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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1914)
DAILY CAPITAL JOUXVAL, IXLZH. OUOON. MONDAY, MAECH 23, 1911. PAQB THHS err larr bo ws EllHII Dixie Queen1 It9s a Brick Lay in a Lot of it You could smoke or chew DIXIE QUEEN by theWwandyou'dnever get enough it's so mel low and rich and pleasing. v Lay in a supply of it today. Keep some at home and some on the job, and it will hold you steady as a spirit-level trues a wall. Plug Cut Tobacco is the one perfect tobacco for the sturdy man who likes his tobacco rich, full-bodied and satisfying. Made of pure old Bur ey leaf, aged carefully for three to five years, so as to bring out all its fragrant flavor and sweetness. This is what makes DIXIE QUEEN always the" same. It doesn't depend upon one season's crop, like manjr tobaccos. We have several seasons crops always stored away. DIXIE QUEEN lasts in the pipe because it burns slow holds its flavor when you chew it. Take DIXIE QUEEN on the job for . a week's try-out-after that you'll always carry DIXIE QUEEN in your jeans. Sold everywhere in convenient 5c foil packages also in 10c pouches and 50c lunch boxes. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY Baill rait V'iilfaKJrdhidti AmuJ Usaying go, over and over again they said it. One of the women at the taa was unusually tempermental. She told a lot of things to prove that. She hadn't paid her rent for a month, and did not intend to pay it for six months longer, by well, I really don 't think I'll quote just what she "dy'd" with. And everybody shrieked with laughter and wos greatly edified. e talked about marriage at the Bo hemian tea and apparently nono of lis approved of marriage at all. Some of us called it a superstition and some of us said, it was archaic. We all despised people who get married poor, o'd-fash- loned, narrow-minded things ,nd to- wprd the end of the tea two or three elderly men came in. They wore not at all like the young men who were so very temperamental. The elderly men were not tempera mental at all in appearance. Thev wore exceedingly smart clothes anil were woll groomed and they had auto mobiles waiting for them below, a'id they stayed when the tea broke up, and think I saw my little frieuil from Sioux City, Iowa, snuggling into ono of the automobiles with a particularly well kept old person with a mouth like a pig's and eyes like a cruel tiger. 1'oor little girl. I wonder how lona she II Btny away from Sioux Citv a.id study" and when she will have to1 take her broken heart back homo for her mother to mend! A genius, a girl with a penl voice, with rcfil ability, somothing moro than ' just a pretty parlor talent ah, that s a different matter, a diforont matter entirely. Tho girl 's different all the way through. Sho may starvo and fight and al most dio alono in a garret in some for eign city, but she'll work and sho '11 work, and she'll koep on working and somo day she will "arrive" through what biter roads of agony none but those who have walked therein can ever dream. Sho may go right or sho may go wrong, personally her genius will hold her Bteady to its" flame and nothing that she does or does not do will change that by. tho shadow of a hair, Genius walks nlone because it can and because it must. xou can't keep your geuiuB at home, littlo mother with the anxious eyes, biio b an eaglo, and all your duckings will novor nipke aJittle brown hen of her. But be suro she is a gonitis boforo you lei ner out alone into tho ravenini world, which eats up little girls who have nothing but talent eats them up, body, brain and soul. U wl iir- . El Tib ;fL'j n ia ipi lsm a m i .y lews JUttJ Elegance Is the Leading Feature of the New Dresses for SpringPrices $5 to $50 Slik dresses will occupy places of honor in the spring ward robe of every well dressed woman. The silk dresses for spring that we are showing are worthy of the very highest places of honor, and we invite you to see them before mak ing a selection. Plenty of other models are also here in challie ,wool challie, printed creve, etc., etc. The styles are marvelously graceful and becoming, accentuating the lithe willowy figure, that it is the aim of fashionable women to attain. As for the dress making, it is of the most artistic character, flawless in every deail. If you think such dresses as these are too expensive for you, you have a pleaant surpriese awaitnig you when you see their price ticket. What Threatens the Girl Art Students Alma Cluck says that American girls who go to Europe to Btudy music spend mnich of theijr time Bitting arouln'd telling each other what Jean de Eeszke thinks about their voices and much of it running about to cafes and being