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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1917)
Editorial Page of The Capital Journal sATI KDW ETEMM!. Janimrv 6. 111 T . CH AXLES h. rassMM Editor ud HMXW rVWVW.W.VSV.V.SWAW.W. W.VW.NW.WVArWIrVVL THEY GAVE HER A COFFIN Pl'JiI.lsliKI) KV RK V EVEN I NO EWKIT srXDAV, SALEM. OKFXJON, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Jnc. Ik S. BARNES. i 1 " r -1 l -1 1 CHAS. H. FISHER, Vice-Pre i dt-nt. DOftA C. AVDRESKX, Sec. aud Trca. SIBSCRIITION HATES Iailv liv carrier, per rttt ..$."'.00 Pit Daily by mail, per year 3.00 month ..45e Per mull lit FULL LEASED W1KE TELECRAPH HKIOKT EASTrTRX KEPRKHKNTATJ VBS New York, Ward-Le iris-Williams Special Agency, Tribune Building Chicago. W. H. Btockwell, People's (inn Building The Capital .louninl carrier boys are instructed to put the paper on the porch. If the carrier doe not do thi, misses you, or neglect getting the. paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation mnnnger, ax thi is the ouh nay we eaa determine whether or not the carriers are following in (tractions. I'hone Main M before f:30 o'clock and a paper will be seat you by special messenger if the carrier linn missed you. A MONUMENT OF INGRATITUDE Colonel Roosevelt has broken into the limelight again with his unsought advice and fishwoman's Billingsgate. That he is entirely devoid of any sense of decency is shown in the fact that having revolted from the party that honored him with the highest gift in its power, and put it out of the running, he started another party of his OWn to which some of the brightest and purest men in the nation announced their allegiance simply because they had faith in his uprightness, and he betrayed that and them. Then, it is believed by many, he deliberately tried to defeat the man whom the republican party had selected as its candidate for the presidency. It is prob able his taking the stump as he did and his making the attacks on the Central allies assisted in defeating Mr. Hughes. His political career has been one of ingratitude and base betrayal. Being unable to secure the nomina tion for a third term, he forced the party to accept the man he selected Taft; and when that gentleman de clined to allow him to be the actual president, and remain a figure head himself, he turned against him and so far as politics are concerned, destroyed him. He assumed to be larger than his party, and the only person capable of running the executive branch of the govenunent. He wants to manage the government still, and dictate the policies of the country, and this despite the party he last dishonored with his affiliation, was turned down at the polls. If he had the least sense of the eternal fitness of things he would retire to some solitude large enough to hold him, and there remain in that obscurity his ac tions have so well qualified him to adorn. VILLA'S ONE SENSIBLE MOVE RHEUMATISM GOES The story of Mazie Colbert, who came to her death at F HOOD'S IS USED the hands, it is believed, of Bernard Lewis, m Philadel- . phia, a few days ago is attracting much attention j s pS1T.7t through tne press, but this more on account of the girl's1 tin of the blood and builds up the 1 . 1 1 i 1 m - . ( ul T. , i ueauiy anu popularity man ior any other reason, it is neither a new nor a strange tale; in fact is an everyday .'if fair, leaving the killing out of it, and even this is no rarity. It is the old story of a pretty counti y girl brought into the city and in contact with rich spendthrifts who steered her up against the great white way, taught her things undreamed of in her country home, and set her feet in the path that can only be followed when the lights are aglow. It was the same old primrose path that thousands of other Mazies have followed to its end, and its end was always death or worse. Poor little country moth, lured by the glaring lights around which she fluttered, dazzled but unafraid, all too soon she fell into the flame and perished. Her beautiful form which was her undoing lies at rest in a casket costing $450, and this is all the reward she received for all she paid. This was the salve to conscience that man paid for what he had made of "only just a little country girl." At last Villa is doing the sensible thing and what, if he expected to accomplish anything material, he should have done long ago. He has arranged to start a government of his own with a constitution and laws