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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1916)
THE DATLY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON. SATURDAY. FEB. 19. 1916. Everybody Admires a 3 ?'.'., i MiniMRtn r rut Unci. m. nuu ft g wrnu.T.uoi'KiMS, -ff"1 m JUtTJOfJ sr. - New INK. f iJtP'tKMlPtfcirnie, I PiS'f.-t nml rolfpvps Sunburn. Ttomows Tan. Timples. lilacklwrids, Moth I'-itche. Rash. Kret kics and Vultrar Kedness. Yellow and Muddy Skl. giving delfeutely I'leur and retlucd rnmplexhm whl'-li every woman desires. No U fc'or sale by lirURKists Ferd.T. Hopkins, Prop.. 37 ACHING JOINTS Rub Pain Right Out With Small Trial Bottle of Old Penetrating "St. Jacob's Oil" ltheiimatism is "puin only." Not one case in fifty requires internal treat ment. Stop drugging. Hub soothing, penetrating "tit. .laeolm (Ml'' right in to your sore, stiff, netting joints nnd muscles, and relief comes instantly.. "SI. Jttiol's Oil'' is a harmless rheu matism eure whieh never disappoints nnd ean not buru the skin. Iiimlier up! (Juit complaining! Oct & flmall trial bottle of old, honest "St. Jacob's Oil" nt any drug store, nnd in jut it nioineiit you'll lie free front rheumatic pain, soreness, stiffness 'nnd swelling, Uon't suffer! Kelief awaits you. "M. Jacob's (Ml" lias cured inillions of rheumatism sufferers ia the lat half century, nml is just as Kooil for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, buelifiehe, sprains. X: l! . Neverfail Maiden Ladies' Husband Catcher A Wonderful Invention lioivtown. I n.!., Teh. Ill, Miss Tnlothn Older 'n thelMek- ens, who was married to Sillie (slosh's widower here lust Wed- nesdny, has let the cat out of the hat; lis to how she finally Inn. led her num. Mis lMekens t lint was, has applied for a pat- put on her Nevcrfiil Maiden Ladies' Hiislmnd Concher. The contraption consists of n very eomtoi table chair, small enough for one and big enough for two. It. is so arranged with elect ricnl Bpliames th'it when the inatri- inoniiil victim sits down in it, toe lights ire nutoinatieally dimmed and. nfter u period lengthy enough not to arouse suspicion, it sets off a Very soft toned rendition of " llonre. Sweet Home " or something like. that on nit automatic music Imx in the next room. This is cul- ciliated to malic the victim in- vite the Maiden l.ndy to share the chair with him. After that it's up to the ispinng damsel, sit NEW BOOKS AT THE PUBLIC LIBRARY Helmet t. A., City of l'leasure. Clark, S. U., lhindheoli of IVst licad ings. leu!ic. I.. T., Misery and Its t'mics. Met. her, 1!. I'., Cm pent rv and Join cry. (iille'te. II. P., Ibindlnudc of Cost Data. t'lovtr. I'. II.. "On mo I'urlscvV book of novel entertainments. .lam.', II. C, Applied Citv (,;,ieru snout. Kell. r, F. A.. Out of Work, l.iiuoii., .1. ('.. Thankful's lilierit jicv, l.yudr, C. ,t.. Home Waterworks. Montgomery,. I.. M Anne of th,. 1 ;uid. I'nint r. I-!. V. M. lid., Oreat I 'edit gttric:il F.s-:ivs. I!"lddus K. C, llicl, School rvliate Hook. JERRY IS LION KILLER HneranifBto. t'n1.. Feb. Jerrv C. Home. .f Humlioldl county, 'm. it trof itali'.e to slay moiiutani F.itis. iur. HiR .lanunry he killed several lieiu mid the sate today sent him a check for tMt the bounty l.eini; l'i a lion. There were H liui killed duriui; the montli. For Good Looks . ayomaa must have good . health, bhe can do her part by lieipmg nature to keep the blood t pure, the liver active arxl the ; iwwels regular, with the ad ot ! Uie mud. vegetable? r(v..iv BESCI2Ar.l1 w3 PILLS W,- J. .f A., M.Hlici. U th. WH nwrwliu. 1. biM, inc., l5o Beautiful Complexion- DR. T. FELIX COURAUD'S Oriental Cream OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER Jin Indispensable and Delightful Toilet Requisite for Fashionable Women. A daily nwoslty for the Indies toilet fphothcr at limn or white traveling. It protects tho skin from injurious effects of t!u element, Jven n wonderfully ef fective heauty to the complexion, it is a perfect iion-greawy Toilet (.'ream and pos itively will not caiiso or encourage the growth (if hair which nil ItulleH should guard axaniMt when elocthiff a toilet pre paration. When tl.'inclmr. howling or oth er exertions heat the skin, it preventa a Kronsv uppenrancP. w Gouraud'i Oriental Cream linn been liichly recommended