Bohemian. Tho rent of tho time, says Alma Oluck, people sit around and talk about tho American musical students. Tho American Woman's Club of Berlin says that Alina Oluck cither didn't know or didn't care what she was talking about when she said those things. There wils a meeting of tho club held recently, and that meeting turned itself into a protest against Miss Oluck 's statements. Mrs. Oorard, wife of tho Ambassador, acted as hoHtess and "protest" leader. Now I don't know a thing about the American girls studying music in Europe, but I do know n littlo something about the American girls who study music at home, and I'd think a good long whilo before I'd let any pretty little daughter of mine run over to Europe "to study" just because some self-seeking person with an aunt who pays her a commission to send boarders to some "near Ameri can" "boairding house in Taris, or Dres den, or Vienna, or Stuttgart, filled her head with a lot of nonsense. The avcraifo American girl nai a good deal more common seuso than the average girl of any other nation ality. But, between you and me, that isn't saying so very much either. Tho American girl is by tempera ment and by training and by her whole ideal of life better able to take cure of herBolf than any other girl in the world. But somehow I can't believe that we made over human nature when wo invented the Stars and Stripes, I'd as soon throw a nice, chubby little baby into a den of wolves as to send tho averngo light-hearted, light headed American girl to Europo, or anywhere else, "to Btudy" alone. There's nothing particularly Bet tling to the mind about tho study of muBie, or art, cither. In fact, there are thoso who bo- licve that the effect of both art and music upon J lie mind of a young and growing girl is apt to be somewhat " tetnpcramontnl." Whatever did we do before we had that convenient wordt I met a girl from Sioux City, Iowa, in New York last winter. She was there "studying," and she won full of rhapsodies about tho glory of liv ing the broader life. "I should die if I had to go back to Sioux City," said the girl who was studying. "My soul would starve." Tho Sioux City girl invited mo to her "iitudio" to a Bohemian tea. Of course, I went. I have ai fad for going to things that people call "Bo hemian." I love to find out what they mean by it. This tea turned out to be so very HOME JOURNAL PATTERNS HURD'S FINE STATIONERY DENNISON'S PAPER NOVEL TIES. COLEGATE'S TOILET AR TICLES NOVELTY BEADS AND JEW-ELRY I D. M. C. EMROIDERY COT TON NOTIONS AND DRESSMAK ERS' SUPPLIES NEW RUCHING NECKWEAR SASH AND BOW RIBBONS NEW SPRING SHADES IN GLOVES LEY El LIBERTY 5TREET Bohemian that there wag no tea at all, just highballs and gin-rickeyi and cigarettes oh, plenty and plenty of cigarettes and girls in queer shabby clothes and scrambled hair, and men with pale faces and red eyes and a genond look of having been out much too late for several nights. I didn't hear much that seemed to me particulnrly'broadening in the con versation at the studio tea. Pcoplo talked very much as intel ligent people talk in Sioux City, Iowa, or in Friend, Nebraska, for tliut mat ter, or any other place where tho daily newspnpor gets into town on tho 9:53 and the wholo town goes to tho truin to get it. Tho young Indy from Sioux City Bang to us, a littlo thing of some i renah com poser rather gweet and pretty U wa., too all about the rose upon tho balcony and tho morning air and tho .ong cf tho birds in tho trees. Somehow 1 ko ! seeing tho girl from Sioux City in a nice, fresh, littlo print frock sweeping off the balcony somewhere in a pretty littlo homo-ln Sioux City and being a thousand times better off anl clev erer and more attractive to real people who really live than sho was, poor girl. IF YOU WANT THE BEST BUTTER JOIN THE NAVY UNITED FRISI UARID WIM. Washington, March 23, The Navy Department has just awarded its con tract for butter for Uncle Sam's blue jackets. The total wa9 725,000 pounds and it is interesting to. no, that probably few American families will have as good spreading for t'.eir bread as the sailors. Undo Rnin demandH the best. Sailors aro cranky about their butter. In the old dtiys when the bluejackot whj given anything tho market afforded lis com- plaints wnro so insistent that a plan was adopted thnt gives him about the best butter money can buy. Although annually purchns'.d in lot of half a million to a million pounds, tho government pays from throe to five cents over tho market price in orde to get absolutely cliomically .uro but ter that will stand aliko the frigi temperature of tho Arctic and th blihtering lunt of tho tropics withou spoiling. After being packed, in five pound tins, tb navy butter is put in cob: storage and held at aero temperature until it is taken out in carload lots to supply tho ships. It is for tlii spoci'i preparation and packing thnt tho in her shabby frock and hor tousled creased price is paid. hair singing rather sweetly ot a lot of dissipatod persons who would go out af ter tho "Bohemian" tea and tell every body that Bhe had only a crap of c voice and not a particle of tempera, ment. They were all very tompornmental, the people at the studio tea. I know they were boiauso they Icent Navy officials insist the buU.