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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1922)
PAGE FOUR THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON FRIDAY, JUNE ournal Balem, Onajoa An Independent Newapaiwr. Published .vary erenlnj except Sonda Telephone SI; si OEORGH PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher Zion and. the Jews Over $5,000,000 has been raised the past year in Ameri ca for the development of Palestine as a Jewish homeland for Jews, according to reports read at the Silver Jubilee convention of the American Zionists now in session at Phila delphia. Over $10,000,000, most of it from America, has now been spent to rehuild Palestine. The Zionist effort is purely a sentimental one, based up on fiction, tradition and idealism, an effort by an exiled homeless people to realize a dream and provide a homeland. It has been cherished by the orthdox Jews since the destruc tion of the Temple (70 A. D.) when the Jews as a nation were enslaved and scattered by Titus, although Palestine remained the center of Jewish religious thought until the fifth century. Zionism has assumed definite form and pur pose in late years as a result of the menace of anti-Semitism. Confusion of race and religion, both bearing the same name, complicates any study of the Jews. Many outside the tribe of Judah adopted the religion of Judahism, were rated as Jews and yet not of Jewish blood, racially speaking. When Alexander destroyed Tyre, many of the dispersed Phoenicians, who were also Semitic, adopted the Jewish religion, and when Rome destroyed Carthage, many of the surviving Carthagenians did likewise and hence became classified as Jews. TheBe people were the merchants, traders and manufacturers of the ancient world. Their blood still flows in the dark complexioned, hooknosed Jew who traces his decent to Spain and the Mediterranean countries and still maintains . the commercial character istics of his ancestors. ' On the other hand, an entire tribe of Turks adopted the Jewish religion in its migration into Europe and mixed! with the Jewish refuges, settling in Poland. Marriage and inter-marriage with the natives of the various countries in which settlement was forced during hundreds of years of forced migrations and persecutions, have given the Jews many of the local characteristics of the country of their nativity, so that there is really no homogeneous Jewish race; despite the binding influence of religion. , : BY . J 0' ' Don't laugh at folks with them. fcf.W ltltoJiH.AtHi, Aiklsnd.Oraema in love ; laugh It takes men with nothing to say long time to say it. ' 4 a - i If some one we don't like has real wit, we hate him twice as much. " Everybody loves the man who doesn't butt in where he doesn't belong. .. It is a terrible calamity for any woman to be under obligations to a vulgar man. Some men's idea of greatness is to be met at the depot by a brass band and a delegation wear ing plug hats. Hez Heck Says: "It takes a woman without a husband to tell how to run one." marriage, was that a man always wanted to be his wife's first love and a woman hoped always, to be his last." "Well, If you ask me, John, I'll say that no man or woman can be absolutely sure In this loving bust nesa. Every time one loves, one thinks it Is the only love and the eternal love, but that does not. prevent one from waking up some morning and finding that the whole thing is as if it had never been. "When I marry, I am going to pick out a girl In cold blood. I'm going to look her over carefully. I am going to see if we have tastes In commonAnd I am going to ask myself if I regard and respect her enough to make her the mother of my children." (Tomorrow A Strange Funeral.) The sale of $123,000 worth of street improvement bonds has been ordered by the city council of Klamath Falls. Secretary Fall of the interior department has approved the ap plication of the North Canal com pany for use of the Crane Prairie reservoir site. 30 - 192a L. M. Hum Car of YickSoTong Chinese Medicine and Tea Co. h medicine whloh will cure any known die- Open Sunday from 10 a. m. until 8 p. m. 161 South Hlg Street Salem, Oregon. Phone 28 J Journal Want' Ads Pay HAR3JWARE akdFURNJTURI! C3Q 20 N. Commerce1 Store Phone 1650 LADD & BUSH BANKERS- ESTABLISHED 1863 GKMERAL BANKING BUSINESS Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. ' : I Capital Junk Comp any Is in market for all kind of JUNK. Will pay market price. Quick service. I 215 Center Street Phone 3S; ' CAPITAL JOURNAL WANT ADS SATISFY THE WAS. PISTO N Rim G$, PISTONS, a PINS ......... .. Copyright 1922; Premier Syndicate, Inc. The Jews of ancient Palestine were primitive farmers and nomad herdsmen. They were a poor people and Pales' tine a comparitively poor country, though the greater rainfall of that era, before dessjpation had so advanced. made it much more fertile than today. Its possession was disputed for centuries