other than his will. His action will cause a still greater desertion from the Car ranza ranks, and will cause many of the moie influential Mexicans to turn to him as the only person in Mexico capable of uniting all factions. While uneducated, he is a natural leader of such men as he has to deal with, that is, Mexicans. Carranza has proved a braggart and a failure. His generals are ap parently moved by no other impulse than self aggrandize ment and jealousy of one another. This was apparent when General Murguia refused to go to the aid of General Trevino when he was attacked at Chihuahua, holding his army 20 miles away while Villa finished whipping Trevino and ransacking the city. He is now in the same position as Trevino was when he betrayed him, and according to .the eternal fitness of things, he too, should be whipped by Villa, and he probably will be. If Villa can get a quasi-government formed and show Mexico that he has the real interests of the country at heart, he will have Carranza on the run in a short time, and will dominate all Mexico. It looks just now as though: the best solution of the Mexican problem would be to let: Villa have a try at straightening out the tangle, tor he certainly cannot make a greater failure of it than His Sideburns has done. The house committee has arranged to investigate the leaks alleged by Thomas Lawson to have been sprung in the governmental departments, by which the stock gamblers have profited. The dispatches the same day this statement was flashed over the wires announced that Mr. Lawson was going to Europe. This gives rise to the suspicion that Thomas was talking for effect, and has not the goods with which to back up his charges. The congressional committee should get a hurry up move on and see that the wordy and spectacular gentleman ap pears before it, before he takes that trip to Europe. He announced yesterday that congress could put off its in vestigation until his return, but as it does not have to, but can force him to stay and testify, perhaps it will take that course instead. Mayor Keyes has taken hold of the city's affairs in a solid sort of way, and his message indicates that his administration will be a strictly business one. He points out the necessity of enforcing all the city laws, especially those concerning autos. If he can put a stop to the viola tion of the speed ordinances and others governing the turning of corners and the like, he will do something that has been sadly neglected and which needs attention badly. Mayor Keyes can rest assured the citizens are solidly behind him in every ' move to better conditions, enforce the laws and put the departments on an econom ical and businesslike basis. It surely is the women's day. Recently a Cincinnati judge ordered a man who was earning $2 a day to pay alimony to his wife who was earning $5, in that time, as employment investigator in a Detroit auto factory. This is robbing Peter to pay Pauline. A Chicago judge has decided that "it is a dangerous precedent to allow a wife to support her husband." And this too, right after Illinois had conferred on women all the rights of citizenship. whole system. It drive out rheuma tism because it cleanses the blood. It has been successfully used for forty years in many thousands of cases the world over. There is no better remedy for skin and blood diseases, for Joss of appe tite, rheumatism, stomach and kid ney troubles, general debility and all ills arising from impure, impover ished, devitalized blood. It is unnecessary to suffer. Start treatment at once. Get a bottle of Hood's Sataparilla from your near est druggist. You Till be pleased with the results. children of the present holders. Sev eral fullblooded, headed by Captain Surapkiti and I'okcr Jim, arc opposed to allottments to chi'dreu of mixed Llood. On the reservation now arc 500 fullblood and 000 mixed blooded In-diaus. Gardiner Index: The tunnel that is betas constructed by Wnrren Reed to tap Clear Lake and furnish miter for Winchester Bay and Reeds-port, is now over 1,000 feet in. Two air shafts '.iuve been made and are working fine- Pete Horn, who is doing the tunnel work expects to have- it finished iu about 90 days. C. I. Roigard, attorney for L. F. Sla ve its, who is now employed in the woods near Bnndon, has just received official notification from the patent office at Washington that Mf. Slavens has been granted a patent for an improvement of the pulli-y or block