i t Tllr. OAKCOX STATESMAN I Tlll'ltftDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 101. The Oregon Statesman x- Issued Dally Except Monday by THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY SIS 8. Commercial St, Salem, Orefoa I " MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press U exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news d If patches credited tp it or not otherwise credited In tbia paper and also the local news published herein. ft. J. Hendrlcka Manager Stephen A. Stone... ." Managing Editor Ralph Glover . -Cashier V. C. Squler. ........ . . .Advertising Manager Frank Jaskoskl. . . '.. .manager jod uepi. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier In Salem and suburbs,1 15 cent a week 50 cents' a month DAILY 8TATESMAN. by mall, $6 a year; $3 for six months; 50 cents a month. For three months or more, paid In advance, at rate of $5 a year. SUNDAY STATESMAN. $1 a year: 50 cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. a government of civil and religious liberty such as the world never before has seen. In all good conscience, therefore, let us today give thanks to God for his goodness to us. Let our grief for those who have laid down their lives be tempered by the thought that they died trial the worm might be free. Let us think of our absent ones as our free gift of service in a holy cause. And having given thanks and re-dedicated ourselves to worthy service, let us come to the feast with merry hearts, for "a merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance, and we shall need both to play a worthy part during the yearvto come. PENITENTIARY TROUBLES. . The local evening paper offers the assertion that, until the Mate penitentiary is again placed under the management of the board of control "the prison always will be in trouble po long as there is a chief executive who uses it to provide jobs for his political friends." History of the penitentiary speaks differently. In the first in stance, Charley Murphy, as warden of the prison, was a heritage nrrrv v mTrWiN L.i in two ix-nar sections. Tuesdays and passed on by the Uard of control to the governor. That board Fridays SI a year (if not paid in advance, $1.25); 50 cents tor six named Murphy as warden before the legislature changed the law . . . T a .1 j 1 months; 25 cents for three months. TELEPHONES: Business Office, 23. Circulation Department. .583. Job Department, 583. Entered at tha Postofftce In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter: THANKSGIVING FOR ALL THE WORLD'S PEOPLE. giving control of the policies of the penitentiary into the hands of the chief executive. The "convict strike" at the prison occurred when the board of control had charee of that institution and named the warden. John 31 into was discharged under the board of control following the most turbulent and violent scenes ever witnessed inside of the prison. Harry Minto was hot and killed after a convict had escaped from under the management of the lxard of control. The few years that the board had charge of the prison were some of the blackest times m the history of that institution. This may be of no particular discredit to the board of control, or to the members who made it htv It merelv crx tn lilmw that trnuhle The spirit of the Pilgrims has gone to the uttermost parts of the at the penitentiary has not leen a monopoly of Governor Withy- earth. I combe, of the board of control, or of any particular administration. The freedom for which they came to the bleak ew hngland coast The penitentiary is the sore snot of every administration and to as become the ideal everywhere. I attempt to place the responsibility for trouble uon the present Since the star humr over the manger at Bethlehem, was there executive indicates. a distorted vision. ever a time in the history of the world when there was so much It is a safe bet that under new management much of the trouble reason for all mankind to join in a pean or tnamuuinessi i which was passed onto the governor from the board of control will For more than four long years the civilized world nas ueen unuer be remedied. Charley Murphv is a good fellow. No one disputes . . i- a a v m - t . a- m - . the black cloud or war. At last tne neaang rays or me sun oi peace mat. lie Mis a targe heart m him. But anyone who has watched are breakincr through, and. please God, soon will have dissipated it the situation is inclined to feel that a noor selection w made bv entirely. Those who have lived in its deepest shadow will not forget the board of control when it named him to handle the toughest job the aeony of those years, nor soon throw off the burden of Buffering on the state payroll. And when anvone is inclined to hlame Gov- - L ! - t a! . 