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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 26, 1916)
THE DATLY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGON. SATURDAY. FEB. 2fi. 1916. JEF H English Fears of German tl FARMSTEAD BOYS' MAGAZINE asanriONdiRido.()oo . . J 11 IT WSJ ill ' Great iiooiog wrers. oy e Daily Capital Journal liri? Have made arrangements by which any subscriber of the V V JL CAPITAL JOURNAL, delivered by carrier in Salem, who will pay for the paper six months in advance, at the regular rate, $2.50, will receive without extra charge, the following publica tions for one year: The Northwest Farmstead, regular price, $1.00 Boys' Magazine, regular price, . . Today's Magazine, regular price . . Household Magazine, regular price, . Total of regular price,-. 1.00 .50 .25 $2.75 REMEMBER these cost you nothing if you pay six months in ad vance for the DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL by carrier in Salem. Or you may have the following combination on the same lines if you prefer it: Today's Magazine, one year, and McCall Magazine, one year, with two McCall pat terns of your own selection, free. Today's Magazine is a splendid publicationbigger and better than ever before. McCall's Magazine is too well-known to need further introduction it is growing bigger and better all the time. Mail Subscribers 1 bargains by paying one year's subscription at the regular rate of $3.00 per year. Call at the business office, or address CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon Friendly Invasion Told By Officer W elpfulness 0U Time Prospectors, College Girls and Priest to School for Cold Hunters (lie l ulled Pn'M.) Weaver. IVIi. "HI, I time" f mi t Klondike, a mother md urn, senior from f ahloiinble Smith eollt'ue, Calholi,' priest, iiml a limn from Muh igiin n well n undent from three ot'i vt hIiiwi me enrolled in n ,biHl lion' tadiiy to learn iicw to find iM liiine Kuil oilier minor il wealth. In ii liort iMilrc fur iiroHjuv tor the (Morn, I, (, liool of miiiee in teaohintf Ihirtv six venous cf ull ni!o mid walki of life. iui'Ui,iiiii three women, how to; WX'lt mili-va! wealth. Specimen, tost : Iiibi'i", soiIit(.V. i.-wnyiiin. laboratory work, toxrSi-olis and mun prm'tieal work with the j 'uk nre being studied liy the student who hope some dnv to vuin their knowledge into El neb find. JiivM Kobe-turn, of fnwon, a ' nn liont " ' "i" wh" know tin' Klondike, H'ji. . .' - - - - nillGIIESTER S PILLS V" ' I"' I'IMIilMI IIUIMI. X J ' S J1' "' A"k ""r ""( "" ff Fit i .i .,-u. -iff. nu I n..ia,,A I I,,, in " l VI4 n -" -V ! -' . Jfc.-.. K'l-I W ' ) V i 4. I l't' .'I ulln-r. Iluf wf ,nr v I I - ' I' .i. ti l '' "I 1' 'I I 1KI i L. I I ' "'I 'H -tS I 'I Y " tj f"' "' I. '''. I'' ''' iiiul 1'ntlior Hoboit Servant, of Golilcn, I'olu., nri" iii'turiMiiUO i'iuroa fliuriiiK Uu i i'iih'r of intiToxt wilb Mrs. NilotU I'l'ltorird. a matronly mro'li owner who thin 1. n there in wealth around !ir riiiuii il' she inn oiih learn how to K rali' the riilii'i. " We roiinh ueok ean't do more than open a country," Maid Holiertson in a talk to the oilier inemler of the pros pei'tiiiu I'lasn. "It's the lii oiillit that I iut s ininiiiK on a gKd basin. The 'X I'orporations ire makiii); tbinn pay with their dr.'Jxi'H wliero the individual miner eoul.lii 't. ' ' Mm. PoHerard t'ink "gold U where yon tin, I it." .she i opposed to "lock ing up the country' mineral wealth in national parka" and tayj, "I dou't see why me projector ana miner are net permitted to go anywhere." , Father Servant knows all the pioneer niinin men of Colorado, lie h.ia hi-i eve on a depo-it of bismuth in an niiandonel mine, lie said. Mrs, Allie T. Wilson, a Uenver woman in the feather Im-iness, suid a'no was jumping to the other extreme, roeks, to develop mine mining interest ho has that never ' panne 1 out." Mrs. Fliuheth Davidson, a aenior t Smith eollee, is seekliiij health through priiiieetiii(. Siie ufl'ered a nervou lireiu.lewii at Smith. Timt Seattle lumberman who fell a vietim of the "bad((er" game can ex ie,t to be the vietim of badgering by his 1'riemls. Preparedness Pays In Forest Fire Protection lMila recently compiled in the state forester's office shows that the forest1 protection lueiuies have for several, years waiied i campaign of " prepared- iicss" in their fijjht against forest fire.; Ourinii the period of l'.U'J to l!'l: in-j elusive, more thnu ;',,0'i.i miles of abau doned and obstructed trail were uindo passable; miles of strategic new trail built: 412 miles of telephone line were constructed nud -3 cabins were erected for the use of Jookout men. This work eillcd for an expenditure of about f."n,i0Ci, practically all of which was borne by t'ne timber owners. "The importance of such work is un questioned" said State Forester KUiott. "Lookout men are of little value unless they can immediately report the fires discovered, to their county warden and to the patrolman tu whose district they occur, and therefore lookout stations must b equipped with telephones and the patrolmen must have access to tele phones at several points along their 'beats.' 