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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1921)
Page Foot The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon : Tuesday, October 4, The Capital Journal Salem. Oregon An Independent Newspaper iJverjr eveningeJPLJ?11? ' new II Telephone II; Editor and PublUtier SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier BO centa a month By mall. In first postal tone (within 60 mile ot Salem) on month 50 centa, 6 months 3.w. one year Elaewhera i a ear. Entered a second class mail matter at Salam, Oraaoa. Member ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press la ex clusively entitled to the use for publication of all newa dis patches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this pa per and aiso local nawa pub lished hereia. Society (Continued from Page Three.) ow afternoon at i o'clock at th ome of Mrs. Albert Gllle, 1252 enter street. G. A. Johns To Marry On Friday Justice Charles A. Johns, for . .y associate Justice of the Ore ,11 supreme court, and Miss Kllis eta Bunch, el Portland, will be tarried on Friday afternoon at 2 . clock in the slat supreme court jlldlng. The chambers of Justice nomas A. McBride will be the .:ne of the wedding nd the ser vice will be performed by Justice IcBrlde. Only a few close frienda vlil be present as witnesses and ttendants. At the wedding ceremony Miss lusch will be attended by Mlsa Oleanor Brodic, of Portland, who SUM been a lifelong friend, and Judge Johns will be attended by Dan Powers, also of Portland, "ollowlng the ceremony the cou le will depart by Shasta limited r San Francesco. They will sail or Manila on the Hoosier Bute ,n October 12. They will be ac ompanled on the voyage hy Miss tilth Johns and Charles A. Johns. It daughter and son of Justice lohus. In Manila. Justice Johns will assume his new duties aa as uKlate Justice of the supreme court of the Philippines. Mies Busch Is a Portland woman nd was graduated from Lincoln hltrh school In 1909. She attended ITnlverslty of Oregon t here she was affiliated with Delta Oaatma. She was graduated with the class of 1913. For the Inst four years she has been office manager for the ltoberts Motor Car company. Justice Johns was elected asso ciate Justice of the supreme court f the state In 1918 Ho was ad nHled to the bar In 1881, after tttMHllM Willamette university. Doing Our Bit The Capital Journal today announces a return to its old subscription price, and it is again a two-cent paper. Hiidi cost of production, which forced the raise in price, has rorwlprf somewhat, but is still far above normal. Further recessions are counted upon to justify the Capital Journal's I effort to give the public the benefit of a low-priced daily : newspaper. The white paper the Capital Journal is printed upon cost over 5 cents a pound, as against a price of nearly 9 cents a pound the first of the year. Paper ordered tor December delivery will cost about four cents a pound, as against two cents before the war. To secure these reductions, it has been necessary for the small papers of Oregon to pool their pur chases and buy in quantity from Europe, as the coast paper trust averages a cent and a half and more a pound over east ern and European prices. Ink, metal and other supplies are ? still far above pre-war prices, though reduced from the peak prices of a year ago. Short hours and war-time wage scales and the unwilling ness of union labor to eo-operate in restoring the normal by accepting reductions commensurate with the falling-off in business and decline in cost of living is the greatest handicap faced by the publisher who is sincerely trying to do his part in reconstruction. The cost of setting a column of matter is 98 per cent greater than under the scale of 1918-19 and more than doubled that of pre-war times. At its reduced price, there is no reason why every one within 50 miles of Salem should not take the Capital Journal. It carries all the important news of the world and the state that Portland papers do, and in addition prints Salem, Marion and Polk county news that no Portland paper carries. It will improve as a newspaper as its business increases. To this end, the Capital Journal asks your continued patronage. ISA (Pamo, wrmr tT-iM 6C ta, .la,-(aowta.. .. AjM.ad.Orafcoeo (DTphe mouth arui the bria should -l i -. Man parents waste $5,000 tryinfc "to educate a five -dollar Cm) Men, who make laws are not quite 30 import ant to the world a J men. who make business. (g).A philosopher is generally a. man who exhibits a rem.arka.Wa capacity lor avoiding hard work. (5) -Aeordiri.g to 5tw Helxef, imaginary snakes are worae than, the real thin. fwtjreai speed is not necessary to Tame, T?ad in. your Bible what slow time Moses made in the wilderness. HEZ HECK "li I had my way, I'd nake people's arms longer; so they coo Id scratch, the middle of their backs.' Tabloid Sermons For Busy People