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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1914)
nTB r ' 4 ARGUMENTS AGAINST I ran The Markets MEASURES ARE FILED THB DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OHXOOK, TTJMDAY JirLY 91 1t4. ' ft J H i AZEROiElittbricani tot Everu Motor Need ZEROLENE The Standard Oil for Motor Cars. ZEROLENE (Heary) For use where a heavy oil U desired. ; ZEROLENE (Light) For Ford Cars. ZEROLENE Transmuaioa Lubricant "A" An Oil heavy bodied. ZEROLENE TruumUiion Lubricant "BB" A Grease semi-fluid. ZEROLENE Tranimitsion Lubricant "BBB" A Grease heavier than BB" ZEROLENE Cup Grease For Grease Cups, etc. ZEROLENE Fibra Grease For use where a fibrous grease is desired. Standard Oil Company (CALIFORNIA Salem Attention! Please I wish to ask a plain simple question. Do you sup pose we could operate two shoe stores if we bought and sold such goods as some of these stores sell ? No. We utilize every effort and means we know any thing about to secure the best shoes at the prevailing popular prices. Besides a nice line of many styles of shoes, we have ' - ir- OatOKDS and PUMPS in various styles, and we're offering them to you at WHOLESALE PRICES. This offer is on the square no iake sale. W6 need space for fall shoes and we're going to clean the shelves. There are two and a half or three months yet during which you can wear pumps and oxfords. Let us show you what bargains we have. Notaseme Hosiery for ladies and children is the greatest buy you can make. No hosiery wears like "Notaseme." Costs but 25c and 50c. We have sold dozens of pairs in the last four weeks. You're next. More than one lady has come in and said: "Give me another pair of hose. I bought a pair a week ago and they are all right. I have paid 75c and $1.00 for hose not nearly so good." This is a guaranteed line and we replace any defective pair with a new pair and give them to you on the spot. We have the trade of the town on ladies' hosier7. Two Stores 344 State 236 N. Com'l A. C. DeVoe BUY-OLOGY Advertising may be said to have created a new science that of BUY-OLOGY. BUY-OLOGY is the art of buying the things most suited to your needs at the right time and at the lowest market price. Advertising makes this practical by bringing to your home, day after day, the story of the markets of the world as told in your daily news paper. The reader of advertising becomes an adept in the new science of BUY-OLOGY and profits accordingly. J LOCAL WHOLESALE ItlKKXTS. Hay, timothy Clover, per ton Oftti and vetch Wheat, per bushel . Bran, per ton Short, per ton Oats, per bushel , 111.00 T.00 8.00 . 83e 26.00 29.00 32c Chittim bark. Mr lb 4V,(5e Cbemt, per ton ... 8.00 Potatoes, per ewt. 1.00 Butter and Eggs. Butterfst. Der lb., f.o.b. Salem 23c Creamery butter, per lb. . 23 Egga -23 rouiwy. lions, per lb 12c Roosters, per lb. , lie Frjers Steers. Steers . Cows, per ewt. Hogs, fat, per lb. .. Stock hogs, peT lb Ewes, per lb Spring laiiilis, pur Jl. - 6e . 5(aSVjc 6Mi(ffi7c 3Mie Veal, according to quality .... 10llV'jc reita. , Dry, per lb . 8e Salted countrv pelts, each 65c$l Lamb pelts, each . 25c SAN FRANCISCO MABBuSTS. San Francisco, July 21. Eggs, extras He; firsts 25Vjf; pullets 24Ue, Batter, extras 25c; prime firsts 23 H; first tie; seconds 22 'A i. Cheese, California fancy le; firsts 12c; seconds 10c. 'SBATTLB MARKETS. Seattle, Wash., July 21. Eggs, fresh ranch 2829c; Orientals 18c. Butter, eountry creamery cubes 26c; bricks 27c; eitr creamery cube 26e; bricks 27c. Cheese, limburger 19c; Wisconsin 18 (fi'lSe; Swiss 20c; Washington lota 17c. Onions, green 20(a25e per dozen; east ern Washington 3Vjc4o per pound; California 3 (a 4 Vic Potatoes, new local lViZFl 3-4c per pound; California 1 3-eCa2c. PORTLAND MARKETS. Portland, July 21. Wheat, Club 78c; Bluestem 82c. Oats, number one white ee 1 2t.50: gray 021. Barley, brewing $20; feed $19. Hogs, best live $8.75. Prime steers $7(a$7.25; fancy cows o.90(.t7; best calves $8.25. Spring lambs $".25. Butter, city creamery 27VjC. Kggs, selected local'extras 23fiT26V. Hens HcfalSc; broilers 18c; geese 