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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1920)
niradatiori ,r 1920. 5250. , !T..f 4258 ! 110, I4,ul ,0 4- 177; Polk 00 , Bureau of Circa. Me.ubcr of -WiM pie8B JSued Wire- rolrTYearNo. 248 forty Soviet uted i j ijrRo MS masnea Crush Enemy in r i vance; "rangci ces Victorious on bern Front 15, The smash. Oct. sixth bolshevik division B,P'r . ..,mtinn r r the pom ln tonight's The poles t boundiry set uy tfraWel Victorious IHMtopol, Oct. i . iss)an El General Wrangels forces Kin here with the capture T0 lSheviki and many ield I. .hire l'IIIIS Tin ninth and P""4 , :it divisions were ifi-seco,,u , merits. On ty-second sov rbrieper front four tntpn iu tw.--- , uners. many ' 1ho. I trains were CM"""5"' " littacks beinir repuiseu. Iincstleators Move. I... ,..,. 15. ih--' league 01 control, felons (WW"" ftft MS in v ...... , " isional government bed after Its recent sewuic Wl .1 r .tin.,..! jlr i arrived Warsaw today. Can't I Run Country Is Opinion of Cox t Syria, Ohio, Oct. 15. Among mtions asked Governor Cox at nmont. Oho, where a large rowd with a brass band cheered was his views on the Japa immlgration question. Ro i that it was an "internal" fcfstkmand that one of the Hitch Kk reservations would take do- estic questions from the league nations jurisdiction. Governor fci added: "I might say furthermore that i is a white man's country and ft yellow man can't run it. If the flow men want to come here r must subscribe to the condi- loos that tve Impose." Iflevernor Cox today hailed as Mother somersault" the league I nations speech of Senator Hard- his republican opponent yes lay at Indianapolis. "The senatorial candidate has e twelpe definite, distinct i on the league since last Au- In three months," he said. "How many,'' Governor Cox con Inued, "could he be ex-netted tn between November 2 and larch ( 'The senator's Indlnnnnnlta means that Harding and I) advisers have been caught In i man's land and they see they HMt get back by November 2 p ought to be a lesson to potit- ' parties for years to come. It i to be square with the neoDle. his thing of trying to wimrle in line presidency will not do." ulksley Girls uo Servant Work iveuesey, Mass.. riot t Wel- . first- lervant Vl girls are receivin r introduction to the oient. The academic aim ft of movies , .....I".,". J ' 31. U LH.I1S -tS. tliav bp rpsnnnalhlo etnaida met the ten wor ' would door at wait on v maids wfresses. Bu' the students h ,. Pation. In w. n.. ft fids. man f .... even open the have vulMn;.-...,...i 1 table and niai., .u As ft inducement to housemaids 'ley is offering 5p?0ial classes """.v, or any subject thev 'ator Problem Solved by City L1" Hug . . ' Chariot l 7-Z ttheCnn,..-... . ,,. - "" - u enureh that i. ea uerk- "" town ' l0wn had h, or several en able to lu -"xiieron' few monrhs. ( kest !ry that cou'.d be paid 0!hi. ... . uugn to a'.tn,., ".en. :no. ' men carne along . in love with N- vew 5 ana hu, eu .... . Wr-co . otl I" EX,., .. a . arS T ino,.r.,es aistei Wn t Pre"'h " here " Br,-,. Peer.. na',ve of Otis. ' resident. r,,ii . a k :- oe" di for tor t"!rT,f r'us 'o the weekly . ae Like . . ' wren 0f RophM -V "ue ...uusina: s -be;'? o of n..a th'. l' bos- "win.-1 mere woman la no . l"e -He , .. teran said It K... m. v res tir . laat, h-:. f ... "u- we -5TTB .he;; J" the MacSwiney Still Alive On 65th Day Loudon, Oct. 16. Terence Mac Swiney, the hunger striking lord mayor of Cork, was reported .by the Brixton prison doctor as navlng passed a fairly good night, says a bulletin today by the Irish Self De termination league. Thh was the sixty-fifth day of the lord mayor's strike. "He was much brighter this morning," the bulletin adds, "but remains in a condition of infinite weakness." A person closely connected with Lord Mayor MacSwiney stated that the MacSwiney family had received word through a churchman who recently had a forty minute audi ence with Pope Benedict, twenty minutes of which were devoted to a discussion of theh unger strikers, that the pontiff does not, regard the Irish hunger strikers as com mitting suicide, taking the attitude that them otive alone determines whether such self destruction is justifiable. Pendleton Not Behind Faction Seeking Pardon Governor Olcott's position in re fusing to extend executive clemen cy to Neil Hart, Jack Rathie and dim Owens, convicted slayers of Sheriff Til Taylor, is endorsed by fully 99 percent of the population of Pendleton according to the Rev. Alfred Lockwood, pastor of the church of the Redeemer, who has written the governor taking issue with the Rev. W. H. Corx of Pendleton who recently appealed to the executive in behalf of the three men. "Th one reason why this com munity refrained from taking the