by alien races and civil war raged among tribes. On occasions the entire nation was deported and enslaved, only a remnant returning, to mix with in vaders. Such prosperity as enjoyed was due to trading carried on across its borders by Phoenicians and Egyptians with the far east. The Jews of today are primarily traders and manu facturers, instead of farmers. Upon them has fallen the mantle of the ancient Phoenicians much of whose blood flows in their veins. They are exploiters rather than de velopers. By training and environment they are unsuited tor pioneering and reclaiming tne desert. (Jenturies m northern and distant cities have made them unfitted for a life of toil in a semi-tropic region. So it is not surprising that many of the pioneers sent by the Zionists have recorded failure. The efforts of the Zionists to appropriate Palestine has not been received with any enthusiasm by the natives of that country, who are Turks, Syrians, Arabs and Jews, and who get along together peacefully despite the fact that they are Mohammedan, Christian and Jewish in religion. Naturally the prospect of a big invasion of European and American Jews is viewed with apprehension by the natives. In ad dition, Palestine in rather a small place, 150 miles long, 100 wide at its broadest part, for such a numerous people as the Jews of today. . The world war proved the Jew a patriotic citizen of his home country. He served creditably at the front in all the armies, showed his gallantry in battle and his genuis aided materiallv in financing the war. Such a nennlp have easilv earned their citizenship in the land of their nativity and ought not to need any other homeland. Wm. S. Hart Hero of the Kiddies Will be shown at the Bligh Theatre today and Satur day and at the children's Capital Journal matinee Saturday morning. L A DRAMATIC STORY OF LOVE AND ROMANCE OVE'S Masquerade By Idah McGlone Gibson The three most vital units in motor performance are the piston rings, the pistons and the piston pins. Wear, improper design or inaccurate fit in these units results in loss of power gasoline waste oil and carbon troubles noise and unsatisfactory operation. . made from Electric Iron. When new pistons and pint are also required, we have the McQuay-Norris Wain. wright line especially designed and made for replace, ment. " When new piston rings alone are needed, we have a McQuay-Norris ring for every price and purpose all li "S .IK ! '-'jf ,1 r . a. iu.au liunicei.il. Doris Glendening did not an swer immediately and the coroner repeated: "Do you intend living with your husband again if he recovers?" "I object," interrupted John Davis. "Mrs. Glendening I advise you not to answer that question. The coroner has no right to ask it. it has no bearing on the case." Doris raised her head and look ed at the coroner silently. "Then you decline to answer?" "On the advice of my attorney," she replied. Then turning to John Davis, ihe cried. "Take me away, John, .ake me away. I can't stand it any .aore." .- v She half rose from her chair and Davis rutted forward im pelled by her extreme pallor. He was just able to catch her as she dropped fainting to the floor. A spasm of pain passed over Adam's face as Doris Glendening was carried from the room. "I did not mean to kill my wife. I do not think I can live without tier," he reiterated earnestly to he coroner as he, too, was led iway. 'There, Jim," said Clavering to Davis when, after taking Doris uome, they sat down In the corner of the club for luncheon, "you can see now, can't you why Mar Saret Earle did not try to believe that Quito stuff. It could not have rung quite true. She prob ably sensed, although she was un onscious of it, that Glendening tiad puleld that line about Quito to other women before he did to tier. And you can see from the American Beauty's letter that he had made her believe it. "Well, Harry will never tell an Jther woman about Quito," re- narked Clavering. "The afternoon papers are going to publish the letter, and I think one of them is going to have it photographed with Harry's picture on one side and Claire Adams' on the other. "You know, John, that I almost have it in my mind to feel sorry for Harry. I never have known a man who hated a scandal as he does and he has been able tor so long to skin out of it. I am afraid that when he is himself and sees he papers they will send him to an insane asylum." "I'm not sure but that it would be a good place for him," said Davis sternly. "He certainly wouldn't break any hearts there." "Don't be too svjre. I wouldn't trust Harry in a cemetery." " "Then you think, Jim, that this will not have a good effect upon him." "I am not sure. I sincerely hope it will. a luiiiiv jl Buiiu liie ilevvb- paper clippings to Margaret Earle. it would be a good way to inform her of what has been going on." "Yes," rejoined Davis, "and I also think it might do Milt a good turn. He may catch her on the rebound." .. "That