by physicians, art reuses, singers ;uit women of fushlon for over hali a century and cannot be sur pitsspil when preparing for dally or even ing ntllre. Gourjud'a Oriental Cream euros Pkm and-Fancy Coods lVulcrs. Great Jones Street, New York j A Bad Weather Poem I (Miring tin' recent Kc1I of unpleasant I weather, the following piicni suggested j itself to Mrs. K'. T. I'orter. wife of the I pastor i'f the l'il'st I'lirlstlnn church. I THE STORM KINO (Hy Mrs. V. T. Forter.) Oh! u e;niff old kine; is the king of storm, (If it fearful face nnd n hideous form; And he sits enthroned in his mountain homo. Where the wild beasts crouch and men's lost souls roam. And he pierces the sky with his fierce wo.-tllier eye. And the lull pines sigh and the waves moan nnd cry. Then he puffs a puff from his dpe of clay. And the smoke flies like feathers nway, n w ay, Anil it swoops right down on the river nnd town, Ami it heaps the valley with frozen down. Where the huddled children are crying for fire, And the price for bread and for wood goes higher. Oh! a fierce old king is the king of storm; As lie mutters in wrath and outsl retches his form To clutch at the pitiful idols of men, And to grind tlieui buck into dust aoain. So he plunder the hearths and the hearts of men, And their broken hopes tosses to wreck heaps. Then Like :i warrior returned from tlio chase ho brings Back his ghastly trophies o plunder ings. And lie gloats o'er the wreck heaps along his way, But lie honrs uot and fears not the hearts that pray. Know tlio length' and the strength of my good right nrin, You shall crouch in fear 'nentU its pow er to harm." So he boasts and lie smokes iu his crvs- r tal hall, Tomorrow may open his faucets all, Ami his anger 1u torrents of water fall To sweep us forever beyond recall. So we know not today what tomorrow will bo For the old king s temper is mvsterv. Yes perchance on the morrow a dove may bring To our window the olive brnucli offer- '"g. And the sun set (he palace of crystal on fire. Ami the old king smile from its funeral pyre. Hut the king at last wearies of wreck and of moan, And he sighs "Though a king I'm hap. py alone." And his sigh floats down to the whis pering sea, To the souls that his wrath lias -swept out to the sea. Uepentant it calls through the deep sea halls. Through old ocean's thunders like music it falls. And up out of the depths comes an ans wering voice As a radiant form bids the world re joice. Hp and out from Hie sou run her her alds in glee. Shouting loud to Hie fields and to men "lie free" On and up to the mountain's on flviue feet. I'p and on to the king with the message sweet. rtut the old king blusters, "I'm the king on the throne." Then the sad echo answers. "Alone. alone. ' ' So ho bids her be welcome to palace and hall, And again hears her answer like music fall. tn her soft robes of state all in gold and green Aid her trailing mist veil slonlv on I comes the iueen. j And the fairest flowers spring 'neath iii-i wm inning root. And the tallest trees bend her loved term to greet. In humility comes she to bow to the king, And Cue wreck heaps nil blos-som, the nroKon hearts sing. Then the old king beckons "Come share my throne" Hide the past with thy greenness. I'd no more reign uloiir. " GUARD AGAINST ANACIIIST3 New Yor. Feb. IS. Fearful that an archist plotters, imbued with the anti clerical and anti-social spirit, may at tempt the lives of Governor Wliilmau ir.1 chinch (nests at thi big Knights of Columbus, ball here tonight, police today issued ordoM for ettra guards. The lu'd w ill be held in Madison Square Garden. It is feared Jean Crones, Chi cago p.j'sou banquet conspirator, may be in the city urging "reds" to operate ttt the fiUK-tiou, Hackett's New of Tragedy of Macbeth Xew York. Feb. . The' sort of: Macbeth who strode upon the boards' in the person of James K. iluckott i here the other night was a strange and j puzzling being to the critics, ilo bore! . the gai n and style, but not the uiind, ot tneir Abo-hot h ; and tltetr welcome to the Thane was not a warm one. That this rather limp palmed greet- j tug wag a possibility not at all un forseen by -Mr. Jlackett, was evidenced by his words to the writer several days prior to the opening of his .Shakespear ean season with Viola Allen nt tho