1'atrolmen finding a fire that thev cannot handle alone must be able without losi of time to request their chief to dispatch i crew of lire fight ers. To mobilize a crew, together with tools and rations, on the fire line in any part of a district in tune to control a lire before it attains dangerous propor tions, tievc.sitatoi a carefully planued I system of passible roads and trails. I ,11111 sure that the preparedness work on I the part of the timber owners and the state has been n vital factor in keeping down to an insignificeiit figure the loss ! sustained from forest fires during the , past four seasons. ' ' j Ashland Tidings: The Rogue River ; C'ntiul company put n big force of men j nnd teams at work the last of the week ,on the Willow Springs extension of the ; canal system. Tents were pitched for the workmen ind work will be rushed. !The canal men estimate that the work I will be finished by the first of April, i Seventy men have been put to work and a force of 100 men will be used as soon ; as the extent of the work will allow, Need a laxative? Don't take a violent purgative. Right the sluggish condition with the tale, vegetable remedy which has held pub lic confidence for over sixty years. flFJ MALTS PILLS UrtMt tl Amr M,ci. im Ik WU. . MmrvWa. U Un. 10, JA An'American who has just returned from the United States and who thus had opportunity of tartdng with the Knglish authorities who boarded, awn long detained the ship he was on, told that amongst Knglish just now the im pression is rife that Germany intends an invasion of England-proper. The above named possibility is one which has been much discussed in mili tary circles, and, in general, the opinion heard is, that such invasion would be well nigh impossible, the difficulties of transport ships needed would be too difficult. American Officer's Opinion. At such a moment, the opinion of an ex-American army officer who has been acting as military observer in Kurope and, who has recently been publishing a series of letters reflecting the im pression he gained ,are just now, of quite special interest.' I ho w riter opens up by reference to remarks in his previous letter as fill lows : I spoke of the degeneracy of the Kng lish in arms. Who was the wit who said that the Knglish urmy of today consisted of Scotch soldiers, an Irish general and a British paymastert Who ever he was, if he added to the Scotch a few Canadians and Australians, would have said all there was to say of Eng land ' soldiery. The little army that England had at the beginning of the war, liil.'.OOO men, was as good an any; but it was a corps d 'elite. Those "mad men in petticoats," us the Germans called the Highland regiments, died nobly, and perhaps saved Calais or Taris or both. But they are gone, all gone. The English officers, all too few in the beginning, are now dead or disabled. And if they died as the fool dietli, it was a splendid folly so splendid that "Even the ranks of Tuscany Could not forbear to cheer." But the fact remains that, they are gone and that their places are now fill ed with boys, splendid boys, but boys. With the forethought and skill of the devil,.the Germans trained corps ,to pick off officers, and the unreasoning cour age of the English officers helped on the purpose of the German sharpshoot ers. , Moral Stamina Less. What I have said about the English masses don't apply to those English aristocrats who have ruled abominably, hut who know how to die magnificent ly. I was speaking then of the bow shouldered knife grinder and' hollow chested spinner who now have the places in tho Knglish ranks flint once were filled by the bone of Yorkshire and the muscular pith of Devon, men whose moral stamina is even nt greater disparity with that nf those one-time yeoman, than the physical. You say Russia is not beaten, and you say