law Into its own hands when those men were., captured was the fee ing that the courts would adjudi cate their case in unflinching and unbending justice and that meant the extreme penalty for cold blood ed and brutal murder. Were any clemency shown these men and anything of like nature ever to happen to this community again mob violence would prevail and nothing could prevent it. Every opportunity has been given these men to present the:.' side of the case the presiding judge has ben absolutely fair and Impartial, the prosecution was conducted with dignity and courtesy, every possi ble contingency that these men were not getting a 'square deal' has been avoided. These men hav ing been convicted by a jury of their peers if; - eeiy p'reaution against unfairness and partiality has been taken this community demands not as a matfOl of re venge but as a matter of even handed justice thtt tl.c-e ti.cn be executed in accordance .'ith tlW law. "It was hard, as I know, for the trial judge to sentence them to death, it is undoubtedly hard for you not to exercise executive clem ency but if the supremacy of the law is to be maintained and jus tice is to prevail there is no other course to pursue but to put these men to death. Outside of a group whose rVilhtbera couid be counted on the fingers of the two handr; this is th.- feeling of the people not only of. Pendleton but of this great commonwealth of Oregon. ' Oregon Team To Be Formidable, Coach Declares Eugene, Oct. 16. That the Uni versity of Oregon football team will be a formidable figure among grid organizations of the coast this fall, was the statement of Coach "Shy" Huntington, shortly after he had offered his hand and a broad smile to Bill Steers, last 1 1 year's quarterback, who returno to Eugene early this morning. Steers was met by a large delega-! tion of football fans at the depot who tendered a banquet in h'"! honor shortly after he stepped off the train. "I admit I was slightly discour aged at the showing made by myi baekfield in he game again:-:ll Multnomah." Huntington said. "The line perfofmed creditably, but there was punch lacking in the baekfield. Steers presence will help materially.'' Steers left his position as coach uf The Dalles high school football team to return to the university. Friday his proteges at The Dalles were victorious over Hood River gridders, winning by a 14 to 7 score. Six Accidents Reported From State Industries Six Oregon men three of them ere killed --".wed tv.-..', . , "i. iri.t.ni.u -u.,iea u.o!,. . - ' " bpT? Harifo-,l Soha.d "r?f I In lntrial accidents during the week ending October 14, accordng stimmnrv of the state accident commission. The list of fitalities for the week '"eludes: George F. Beckey, labor er, Portland; Erice Johnson, team ster, Portland: WP.liam J. Malone. logger, Kerry; D. G. Clements, teamster. Bend: Pete Mike, choker setter, Portland: Harry- Morgiston. iogger. Kjiappa. Of the 519 acci- " irpjricu. 1,3 are suojef. iu he provUions of the workmen's , Irishman Is Shot Dead In Own Doorway Dublin Man Called to Door and Killed as "Traitor to Ireland," Report Dublin, Oct. 16. A number of armed men knocked at the home of Peter O'Carroll early today and when he opened the door the sound of shots was heard by his wife. She found O'Carroll's body, with bul lets in the head and a paper on which were the words: "A traitor to Ireland, shot by the I. R. A." The O'Carroll home had pre viously been raided frequently by the military, searching fortwo sons of the family; In another shooting affray sev eral persons were wounded. A number of other persons were tak en to hosptials as the result of clashes incident to military activ ity during the night. Raids were continuing in Dublin today. Belfast Riot Scene. Belfast, Ireland, Oct. 16. Riot ing was renewed today in the no torious Marrowboned istrlct. The Sinn Feiners used revolvers while the Unionists replied with stones. The number of casualties has not been announced, but it was learned that eight persons wounded by bul lets had been odmitted to hospitals, Including a four year old boy dan gerously wounded. Three policemen were injured with stones. McDonald Bares Dope Game; Is Taking "Course" Clyde McDonald, 27, confirmed drug addict, now serving a ninety day sentence in the Marion county jail, has a personal message for the man or woman who is tampering with narcotics in any form in the "beginner" stage. "Its old stuff to say it, but if a fellow don't start the dope habit, he won't have to break away from it," says McDonald. "Say, man! Don't make me laugh by saying that its not possible to get dope any more. Why right here in peaceful old Saiem the peddlers are on the job, all ttie time. I'm in here right now, just because I ran into an