12c. Arguments opposing numerous men- nres to be voted itotn at the cammi; eU-etion were receded by Secretary of I Mate Ulrott today. This is the Inst day for filing nciiktive arguments nnd none will be received after five o'clock this afternoon. F. W. Mulkey filed arguments opposing the $1300 tax ex- emptioa and the graduated sur tax ; amendment. The People 's Power lea gue opposes the legislative amendment j providing for a lieutenant governor, ! the amendment providing for the elas- J situation of property for taxation, measures designed to end single tax 1 agitation and the bill providing for a j supplementary primary. i W. T. Foster, president of Reed col- ' leee. and others filed inumKnti ( sgninst the dental bill, fathered by Painless Parker. The Nou-Partiwin league offered arguments against the universal eight-hour luw, right-hour law for women, $1500 tax exemption, graduated surtax amendment, amend ment to abolish state senate, amend ment providing proportional represent ation ana amendment creating deport ment of public works. DRAMATIC STORY (Continued from page one.) 8 Fignro' was leading against me. We attached no importance to them. ' 'Le Figaro's' campaign was par ticularly gravo since Editor Calmctte signed his articles. He tried to pur chase witnesses against me. - I, too, might have indulged in such politics, ! since I was offered documents against i Calmette, but 1 refused' them, for 1 would not stoop to take up such arms agninst my opponent." ' j The two letters the publication of I which his wife so feared, the witness explained, were written to her by him self beforo their marriage. They were I very personal. One was written on S" General Council of the Sarthe" let ' terheads and was short. The second 'was on "Chamber of Deputies" let terheads and covered 16 pages. ! Letter "Bared His SouL" i This letter bared bis soul, tho wit jness said, revealing his innermost I thoughts for years back. In it he ex plained toe reasons, principally poli i tical, which kept him from divorcing his first wife at the time the letter jwas written. ! His warning that these letters were I to be published, Caillaux testified, came I from ex-Premier Louis Barthou, who told Mrs. Caillaux that he had seen and talked with her husband's first wife under a street lamp and that she jhad read him certain "private and in. timate communications." In spite of numerous warnings, how ; ever, the witness said he was asfonish ied when the "Ton Jo" letter nppear 'ed.' His astonishment turned to viol ent rage when he was informed by one whose word he could not doubt that the other two letters were also to be published. The Princess De Mesagno-Estradero, he related, told Mme. Caillaux that Cal ' mette had made an offer of 30,000 ! franca to use 'one of her friends to ar range a meeting between himself and Caillaux 's first wife. The princess said i she received an offer of an even 1 rgcr sum, but refused the commission. I "Why did they wish to print those letters?" exclaimed the witness pas sionately. "To humiliate me, if pos sible, by dragging my most private sentiments before the public. "I might have borne it but the very idea struck to the quick my wife's most i sacred .feelings and wounded her pride j as a wife and mother. ! His Wife Is Crazed, j "Suffering, harassed, her nerves i shattered, my wife came to the day of 1 tho shooting. Each day had seen her 'more and more highly strung, the frightful stnto of her nerves impairing j still further her general healthj which is not of the best. "About 9 o'clock one morning she ucnme into my room while I was finish ing dressing. She held that day's copy of 'Le Figaro.' On the front page was ;an article headed: i "' Comic interlude Ton Jo!' embassy that night, She seemed so overwrought, so distracted, so like as Delbos said a hunted beast, that I did not insist. 