by Parson Abief Halle Portland Folk Week End Guwt Here Mr am" Mrs. Ralph Harris and , Claude, of Portland, were week end Ruests in Salem at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nle meyer. They returned home yes terday and were accompanied to Portland by Mrs. Nlemeyer, who panl the day In the city, return ing to Salem last nlnht. Party Makes Trio to Benchei Mr ami Mrs. Charles Nlemeyer and ton. Btuart, Or. and Mrs. Charles Sherman and son. Charles Jr motored to Canon Beach and Seaside last week, spending about three daya on the trip. Protection for Miners Sought Washington. Oct. 4. Member Of a committee appointed by the United Mine Workers ot America at the convention being held lu Indianapolis arrived in Washing ton today to ask 1'resldent Hard log to give protection to US min er, who are being held as state prisoners In Wcat Virginia Jails and whose lives, the union repre sentative assart are in Jeopardy. Learning About Japan One commendable result of the proposed conference to dis cuss disarmament and the Oriental situation, is the investiga tion by trained American journalists of the conditions in Japan, the real character of the Japanese and the motives influencing the imperial government. As a result the people of the United States are acquiring a better knowledge of the Japanese, information gained at first hand long ago by the Pacific coast states, and will more clearly comprehend the. menace of Japanese immigration to American civilization. Japan is an Oriental despotism and the Jap has no concep tion of democracy in the American sense. The emperor is a riivinitv descendant of the irods and his person sacred. Both .. . - . . . ,, lL . T ' 1 1 tki by religion, feudal ana Civil ties, int Japanese is uuunu iu government and its will is the law of life and death. The real ruler of Japan is the general staff of the army, which is controlled by the elder statesmen of the house of peers. Cabinets are made and unmade at its will and its democratic form of parliament pure camouflage. Japan has been aptly termed the Prussia of the Orient. It is more, for Germany under the kaiser never began to be the reactionary military autocracy that Japan is. Japan seeksj to control and exploit all Asia and works to that end. With-, I i -1 at,,, ImuIIahi, ,,, I utnnvnl'nt I lm Tin QUI scrupie, wai in inauc ivi wiiwfraw wwwmm,w. .-j, tlc.,(y of h)s second epistiei but they are quite beside the mark. Trans goes ana on wnaiever pretext, ne teniaiiity nuiuinK (.u.hjucic lators uscd the wm.(la Ulen known and ba(1 nol tuc famiiiarity with or seized provinces by military torce, nated Uy tnose ne IUieSi Creek or Jewish idiom und they may have given ground for the de- nnd eXDloits. The treatment accorded China, Korea, Man- baters on some minor points. Iiut the clear-cut wisdom of Peter thuria and Siberia is an index of his intent. In international diplomacy, the Jap has all wiles of Machi avelism, the duplicity, chicanery and subtlety of insidious ness. Remorseless and without conscience, Japan works toward a single end. Having used England to further Japan's projects in northern Asia, Japan will use China to expel the English from India. By peaceful penetration Japan seeks a foothold on the Pacific coast, hoping some future day to an- nex it. j Whatever agreement Japan makes for limiting armament ...111 laa, tnafDlv ili-itn'm th rpt nf tho wapIiI A 2 nnn nv ' . , . . .... . . discover the world is flat and that soothing tobacco is poison and pect the German junkers to give up militarism as to expect (lepart aml are forgotten. The ettH fl0UrUhwI tn Peter.s dav and did the Japanese general staff to disarm and surrender its we in a financial way, peddling their interpretations. Peter was dreams of world dominion. grounded in his faith. He had a ripe experience jail, glory, fame, 1 hatred and his own great errors. In the fullness of his years, having 1 seen the Interpreters confounded und the new presentment of the old faith gain and did keep its foundation for the marvelous growth, he approved the prophecies as they are. Are we more wise than Peter? If not, can we do better than accept his opinion, and as they say in Dixie, accept the Word "from kiver to kiver." "Knowing" this first, that the prophecy of the Scripture is of no pri vate interpretation." 