intimate who knew that I had meddled with the 'coke' and the little shot he gave me started me on the break-a-away from my last attempt to quit the habit." "Not Insane," Findug Brisk and apparently 100 per cent normal, McDonald was taken from the jail, Thursday and passed an examination as to his sanity. In his report on McDonald, issued Friday, Dr. Byrd, county physician, stated that despite McDonald's ex cessive use of narcotics, his men tality is unimpaired. McDonald, who recently burgalarized local medical offices for morphine and cocaiue, admits that he has used these drugs and also tobacco and alcohol to excess. "1 started on the bcoze route," he states. "I'm through for life," is the prisoner's assertion. "I don't mind the jail sentence, as it will help me in this effort to keep away from the dope. There is only one cure for this habit, and that is will power. I expect that Sheriff Need ham's "ninety-day course in self control" will go a long way to ward giving mc strength to win out in this matter. "As for dope cures, graduated shots'' and the rest of that talk, there is nothing to it. To attempt to cure a man by giving him diminished doses of he poison is only to arouse the same old desire each time his body has a chance to aosoro eeu of the dope.' the smallest particle PcZIIrTils .Sfi iTiWWIMW W Skimmed Milk Charges Declare Portland. Or.. Oct. )-Mne restaurants, ranging from quick lunches to uptown cafeterias were served with John Doe warrants for the arrest of their proprietors: to day on charges of vtoJMIni the pure food laws. It is alleged that malk not iontainiug the minimum of 3.2 standard butterfat was sold to natrons. Some of thhl-k:mi.icd product ran as low as 1.5. Stock Premium Warrant Issued A warrant for $2n000 was trans mitted to the Pacific International Livestock Exposition company. Portland, Friday by Secretary of State Kozer, in compliance with . n-nvis ons of an act or me legislature appropriating this sum for both 1919 and 1920 for the payment of premiums on me- stock at the annual show. Washington, Oct. 16. Conver sations between the state depart ment and the Japanese enibassy re garding the proposed anti-Japanese land legislation in California, have been tefporarily discontinued and will not be resumed until after the November elections in which . nte on the California people will ote on the land legislation Salem, Oregon, Saturday, October 16, 1920 Republicans Turn to Cox For Relief Chicago, Oct. 16. Democratic national committee headquarters here made public a statement by Marshall Stimson, of Los Angeles, announcing he would vote for Gov ernor Cox. Mr. Stimson, the statement adds, was campaign manager for Senator Hiram Johnson in southern Cali fornia In 1910; a.. delegate to the republican national convention m 1912 and a member of the Califor nia republican state committee this year. "I am brought to the ooint where decent self respect will no longer allow me to continue my support of Senator Harding," the statement says after reviewing the senator s stand on the league of nations issue, "and the most ef fective protest I can make is to vote for th democratic candidate, Governor Cox, who has wisdom to take the side'of ther ight and cour aget o be positive in expressing his views." WOMAN ORGANIZER FOR KENTS QUIT PARTY San Francisco, Oct. 16. Mrs. Timothy Nealy, who was organizer for women in William Kent's cam paign for the republican nomina tion of United States senator, has bolted the republican party and wil vote for Governor Cox because of his stand on the league of na tions issue. Mrs. Nealy is promt, nent in political affairs in San ranciseo and was ardent in her suport of Congressman Kent. Sen iftor Harding's statement regard ing the covenant of the league of nation that "It is not Interpretation but rejection that I am seeking," thus placing himself squarely op- posed to the league was the com pelling cause that moved Mrs. Nealy to declare herself for Cox. POLITICAL SCIENTIST FAVORS GOVERNOR COX Los Angeles, Oct. 16. -Roy Mal- OOlm, professor of political science! in the University of Southern Call-1 fornia and executive secretary of the Los Angeles lounty unit of the' uvagut) to -iiiiuorie ieace, nas an-i; nounced his intention to suirMOft. Governor Cox because of his stand for the league of nations. "I am voting the democratic ticket," said -Malcolm, "because 1 believe it has a clearer vision of the twentieth century place of the United States in the family of nations. It is fool, ish to talk about isolation when' there is no isolation and has not been for a generation, especially since 18 98. I take this stand upon my individual responsibility and not as representing the institution with which I am connected." CITY MANAGER OF DAYTON BACKS