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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1928)
PAGE FOUR THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 192ft L.apital Journal Balem. Oregon An Independent Newspaper, Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday at 136 S. Commercial Street. Telephone 81; News 82 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher Eentered as second-class mall matter at Salem, Oregon SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier 10 cent a week. 45 cents a month. $5 a year In advance. By mail In Marlon and Polk counties, one month 50 cents, 3 months $1.25, 6 months $2.25, 1 year $4.00. Elsewhere 50 cents a month; $5 a year in advance, FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PUESS AND OF THE UNITED PRESS - The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion ot all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published herein. "Without or with offense to friends or foes I sketch your world exactly as it goes." The Auto Grounds The city council has voted to continue in operation the municipal auto camping ground, at least for a period. There cannot be much objection if it is kept merely as a camping ground until such time as it can be utilized as a children a playground and public park. It is not the utilization of the property as a temporary camping ground that arousea objection, but the effort to put the city in the auto resort business by erecting perma nent cottages and other buildings, which will destroy its beauty and keep the municipality, with a large investment, permanently in business in competition with private enter prise. Buildings cannot be erected without cutting down trees and otherwise marring a natural site that only needs slight landscaping to be made a real resource in a city shametully shy of public parks. , Our government was not designed for the promotion of business enterprises, and they should form no part of its efforts. The park was purchased by public subscription to be utilized for a then public need, an auto camp ground, until Buch time as the auto resort business became stabilized and private enterprise could supply the deficiency. That time is nearing, or already here, and the city should with draw from a field it never was designed to enter. A Futile Effort The effort of Senator Robinson of Indiana to involve the Democrats in the oil scandal by charging that Sinclair was a heavy contributor to Al Smith s campaign tund in rjzi) and was in return subsequently appointed to the state racing commission is nronerly termed "demogogic slander." Even if Sinclair had contributed to the Smith campaign and in re turn received an honorary appointment it would have been merely in accordance with political custom and no charge of moral turpitude been involved. Robinson's statement however proves to have been a falsehood. Sinclair did not contribute to Smith's campaign fund either in 1920 or thereafter. Moreover Smith was de feated in 1920. Sinclair had been appointed on the racing commission, because of his prominence as a stable owner, four years before the Teapot Dome deal was pulled off. It was not Sinclair's campaign contribution that has aroused the nation, but what it involved. Having bribed a cabinet official to loot the nation's oil reserves, he put up $160,000 after the crooked deal to nay Republican party debts to receive protection. Only a few leaders knew either of the contribution, which was carefully concealed lor rive years, or its purpose. The attempt of the Oregonian to make out that the Democrats were similarly tainted, because Doheny made a contribution to the Democratic campaign in 1920, is equally misleading and false. The Democrats were iot in power ! when Doheny sent his $100,000 black-satchel bribe to a Re- publican cabinet official and received in return naval oil re serves. Itvwas a Democrat, Senator Walsh, who despite offi cial effort at protection, finally dug up the facts of the cor ruption. The size of the campaign gift is not in itself damning, if it is ooen and above board and without ulterior motive. It is the purpose of the contribution that governs. If it is made m the expectation ot being repaid, eiiner uy corrup tion or privilege, it becomes baneful. The Renublicans cannot escape moral responsibility for the corruption of the Harding administration, including the deals of the Ohio gang and the oil scandals. They were m power, the culprits were Republican ottice homers, inc Democrats, not being In power, cannot be involved. Too Much for the Turf Harry Sinclair and his stables have been barred from the three race tracks of Maryland as a siirn of public protest against his course as