FIVB c: n n ii n I SUNDAY MONDAY THE OREGON If It's Good, We Have It : Billie Burke, in "Gloria's Romance" 13 EI II ON EIGHT HOUR BILL! MONDAY ii; President Will Urge Action On This the First Thing On(y one more eft Don't Miss Them When Congress Meets THE DAILV CAPITAL JOUItNAL. :!AT.EM, OREGON, SATURDAY, NOV-. 11, 1916, 1 1 II if x. m ALSO WILLIAM NIGH and IRENE HOWLEY Fiyfc Acts of Realism, Power and Romance By Robert J. Bender. d'nitcd Press staff correspondent.) Willininstown, Muss., Nov. U Glad thnt the' election is now over, 1'resident Wilson today took tlie first complete rest he has had since the, opening of the campaign. Dining the ilny he drove through the hills anil planned to see a part, at least, of the football game this afternoon between Williams and the j State Agricultural college. He leaves i at 5:25 on his return journey to Bhine I-Cliff. N. Y.. whore h hnsr.ln thn Mnv. l ; flower for a cruise down the river to jNew York. He expects to come ashore a Sunday for church and an automobile U'.ride and will leave that afternoon for , Washington by train, arriving about 9 II 'o'clock. . 3 ! The president's friends are strongly W I urging him to take an extended cruise 52 on the Mayflower or go ay some- . where Tor a couple of weeks' rest bofore jakintr III) his nft'icinl duties nirnin nnrl EZEnSESnSEElMI EZSS contemplated program in . (congress. They Bay the strain of the campaign has prevented him from y tin nun mn, mi "- fj", ft ' - : ii : h' y t V f . , hi s pi ,-?- 11 w. - El 4 - M LA.V r-J ii WILLIAM NIGH IN UFE'i5HAPOWa Coming Tuesday Evening Grand Concert in appreciation of Miss Mary Schultz. Indorsed by the Salem Woman's Club. Prohis Candidate Wins In FloridaWets Victorious in Missouri Absolute prohibition has carried in Oregon by a majority well over 4(100 v(tes. With the count in Multnomah county complete and some of the dry districts upBtate yet to hear from, the amend ment has a clear majority of 4181. The outlying counties are giving the meas ure a- heavy favorable vote. The1 final majority may be as high as 4500. The total "vote, including Multnomah county, now stands: res, 108,470. No, 104,298. . Majority for, 4181: The affirmative vote outside Mult nomah county v 77,197, the negative vote 03,241 a lii-r favorable majority of 13,958. .'. Multnomah 9775 Asalnst But Multnomah lounty voted against the amendment by a majority of 9775, leaving a net majority of 4147. Trv Sleet Governor t Tampa, Fla., Nov. 11. C. C. Catts, independent prohibitionist cainliilato for governor, was leading W. V. Knott, JOHNSON PLACES E Says It Was Crocker, Kees ling, Harrison Gray Otis and the Gang. San Francisco, Nov. 11. Replying to an editorial in the Los Angeles Times blaming him for the defeat of Govern or Hughes for president, Governor Hi ram W. Johnson today issued a state ment in which he declared that "Wil liam H. Crocker, Francis V. Keesling, Harrison Gray Otis and other republi can leaders in California were responsi ble for Hughes defeat. If California has been tho deciding factor in this election," he said, "Wil liam H. Crocker, Francis V. Keeling, Harrison Gray Otis and a few acting in concert with them have the proud dis tinction of having made a president of the United States and Woodrow Wilson owes them a debt of gratitude he never can repay." , 'Californiang know full well what lost this state to Hughes" said John sou. "A few petty politicians, acting with the Los Angeles Times and one or two others, so misused Mr. Hughes and Mb visit to California that the injury they did wo were unable to undo. "When Mr. Hughes came into our lor governor, w icau ..g ... state, Crocker and Keesling, aided and democrat, by votf ' aCC "iled Netted by a small coterie, created a fish the situation so that their respon sibility may be overlooked and forgotten." Berlin Says A'Jies What White Thinks Emporia, Kas., Nov. 11. William Allen White, former progressive and editor of the Kmporia Gazette says in an editoriul, "The west does not for get." "The progressives would not vote with those who distributed the aspira tions of the people. Not even the iss'ie ' Homme -phey expected to break through. cot- ting the rest he needed nt Mhadow Tou Tl... i 1 1 IT . t'V J'lfflUIVMI llllliniTIL mitt Hiuilt' unnot ireK Line " ,,"t,mto .u i at the prospect of having a working ma- ijority in both houses of congress and is Say Lino is Impregnable. ! already planning legislation. First of By Carl W. Ackcrman, i1'11 ,vi" probably come completion of tho " ( United Press staff correspondent.) !lrnrnm set forth to settle the threaten Headquarters Homme Front, via Ber-ied railroad strike last summer. Im lin, mid wireless to Snvvil'le. L. I., NoV-1 mediate action will be urged on this in llTho English and French are " f"t incssago to congress. faced with an impossible task on the here from 35 out of 52 comities in Flor ida and almost complete returns from the others. The vote was: Catts 35,815, Knott 27,848. ' Wets Win in Missouri St. Louis, Nov. 10. State wide pro hibition was defeated in Missouri last Tuesdav bv an overwhelming vote. It appears that