COX New York, Oct. 16. Colonel H. H. VVaite, formerly city manager of Dayton, Ohio, and a lifelong re publican, has come out in support of Governor Cox in spite of having been his political oponent on many state issues. Colonel Waite, who is a grandson of Chief Justice Waite of the United States supreme court, today ofered his services to Professor Irving Fisher of the com mittee of Pro-League Independents which has established headquarters at 17 East 41st street, New York He will lake an active part ln the campaign activities of the organ ization from now until election. Knows Cox Well. "As a republican, I had hoped to be able to vote for Mr. Harding, but the league of nations' issue is to my mind of such tremendous importance, and Mr. Cox and the democratic platform are so much more progressive and independent than Mr. Harding and the republi can platform, thai after most care ful consideration I have decided that it is my duty to vote ancxt my pariy," said Mr. Wuite at headquarter today. "I may add that, as city manager of Dayton, Ohio. I have known Mr. Cox for many jears, I have been on oppo site sines of many fights with him. He is a man of much more ability than is ordinarily recognized ami what is of special importance in the present problems of this coun try, he grows. He Is a far greater man today than he was tour years ago, and I know he will be still big. ger four years hence than he is to day." Students Kidnap Prohi Speaker London, Oct. 16. H. S. Warner, secretary of the American Students Temperance movement, while ad dressing a prohibition meeting in Sheffield was kidnaped by Shef field university students and driven in an automoible to the moors where he was left, according 10 dispatch to the Evening News. Viscount to Wed Woman Barber London, Oct. 16. Announce--ment is made that Charles Saun ders Dur.das, sixth Viscount Mel-j vile, soon will marry Miss Margar- i et Todd, an assistant in a barber shop In Edinburgh, says the Times. This will be the third marriage of the viscount, who is 77 years ci i age. Diaz In Havana. Havana. Oct. 16. General Felix Diaz. Mexican rebel leader, recent ly exiled from Mexico, arrived here yesterday, accompanied by LoU tenant Colonel Certex, sent here with Diaz by the Mexican govern ment. The joint institute of Gilliam and Wheeler counties' teachers has elected Professors Tucker or rs- j i! and Shirk of Condon delegates to the state teachers' convention. I Million Coal Miners Leave Jobs Tonight Great Britain Makes Ready to Cope With Strike Hitting Very Vitals of Nation ' London, Oct. 16. Preparations for the great Industrial struggle precipitated by the decision of 1,000,000 British coal miners to cease work tonight went grimly forward today. The machinery established by the government to cope with the crisis was working smoothly at full speed. The miners were squally active. Some already had ceased work at the end of their shifts. Meanwhile the public was wait ing anxiously, even fearfully, for the real beginning of the battle which hits at the vitals of the country. Railways May Halt. The executive committee -of trie. National Union of Ra::wayinn called a special conference of dele-, gates for Wednesday next to decide whether the railway men shall support the miners through a sym pathetic strike. The National Federation ot- i'ranaport Workers declined to in dicate its position. The executive committee of the federation will meet Monday. The executive committee of the Asosciated Society of Locomotive; Engineers and Firemen is meeting today at Leeds to decide the atti- 'tude of that union. MUltary leave has been stopped in the Portsmouth district, owing to thes trike. Considerable forces are maintained there ond officers and men on leave have been re ' called. Iron Works Closed. Seme o the iron arid steel works m the north of yorKsnire already have succumbed to the coal strike thrat, with its implication of a prospective coal shortage, wlthj ,, ... nZi,a ,,.Q ,w ri'"r""-Ti r'lr cioseu touay, aura auoui av.vvu iiiu have been thrown out of employ- ment. It is stated that all the works in this district will be Idle after to day. The local shipyards will be kept going, however, for a few days. From Sheffield comes the report that'while some of the big factories, have supplies of coal sufficient for three weeks, the staple trades will be immediately affected. At the end of a week it is estimated there will be 80.000 steel, iron, engineer ing, cutlery and eletcroplate work ers Idle. On the marine side, ocean .mers have been instructed to obtain bunker coal abroad as much as possible. Reports from Liverpool state most disquietude is felt there. The premier's message read as follows: Refuses Arbitration. "The nation is confronted with a coal