1 - ! n n A .4 ft A, n I. M A 1.1 J 1WA.1 I . WI.U.... I A 1 1 il ... . . ana woe wnicn xney nave inijwavu. cn wicu cuwr iinjcumue ior irouoie at Hie prison he should bear in mind ones' upon the altar will never cease to mourn their loss. But even! that the most troublous davs the prison ever saw were when the j those who have suffered most vrul join in thanKiuiness to uod tnaii board of control had complete and exclusive control of that insti- : the new day is dawning, a day bright with hope or a peace mat i tution. shall be lasting, and that coming generations may be spared the Wishing you a thankful day. .100.000; this fifure cannot be ac cepted without Question because of rthe demoralization of the Russian griefs and burdens which they have had to bear. For this was not a war of mere commercial supremacy between struggling nations. It was not a warfor conquest by the victors. Thanksgiving; is the home day; m . . -m m a . a. a w v a 1 a r . W A. . A . - a I Jt was not a struggle Drougm aDOUl Dy racial anupainies. u was i ana tne noaie is the bulwark of the t army and uncertainty as to the ac a a a. a 1 I l not & war precipitated m a moment or. passion oy a snorc-tempereu i nation. jxuracy of its bookkeeping, but ihe i ruler. pJo; it was a war;in which two great ideals or civilization met i brasuaiities undoubtedly wci appall in a death grapple two ideals between which there is and must The Salem district ought in 1919 inr. The Russian fought heroically 'lie always an irreconcilable conflict. One must survive and the to be thankful for at least a doubled till tU dtcid-d that they were be Uher must perish- '. . berry acreage. )ng sacrificed as rannon fodder, and un the one side the Jorees were iea ny one who nau saia, wuen 1 then neither coaxing nor threats speaking to his Own people:- ': y -: I The man or woman who has noth- h,uld keep theni in t'te ar. ) ."There is onlyv one master in this country; I am he, and I will not tolerate another. There is only one law my law the law 'which I lay down. The soldier must not have a will of his own. They must-all have only one will and that will mine. .'As I look upon myself as an instrument of the Lord, I am indif ferent to the point of view of the present day. I pursue ray vnu nor The Salem district ought In 1919 ing this year for which to be thank ful is about hopeless. A league of nations will be needed to keep the little Balkan states from continual war. That has grown to be their normal condition. There would be general -Interest, I By teaching his people from their youth up a gross materialistic philosophy which exalted the doctrine of might ; by leading them to place their trust in a god of thfir own making; by holding out to I when a convenient time comes, in them th hope of conquest, pillage and finally world dominion, this exhibition flights and maneuvers of man was able to weld them int the mightiest military machine the large squadrons of airplanes, and no world had ever seen. And when the time seemed ripe for the sue- form of military display could so cess of his plan, he struck through the heart of a nation he had! readily be exhibited to great num- agreed to protect, in an effort to crush quickly the nearest of those jters or people over a wide area other nations whom he had determined to conquer. On the other side were those great nations which had been buildedl Mr. Asqulth is in favor of a rapid upon belief In the right of man to govern himself and in the right unsciambling. True to British lib of nations to be free from the domination of other nations. eral traditions, he lose no time in ' So the issue was gnuarelv joined. calling for the earliest possible re- It was the old struggle between right and might: between autoc-tratlon of freedom. Great Britain racy and self-government; between injustice, cruelty,-inhumanity, has had a longer experience than the beastliness and justice, decency and all that follows a civilization United States of the necessary re- built on Christian ideals. With such an issue there could be no trictiona on personal liberty which drawn battle. , a great war Imposes, and Is possibly '. Men tire of war, but they fight unto death for deathless principles, the more Impatient for a return to ' And as we near the end and turn with liehter hearts to healing normal conditions. But any long and the wounds of a suffering world, it is indeed well that we should nnecesary delays in our country Ktrr fnr t mn ami in nil tmhorneua nl tiiwpntv oiv llmnlci tn tliel w ueeiop impatience mat Will just God that we have been used to establish more securely the ever- axting principles laid down by Him for men to live by. This is not merely, a victory of some nations over others. It is a triumph of righteousness; and if we accept it as such, we put ourselves in the way of .being wonderfully used for world service in the future. amount to insistence. Although the British casualty fig ures are not yet complete, it may be supposed that the ratio of wound- Of all peoplesnone have greater cause for thankfulness than the ed to kiU not VT