used in logging and in the handling by cable of heavy articles. We want to announce that we have discontinued our Retail Wagon Trade. OUR GOODS ARE ON SALE BY ALL SALEM GROCERS However, for the benefit of those living in the neigh borhood, we maintain a retail store at 240 SOUTH COMMERCIAL For Goodness Sake EAT Pan Dandy and Big Dandy BREAD "Made in Salem-Where We Live" The Salem Royal Bakery TELEPHONE 378 University Notes Oswego, Ore. : Supposed to have been dead, I. X. I.eniery, a lormer resident of Oswego, returned last week after an absence of six and one-half years and oral hundred dollars were pledged and surprised his sisters, Mrs. (ieorge Thorn-1 many mora promised to the endowment as and -Mrs. J. B. Hill. Lemery left Os-jfund by friends and alumni in Grants 000 to $200,000, and his only known rel-' vision of the colleges of the church, ative on the coast is a nephew. The three women 8 literary soeietiei ' postponed their meetings scheduled for i yesterday- to Monday afternoon. The Excellent results ore reported bv Sec-' ?n v-' out of respect to Mr. T. 8. ictary K. C. Richards of the administra tion board who has just returned from a two weeks' tour ih southern Oregon in the interests of old Willamette. Sev- wego in 1910 and had not been heard from since, although his name, had been advertised in connection with the settle incut at the Lemery estate, of which he ia an heir. After a brief stay here he left to spend the winter in California- Testimonial to the coast climate, in Coquille Sentinel: "Home people have Pass. Ashland, Talent and Gold Hill. He also secured the promise of half a dozen high schools students to investi gate the local institution when select ing a university for their alma mater. Prof. Richards' principal work as ex tension and financial secretary is to in terest the uorthwest commonwealth in Willamette as a character-building insti- been complaining of cold weather here ! tution of top notch rank. He interviews during the past week, even while the the laymen of the conference and dis ground has remained unfrozen and the ; :,triet. preaches in the local Methodist grass still green. Wonder what' they ; churches and addresses the students of would think if suddenly transported ; the high schools. As his work is so wide- over the ascades to tlte states that j lv scattered and demands travel, he is have been blanketed with deep snows while the thermometer went 20 de grees below zero." Big business prospects, for Salem in 1917, listed by the Capital Journal : able to visit iu Salem only infrequent!; His schedule for January consists of Ilalsey ou the 14th, Lebanon the Slat, and Sheridan the 28th. Of more than passing interest to the "ior the year Wit the outlook is ex -student bodv is the fact that Prof. Eu i client. A new Southern Pacific depot j gene A. Hancock, who has just assumed will be built, a new steel or concrete ; the chair -6'f (he rhetoric department va bridge across the river will give em-1 vated bv Prof. MacMurray, is a former ployment to many workmen, and al-1 student of Dean George H. Alden 's at ready several business buildings lire Willnmette. Prof. Hancock studied under w ay or definitely projected. Best j English historv under Dean Alden when of all perrhaps is the assurance that the the latter was a member of the faculty old South mill race will be utilized fori of the University of Washington. V a new factory which will be one of the! was largelv through his brilliant schol- most important industries of the.astic standing that Dr. Alden came to city. Know uiamette's new professor ami when the vacancy occurred, it was but natural tlir.t Prof. Hancock was of first RippliRhuinQS' In New York five years ago patrohnan Edward O'Rourke helped Miss Esther Adair across the street. Today he is heir to her fortune of $;i0.000. But then most of us are neither policemen nor Irishmen, and of course could not begin to say the nice things Edward peddled on that short trip. Rev. Charles Reynolds of Newark, New Jersey, thought he had found a fine text for a sermon, and pro ceeded to deliver the same to his fashionable congrega tion. The text was: "How Old Art Thou?" The reverend gentleman is taking an enforced vacation in New York city while the congregation quiets down. LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 1868 CAPITAL $500,000.00 Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT THE POOR "I cannot give the poor a cent," remarks