strike. The government has made every effort consistent with its duty as trustee for the peoj.fe to avert this calamity. The proposa of the government have been sun- ported by many of the most sponsible leaders of the miners fed eration. They have beeli regarded by all sections of the people as fair and reasonable. "The government offered to sub mit the miners claims for an In crease in wages to an impartial tri bunal and to abide by the result. This offer the miners refused. The government offered to give the in. crease if the miners would restore the present low production of coal to the figures of the early part of the present year. "This, too, the miners refused against the advice of their most ex perienced leaders. They are at tempting now to gain their ends by force. The nation must and will resist such an attack with all its Btl&ngth and there tan be no doubt as to the issue. Co-operation A-ked. "The citizens must help each other to lessen the inconvenience and suffering which the miners strike will cause. The supplies of coal for the public are sufficient. The government will insure the fair distribution of the available supplies of coal. Every household er can help by saving coal. Every manufacturer can help his work men by making his supplies: of coal last as long" as possible. There should be no cessation of employ ment until that misfortune cannot longer be avoided and. above all, the people should remain calm and deal with emergencies as they arise. "No one need underrate the damage which this strike will cto but no one will be dismayed. We have ben through much more dif i ficuit times. With steady purpose and determination to do justice,! the nation will overcome all its dlf. ficulties." Salem Woman Is Found Gulity Of Larceny by Jury Mrs. Alva Brundrldge of this city charged with the larceny of house hold goods belonging to Mrs. L. A. Barrick, 1357 Hines street, was found guilty by a jury following her trial before Judge G. E. Un. ruh in the justice court Thursday afternoon. Sentence will be Im posed by Judge Unruh at 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Mrs. Barrick stated that she first discovered her property when she saw some atricles th ough a win dow ln the home of Mrs. Brun dridge. who is a nearby neighbor. The property was stolen about one year ago. she stated. ourrval Mail Plane Demolishet Pilot Dead Omaha, Neb.. Oct. 16. Bryan McMuIlen of Dallas, Texas, air mail pilot of the Chicago-Omaha service, was killed when his plane felltoday near Batavia, 111., accord ing to information received here from the superintendent of the air mall service at Chicago. The pilot was seeking to land in the early moring fog. His machine struck one of a few telephone lines runlng across the prairie and turn ed over. As it hit the ground the gasoline tank exploded. The driver was strapped in and burned to death. George White, a farmer, and his wife saw the flyer hit the wires but the flames were so intense they could not assist. Love Epistles Play Big Part In Divorce Suit White Plains, N. Y., Oct. 16. Love notes and charges and coun ter charges of unfaithfulness are dominant factors in the efofrts be ing made by Louis M. Kardos nd his wife, Effel Lane Kardos. to sever the matrimonial bonds which have bound them for the last fvo years. Mr. Kardos, who Is reported to heive an income of $100,000 from his business as a stock broker, is suing for an annulment of his rif..r riage. Mrs. Kardos oseks a di vorce. Papers in the case, including amorous epistiles alleged to have been sent Mr. Kardos by the other woman, have been submitted in the supreme court in White Plains, All persons involved In the two suits are residents of New York city, but the broker claims a homo in Mount Kisco and the annulment litigation will be waged in Wist. Chester county. Justice Tompkins decided that some of the charges by Karoos were scandalous and orders them stricken from the complalnc. Through Joseph S. :'rin'.;, her attorney, Mrs. Kardos asserted '.ht.t her husband became in.'utuated with Dorothy Heffron of the Pronx who was a filing clJ.'K in his Broadway office. The broker in stalled her ln a Mount 'Cisco man sion, the atorney contends, givir.g her the use of three aulomooiies and two chauffeurs, vh'le Mrs. Kardos has to ride on street ell's. She is. seeking $500 a week ali mony and $7500 counsel tees. They were married irf Grace church two years ago. In his com plaint Mr. Kardos charges that'hls wife possessed a lurid past, which she concealed from him until atte. the ceremony. Mrs. Kardos has or fered in the Westchester court let ters alleged to have been sent hoc husband by Miss Heffron, who is described as a young Titian blonde. One of the letters reads: "Dear Lou You poor little dear