different from people or the United states, not because as a nation we have bornei'"" j .nu,. infh mll nf li uArlil.nriA mirroring lnrtn th r fnur I v.eriiinjr repons l.USU.UUU Killed years, but because through the fierv ordeals of war our national eon- Bd ln round numbers 4.000.000 Hoienom fma lon rmiolrpnp.1 nnon mnrfi Wl.ntvPr thrt future tnn v I WOUnded. The British killed Came have in store for iu. we Khali not oon strain view with sanctimonious 1 10 a toU1 of and the same indifference the abhorrent anectacl of a treat nation rtithlesslv I ratI wou,d Indicate alwut 1.60,000 crushing a weaker nation beneath its iron heel. We are no longer hounded, or a toUl of 2.328.65. as too-proud to fight," when it is right to fight. We have renounced asaml 'or Germany. The once and for all the shibboleth of "peace at any price," for we have :CB'" "surr n"e D."1 RPn 1Ten ; learned that peace may be bought too dearly. ' It is true that we entered the war with the steps of a slu-rgard, jand narrowly escaped becoming a contempt among the nations. Hut : once' inr'otir laggard steps became the strides of a giant. We have ; borne ourselves manfully, as becomes a people of our pretensions. We have shown by our deeds a willingness to repay to France the debt we have owed for almost a century and a half; and the mighty Many inventions were no doubt held up by the war. because condi tions were not favorable for putting them on the market, while others wcie put Into use' but kept secret for military reasons. Of the latter sev eral are already being divulged. In eluding the development of wireless telephony for flying machines and what is said to be a notable Improve ment in the wireless telegraph. By eliminating troubles due to the static electricity which varies with weath er conditions, it Is said to be possible to dispense with high masts, to re duce the power used by half, and to multiply dispatching stations indefi nlft-Iy. One result should be. as soon as disturbances due to the war sub side, to give the world better com munlrations than it has ever had Remote places which have never been reached by the telegraph might be got at by wireless. In this respect also the relets- r.f a great numbei of aviators and airplanes from mill tary sen ice will be useful; there Is hardly any part of the world with which civilization cannot now keep In touch if there is adequate niotlvr for it. Mr. Edison said a few years ago that the time would come when a man ln the center of the Sahara desert might take an Instrument out of his pocket and talk through It to any comer of the earth. Edison is a dreamer, but hia drtams have habit of coming true. force which we hurled into the war certainly hastened the end of nd m""1 ,,uM,lned "btlng. the mad carnival of murder and destruction. no nl.kely. Indi that the 1 For all this may we be truly thankful And what more fitting than that the :.' United States should lead the nations today in formal recognition of the Divine Being who doeth all things well and to whom thanks are justly due? From the time the Pilgrims landed until the present .day, the Americans as a people have been accustomed to recognize in a public way the existence of. this Supreme Tower. They have turned to God in public prayer in time of trouble, and in the same open way they have praised His name with' grateful hearts and songs of thanksgiving for the many blessings reeejved. ' It was away back in 1777 that the first Continental Congress by jlaw proclaimed a national Thanksgiving; and it is interesting to note that the proclamation expressed gratitude that God had been pleased "to smile on us in the prosecution of a just and necessary war. ' Two years afterwards. Congress voted to set aside the last Thursday in November each year for a day of national thanksgiving; and since that time the President of the United States and the Gov ernors of the various States each year have issued, formal procla mations calling upon the people to observe Thanksgiving Day in fitting fashion. We arc not a perfect copIe by any means. "U0JI1 individually and collectively we are guilty, of many sins both iainst God and man; but this nation-old habit of recognizing the Jod to whom we can-turn -when in dW-ress and in whom we acknowl Ihe source of our many. blessings,. has made us a far better cople.tliHii wc would have been otherwise.' Whatever one's religious views may be, an open-minded si udent of our national history must limit that th is belief in God. ban been the roek-upon which rests H of our national greatness that, is worth while; that from tqis bnt In Hew of the fact that the French had to hold mott of the front till the jicw British armies were ready, their losses are presumably considerably greater, despite the fact that this year the British of all the belligerents have done the leaviest It is aggre gate losses of the allies on the wt:t ern front will prove greater than the total German casualties. The Rus sian casualties hav Ven put at 12.