Criterion : "If five years suffice to establish ablv in the critics' minds J. shall feci ably ii i the critics' minds I shall feel that I have accomplished my task in j record time. I hope and believe that it w ill be much sooner welcomed by I tho public. j ".My father's Falstaff was howled down. His best friends pleaded with! htm to drop it. His reply was that it, at tho end of five years he had not firmly established himself in the hearts and minds of critics and public, he would abandon the role. He played it for forty years; and I am quite will ing to leave the present day standing of my father's Falstaff to speak for itself. "I expect my Macbeth to be severely i criticised, but on the fly leaf of my; prompt book you will find the note on which J base nil that I have done in tny interpretation of Macbeth, and op-1 on which I shall stand for exactly five years. It reads: I " '.Shakespeare threw all tradition to I the winds in writing his plays, so I. propose to do likewise in my interpret ! tation of the character of Macbeth and in the interpretation of other i characters of the play if i shall deem it essential.' "The atmosphere pervading the play of Macbeth is that of Evil. Intrigue nnd unscrupulous ambition abound throughout te incident. This lias led j not only present day critics, but so illustrious a player as Sir Henry Irv ing to pnint .Macbeth himself as a black hearted villain with his mind bent on the murder of Duncan even be- fore the rise of the curtain upon the first, act. "I cannot understand how a man with the gigantic brain of Sir Henry Irving could so misconceive the true character of the big, bluff, good hearted warrior who. through the sub tle suggestions of his ambitious wife and the influences of the same stripe i which she brings to bear upon him, is i fired nt last w ith something of her vile spirit of conquest and finally is i moved to murder. I "How to explain the words and ac-' Most Shot-up British By Ed 1. Keen (I'nited Press Staff Correspondent.) With the Cat Squadron (Somewhere Jin the English Coast). .Inn. 211. (Hy mail) "In case of a sudden call, how long would it take you to get under way "Oh, not. very long," "How ninny of those fouHuch shells do you usually carry,''' " Well, a good many." "How rapidly can you five that new gun?" "That all depends, yon know." Thus did the skillful sea-fighter dodge some of the multitude of questions fired at him today by his visitors. . Liko the British fleet itself, he is not only right On the job but he is taking no foolish chances. It was an Admiralty honso party. The Allied nnd neutral worlds were, the guests iu the persons of about forty correspondent from America, France, Italy, .Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Hol land and Spain, besides a number from lOnglaud. Australia and Canada. Perhaps thero was a (iermnn spy in our midst, despite the care exercised by the revolving chair warriors . in Whitehall iu selecting the party's per sonnel. If so, probably he learned some things, but there are a lot he would 1 1 U o to learn that he didn't. He surely uiu-t have been inipressel right at tlio start villi the fact that the British nnvnl officer can be cliarniing lv courteous without being unduly c'ouiiiinicative, mid that the British blue-jacket has been quite ns well drilled in controlling his tongue as in tnuiining the guns. Another thinn he must have learned before the day was over, if he lidn'tj know it before, was that there are no; croakers among, these sea-fighters. The men of the Cat Squadron are tho cheer-1 fulest lot of Britishers 1 ve met since the war started, as well as among the hardest worked. Vpon the crews of these light cruisers and speedy destroy ers rests n Heavy responsioniM . iui seventeen months they have been at j this job of guarding Britain from raid or invasion, steam is nlways up. They I are not onlv ready at an instant's: notice to pounce upon the enemy, but thev are constantly searching for him. Some part of the Cat Squadron is al ways prowling about the North Sea, i $100 Reward, $100 The remlers of this paper will b pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreuJed disease that elenc has been We to cure In nil Its tin;e, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh C'uro Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beimr a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken In temnllv, aclmu directly upon the blood sml mucous surruees or tne system inere bv destroying the foundation of tne dls- ease, nnd giving the patient strength by building up the constitution snd assisting nature In doing Its work. The proprietors hsve so much faith In Its cnrstlve now en th.it thv offer One Hundred Dollars ' for nv case that It falls to euro. Send for list of testimonial. w AitdrfM: r J I'HKNET ft CO. Tld. O, 'fi.il.l by nil Pnnm Tie. !!