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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1917)
iftlWWMWWWWWWWWWVIMW foria Page of The Capital Journal KIMUAY KVKKINll, CHARLES H. FISHES January St'., 1M 1 7. Editor and Manager www 5 2 S i Loganberry for its delectation and PUBLISH K I) KVKIiY KYKNINC EXt'KPT Sl'NOAY, SAI.KM, OKKOON, OT Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. L. 8. BABXKS, (HAS. President. H. FISHKR. Vice President. DORA :. ANDRK8EN, Sec. und Trcas. SUBS KIITION KATKS Djily by carrier, per Tear Daily by mail, per year ..$r,.w .. .1.00 J'cr month 4e Pit month Xe It's Easy If You Know Dr. Edwards' Oiive Tablets New York, V 1TI.I. LKASEH WlltE TELEGRAPH BKPOET E ST K 1 : X liKl'K BSE N TAT V I :s I). Ward. Trilnino Building. Chicago, W. H Sin well, I'oople's Htulil i ntf. The Capital Journal errlf bojn arc Instructed to put the paper! on the porch. If the carrier dues not do this, misses you, or Ifllttl getting the. paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, us this is this only way ' wo ran determine whether or not the curriers are following in ftructioiiK. Phone Main SI before 7:30 o'clock ami a paper will be sent you bv special messenger if the carrier has missed you. SALEM, MODEST BUT DETERMINED the cocktail top dressing. It has emptied its horn of plenty in the effete east and delighted all eyes and palates with apples, peaches, pears, plums, and every fruit that grows outside the tropics. It has supplied the coast with pota toes and its onions are known from Alaska to Boca Chica. When in the far east the citizen in the halcyon Spring gathers the succulent young onion from its dish, he does not know it, but the sets that gave it life were grown on the beaver dam lands adjacent to Salem the one and onlv. It is erowiner flax and in the near future i Salem linen will be as familiar to the world as that of j SSlXJLTS 7oZ Belfast is now. Besides all these things and hundreds of! the liver and bowels, which he save to i ui..u: j:ce.i e u:j Ibis nations for vcars. (liners U1UL space ami uiUMlliig UUmniKC iui urn uui men- rr Awards' olive Tablets, the suc tioning, it was this balem that started all this talk, not i some other measly little namesake. Did any of the whole I bunch ever stir up so much discussion about themselves in their hundred years of existence? We wot not with a great big capital wot. Salem Massachusetts, Salem West Virginia, and some Git, skedaddle, vamoose, get off the map, you unfits, two dozen other unknown villages back east are dis- and let the real and only Salem spread herself cherry for its innKIHG YIHIM LITTLE STORIES llkkl WynUW IWWI1M (Continued from pagToae.) I committee on medicine and pharmacy, ami will later have to go before the Hie secret of keeping young is to! wins nnd means committee, as it also feel young to do this you must watch ,.arrie. M appropriation, your bver and Imwels-thcre no need ,,n, to ,,,. for p.,' of having a sallow complexion dark, ....... . i-.i.' r i i.nr , Mll-O,,-'-. A Oil- I . .'.1. v: ' CRISIS OF WOMAN'S LIFE eruntled because, forsooth, at least one place of that name is trying to do something to justify its being a The Albany Commercial Club most assuredly has its community. Salem Oregon, is the place, and in order nerve! It suggests an investigation of the game and fish that it might not lie handicapped in its laudabe efforts department, alleging incompetence and extravagance in to lift the name from that oblivion that has buried it for the administration of its affairs, when everybody at all more than two centuries, it asked these other namesakes familiar with the real situation knows that the fish and to go chase themselves, get married or do something that game department rules the state of Oregon and all the would change their names. , officials thereof, including the members of the legislature, Salem Massachusetts eets real chesty over this and sVith a rod of iron. In plain words the fish and game .,lliirlo; to t hie thi. onlv S:ilfin. us ;i countrv village. It rnmmiaainn is rru hirrp-pst. thinp- in the wav of a uolltical niwng m towm StU per cent uiiuut.o J V .. . , , " --e o - Tnntv i t iul i,,u r !,.... V no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ; temporary appointment to fill vacancy ninety per cent of all sickness come-, in the office of justice of the peace. Aft from inactive bowels and liver. er it was explained by Mr. Joues it was Dr. hd wards, a well-known physician passed- The bill fixing the standard of mens-imnii-nt for crauberrv boxes and Imr- 1.-I,...!, -,.. .nn,.. I, .. L .. 