- ft aTiea. Xov. 21, Thursday -Thankss-vitiaT dtr. Dwnnbfr I. 8uny Blks Memorial pmcrftm at Grand Opera feoua. Decemhar. data mot t ruth aoaaal Urinn. CiunHr Crn Show. Daratnber 31. Tuadar--Mmrlal In honor of Juatlt-e V, A. !oor at au rm cHirt buWd)n. , , Dwmbfr t-15 raclflc International L4vatk anow. Portland.'.. IeemhT 15, Wdeday Christmas f 1... . i. ...tcr.t... .,..... i. - t...:i.i . W'"1". z " nristmaa na ""'J (fi""u n't w, viyiuoiiu lut oil kit iu vuitu buu Uiaiuio'U jijri g Salem scboola. 11ARLEY 2H IN. DEVON 1H IN. ARROW COLLARS CLurrr. reanooy co.. me. miMwmm A "In tiriliemght" f). r Tba roo mad chrr aj ftZ , r .. th glowing warmth of Perfection Oil Heat- 7 V 1 cr Lixhts at the. touch of a match. No g --r--J 1 troublesome fixe to bother with. No dust. J V r-r no dirt, no ashes. y Trr- IX Givti steady, ccfortabia warmth 1 J tCV fjft boriTsooonafilliiifwithPtaxipw- t? f' O if" f obuinabie fucL No smoke or odor. Portable, (7 a f t . " Arh Economical. ulxS 1 I k STANDARD Ji- xSffti j- a'' A o-.'A 1L Vll r&rtfJJ IPS 3S GT IS R. H. Campbell, Special Agent. Standard OH Co., Salem, Or. PKALKRH XAMKH K. 1. stiff M Son. KaJera. r. Spencer Hardware t'o galem, tr. W. V. Jloorr, Satom. Or. V. H. Hamlltos), Salem, Or. . Itay I Farmer Hdwe. Co Salesn. Or. Salem Hardware i'o Salem. Or. Mat O. Harm. Salem, Or. Chambers A Cliamber. Salem. Or. constitutional "inabilltr to dlscharse the power and duties' of the presi dency. What Judge 8tory pointed out long a no remain the fact today. namely: "No provision has as yt been made for the case of the inabil ity of the president to pet form the duties of his office, nor has any mode of proof Wen p rear rl bed to as certain the fact of Inability or what shall be deemed an Inability." It Is highly probable, therefore, that the president's absence will be regarded legally and officially as not essen tially different from the absence of President Roosevelt and President Tart on their trips to Panama. In some Oregon circles It Is becom es the fad to wear old clothes. In thers it Is a necessity. BITS FOR BREAKFAST t!-. "Come and get It." - S "Now rood digestion wails on ap petm. and health on both." S Hoover Is la Europe, anyway. So do your worst. S S There is to be a Pacific spuadron again. . .. . ... And. what do you think They are raying It will include half tba United StMes nar. S "a The language of the peace confer ence will probably be In Kngllth. The first time In history. The lan guage of diplomacy has heretofore es baea la Freach. I The universal language will be English. It la the universal commer cial language now. Every feretga bill of lading sent to the greatest commercial ports of the world Is la English: or has accompanying It as English translation. Ail raund th earth, leading hotels have to employ clerks speaking English. Every high school student In Japaa at a dies English. The same was true of Ger many before the war. It will aooo b true of all eotsrtrlea oatalda of the English speaking nationa. Tfca English language Is the richest la tba world, for It Is mad op of all others ancient and modern, and It la grow ing at tne rate of 4000 to S000 Stw words a rear. I kaaJWMalta 1 This year we truly celebrate Si lt THE HOLIDAY HA HIT. Congress has been asked to have Thanksgiving officially moved for ward so that it would hereafter fair on November 11. or Peace Day. will do no harm to have two holiday in November.' as In most states It. I a rather gloomy and disagreeable month. If a man can yet in thanks giving mood in November let him have the chance. Desldes. Thanks giving Is pecularly an American hol iday, born of conditions native to the soil and a part of the country's history. Peace Day will be In Inter national affair a world holiday nd a such hold a different mean ing that would be confusing to an American harvest festival. Thre are a good many holidays in the world, but fewer tn America than in most lands, and we can easily afford to take on another without doubling It up with Thanksgiving, THE PUKSIDEXTH "IXAIHI.ITY." Following n the vl-w or the .-on-Kcrv4tive New York Kvfnine Pout on the q ueH ton of the "InaMIHy" r'aie that is aroiislmt much discussion: There U no suegpstion that the vice preirint temporarily dis'hara some of the duties of th presidency. For that there would he neither con. stltutional warrant nor precedent, ff ever a president suffered from "Inability it waa Garfield after b--inrshot in mi. when he lay help less and dying for wek. Yet it re wag then no thought of railing upon Vice President Arthur to act aa chief executive. Congress ha never defined the. BECAUSE A nation's word mast no longer be a scrap of paper. BECAUSE Might could not overcome right BECAUSE "Government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." KUPPENHE1MER CLOTHES STYLEPLUS CLOTHES ' FRAT CLOTHES SCHEI'S O. J. Echei & Co., Salem 5