seems to me a queer bias on Milt's character," commented Clavering. "I would not ...want a woman for my wife whd had con fessed to loving a man as Margaret ISarle has confessed to" loving Glendening." "Oh, yes you would, jim You're not any different from any other man. If you got crazy about any woman real madly In love, I mean it wouldnt' make any dif ference to you how you got her, if in the end you got her.," f "Look about you and; see the men among your acquaintance that have married the castoft sweethearts or parted wives ot other men. Presumedly most of the women who have been widow ed by death or divorce loved their husbands when they were first married. "Honestly, I am as sure that man will marry a woman with past if he really and truly loves her as that a woman will marry a man who is known to have been a rounder. I don't believe that even you, John, know any woman that shies at a man's past. All she asks of him Is that he will shut the book of his love-lies when he marries her and begin a new vol ume." "No," said Davis Bomewhat re luctantly, "I cannot think of any woman just now who would re fuse to marry a man she cared for because he had loved some other woman before he loved her. have always thought, however, that the real difference between man and woman, when it came to High Street at Ferry Piotnna MeQttar-Itarttm Wain- , 1 181UI1S wriAhtPimtonBtndPini J P;ns ry iron putont ar anO. rinS H,ht inweiht ufcty permits specially designed for replace, ment available in standard sizes and over .sizes also in semi-finished form 75 thousandths over-sise pins of special hardened steel, ground to exceptional accuracy. Regardless of where you plan to have your car over- ' hauled, we can supply all sizes or over-sizes promptly. I We Carry a Complete Service Stock I Eu BURNS - DAN BURNS i Not Brothers, the Same Man TT. , ni I High Street at Ferr Per Ring gjvvrtSooy- sn exclusive two piece design, pie vent in 2 loaa of gas and compreialon. Give equal pressure at all points on cylinder walls, for alt piston troovee except top, which should ave ttupvovC. Each ring packed la parchment container. 1 lubricating oil 1 out of com bus- E Keeps 3U roiu" tion chamber. Collects excess oil on each down stroke of piston and empties on each up stroke, which ordinary grooved rings cannot do. Baca ring packed in a parchment container. him i y A U)J 11 31 1 1 iuw Bfliati 1 1 u 11 h 1 j 1 n ii.!rHH (119 SSSS.SESS KOrjrn7-CiI'J - "ax- one-piece ring. Non par Ring butting joint, which can be fitted closer than ordinary step cut velvet finish quick seating. "Seats in jiffy." To keep them clean and free from rust, each ring la Escked in an Individual glass to envelope. McOUAY-NORMS piston rings. Snap t Rings SS; . facturlnf vaeth - Their use Insure all the u faction possible for yon tt f 1 from a plain snap lini. ft are packed twelve rlngi tt iy carton and rolled in waxed vim anaiaWq SNAP RINCS I I . 4MiHTa,H J f Came Home to Die Three years ago I came home thinking 2 or 3 weeks would be my limit to live. I had suffered for 15 years from colic attacks and severe liver and stomach trouble. I happened to see an art vertisement ot Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and. purchased a bottle at the drug store and after taking the first dose I felt better than had for 15 years. I am now in the best of health thanks to Mayr's Wonderful Remedy.' It removes the catarrhal mucous "from the intestinal tract, and allays the in flammation which causes practic ally all stomach, liver and intes tinal ailments, Including appen dicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded at J. -C." Perry's, D. J. Fry's and druggists every where, (adv) X 3 A .-1. zr LI Horn. Sat ruinPvTT, Lflliilij America's Home Shoe Polish Makes vour shoes neat and trim and improves the whole appear ance. Shines for all the family. Black, Tan. Whita, Ox-fcIoo4 and Brown Always lOc Malta th. dailv shin, an aur 1tii ... ft.. SH1NOLA Horn. Set A geouio. briatl. daubr which cleans th. shoe and appliaa polish quickly and easily. Lara lambs' wool polisher brings th. shin, with a fsw strokes. It's beat to Bay "SHINOLJL." Oh for a Cool Place We can't furnish the place because you may choose the seashore, the mountains or a week end close at hand -BUT- WE CAN FURNISH ALL THE NECESSARY EQUIPMENT TENTS All sizes, several different weights, regular wall style; half tents; auto tent or we will make any style you like. Tents priced at $11.50 up. Detachable poles made to go in bun dle 36-inches long, $1.50. I i I , i t! Ti" h K Folding Tables large enough for ten people (36- jf incnes Dy o it.; $1U. Folding canvas cots, heavy grade of canvas on a good substantial frame, single size, $3.75. T? f 1- Canvas Hammocks $6.00; Camp Stools $1.00; Camp Stoves $1.25; Canvas, per yard $1.25 up. See the Auto Tent in the west win dow of our used goods store, 404 Court street, corner of Liberty street. The price is $14.50. V