the portly, stallfed gent, who's just con sumed a pie; "it turns my auburn ringlets gray to make ends meet from day to day, all prices are so high. Just glance along! that bill 01 fare, and note the prices ruling there, on canvasback and teal; mark how things cost to beat the band, and then per haps you'll understand why I can't spare a wheel. Planked steaks with French im ported peas, and all such staple things as tnese, that every man must eat, are costing now so many wheels the woebegone consumer feels a coldness in his feet. Without such things as mushroom sauce my victuals are a total loss, and they've gone up in price ; I shudder, too, as well I may, recalling what I have to pay for bottles on the ice. A man must feed before he thinks of handing out to needy ginks a portion of his kale, and he has little left, I swear, when he has paid for Belgian hare, for oyster stews and quail. I'd help the poor, as well as you, if lofty sentiments would do, instead of silver dimes. Now I must eat a slab of beef, while I deplore the woe and grief of these outlandish tiroes." tion. Marslifield Times: Z. T. (Tavlnr) Siglin, one of the best known pioneers (consideration as a prospect for the posi- ui me uvua -cm, ecuuu, uieu last Uigur at Mercy hospital after a short illness of la grippe and other complications. His condition was not regarded as se rious until yesterday. Mr. Siglin was an old bachelor and for yeaisi lived on a ranch on Isthmus Inlet near the Ooquille-Marsh'field road. Besides looUing after his ranch, he had many otlier interests and spent much time iu Marshfield. He served one term as sheriff of Coos county, served many years as road supervisor, as sehoo' director and in other public capacities. He leaves an estate valued at On account of Mr. McDnnieb-' death! nnd the pressing necessity of securing a new rhetoric, instructor immediately. President JJoney w as delayed in leaving i wlres n tne local zone, wno acted as for Chicago until yesterday afternoon. Mr- Toner 's chief aid during the past lcjJamel, president of the board of trusteee., who died in Portland Inet Wed nesday. The Philodosian9 will have a scrapbook program while the Adelantea will devote their attention to Robert I.ouis Stevenson, the great English nov elist and poet. Songs, readings ani verse interpretations of Stevenson 'g promises to make the Adelante meeting especially interesting. The Carist op hi 1 ian program is not announced. Coast Zone Officials of Maxwell Announced With the recent promotion of T. J. Toner, formerly Pacific Coast. Super visor of the .Jaxwell Motor Sales Cor poration, to the positioa of Director of Sales, comes the announcement of im portant changes in the management of the Pacific Coast branches in Saa Francisco aud Portland. Toner has divided this district, inte two zones. J. ft, Justice hae been made head of the Oaliforaift zone, which comprises the States of Califor nia, Arizona and Nevada, while W. .1. LaCasse has been appointed Super visor on the Northwestern zone, com prising the States of Oregon, Wash ington, Idaho, Utah and Western Montana. For the past year Mr. Justice has been traveling over the California territory under Toner and is well fit ted for the new position. His work has made for him an euviablo record and he thoroughly understands Toner's methods. Mr. LaOrosse has been largely in strumental in placing the Maxwell car in front up North, and he has won for himself a position of high repute in the Sales Department. E. E. Thompson, one of the liva He attended Mr. Mc Daniels' funeral in Portland, leaving there last night for Chicago, where he ia to attend tlje ses sions of the Methodist educational board. He also was delegate to the university senate yean-, will leave next week for Detroit, to take up important duties in the Sales Department of the factory. There's one place the fighting ua- the board in charee I tions have got neutrals envious of theia of the furtherance aud general super- There 's always their chance for a moratorium. ;U7 ounces, and the estimated output in 1 191 is 227,500 ounces, or 10,5tX ounces TATF NpWC mi"' The output of copper in 1915 was JlAlIi nClfiJ 451.172 pounds, and the estimated out- !Pt in 1916 is 2,527,000 pounds, an in- crease tor lfl of 2.07fi,999 pounds, and . tne output ot lead in 1915 was ti2,y,-7 Preliminary estimates of the produc ' pound, as compared with 102,000 pounds turn of metals from Oregon mines iu in 1915, or 