( lUlls Family Fills for jftlpstlos, Conception tions of Macbeth after the murder has been committed, otherwise than by in terpreting the character as I have in terpreted it, I cannot imagine. " livery other Macbeth I ever heard of was painted a deep dyed scoundrel from curtain to curtain. 1 prefer to consider Macbeth a perfectly human human, led into his errors step by step by the circumstances and influences that surround, him. Is not this the his tory of the development, of most vil lians in real life? I think it is. "How little real attention ever has been given to the production of Mac beth is clearly shown, I believe, in tho long procession of sheeted and for the most part rather heavy set ghosts that stalk and prowl boldly through the conservative production of Macbeth. "Had those who made, the presenta tions paused a moment to consider, thev would have realized that Shake speare was compelled to write down to ! his audiences, which were much more from Missouri than the audiences of to-i day. When Shakespeare wanted to pre sent a ghost to his audience, he had to present a ghost that was a very ghast ly ghost and plainly labelled: 'This is a Chost',' "Were Shakespeare alive and writing Macbeth today, lie would have no such palpable apparition. I believe he would quite agree with me. I have merely the siiL'irestion of a chost. niado bv a flickering green light upon the scarlet j velvet of a chairbiuk, or fluttering here nnd there about some corner of the room. Macbeth rejtlly saw no ghost, you know; it was merely part of the imaginings of a half-crazed man such as I interpret Macbeth to be just after the murder. "I believe Macbeth is the most dif ferent and generally shunned of Shake spearean roles. It has come to be a tradition among players that to have a part in the presentation or even to quoto Mqacbetlt is bound to bring dis aster. " do not believe this any more than believe the old nonsense nbdut Shakespeare being unpopular with the public. The great trouble always has been that Shakespeare has been made iinpopulur by being presented to the public by players who did not know how to play Shakespeare. " Booth 's Hamlet invariably played to packed houses. The same is true of Keeno's Othello and my father's Fal staff. That was because each in his respective sphere knew how to play Hamlet nnd Othello and Falstaff. "It. is my ambition to play Macbeth. Flayed at and around and about, Mac beth unquestionably has been; but Macbeth himself, the real. ' the true Macbeth, never has been played." Ship in Navy Is Visited nosing out submarines, fishing for mines, annoying Zeppelins, chasing aeroplanes, or quietly rubbering along the (termini coast. They are too busy to grumble even if they felt liko it. Hack in London cabinet members were resigning; Labor was threatening .to boycott the war; politicians generally were making a frightful fuss; the pessimists were hav ing the time of. their lives and even the dyed-in-the-wool optimists were sadly shaking their heads. But here all was peace and quiet, and cheerfulness and work. We talked with men of all grades, from the youthful-looking Commodore to the veteran oiler and politics wasn't incut ionel once the whole day. They had no curiosity ns to what, was going on at Westminister. The overturning of the government or even the abdication of the king would make no difference to them. Their work was cut out when Winston Churchill, 'a week before war was de clared, started the (rrand Fleet for the stations where it would do the most good, and they are going to keep right at the job until the finish. This rendezvous of the Cat Squadron is one of the most important outposts of the Empire. Here, in a com modious and well-guarded harbor, are