truly. They can shear off n Poland or two and yet. leave Russia's strength unimpaired. But the advant age to Germany that comes from her success in the west Russian campaign has been shown in the Balkans. Bul garia had to pick the winner and had been waiting so as to be sure. The Ger man doings in Poland and her victories nt Vilna and the rest showed to Bul garia who was to win, or at least who looked to be the winner, and then was the time that Bulgaria must choose, nnd she chose the Teuton's side: and with a belt of countrv from the Bosphorus to the Baltic, all Hell can't break through. Serbia is on the point of annihilation and Greece is having a time to keep her national identity. A Territorial Block. But whatever is the fate of Greece; Turkey, Bulgaria. Poland, Austria-Hungary and the German empire will con stitute a territorial block that neither Russia from the north nor Italy from the. south nor France'and England from the west can seriously dent. What success have the allies hud at the Dardanelles? And remember all this time that the allies have not suc ceeded, the only aid that the Germans were able to give the Turks was such as could be given surreptitiously. With the rnnd open from the Kiel canal to Constantinople by which the products of the mines and factories of northern France and Belgium and Germany can be poured into the Ottoman 'a lap what can the Anglo Frnnk- contingent hope to do on tho Jfarmoraf Foresees Capture of Calais. I don't look to see decisive activity on tho western line until the Balkan situation is settled and the Suez taken by the Tiirko-Teptonic. forces; then, with the British Empire cut in two and Russia bottled up north and south, Ger many can give -some time to Calais. In six months or a year, with the help of Japan and with wnr goods from America, Russia will be busy again, but many things can be done in six months or a year. It will be a huge task to break through to Culais, for the al lies, taking pages from the German's book have intrenched themselves tre mendously; but break through the Ger mans will, by force or diplomacy. What mean by diplomacy Iwill ex plain later. But now I will assume that the kaiser is opposite Dover and a scant twenty miles from it. He will place huge batteries on either side of a strip of water a mile or two wide. These guns will be forty-two centimeter guns or perhaps-twice the sie, and with them the channel in front of them will be cleared of English ships. Those great guns will make that strip of water between those batteries clear water for the small bouts to be used for the passing over of the German troops; they will use small vessels of the type that Napoleon planned to use when he had his army at Boulogne just before the rnmpaif of Clm. And when, like the children of Israel, the Germans have passed over, what do you think will happen to those iinhap pv island people f Thinks France WiU Yield. And all that is but a prelude to the war song that will echo on our shores, has been at concert pitch for a year. I spoke of the kaiser's getting to Ca lais by diplomacy. This is how . France That strain can't last always: she has no tide of young men coming on to replace the dead and wounded in the trenches; all her men are in. down to the boys cf 10. The French nre far from satisfied with the help that Eng land has given, france thinks Kitch- I cner is keep troops at home to guard against pu.-sible invasion who should , be in northern France making that in ' vasion impossible. The Germans will offer to give up the newly conquered territory if the French will give up all claims upon Alsace and Lorraine and some of the French colonies and give free passage to the German arms to the .south shore of the Straits of Dover. Aud I France, worn and battered, more philos j opher than patriot, will say: "Those pigs of England have left us in the ; lurch. Alsace and Lorraine have been ! gone a long time. Those colonies have . been more trouble than they are worth, j and anyway, we can't keep this thing I up forever." 