'She told me that I must go and that sho would send my evening clothes by my valet to the ministry. She had the embassy rung up and told that I would i-nmt) alone. ' "This proves that she did not pre mediate, killing or even shooting Cal mette. Had she anticipated any such thing, he would have said nothing at all to the embassy or she would have excused the two of us together. t left nome witn no misgivings. but net wihtuot certain uneasiness as to my wife's enfeebled and highly ner vous physical state. At the senate, aoout ,i o-ciock, i tamed with At. Cec caldi, mentioning my fears on the sub ject. "When I returned to the ministry I learned of the tragedy. 1 ' I .went nt once to the police com missary and saw my wife. "Her first words to me were: "'I sincerely hope did not kill him; I only wanted to teecb. him a les son'!" Bourget Telia of Shooting. Paris, July 21. Paul Bourget, the author, playwright and member of the Aca.leinie Francaise, was today's first witness at the trial of Mme. Henritte Caillaux. Bourget was with Editor Gaston. Bourget was with Editor Gaston Cal mette of "Le Figaro," in the latter office when Mie. Caillaux ' card was brought in the day the editor was killed. "Jt is Mme. Caillaux," the witness described Calmette aa aayiug, as he giauced at tne card. "Am you going to receive herf Bonrgct said he asked. " t must; she is a woman," the editor wai quoted as replying, "Very well," the author testified he. answered, "then I will leave you." He had reached the front door of the uuilding, a flight below Calmette 's of fice, when he heard the commotion above and ran back. He was one of the first, he said, to Tush into the of fice, where Calmctte lay gaspine in his arm chair. Mme. Caillaux was standing, quite calm, the automatic still in her hand. To the ottice attendant who had seized hr, Bourget testified she said: "L-. t go of me. I am a woman. I shall not run." Contradicts Lie. Adrien Nieet followed Bourget on the witness stand. As an attendant at the office of "Le Figaro," it was he who took Mme. Caillaux'p carl to Editor CalmetM. He denies that Calinette ut tered Mine. C'uillaux's name or that he, Nieet, repeated it. The editor spoke in so low a tone, ho said, that he was sure nobody but himself could have heard the estate of a Frenchman who died in Brazil some sixty years ago, leaving an enormous fortune, which has never been distribute.! among the heirs owing to complications with French government. His enemies charged that Caillaux pro posed to settle this case on the basis of about 20 per cent for the heirs and the balance for his party's campaign : fund. . All His Ammunition. . Later, Latzarus continued, Calinette' showed him two papers relative to the incident of the sending of a (Icrinan warship to Agadir in northwest Africa, in disregarding of French claims to authority there japers, cording to the witnesn, which would have been of grave import for Caillaux. Calmctte told Latrarus, however, that he would , not use them, as they might make! trouble for France outside the country. When "Le Figaro" published the "Ton Jo" letter, the editor told him,; Latzarus said, that if it ailed to ac complish Its purpose against Caillaux he would have to give up his campaign, as! ne bad no more ammunition. This was in contradiction of Mine. Caillaux claim, that the editor had two more of her letters, which she was even : more anxious to have suppressed than . the "Ton Jo" communication. At this point, sai- utrsrus, someone! reminded Cnlmette of the "Fabre document," a memorandum by Judge' Fabre, charging that Caillaux brought' pressure to bear on him to postpone the prosecution of the millionaire swindler,' Rochette, who, as a result of the delay,! escaped entirely. j 'Oh, but I promised not to use thnt,", Latzarus testified that Calniette an-' swered. I Then, taking out his wallet, Lnt.arusj said, Calmette showed the "Fabrej document," faying, "1 will not part from this, ever." I "If be had had any other letters," j concluded the witness, "we would have round tnem arter his death, but we found nothing." During her examination Mme. Cail laux asserted that while she sat In the waiting room In the office of "Lei Figaro", three men were talking nearj her, that they mentioned her name, that j one of them spoke of a publication con- cerning her soon to appear in the