a malefactor of great wealth. It is the lirst eitort at social ostrachism, evoked because or ma suc cess in exploiting to the fullest the laws delay in efforts to avoid penalty for his crimes. The race track has always been known as a crooked came. In Jute vears. strenuous efforts have been made to clean house and make it straight. It goes without saying that a man who would corrupt his own government, would not hesitate to corrupt the race course to win for his stables. Therefore to insure honest races and keep the sport popular, the crooked horseman must be barred. It is to be regretted that no such sense of public decency actuates the oil industry, which unanimously reelects Sin clair as director of the National Petroleum Institute and Stewart, his fellow conspirator, chairman of the board of the Standard oil, presumably as rewards of merit. The racing game is on a higher moral piano than the oil industry. Golden Youth Ily I.AIRi: POMKItOk CHAPTER 17 There was no denying Jack Tlf f ally's cleverness. In the car which ho "borrowed irom his host, he v was enjoying the company of Jerry "... Haines find because he was a sym ; pathetic listener, he learned Irom her that she was soon to be an heiress. Not that there was any thing particularly clever in this dis covery, because Jerry was keeping the news of her exiwcted legacy any- ' thing but ft secret, It was something for her to hold over the heads of the other bIiIs In Her set; garo her a seme ot superiority ana import mice which wiu food and drink Tor Jerry Haines. The money itself meant nothing to her. Money was merely something which was neces sary to buy things witn. No. Jack Tiffany was -lever for another reason. Ho did not know, of course, about Jerry's bet with her friend. Bee. He did not know that Jerry had wagered she would be Mrs. Tiffany before the month was ended. And It looked now, to jerry, as though she were going to lose that bet ... . Listen to Jack Tiffany's words to her this sunshiny afternoon: j "1 like you because you don't i possess the avid eye of the luisband hunter." Jerry started. "What?" she gasped, "You're such n regular little fel low," he explained. "Von don't have that look of sweet solicitude In vour eyes which most women put there. That tendir look of a guardian aiel that dims for one's sweet sake, and all that kind of piffle." "Haven't I?" Jerry was deeply In terested. "No," ho replied. "For years I've beeD hinting at parties and lunch eons and dinners sweet young things who simper ot me, and then they become languidly elus.ve and care fully drop hints about their own virtues and generally extoll praises of mino. They must think a man Is an awful fool If they think ho Is deceived by theso sudden changes from a modest violet tc a flaring rose, and vice versa." "Oh, yes?" Jerry was perplexed. Was he tolling her all this Just by way of warning her? "Men are better proposers than women and thev like to nmctiro their art once in a while," went on the fellow. "Women srldom civo them the chant nowadays. Their methods of angling are frightfully i crude." i "Are ttiay?"-.- I "Indeed they are," he said, warm-1 ingiiig to the subject. "Of course.: we can cut out the woman who re-1 lies entirely upon her sex appeal. Women tike, what's her name the blonde?" He turned an Inquiring eye upon the girl. "Mona French?" Jerry supplied quickly. "Yes. she's the one I mean." Tif fany was aware of Jerry's sudden change of demearor; like a little turtle withdrawing within its shell. Tiffany knew how young girls felt about something that was hard to "get." She might be a wee bit angry at him for a while; plq'.ie.l was a better word, but she'd get over It and all would work out to nls ad vantage. "What about her?" asker Jerry a little breathlessly. "Oh, the woman who depends solely upon tier sex appeal is mere ly a dangerous form of Bolshevik who ought to be locked up, like any other anarchist who Is in pos session of weapons over which she has no control." Jerry liked this. It; delighted her and she hoped to goodness she could remember it. How she would love to spring it on Todd I "You sound like a womanhater," she told him with a giggle. "Oosh, I didn't know you disliked us so. You've kept it pretty well hidden up until now." "Oh. no, Jerry," Tiffany assured her hastily. "I'm not om of those tiresome fogies who go about bleat ing ot their abhorrence of all things feminine. You know better than than. But one thing sure," he add ed, with a downward glance to see how she was taking it, "I'm not the marrying kind." Jerry started again. This was hit ting pretty close to home. "Confirmed bachelor and all that sort of thing, eh?' sne said lightly.' "Well, why not?" he wasted to know, 'Marriage