the heavy adverse cote in St. Louis defeated- the amend ment. - DRY AMENDMENT CARRIES Portlnnd, Ore,, Nov. 11. Liquor in any form is going to be as scarce as hen's teeth iu Oregon within'a month. The "bone dry" amendment to the state constitution has carried by 3,000, according ta returns today and the im portation of bottled goods from Cali fornia will be halted - PAID FREAK BETS Stanford University, Cal., Nov. 11. Two Stanford students who bet on Hughes paid bets by appearing on the campus in broad daylight in full dress suits, with red, white and blue Hughes badges painted on their dress shirts. The United States Steel corporation tys declared one per cent extra oiMhe common stock, payable with the regular quarterly dividend of one and one fourth por. cent on December 30. Not earnings for the third quarter establish ed a new high record of K5.817,0!i7. Try the Journal classified ads the cost little and produce big results. situation in which they made it appear that air. ungues waaentiroly reaction ary and that he was neither in accord with nor sympathetic with California's progress and achievement. Californians looked aghast and unfortunately bo lieved that the situation created by Crocker, Keesling and the Times pre sented and revealed the mind of Mr. Hughes and that the mind thus revealed was whnt long ago California had pass ed by and repudiated. "These little politicians, doing-their littlo politics, preferred the gratifica tion of their malice and momentary tri umph of their prejudice 10 the success of the republican presidential candi date. They not only affronted progres sives and ignored progressive leaders, but in San Francisco, with equal stu pidity, they ignored San Francisco's greatest vote getter, Mayor James Kolpr, Jr.. and in Los Angeles treated in hko fashion the newly created lieu tenant governor, V uliam D. Stevens, both of whom were registered republi cans. "When Hughes first came to Cali fornia our people saw first with amaze ment," ho said, ."with sadness, then with increasing indignation that ap parently he was wholly in charge of those who represented tho old system, and the picture presented to our people was one that Crocker, Keesling and Otis and the few nctin? with them so impressed" upon the recollection of our electorate that, despite our efforts, it could not be wholly eliminated. "It is a matter of regret that any statement should be necessary at this time concerning tho result in Califor nia It would not be necessary but for the indecency of the Times in their present publications designed to cuttlo- of national honor swayed those politic al crusaders. Disheartened and ashamed but with unbroken spirits and unshak en convictions, these people voted for Wilson. Their leaders went to uugnes. But the folks in tho west refused to follow. They would vote for a man and a party that they despised, before vot ing fo'r a party" that they distrusted, even though they respected its. candi date." Whito and his paper supported Hughes, Comment Made by New York Papers On the Election New York, Nov. 11. New York news papers commented today as follows on l'resident Wilson's election: . Herald: "What is past is past. Let us rub off the slate and begin all over again, but write on that slate in let ters so large that this time they can not again be overlooked the words, ' sjn gle presideptial term. A single term of six or seven years would seem the best solution of the problem." Sun: "The president elected is the president not only for those who sup ported him, but for every patriotic and devoted American: and good luck, to him and -wisdom commensurate -with the mighty task before him in the next four years." Times: "If Mr. Roosevelt had been the republican candidate nobody can tell what would have happened. But Mr. Roosevelt is a genius, a sort of ele mental force. Mr. Hughes can't lie blamed for not being a Roosevelt. Be sides, one is enough." Tribune: "Tuesday's election dem onstrated beyond doubt the non-deliver- ability of the union labor vote. The vote which re-elected Mr. Wilson came large ly from the rural districts, from states in which tnere is only a trace oi nigniy unionized labor. World: "President Wilson will enter his second term with a clean slate. The old issues are dead. The old political alignments are broken. The president has no friends whom he is under obli gations ,o reward. He owes nothing to any political organization." NAN PATTERSON NAMED Cincinnati, O., Nov. 11. Nan' Pat terson, the actress, mentioned in the Caesar Young murder trial in New York several years ago, was named today co respondent in the amended divorce peti tion of Mrs. Viola Dillingham of the Grand hotel, who charges that her. hus band, Frank A. Dillingham, patent medicine manufacturer, traveled with Nan Patterson on a steamboat from Se attle to Alaska iu 1913. . The Boston Consolidated Gas com pany reports an output of 501,131,000 cubic feet for October, a gain of 8.4 per cent over the corresponding period of the previous year. But every soldier, -every officer and ev ery German general knows they can't break