paper and that this was another thing which tended to deprive her of her reason, j from anger and excitement, as she en tered t'almette's room. Say Bho I Mistaken. One of these men, a business office attache of the paper, named Voisin, fol-1 lowed Latzarus on the witness stand.! He and his two companions, ho said, were discussing pictures. One of the men with him, he added, was an artist' named Honore and the other one acquaintance named Mnsson, uncon nected with " Le Figaro". Voisan' denied that Mine. Caillaux 's name was mentioned. Two office boys named Potticr mid Roiilleau testified in corroboration of the stories told by Nieet and Cirac, the attendants In the waiting room. Next a deposition by President Poin care war. read. This incident of bring , ing a French chief executive Into a him and all he said was: "Show tl.f"n""al ,r,nl a8 0 witness, even though ; ladv In " I ne appear in ijcrson, was souie- iNicct's testimony was important in.'1" oliit-lv nnprectdeiitnd n the that it contradicted Mme. ( aillnux's! hlH1,("7 of the (lalhe courts and it was story that Calinette called in a loud! on'?hy f?n91!l,'rnbl8 retching of two voice, "Show Mme. Caillux in," and art"'lc8 ,a 'aw promulgated by King thnt. he otton.lont tor.in fc.lLOUIg Phlllippe in 1 N;I2 that it WUHI 10 WHEN IT COMES TO A QUESTION OF POWER, THE BEST IS NONE TOO GOOD. WE HANDLE THE BEST MAKES OF ELECTRIC MOTORS AND CAN GIVE EXPERT ADVICE AS TO THEIR APPLICATION. OUR 7 1-2 YEARS CONNECTION WITH THE LARGEST MOTOR MANU FACTURER IN THE WORLD IS PROOF OF OUR ABILITY. "If it's electric come to us" alemElectricCo. V Masonic Temple Phone 1200 Tone and Touch are the two fundamentals in piano making. Unless they enter into the instrument you contemplate buy ing, with a high degree of perfection, the instrument will not give you the satisfaction for which you are ' paying. All of our pianos embody these two essen tials. Music loving people will tell you that Perfection of Quality is the basic principle of our business. No matter how low a price you may be charged here, you can hold this store responsible for the very best satisfac tion. It's the life of pur business to keep improving. A Square Deal is always given the purchaser who buys a piano at our store. We represent our instruments just as they are, and they will stand the test. Our prices and terms are right. CALL EXAMINE COMPARE ! Geo. C. Will 432 STATE STREET door, shouted-. loud a Mme. Caillaux, tnna ihnf DVarvViAilv nKmi. Ikn . ,,, , .... ...v ...... v.v. j auun, MIC I. ITIia nflv. .hm.v .'ah nr.ll nun uha . ... " iuv ,,1,1. ..... piace could Hear. neo, -win De my own pel name pa- was exii( i r,,o,wl of in so " i ii is jhw proiiiuiis i rnded in the same place! ' I "She threw the paper violently into a chair. 'Can't you do something to stop thisf she asked. "We decided to consult Judge Mo nier. My proposal was to see him about 1:30 that afternoon. Forgetting that the judge is detained at the palace i of justice at that hour. 80 I left foi the cabinet meeting. n this way it I was my wife who finally talked vtith : the judge," Monicr having given it as his opin ion that nothing was to bo gained and that something might be lost by legal proceedings, Mme. Caillaux reported to her husband, asking him: "What do you propose doingl" N He Said It in French. " 'If that's the way things stand,' I replied," testified the witness, " 'I'll ismash his face'." ! The expression, as was brought out by Maitre La'ooil, v.?me. Caillaux 's lawyer, "easser la geueul," m been taken to be literal or threat to kill. It does not translate quite accurately into English, in which its best equivalent would be: "If that's the way things stand, I'll just hand him something myself." j "My wife bad called on me at the ministry," went on Caillaux. "On our way beme in our automobile my wife ; evidently was pondering my threat, j " 'When do you think of doing what 'you saidf' she asked. ' Today V 1 " 'Xo,' said I, 'not today. I shall 1 do it at my own day and hour, but soon.' ' "As I left the house after lunch my , wife told me she had decided not to ,dine, a