kiiia sooiethiug Lri every man and woman who w&fc into it. It kills the poetry of life. Try to find any poetry in marriage if you can. For a little while, maybe, and then the lyric falters, the rhymes become out ol rhythm and thel lilting sweep of song dwindles into dreary prose." "Golly I" Cried Jerry, "you cer tainly can tell It! Say soma more and puncture a couple more illu sions for me." "I wouldn't tell you this if you weren't a pretty inteli. ent girl,", said Tiffany. "You are and you know it. You're not like the usual run of flappers that trail around the place, cluttering up the world." "Thanks," she salt dryly, "And being intelligent, how can any intelligent man pr woman ex pect two highly-stigg entirely in dividual natures to sWle down, bal ancing their lives on a precarious precipice called sentimentally, ' give and take' I'm not deceived. The glory dies, and a bewildered, mad night of enchantment turns into a sordid dawn ..." They were silent. Jerry had some thing to think about, now. This was a ntw problem for her. Wis she was, wise as Pi. her g aeration is bound to be, but for r" that, her quick little brain was quite as full of romantic ideas e - her grand mother's was. Jack Tiffany had seemed to her all that . romantic and thrilling to her girlish heart. Now she found in him the unat tainable and she wa? spuired into an intense desire to make him change his opinions. Jack Tiffany sat bpside her, quite satisfied with his day's work. When the time came he knew she would be his for the taking. The romance o it. In one fell swoop he would tell her he loved her more than his needom that he must have her lor his wile. Yes. Mdeed, there a no denying Jack Tiffany's cleverness! . (To Be Continued.) , Girls Regard Leap Year Seriously In Washington Town Kennewlck, Wash, Women in this small town have taken leap year propaganda seriously and as a result the newly-organized bache lors' club is faced with extinction. Outnumbered by a good margin, the eligible young men of the city organized a club to forestall any efforts of the feminine folk to pro pose marriage during the year. But the young women of the1 vil lage have been so insistent since the leap year was ushered in that many of the club members have given up all hope of being able to stay away from the altar for another nine months. During one week, the members said, they received so many tele phone calls from young women who refused to reveal then identities and' who asked for "blind dates" that several of the men contemplated quitting the city. In one case, it was said, an eligible member received a proposal of mar riage from a woman who stated she had a good job and also an automobile. Drunkenness Is no excuse for crime unless it is definitely proven that the accused's mind was so ut terly and completely influenced by alcohol that he could not form a criminal Intention, according to Lord Howart, Lord Chief Justice of Engalnd. NNSYLVANIA MEMORIALS IN FRENCH FIELDS PhiladelpM: (P)Three memor ials to Pennsylvania croops in the World war will be dedicated May 29 and 30 in France at points where sons of the state most distinguished themselves in encounters of the American and allied offensives. The monuments of the common wealth of Pennsylvania- a drinking fountain, a large colonnade and a bri ageare to be paid for out of a $300,000 appropriation by the legis lature. They are in the course of completion on sites chosen by the Pennsylvania state battle monu ments commission, which approved the designs and is supervising the erection. One memorial, a beautiful colon nade costing $175,000, has been built at Varennes on a hilltop which was hotly contested by the Pennsylvania forces if the American expedition ary fortes and the enemy in the Meuse-Argonne drive of late Sep tember, HUB. ij stands as a tribute to all Pennsylvania soldiers who participated in the war. In the memorial to the Twenty eighth Division, "Pennsylvania's Own," the commission has given France a structure as useful as it Is ornamental a bridge connecting Fismes and Fismette across the Vesle River, It replaces a span de stroyed in the fighting. The third monument, a drinking fountain, has been erected at Nan tillois in memory of the Eightieth Division, comprised In part of Penn sylvanians. Two other memorials, one to the Seventy-ulnlh Division at Wontfau con and another to the Fifty-third field artillery brigade, at Audenard, Belgium, have been heik up by the national battle momuments com mission, which selected the sites for national memorials. They are to be erected later elsewhere. GARTER ON INSTEPS London.W A garter on the in step pleases debutantes this season. 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