-r is th finest in tho world. On ono occasion test was mado to show just what th butter can stand. A product whii: tested 05 per cent was kept in storage eight months and then tent to, Buba waters, with instructions that It was not to bo kept on ice, but packed with usual ship stores. After six months this shape tho butter, then melted oil was again put in cold Btomgo and then tested by the Department of Agricu'.' tore. It tested 88 por cont and this after fourteen mouths of cold and heat. KINO DIES IN POVERTY IN RUSSIAN HOSPITAL died amoug paupers and beggars in the miBorable ward of tho poorest charity hospitul in St. Petersburg. UNITED MESS I.KASCD WII1B St. Petersburg, March 23.-Tho last of tho "Kings of Jerusalem'', Pnuce Michael of Lusignan, has just died bora in novertv and misery. Prince Michael was tho last offshoot of Lusignan the Crunndor, later King of Joru:.tlim and Cyprus. King Louis of Luslnnnn fled to Hussia when the TurkB cnpturd Cyprus in 1832. Czar Nicholas I mado him a captain in his" guard. Ludwig hopod for yea j that Hussia would help to reduce him on his throne but ho finally became resigned to his fato and when tho Grecian throne wns offered to tno ot king ho was so apathetic thnt he de clined it. In 1808 Ludwig kvin an action against Turkey for ,."0,C 00,01)0 for property which he claimed had bcir, confiscated. lie never weived a penny. Lurwig VI died in 1HB4 at the ago if 77, having lived for years on l(ussinr. charity. His son, Princo Michael, wns then 24. The latter spent his eutlru timo droaning about the heroic deeds of his crusader ancestors. In a comic opera uniform if a i.enorul with three crowns on his epaulets Jerusalem, Cyprus and Syria over which he clnlmed to be tho legitimate king, Michael wns for years a well known figure iu the stnets of St. Petersburg. Jn the Inst, fen ;'cars he has been little more thai a vivt. obsorved was oscortod back to the Quirinal by the entire department of public safety. DEMOCRATIC QUEEN ELEcfA CAUSES BENHATION IN BOMB Rome, March 23. Beglnninp today, tho royul palace of tho Quirinal will be constantly guarded by secret service agents in plain clothes whose duty it will 00 to ncc as a recrut piu.ru m Queen Eloun whenever sho may again tnko it into her head to go shopiing on foot. Tho queen recently caused th: huir of tho entire personnel ff tho d pnrtmcnt of public safety to sinud on end by quietly slipping out ot the pnlueo with three of tho roya! children ami doing a littlo informal shopping afoot. As usual tho royal carriage hud been called for hor ami a n.ounted escort wus awaiting when the queeu decided to in shoi'iiinir lust like she ui"d to in ! the streets of Cotti',JO whan t.io wui merely Princess Eloua of Mcntongio. What she had douo wns discovered half an hour later. An excited telephone message Wns Bent to tho department of public safety ami in less than a Jifyi tho entire force was scurv) leg thij streets of Koine to find what iind biv eomo of tho queen and the three royul "liildron. She wus discovered later q.iiwly buy ing lace at a store established by Queen Mother Marghorita for the bene fit of tho Italian peasant women amongst whom the Queen Mother has revived the lace making InJustry Queen Elena who hail succeeded in pitching tho storo unrec figni.'.d ind in- Improvemeut Buggeated. was Hubert s first visit to the It zoo. "What do you think of tho an Imnlst" inquired Undo Bon. After a critical inspection of the ex hibit tho boy replied: "I think tho knngnroo and the ele phant should change tails. "Youngs town Telegram. I iiumiimi iii i I ii Mill "J," IMC XT ,oughs and Colds Foreran Sickness Btu! iImoM tar ImmedUx afflckaf trmtnnt with SCOTT! KUUUION bMN pkyaleal poww hi ndnoMl at Um cld would not ntt. D-raf84 pflls and alcohol le yrnp ar crutch., not ramediea, tat Scott's Emulsion drives oat th cold, warmi the body by coriclUnff th blood, and ttnngth tn um long. NoiKinf aqual onparM with 5coM 'imUm la boikl. Inf th f ore to pwTwt b mo duli, frtpp or pwMmnnla. AtU AictUlk StbtlratM. HENRY PECK'S COUSIN SALLY - - - - By Gross rhingsWeNeverSeej : 1 rV-MS-A-AMHj J M KbaEBQD UPS, So I farm j . . WhkT slI HOfr OF -ooerf I u I oT Tc.6