as If you had anything to worry about. You know I love you and will always do so and that I have always done anything you asked me too, haven't 1? You looked very tired this morning, Lou, and I want ou to go home and rest and please dont' weaken, dear, for I am always with you, and please try and re member it, won't your "Bye-bye, deary. "Yours as ever, DOT." Farmer - Labor Candidate Is Aliens' Friend Waterloo, Iowa, Oct. 16. P.uley p. Chrlstensen, farmer-labor can didate for president, here today praised the Immigrant and empha sized Scandinavion contributions to the political .progresslvlam of the west. "There are people," he said, ,..h .rant Hie immigrant rushed to some plant where" every vestige of his part traditions Kfian u re moved. They would have him geographically washed and steril- iZ'-d as soon as he steps on Bins island. ' "I believe that we can so fashion the instructions of mis country that the immigrant will of his own acocrd, freely and cheerfully avail himself of the opportunity to count nimselt an Americon. Investigation of Method Used In Trial Opens Pendleton. Or., Oct. 16. Court records, including the testimony of the five convicted slayers on ami iff Tavlor. wi re heard in detail to day by the grand jury holdin? an investigation of the charges of third degree methods aliegea 10 y.ave been used in gaining conies- I uma from the five sentenced men following their return to the Uma tilla county jail after breaking Jail. Knights Templar Close Session Portland, Or., Oct. 1. After' electing officers and choosing la Grande as the place for holding j next year's sesnlon, the grand com- ; mandery. Knights Tefnplar for Ore j gon closed its convention here to day. Weston Or. Shellenberger of Port- i land was elected grand commander 1 succeeding Grand Commander1 Baillie of this city. The directors of the Clatsop County Naval Base company- have elected B. F. Stone president. Larger Participation In Nation's Affairs Urged of Women by Governor Co Advocates National Co ngress of Fair Voters to Frame Program of Social Legislation soil ' Administration for Presentation to Presi dent and Congress Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 16. A na tional woman's congress to frame a program of social legislation and administration for presentation to the president and congress was ad vocated here today by Governor Cox, democratic presidential candi date before an audience of women at a non-partisan meeting. Urging larger participation of women ln national affairs, he also championed the. league of nations as a measure to protect women and children from the horrors of war. Record Proves Position. "From my experience in Ohio," said the governor, "you may know what to expect when I am elected president. There is much to be done for human welfare and social progress. We must stamp out dis ease, oppression and ignorance and eliminate neglect. With woman only at the threshold of political wrk in America I cannot call upon you for congressional action but we can work in common purpose with common counsel and it would seem to me perfectly proper and fitting that a natiortUJ meeting be called of representatives of every woman's organization In America to formu late a program for congress and the executive for social legislation and administration." Governor Cox pledged his sup. port to reforms promised in the San Francisco platform, including federal cooperation with the states for protecting infants and to re- Victory Medals For Sailors To Be Distributed A Victory Medal will be awarded to each peVson that performed ac tive duty in the navy during the world war, between the dates 6 of April 1917 and 11 November 1918, and whose service was honor able. Ex-service enlisted men that have not enrolled In the Reserve force may obtain a Victory Medal upon application to a navy rocruit ing station. It will be necessary for such men o present their orig inal discharge papers or war serv ice certificate or other official papers showing the ships or sta tions upon which the men served in order that the clasp to which they are intltled may be de termined. Ex-service officers who have not enrolled in the Reserve force may obtain a Victory Medal, clasp and button upon application direct to the Bureau of Navigation. Men enrolled In the Naval re serve force may obtain their Vic tory Medal clasp, and button by sending their original release to the Commandant 13th Naval Dis trict, Navy Yard, Puget Sound, Washington. The Navy Department Is recelv i im nf fhe number uf medals us they are issued, the remainder j going to the War Department, consequently each recruiting sta tion cannot receive its entire quota at one time. The Navy Recruiting Station, 323 State street, Salem, Oregon, will supply