through." General Von Buelow, comninnder in HUGHES' IS STILL SERENE By Carl D. Groat. (United Press staff correspondent.) New York, Nov. 11 Out wa Ally, at chief of the German forces on the Soni-1 ''", Charles tvans Hughes is not me, thus spoke today in an interview nt ; mowing any signs or disappointment his headquarters. over indications thnt he has just lost It is-reported they have covnlry Ju" ni""-. me always ready to rush over our lines," , Wu0 ,wo v Detore the election he continued. "But it is technically and filu,u: ,,"If 1 Bm elected as I expect physically impossible for them to break'!0 b? audsnid it with conviction ring through. The battle will continue for '"R 111 1,18 vmer wns j"" imperturb two months, two years or two hundred KU'y unconcerned as when a snort sis years until the English and French get , montns ago lie snt on the bench of th so much iron pounded into their heads " i-- '-"" that they can't carry them." i.iudicial calm. There was no doubt that i iiii,o nuo K'lit'. I1IVVCU , en iicniiiij Situation Unchanged. w'en, after having gone to bed Tues- Bucharest, Nov. 11 Despite the great j "nf mK"; convinced no was elected, at But toihiy he hnd no Higns of Uwoouipo N battle raging about Cernavoda for pos -session of the Danube bridge there, the war office today was unusually brief in its report of the situation in the Dob-rudja. 'Tho situation in the Dubrudia re gion is unchanged ' said the announce ment. . : .. Berlin, via wireless to Snyville, L. I., Nov. 11. Englith forces succeeded in penotrating advanced German trenches northeast . of Courielette, but French troops that participated in hourc to house fighting near the church in Hailly Sailliesel gained no advantage, the war Bayonne Strikers Fear Hand of Sheriff Kinkead MI M M M M jj I j M M f H f ? I I ???'???? I ? t MM '? t ttl t Tuesday Evening, Nov. 14 II , IIIIIIIIIHIII Ii Under the auspices of the Salem Woman's Club, Miss Mary Schultz will be presented in an appreciation concert, assisted by Mr. Stuart McGuire, baritone, and Miss Vera Kitchener, pianist, of Portland, and Mrs. Alfred Schram, piano accompanist, it ut mi ttttlll At The Oregon Theatre y i- 9 i r, ?i' 1 f" Jjf i 'SMEK'fr,e eu(0 KINKCftO j I I ure or disappointment. No one has been a greater factor Iu maintaining a smooth balance in tin Hughes camp thou Mrs. Hughes hci husband's adviser, comforter and con- ; slant companion in all the hard work of the campaign. ' One thing tjmt Hughes has told his friends warmed nis heart greatly w: the handsome majority which his own home state of New York accorded him: Neither Hughes nor his personal Btaff have yet conceded Wilson's election. Thoy are waiting for the official count. They are particularly interested in the enormous increase in California's total vote and it is expected that a quiet- investigation is now under way in re gard to this. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes probably will remain at the Hotel Astor for several days and then will depart for some quiet spot nearby to rest. It is probable they will go to Montelair, N. J., where Hughes rested between several of his campaign tours. office announced today. Other attneka made against the Gcrmnn lines yester day iu the same region likewise fuiled. SUN D A "V . HARRIS & KRESS' Novelty Singing, Dancing, Whirl wind Roller Skating Two Jolly Jesting Street Manicurcrs SMITH & GLENN Singing White Wings RALPH WRITEHEAD & CO. Musical Comedy Favorites QUAKER CITY FOUR The Singing Blacksmiths, excel lent Harmony, Clean Comedy, Beautiful Scenic Effects n IL SI and MARY STEBBING M Original Barnum & Bailey Rubes mamamm wammmmmmmammBmmmmmmammmm IP MarletteV Manikins 7, rFANTOMAS" ; A thrilling Detective Drama Sensation . I "THE PHANTOM CROOK" SUNDAY -ONE DAY ONLY Matinees-Evening GRAND Theatre DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL Classified Ads BRING YOU BESULTS Fhon 81 Prompt Berries I ', 1""," Capital Journal Want Ad Bring Results BLUE BIRD PHOTO PLAYS A TRUTHFUL REFLECTION OF THEATRICAL LIFE VIZUAUZED IN A PHOTO GRAPHICALLY BEAUTIFUL TIVE-ACT PHOTO-PLAY-SUNDAY and MONDAY Hheriff Eugene Kinliead of Hvdson county. Jf. J., the man who broke- lat year's strike of oil workers in Hayon-4 no, a. j., eiter tne ponce nart ra lcd, has been watching the recent disorders, which were attended by fatalities. ''1 .hope I-shan't he called into this af- TX'.fair," he said, "and 1 don't believe 1 shall, but if I am summoned rtsvonne can feel certain that 1 r.on't allow the! rights of Americans to lie trampled on! by persons who have ri,me to us -from foreign shores. 1 think the police- ikf-1 serve freat credit for" what they huve accomplished, and 1 believe they will j control the situation, but I am ready if I am needed. I havo 300 trained men, I SAVING III EVEYN Fill Y Iff : ii i PRODUCED FOR THE SCREEN BY ; LOIS WEBER f I Introducing Mary MacLaren and Phillips Smalley 1000 FT. OF COMEDY. UUGH TILL YOUR SICK COMING TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY THE GRIP OF f&UGHf 'Secret of thi EVIU 0 theatre 'kJ Submarine' ; ?. .M )))t)IHuin 4 j"? " in.ini. uisoruer ln a