assembled practically every typ of naval vessel, with the exception of Dreadnoughts. Besides swift light cruisers of the Arethusa type, nnd the latest lll(i tnodol of destroyers, there is an imposing flock of "K" submarines, also mine-layers and minesweepers, colliers, tankers, supply ships of var ious kinds, airplane carriers that look like huge houseboats, drifters, and trawlers, not to mention motor boats " made in America. " I It was in one of the latter that we were permitted to cruise about the har bor nnd finally to visit the most shot up ship in the British navy, the Are thusa. Despite her numerous scars and patches she suffers from no in-j ternai complaint. They call her the Snucy Arethusa and she looks the part. Also her record proves it. She has been in every publicly recorded scrap in the North -Sea since the war started and in several unofficial ones about which nothing is to be said. Her chief trophy is the lllucher, which she tor pedoed in tho Dogger Hank engagement of January it last, then helped to fish the struggling survivors out of t lie water. More interesting than the details of her up-to-date armament, her fire control-system or her oil driven engines, was the snappiness of her crew. Youth has the call in the British navy these days, among both officers and men. The officers we met today average in age probably ten years younger than those in similar positions in the American navy. As an exhibition of quickness of movement it would be difficult to imagine a more inspiring spectacle than the demonstration given for our benefit of rapid filing by one of the four-inch jjuu crews. .No one hold the Did lt Ever Happen ! ' ' ' I- (LtSTEM ToV . I j CZ (NOvJUiTfcMj T" CI3VTHIS JokE-LJ . J ZZl I HAVE: ToAAA m$sJ -?J? 'ry ymSvv 3irs ALtrc J fttrfoiv. o . A VZSJ 11 Xi W$m Regiment of King Georges Servants Mysteriously Disappears By Wilbur S. Forrest. (Knifed I'ress Staff Correspondent.) London, Fob, 2. (By Mail) " Mfith ing more was ever heard of them. Thev charged into the forest and were lost to sight and sound. Xot one of them ever came back." Sir Ian Hamilton's report. It is the talk of England, the great est mystery of the war, the charge of the Fifth Norfolk's, the King's own servants, at Anafarta. The storv of how these 260 "ardent souls" charged on through the village of Anafarta and completely vanished into the "for est of 'death" beyond, is history that some day may take its place beside that of the immortal tale of Bnlaklava. The "Lost Legion," it is called to day, but. until the war is over the fate of the men who went to battle from the King's Sandringham estates cannot be told. The king personally had in stituted every possible inquiry. The American embassy in Constantinople has asked the Turkish government The forest through which the "Lost Legion" swept on in Gnllipoli has been searched time and time again. There have been found no bodies, no graves, no sign , except two small poeketbooks, the property of Captain William Deck, who commanded the Legion. Captain Beck is missing with all of his command. Meantime scores of cottage homes in the royal Sandringham estates of West Norfolk are in mourning. Wives, sweet hearts and mothers are wearing crepe, but despite all this there is ever the hope that some day the. boys will come marching homp. "Perhaps they are prisoners of the Turks; perhaps they weren't killed at all, and perhaps" it's the hope against hope of the women of West Norfolk. The "Lost Legion'' received its baptism of fire before it set foot on Turkish soil. It arrived off Sulva Bay August 10th aboard the palatial Aqui tania from England. Turkish ma chine guns ami artillery ploughed the water about them as they were being natch on them. That wouldn't have been good form, in the circumstances; but if the Hermans can do it any faster they are entitled to crow. Concentrated efficiency, readiness for any emergency, but above all the breezy, boyish optimism of these sea fighters which the nervous strain of constant vigilance or the down-hearted-Hess of some of the folks back home has failed to disturb in the slightest degree these nre the impressions one cannot fail to carry away nfter a day spent with the Cat Squadron. YOU MUST WEAR BRIGHT THINGS WITH YOUR NEW "MUD BLUE" THIS SPRING; Y'OUNG MEN WILL