1 And they'll trade. ! You hear talk that the Germans are j not behind their government. Don't ; think it. The greatest wisdom of the kaiser has been displayed in taking les i sons from the Church of Rome. The Roman church will live till the arches of London bridge are indeed broken, because she places her impress upon the mind ofouth. Says Bergium Will Be German. It is the psychic truth that the kaiser has seized upon. He wrought wisely in building his great military great ness, the supremacy of force, the doc trines of Nitzsche and Treitschkc, the great destiny of the Germans, that the German is the super man, that the Teu tonic world-dominion is to be had for the taking, and so on. And these things, taught as at a time when things taught can never be forgot ten, explain the supreme self-confidence of the German. These things are not mere matters of belief with him; they nre articles of blind, fanatical faith. And so you now find the German na tion. Socialists and all, at the kaiser's back. And they look upon this conquest business as a duty. They think thcy will rule the new territory better than it is now ruled; and given a chance to order the world, will make it a bet ter and happier worn! and it will re main so such is their belief. The brutalities practiced in Belgium nnd France they look upon as the pain the surgeon 's knife inflicts; they cut to cure. Belgium is now German nnd will remain so, and the sooner the Bel gians understand this the better. Con tinental Times, Berlin. DON'T SUFFER LAUGH AT STOMACH MISERY Daniel J. Fry Will Return the Money If Mi-o-na Does Not Relieve Dyspepsia. Among all the remedies in Daniel J. Fry's popular drug Btore, there are few that he is willing to sell on a guarantee to refund the mouey if they do not cure. Mi-o-na, the famous dyspepsia remedy has helped so many of his customers that Daniel J. Fry says, "If this remedy does not relieve you, come back to my store and I will cheerfully re turn your money." Anyone who has dyspepsia, indiges tion, headaches, dizzy feelings or liver troubles, should take advantage of this chance to be made well without any risk of spending their money to no pur pose, lli-o-na will relieve you, will regulate the digestion, will enable you to eat what ytfu want. If it does not do all this it will not cost you a cent. Daniel J. Fry has sold hundreds of boxes of Mi-o-ua in the last few weeks and has yet to receive the first com plaint from any customer. Such a record is simply marvelous and speaks volumes for the merit of the remedy. It is easy enough' to fill a column with the symptoms afflicting those who have dyspepsia, but there is no need Tf describing their condition. What they want is relief and they can get it in -Mi-o-na. Do not suffer a day longer with disordered digestion. If Mi-o-na relieves you it costs vou 50 cents a box, if it docs not, you have Daniel J. Fry 's personal guarantee to return your money. - i Rev. Billy Sunday Says, "Put Oranges In Dinner fail" is a splendid way of referring to HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters in cases of Poor Appetite, In digestion, Biliousness and Con stipation. -Try a bottle. Senator Wants Inland Water Pocket Like Kiel Canal, for U. S. Fleet (By United Press. Washington, Feb. 2(i The example of the German fleet riding safely at anch or in the Kiel canal harbor und picking its own time for combat, wbb cited to day by Senator Saulsbury, of Delaware, as his reason for demanding that miles of defenive canals be dug' in this country. The two waterways he pro poses, one of 15 miles from Chesapeakii to Delaware Bay, and one from Tren ton, N. J ., across the Aaridan Bay,, would provide an inner harbor from the Virginia capes to Naragansett Bay. Thes.o defensive projects, in the opinion of military experts, would be equival cnt to a large army as a defensive fact or They would enable the American navy to concentrate in safety and force a foe to keep two fleets, each of . strength equal to that of the United States fleet, at both the Virginia Capes ' and off New York harbor, it' it attempt ed a blockade. Such a canal would serve, like a giant moat, as a vast linn of defensive against land forces, which might attempt to invade the region in which most of the munitions plants and, manufacturing concerns of the nutioa are located. "The time -of greatest danger will be just at the close of tha European war," said Senator SaulBbury today. "The nations will be at th j height of their military power. What kind of navy and coifst defense we have in 1823 is not one-tenth so important . as w hat we have in 1918. The Chesa- noola anA Plain n... . n ...... 