2 Peter 1-20. Peter was Bound in faith and doctrine; he took his belief without qualification. There has been learned speculation as to the authen speaks tor ltselt. no matter If he did shake Ins head a UUIa over some point made by Paul. Until the close of the last century, higher crltl cism and new thought and interpretive constructions did not flourish Delvers were given scant encouragement by the leaders and councils of leaders, and possibly some harm was done the entire church hy the abrupt treatment accorded heresies. The better way is the open Bible taken as It is a collection of fragments of history of mankind, the prophecies and the New Testament. Yet allare helpful, some notably so. Peter was familiar with the recorded history and prophecies and unto them he hud added the knowledse he had acquired at the feet of the Nar.arene. In these days, we find interpreters of the Scripture as thick as flies in August. New ones arise daily, flourish for a time. ALICIA HAMMERSLEY A Woman Who Wouldn't Remarry By IDAH McGLONE GIBSON The Noted Writer 15 Students Are Dismissed for Haxing Activity Chicago. Oet. s. -rifteeu stu dents of Northwestern university' have been dismissed as the result ( investigation Into hazing' following the disappearance of one! student and the Hear drowning of another two weeks ago. It became, known today. Suspense. Bab wanted to be alone and I. too. felt that only alone could 1 stand the suspense of waiting watting tor something 1 knew nol what. It 1m a strange psychological tact that Joy and pleasure can be shared. In fact they are multi plied when shared but. suspense. sorrow and unhappiness, are all emotions we ran best endure tn solitude. I went to my room and. after a glance at my sleeping boy. closed the door and once more read Judge Turner's cable. Then, abrouplly. It came to me Ilk a breath of syring across the snow-rlad hills that Jett Turner had not given me up utterly. Rren when he went away and wrote me his letter of renunciation, down deep In his heart he had a feeling that sometime life would be good to us. This was true otherwise he never would have decided to come back for an operation upon his yes as a last resort. But cablegrams are poor con solers and I felt that 1 had had more than my share of trouble as I sat in the twilight and reviewed my widowhood. I hud begun widowhood with a feeling that a woman could love but once and having loved and lost my baby, my boy. must be suffi cient for me in the future I clung to the old traditlou an otfsbot of "Suttee" of the East Indies that1 wiin in death of Hal. my hus band, my life was over. I mnst alwavs ba Hal s widow, I could never be anything rsf. Tt, .... I .. l ' m,u . -ot! up one morning to f:U, Bringing Up Father By George McManus find that the world v.as still beau tiful, and happiness was every where I found, too, that nature was something impossible to deny 1 was young 1 am still young love again beckoned and whisper ed that life would stretch itself out in an interminable waste un less I again could catch him and press him to my heart. And then I asked myself: "Would I be happy with the man I love if he were really blind? Would a life of service and re nunciation such as was Alice Gor don's fill my cup of happiness?" "Oh. God, make me unselfish." I prayed because I knew that I wanted Jeff Turner's seeing tyta to rest upon me with loving satis faction. Deen down In tnv .., ; I understood I never could be the i selfless loving woman that Alice was. If I could have been, little I Hal who vts growing more and more beautiful and satisfying day would have filled my I lonsins heart with his unconscious appeal. "Alice Hammersly, you are a very imperfect woman," I said to myself, "and I am afraid that you are also very selfish." And then my heart spoke: "Baja. Alicia, you and I are still young! Surely we both have the right to all the happiness that we can grasp from youthful years." Although I was under thirty my sentiment was no longer youthful.1 l asuen questions of myself and my love that youth would never think of asking. Here is one of them: "Alicia Hammersly. do you think a blind man can give you happiness?" v.. yes Oh. I do not know ! If the man was Jeff Turner I think I could be happy," I tried to answer honestly. "Remember. ' admonished Com mon Sense. "No man has ever un yonr first marriage that von mnt have something more than the emotional fervor that satisfied you and your lover before marriage. "With that thought you have convinced me," I answered Com monSense. "No man has ever un derstood me my shortcomings and my virtues as has Jeff Tur ner. And during the trying epi sode of Bab's divorce I have come to know that understanding is the onlythlng that can make it possi ble for a man and woman to live happily in marriage. One need not have eyes, one may be crippled in body, but the nearer the souls of both the man and woman who elect to live in peace and happi ness together, grow into some thing perfect and beautiful, the nearer will they come to that ideal in which marirage was con ceived." "Alix, Alii, where are you?" Bab's voice broke in upon my retrospection. "Here is a telegram for you AIlx. Do you suppose it is from Duane and he is softening his re fusal to come back by telling it to you instead of me? Oh, Alix, Alix, hurry up and read it." "I'll read it as soon as you give it to me dear," for Bab was hold ing the envelope In her tightly clenched hands. I took the little yellow message from her with a sinking in my heart for I too, thought that Bab's