41,000 pounds leu. These 1910, by the Cnited Stales geologic.vJ preliminary figures are compiled by survey, department of the interior, ; t'harles (i. Yale, of the San Francisco show iuereases over 1915 tor gold, sil-1 office of the geological aurvey. ver and copper, and a decrease for lead. The output ot gold in 191S was l,Ml. IIM HUSBAND ANDJQE JSlfcr Jr Jtene Phelps JB LEONARD BROOK ACT AS ESCORD CHAPTER CXIV. I told myself that my husband had set the pace and that I had a right to fol lew it. Yet women of my type, brought up as I had been, require some strong im pelling motive to make them set aside convention. It wag one thing to deter mine to do as I pleased, and as I imag ined my husband did, and quite another thing to carry out my determination. Mrs. Norville had invited Clifford and me to a dinner party. Clifford claimed he could not- ge, but said for me to accept if I wished, er-relessly adding that there would probably be some young cub there who would'bring me home. I absolutely refused to go without him and so told Mrs. Norville, who in sisted that I .Ml'iT come and that she would send Leonard Brooke after me. "He is to be one of my guests," the told me. "and I know you are great friends, so come. not neglected me. I have read that one ford it was to be sorry that he was , should always wish for the right thing Ifooiish as to miss such a good time, an if they wanted their wishes to come not to worry because he had refused t true. When I wished for my husband ' ; go with me'. love, his attention. I surely was wish-j After dinner we had a sort of mu ing only for something belonging to me, I sicaie, then an impromptu dance. I or which should have belonged to me. loved to dance and never lacked for So, failing to get what I most wished ! partners, and so was happy. It was aft for, I turned to someone else to give roe er midnight when we broke up. Leoa-w-hat 1 sought. ard had hia car, and it was such a lovely Utterly impotent I was, and in full night that he asked me to take jnst a bitterne'ss I realized it. Even my life! Utile spin. with Edith was poisoned by tho thought ! ' ' The longest wav round is the short- mui uct luiuer carea notnmg ior me; . est way Home, 1 laughed. less than nothing, for didn't he fairly throw- me into the arms of othersf Is it any wonder that I turned to Leonard Every way is all too short ." he ans wered. He was always s.n-imr Ktti -- Brooke? He was young enough to un like this, but never since the day I told derstand my likes and dislikes; he was j him he must not had he again said any thoughtful, and always kind. Then, thing at which I'could take offenee too, he made me feel that I amounted' "I am going to Chicago with Clifi to something, was somebody. A feeling (ford next week," I told him before w I never had had when with Clifford, ! reached home. save only once or twice, since 1 had: "To make a Iotik -fi-- i.- nakefl, hi, face darkening. I knew he was ininaing ot Burns Mayson, and was been married. Now I found myself often wishing Pendleton, Ore.: Umatilla Indian; 710. and the estimated output for 1910 are in council to consider the prorosi is 41.P00.0ft0, an increase of .'S.0O0. ! tion of allotting 75,000 acres of tribal if wishes could have accomplished any The output of silver iu 1915 was 117.- lands on the reservation among the thing Clifford would have loved and time, and if I thought at all -of Oil 1 told Clifford just what she said, and he replied: i that I had married some one vounir. likeisorrv I had mention.) " Jnst the thing! Brooke will be glad1 myself! some one who would understand "No, just a day or two I haven't to play escort." me as Leonard Brooke did. But not yet j felt reallv well since Fdith's sicknesiJ Do you wonder that I made an my bad I acknowledged . to myself that I Tho doctor think ., t;n.. ..u mind to defy convention f That 1 would ever think of Leonard as morei thought what 1 did mattered nothing to than a friend; even though I had often j my husband f thought that did not Clifford change vajn n inning. boob jl snouia leave mm. "If wishes were horses, beggars Mrs. NorrUto's Dinner Party. mignt riue, runs tne oia song. Ana mam. norvme s runner was a won derful success. I had a delisrhtf til i do me good." "I'll see you before yon go," Leon ard answered as he helped me from the car and bade me good-night. His tons conveyed the impression that he would have something to say to me. (MondayEqual to the Oecaaion.)