additional information and assist in the distribution of the medals. Fourteen Claim Reward Money In Taylor Case Pendleton, Or.. Oct. 16 Four teen claims today were r.id for the $750 offered by the city of Pen dleton and Umatilla county for the capture of John Laffebean, alias Jack Rathie, at hearings by mem bers of the county court and a city committee. A contest is also in store for the $4LT,u reward for capture of Nell Hart and Jim Owens. There will tie un contest for the reward of. fered for the capture of Stoop and j Henderson. Two sheepherders, It I Is announced, have a clear title tn $500 each. "The Restless Sex A Novel by Robert W. Chambers, his latest and most absorbing romance, will begin., in., the.. Capital Journal mm . -i.il. next raonaay, uciooer torn. The magic of Chambers is in every line. Its facina tion its action its color its plot and its atmosphere stamp "The Restless Sex" as one of his greatest. The heroine is torn from the shadows of the slums to the glittering parlors of the rich. There are chapters you can never forget ; chapters of exquisite pathos, and yet of such overwhelming dramatic strength that they will stay with Jhe readers for days and days. "The Restless Sex" is the most absorbing and in aO ways the best story ever offered newspaper readers. You cannot afford to miss it. Begins next Monday, October 18. The Weather OREGON: Tonight and Sunday rain; warmer tonight; strong south east shifting to southwest gales along the coast. LOCAL: Minimum temperature 43, minimum 58. mean 45. Rain fall .12. River 7 feet, rising. Price Two Cote I move illiteracy. In this connection i he urged establishment of a federal bureau of Americanization to ea il eal., aliens. Regarding the bureau of educw tlon Governor Cox said: Favors House Cleaning. "At present the federal bureau of education is burled with a var ied assortment of national busineeo ln the department of the interior! My opponent has spoken recently for a new department of publio welfare under which to group ceiav tain social welfare activities. WKMt I am in hearty accord with the idea of house cleaning our government departments and sorting out they human from the technical prob lems, I feci that we should look forward to giving education aeHt health equal consideration with la bor, instead of lumping all aoctet questions again in another grab bag, ill-defined department." In the last congress, Governor Cox charged, a "baby's bill" pro viding for maternity and in rant care "waited in vain while reac tionary leaders spent their una 'scrapping' the league of national" "If we.' are to be deprived Off world peace as a result of the ac tion of our own country under leadership of a patrisan conspiracy, it is woman's right that her vole be heard. If the women of Amer ica may express their will I havo' !no doubt of the result," ho said iu I conclusion. O) Car of Wheat Equals Farm b Total Value Fort William, Ont., Oot. ll. A carload of wheat worth a good farm recently rolled into the Fort William yards as part of a freight train bearing the first fruits of they western Canadian harvest. The car was one of the new-styte Canadian Pclfic railway hopprt It was a giant as big as a cottage and If dlvided'up into rooms might provide comfortable living quarters for a fair sized family. It contain ed 2500 bushels of No. 1 northern wheat loaded in the Rathwelt dis trict, in the heart of the grain belt of Mantoba. It was the largest and most valuble carload of wheat that, ever came east from the Canadian prairies. The wheat sold for $7150. There arc thousands of acres of good farm lands In western Canada, that sell for $30 an ere. On this basis the money represented in this one carload of wheat would buy f irm of 205 acres. Letter Award Change Proposed To Be Held Over The change proposed In athletic awards at Willamette university by the "W" club were postponed until the next meeting for final vote of I he stuil'-nt body when brought up at Friday's meeting, as they met with some opposition. The amend ment proposed provided for uni form avfards for all sports and come believe there should be dis crimination 'between major and minor sports such an tennis and track. Resolutions in regard to campus friendliness and care of the grounds were introduced. 'The lat i. .- was passed, but the first waa tabled it being deemed unnecessary to legislate on a condition so obvi ously deslruble. Resolutions nf sympathy wero ordered sent 1 1 tin relatives of George Holt. a. former student who recently died in Seattle. Tinkham Gilbert, a senior, was announced as appointed forensic manager for the year by the execu tive coiumitlt e. Professor Her sehell Hewitt wis unanimously elected faculty member of the a wards committee. i compensation act. i