guess might be correct. With an effort of will I tore it open and read: Office informs me that with ex ception of your serial story noth ing has been received from you for three months. Is it your inten tion to write only the serial dur ing remainder of year? Must con sult you in the matter. Will meet you at your convenience at hotel. Roland Earlv." I think I was longer than I :hould have been reading this mes sage for it took me a moment to adjust my thougnt to an entirely unexpected set of conditions. wnat is it? What is it, Altx' rv.n't tn me in suspense. I can stand anything better than that non't worry, dear, it is a tele gram from Roland Early." "Oh, what does Be want now? We can't have him interfering." "He wants me to write him an other story." "That is just like him. He pre tends to be in love with you, but where dollars are concerned he al ways exacts his pound of flesh. As she turned On her heel Bab left me. (Tomorrow Mr. Early Phones.) Fight Planned To Save Heads Of Middlemen Chicago. Oct. . Preservation of the middleman in the grain in dustry is to be one of the prin cipal topics for consideration at the three day convention of the National Grain ' Dealers associa tion, which convened here yester day, according to Charles Quinn, secretary. The 1200 members attending the meeting, according to Mr. Quinn, expected to draw up a course of action to frustrate plans of various interests to do away with the middleman. The post-war breakdown nation's commercial and iSj, trial Bupersiruciure was due Hrplv tn thA fleeltna In r . . j mrm , ducts to levels that destroyed t producers purchasing power, b Clement ot Waco, Texas, preside of tne association, said In hi,. dress. . v icbuiu bu uuiuiai ca mean pre-war levels for farm i ducts, Mr. Clement said. for farm products that win en producers' purchasing power, restrain purchasing power start -the wheels of industry wipe out unemployment. Mr. Clement assailed agitato who endeavored to turn produce against middlemen, and said communlze farmers would destrt their individual initiative, piH them at tne mercy or insincere 1 ders and bring wreck and ruij on America. French Papers to Maintain Pric Paris, Oct. 4. A decision maintain the present prices newspapers was reacnea oy ne paper owners of France at a j eral meeting here today. Thei vance in prices generally has ben to the equivalent of three eea from the former one cent rate. Capital Journal Bargain i Price $5.00 per year by carrier. LADD & BUSH BANKERS ESTABLISHED 1868 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. -Wear-Ever- one-quart ALUMINUM II STEW PAN From Oct 3rd to Oct. 8th only 2 The S Sfi' limited mtifr Bfciy Sf SjT only bon. Oc l.d. jSBgbfc, fS oCX. Mi. 1921 This pan will prove to you that "Wear-Ever" SAVES FUEL This pan will give you a true impression of "Wear Ever" quality. Use it on your own stove and KNOW why more than two million American housewives pre fer "Wear-Ever" utensils for every cooking purpose. KNOW from your own experience that " Wear Ever" insures better fla vored foods and that it effects a material SAVING "Wear Ever" atvnalU kp food flavor IN ami fool cost DOWN. "Wf-Ever ' utenaila hovo two s,ica edvontagaa : Toe heal EVENLY .llo.er.od ooce jeMd they nntnliin . ceoltirt. iKtuperdtim over o REDUCED Rune. Hence, "Wear-Ever" uteKnb re more LESS FUEL .nj cook tne food with Kroner uni formity and bou.r flavor. For beat reaulta with "Wear Ever" kkchea equipaaent : I Place utrrtail over oauol keel until rood m that uKly healed. 2-That REDUCE kaat bout ONE-HALF. in the amount of gas consumed in preparing meals. For a limited time, "Wear-Ever" stores will sell this 95c stew pan at the special price of 38c in order that you may satisfy yourself through actual trials that "Wear-Ever" in sures the utmost in long life, cooking efficiency and fuel saving advantages. THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL COMPANY New Kensington, Pa. Look for fAe ttore with the M HW-por" window rfiaafe,. If TOOT atoro do, not Wave " We.r-Ever " St.w P.O., end 55c to tko tmwj aod Stow P.o wall mm eool to you po.t-p.id j ' Store, located .nvwker. circulate, im authorized to aell " Wa- r " c . b .. . r ait mor w- a. " in. .pocau prv-. rncen on all wear-ever alum m n,U have been riur). SALtUm DAT. T. AS Pro, -or, wv.r:, - m M-f . t i vii uaiunaiC V, U l i l pa n jcjp r EtKauiN A. H. Hinz Ray L. Farmer Hardware Company Salem Hardware Company Chambers & Chambers Furniture Co Wm. Gahlsdorf Doughton & Miller Hardware Company MONMOUTH Monmouth Hardware Company. MT. ANGEL P. N. Smith Furniture Company. Capital Journal Barcala lrir J OS plr Tfr by mall. :ay KORITE Scientifically Water Proof I KORITE FDCCES SHOE BILLS ONE-HALF SK YOl'R DEALER 1 7 ' ! t rrn-- -i r- , 1 copmg-ut it by H. c. fi A.H. AMD IVE rT- . I I f7 -y j . Trad mark Rac. U. & Pat OHM f!E!c rsriT IhJ r- Lr s Sw!pS 14- - rrj 0 ' j '93' l-M ftTUM M j " ?F ' ,L : lW73