1 O-: .3 I'vua.v u.,u uciaitaic tuiil.i, fiu XCVl UtCJI, would cost but $12,000,000, which is k-.ia than we pay for a battleship. Yet it would double the effectiveness of our Atlantic fleet. Besides being a most valuable means of defense, this canal would save commercial shipping hun- ' dreds of thousands of dollars a year. Ships to reach Baltimore would not need to round the treacherous Virginia, Capes, not to mention the great sav ing in distance that would be effect ed. Most naval and transportation men, with whom I have talked cannot explain why so obviously a meritorious public, improvement has not been put through." WETS AND DR.YS BATTLE BE FORE NEW YORK SOLONS TODAY (By United Press.) m Albany, N. Y., Feb. 2ii. Legislative lobbyists, representing the prohibition ists and the auti-prohibitionists, are at I it nere today, l ue measure, providing , for state prohibition and pending in th legislature, is the bone of contention. The nntis declare the passage of the bill would lose the state nearly $20,000.(H)i' in annual revenue from excise taxes. The pros reply that its passage would snvc the state far more thau $20,000,0ui) in annual expenditures for prisons, elmshouses und insane asylums. DALLAS HAS A NEW MUNICIPAL FLAG Dallas. Texas, Feb. 20. Dallas is to have a municipal flag. It has three bars, two blue and n white, w ith a red star in the center. It was designed by Oswin K. King, a newspaper man. A public christening is planued when the flag is first raised on the city hall. Put an orange in the dinner pail so that "Bill" will have no occasion to "rush the growler" at noon time this is the advice that the Rev. Billy Sunday gives to the wives and sisters of workingmen. "CAI.IFOKXIA. well named the Golden State, is typified bv a Goldeu Trinity its Golden Metal. Golden Sun sets and Golden Oranges," says the Reverend Billv. "The man here who has not tho de sire to work, and to enjoy life as it can not be enjoyed in many loss favored regions, must be a grouch. If he feels that way he should take an orange the magic remedy so bountifully pro vided by Nature. For surely the know ledge that these Gohten Oranges pun gent with their citrus odor, delightful in their refreshing taste, a pleasing combination of food and drink may be grown in your front garden, should chase the grouch, from any cross-grained nature. "I love to reel an orange. As I do o I get a whiff of Orange Blossoms life seems gladder. I almost hear th" chime of wedding bells. Or, again, the aroma of the gulden skin acts as an no- petizing tonic and I clearly hear th. "Every workingman should have an orange in his lunch basket: mothers should give them without stint to their children; a dish of ornnges should form, a centerpiece for every home breakfa.it. table for all to eat who will for the orange is truly typical of this lovelv country; is emblematic of the beauty of your mountains and valleys, your home an.l lit,,,. t1.n!- n V - l: J .. it I.om u.rs iu,ii. iiiuj uc iivru iu luein. Everyone, grouch or no grouch, should cat them If the wives and sisters o? workingmen would see to it that every lunch basket or dinner pail had an or ange in it, 'Bill' would not want that glass of beer for lunch. " California ! There is something in the very nume that lures nnd charm you. "California! It smells of orange blos soms, roses, daffodils, poppies and hon eysuckles. "California! It tastes of orange, figs, raisins, dates, olives, plums, mel ons, and walnuts. "California! It is a labyrinth of bewitching beauty, festooned with tang ling creepers, bright with perennial bloom, with its groves of pepper, or ange, palm, olive and eucalyptus trees. "California! It bronzes your cheek and bathes you in its matchless sun sine, nnd keeps the undertaker away, "California! I hnva often imnHiip,? . that Heaven must be just around the At Last! Instant Relief for that Awful Bunion ???ru. W'hr enntinu. to suflVr the atrnny. torture end discomfort of that awful bumon whrn her u IntUnt UIl Ou iranteeU i.,l you doo t liav to pjy one ceat uuioi jrou ct aosolute saiuiacliou. "Btsnsoii Comfort" Guaranteed to Give Instant Relief Cured owrTJ.WO m?n anl trwen lest yar 15 ywn of cor.tinuM iurrMfl. M'r who tiav trpi1 iMils, plntfc. emit .uHi-'v.ii a:iJ all w.rtu ! cheap remedies without u:v.-i guuiiy p.i? the full pri'.-e fvr a rpul rftnetly ' ft-mion Cnmt.Ml 'the only known Bunion cure Don"; 'ive ti? don't think that Bunion are incurable don't f you've tried even thing under the un- todav to the dniBiat named below net box ot "iiunion Comfort'' try two peters- an j if yon do not ft 1 1 i,i-.-a;it relirf. return The rmarr.Vr and all vourmorey ba;;k. We know wka: 'Itunion Cvtniort have don for other wt know wuat they can do for you. J. C. PERRY, Druggist, 115 S. Commercial Street