ALSO SELECT BLATANT HUES . M A S - Qi v v nicsT"1 oevsrtv rs$ The new note in female apparel this pring is "mud blue," shads so drab and dull that it must U VJrJ wtth ery bnght colors. Gay spots of eolor in th hat, jrirdle and other ippropriaU placea relier the BobernesS of the shade which it s promised as will be Tery popular. Male atyle will abo be enlivened with bright colored ss ni raYat n tendency in the length andjridth of aUrU stems to indicate a return of th athletic firLj to You? 1 IN I " 1 1 UV t v-S I rim Firmer an Regarding . . . "ruie wneat crop, it is marvelous and a monument of streagtn lor business confidence to build upon, exceeding the most optimistic predictions." IMimi avsratnl In 1913 mm 25 hnltH me, men Oa. n;mmB4 In 191 S over 45 bushel, men Barley average in 1913 mm 40 buehel, per mere Prices are high, markets convenient, excellent land low in mice either iml r J. N. Grieve, Cor. 1st and Post Streets, Spokane, Wash. transported to shore, where they landed safely and dug themselves in. Two days later the men were ordered to clear the Turks from Anafarta. Colonel Beauchamp was at fueir head with Captain Beck. The attack, de veloped rapidly. Enfiladed by Turk ish fire, ninny of them dropped wound ed or dead, but the others swept on through the village and into oblivion. Xiws has filtered through via Switzerland that thirteen of those who charged through Anafarta are prison ers in Constantinople. But it has developed that these men fell wound ed before the mysterious darkness of the forest was Reached. Long before Gallipoli was evacuated the Mystery Forest was retaken by the Turks. This event sealed the puzzle tighter than ever. Among those who charged with Cap tain Be.ckJ. organizer of the Legion and for twenty years the lung's estate agent, were the king's plumber, gard ner. game-keeper, woodman, golf fore man and scores of men in lesser posi tions. Like their fathers ajid their fathers' fathers they had been born royal servants. Even- Sunday in n-11 the parish churches now prayers are said for the I safe return of the missing ones. In every cottage is a recent message from j the king: I "I heartily sympathize with you who j are. left in suspense but I am proud i that the battalion fought so splendid 'lv." A London newspiper has by vote of its readers chosen the twelve English men who can least be spared at this crisis. Lloyd-Ceorge runs first and: Bing (left-go gets in Xo. 12. Syracuse Post-Standard. ' jrrr - w , By Mort Burger Bushs! Crop in 1915 lay lor their land with on year' trap prosperity wis nvtr so treat Western Canada as a grain nnwtiirr a hmm ment business man says: "Canada's position today is sounder than ever. There is more wheat, more oats, more grain for feed, 20 more cattle than last year and more nogs. The war market in Europe needs our surplus. As - 1 sic,): HERE'S NEW VIGOE FOB OVEBWOBKED STOMACHS Daniel J. Fry, the popular dmggist, has been in the drug business long enough to have his own opinion of the best way of selling medicines. He says the plan adopted by Mi-o-na, the great dyspepsia remedy, is the fairest he has ever heard of. He doesn't believe that a medicine ought to be paid for unless it does the user some good. And Mi-o-na is sold under a positive guarantee to relieve dyspepsia or to refund th money. You simply leave 50 cents on deposit with Daniel J. Fry and if, after you have used the box of Mi-o-na you decide that it has done you no good, all you have to d is to tell him so and he will return your money. Hundreds of people have been relieved of stomach agonies by using this re markable remedy. It is not simply a food digester; it is a medicine that put all of the digestive organs into normal condition and gives ruddy, glowing, vig orous health. A change for the better will be seen after the first few doses of Mi-o-na, and its continued use will soon give the power to cat anything at any tim and uot suffer distress after ward. Mi-o-na is sold under a positive guar antee to refund the money if it does not cure. This is the strongest proof that can be offered as to the merit of the medicine. Nothing lessens a man's success in his work or a woman's fascinating per sonality more than a weak stomach with its attending evils. Use Mi-o-n3 and see how much more there is in life