People, and love to you both." Many a man thinks himself holy and tlghteouf. when as a matter of fact he is only lazy and tired. WHAT THE STJX DOES. By letting the sua shlae for a t ea time upon the blackened eertr of a box filled with water or some etker liquid and sotlnjC the rise la temper ature, affords us a method of ap proximating the amount of heat g?r en up by the sua. By such a netio! It Is estimated that the earth recelvts every second .from the sua aotrV heat to raise 100,000.0 00 tons ef lee water to the boiling point, or le cut 4 1 0.0 00.0 00 tons of lee wltlott change in temperature. If this is tli amount that the earth receives tllsi. of the amount that must be pasxtrr off Into space and other pliatti. This amount has been com pa ted ts be 2,200.000.001 times as great u that which the earth receives. EdrtU ists hare shown that tae ataotst ef heat received by us from the. sua suy vary as mueh as I per cent la less than a week. T. P. New governments, and mayhap re public, are being bom. at this very hour la Europe It Is not too mack to aay that the map of the world 1 In the remaking. And let us remem ber that revolutions never go backward. With Troy Cartwrlcht and Tom Slattery. alias Clarence Letnledge, In custody. Sheriff W. I. Needham came fron Albany yesterday, having re ceived the men from Albany officers wno arrested them upon advices from the sheriffs office here. They are accused of stealing a bolt or cloth from the tailor shop of John Sundln Wednesday, and other roods of sim ilar nature found In their possession Indicate they have been engaged In the shop lifting game elsewhere. At Albany th two men attempted to sell the cloth to a tailoring estab lishment there. This led to their immediate arrest, the Albanv officers having received Instructions from Sa lem. Cartwrlght and Slattery vis ited nearly every tailoring shop In Salem Wednesday and their action excited the suspicions of the propri etors', so when the theft at the Sun dln establishment was discovered their descriptions were easily given the officers. Sherifr Needham lo cated them at a local hotel a few min. utes before they took a train for Al bany, but was unable to apprehend them before they boarded the train. Appearing at the Sundln shop Cartwrlght and Slattery asked to have a suit or clothes pressed. While the shopkeeper went upstairs to do their work they are alleged to have taken the bolt or cloth and one of the two secreted It beneath an over coat which he carried on his arm. The two men are held at the coun ty jail in separate compartments. They tell conflicting stories snd are to be questioned further today. Cartwrlght carries discharge paper the first of thej,rom -Canadian army and is s t SO North Sum- cr,DDl- 1Ie claims Chicago as his home and Slattery says his home is in Indisna. 1 1 LOUIE COMPTON HIT BY GERMANS Former Secretary of Salem YJLCA. Gets Ballet Through Shoulder Louis II. Camnlnn ft rat lir. - at the parsonage of the First Chris- 25d Infantry, A. P. O. 710, A, E. F.. Laces and Delicate Fabrics Have No Terrors for Us . . . No need to hold out the delicate thinga vben aendiiis; Isundry to us. We carefullj sort out all such articles for special painstaking treatment. They are not dumped into a washing machine with a lot of rough stuff, but are turned over to our skilled ex- pert on laceg and light fabrics.0 They receive separate care are cleaned properly, dried properly, shaped properly, ironed properly and returned to you in proper condition. s Remember thii and send us all articles which you prize and are particular about. Kali Oar Kar Salem Laundry Co. 136 Bonth Liberty Street Phone 25