we had intended, at the Italian exposure of the fact that she hail called on Calmette, which she had desired "above everything to avoid", that had much to do with driving her frantic and provoking her to fire on the editor, she testified. Name Not Spoken Aloud. Ktienne Cirac another attendant in "Le Figaro" waiting room, corrobor ate! Nicet's testimony that Mme. Cail lanx's name was not spoken aloud. It was he, he said, who actually con ducted the visitor to the editor's door, the allini; of1 princes and princesses of the royal blood, high dignitaries or the minister ' Of justice as witnesses in legal pro- j ceeuings. It does, however, permit their: testimony, specially authorized, to be' introduced in writing, us was done to day. j The president's deposition was as, follows: I President Poincare a Witness. "On Monday morning of the day I Calmette was killed, n cabinet meeting was called at the fclysec. As usual ine president talked with the various mem- Marion Creamery & Produce Co. ICE CREAM AND SHERBET some time not only with rromie.r Doumergue, but with Minister of Fin ance Joseph Caillaux as well. Later, as the cabinet members were filing into the room where such meetings are us ually held, Caillaux stopped the presi dent and said: "'Mr. l'rcsidcnt, may I speak with wnich he opened to let her enter, thenibers of the cabinet before entering 111 stood aside while she iiassed in and on official business. He talked for closed the door alter her. He was also, he testified, the first to mull into'the editor's office, arriving on the s-'ene before Mme. Caillaux bad fired her sixth shot. She turned her head1 away, he declared, as she fired it. This Mme. Caillaux denied. News Editor Louis Latzarus of "Le Figaro" told the conrt that he was I you for a moment privately?' standing in a corridor of the office a "The president acquiesced and the few minutes before Calmette was .ied, doois closed, leaving the two men alone. ight have i when a woman, dressed in black, passed j Kapidly but in a voice filled with to be a him. her hands concealed in a muff. I emotion, Caillaux then told of his fears. She was ushered into Calmette ' oi'- I have it from the best source," fice and the door was closed after her. ho said, 'that letters written by me to Five or six seconds later six shots rang' the lady who is now my wife have been out in rapid auccession. He dashed in- given to "Le Fignro" and that Gaston t the orfice, but too late to prevent j Calmette, the editor, intends using the tragedy. Mme. Cailluax, he testi fied, was quite calm-. While Calmette was waging his news- roper campaign against Joseph Caillaux, Made by the latest r.nd most improved methods of manufacture. Try it. Orders filled for one gallon and upwards. Phone Main 2488. I know that he will publish them them, " 'You must me president replied. 'I the prisoner's husband, then Minister i He is a gallant man. mistaken," the know Calinette. He would never of finance, Latzarus said, the editor had a taJk with him in the course of which he remarked that all he wished to do was to prevent Caillaux from filling his election coffers with "Prien money," and that having accomplished this, he would .e satisfied. The "I'rieu money" referred to was bring the name of a woman into an af fair of politics.' "Caillaux was insistent. The people who had told him of Calmette 's inten tions could not be mistaken. And, too, he had visible indications that "Le Figaro" was preparing for further publication!. That very morning "Le A New Fact Each Day One new fact stored away each day builds a treasure house of knowledge in the mind. The world's rewards come to those who know how to receive them. A good newspaper like The Journal is an edu cator. It brings each day its quota of the world's work. Not to read the advertising is to miss part of the day's possibilities. Figaro" itself had printed an article entitled 'Comic interlude, the biog raphical notes of Jo, oy M. Joseph Cail laux. Interlude meant that something was to follow and this 'something', ac cording to all indications, was the two Continued on page 8.)