1 . I. tl. ' recommendation that it pass, w ith a short explanation was passed. The bill was introdu I by Mr. Schimpff. House bill Ho, ISO, I ,v Hepresentative Thomas, regulating the inspection of or- chards, was passed. House bill No. 122. bv Kepreseutative i Gore, fixing the capital stock of title .guaranty companies and title insurance ! companies according to population, ! passed. The bill by Representative Burdick. , house bill No. l'.in. allowing water tnas j tern traveling expenses, reported buck with the recommendation that it pass. ' " as pas.-ed. The bill by Representative Peck, 'house bill No. 200, giving the city of Myrtle I'oint .pirisdiet ion over county roads within its limits, pifssed. Senate bill No. t. by Senator Diniick. regnUvtlng the drivinj; of automobiles bv intoxicated persons, was passed without any opposition. Change Safely Passed by 1 T-l l l; c D:l.t l aKtng iyuici l.. i itiiuiBiii Vegetable Compound. stittite lor calomel, are gentle in tneir action, yet always effective. They brim? abotjf that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be en joyed by everyone, by toning up the liver and clearing the system of impurities. You will know Dr. Kdwards' Olive Tablets by their olive color. 10c and ; 25c per box. All druggists. Salsm Now Ranks Third !n Bank Deposits Out of total bank deposits in the state of l'it.r)!Hi.!lsn.74, the city of Portland has 4S.:; pel cent, or a total of $.S!i.(i(l!l. 407.03, aceonliny to a statement issued yesterday by S. C. Sarjjeni. superinten dent of banks. Nineteen cities am: towns outside of Portland hold 2(i.:s per cent 03 tae tola! deposits and the re says It never heard ot it, and that is easily oenevea. n machine in the state and does not hesitate to exercise its is just as easily believed that it has never heard of the i power whenever necessary. Two years ago it had the Pendleton Round Up, or Portland's lost, woodpile, oi'j legislators performing like trained animals in a zoo and J'Ren. It probably never heard ot Joe Meek or nomer(this session it maintains headquarters in the governors Davenport, or of the pioneers who crossed the plains in executive office, and well, that resolution of investiga- bull propelled pullmans and saved tms greaiesi secuon tl0n Will get less consideration than anything else tnac nas cent of those having banking facilities anil .slj institutions, or :!2.o per cent of the nanber ol banks, hold SO. 7 per eent of the deposits in the entire state- The following cities and towns have total deposits of $1,000,000 or inure, ac cording to the last .statement: No. of City or nt' iho universe to the United States Why the defunct village down next to Misery island, which got its name from being so near it, has been hang- been sprung on the legislature this year. Snnm si :distiei,m estimates that colds COst the United; ing onto the ragged edges of the map for three centuries,, states $10,000,00 a year in the way of lost time and pooi-i ever since the Mayflower unloaded the largest list of pas- Ana work done on account of the measly snuffles, general de- As this would only amount to sengers that ever crossed the briny in a single snip, ahu; l)ress;on mK "cultusness what has it done in all that time? Hanged, burned andjten cents a piecei tne estimate would seem entirly too fnt-tin-erl twentv innocent old women because they werei, r rw tViino- ;c utim rul thnt is the pnlds are worth witches and bewitched others, and this at the behest of more tnan that; for anyone with a good, or bad a crazy fanatic one Cotton Mather. What can be ex-jcol(j whicft ever describes the condition, would gladly pected ol a community mat vvoum oe uewin-ucu uy a 0,j fifteen cents or more to be rid ot it. The amount of old women when there was plenty of pretty girls! f around? Does that entitle that little old burg to get chesty and make slurring remarks about its betters Then these same witch burners took up with Roger Wil liams, a good preacher as well as a good man, but when the general court disfranchised them for so doing, they went back on their pastor and their religion both, in order to save some land down around Salem Neck that w asn't worth two shillings a square mile. That was the price ol t noil" religion, aim uieir utenuMuii. this country in a year would far exceed that sum. This does not take into account the alcohol baths internal and external made necessary by these same colds. The ex tra laundry bill caused by the "run" on handkerchiefs would make a startling bill alone in the course of a year. Governor Withvcombe has promised Rev. E. B. Lock- hart, pastor of the Methodist church at Stayton, that soon after the legislature adjourns, he will visit Stayton i , ,., , - , SUUIl ailtl Lilt ii'Kisniiiin an iuiu no, tju That was more ban wo hundred years ago, and I we thfi lpit8of the church at the regular Sunday defy any resident of that yankee village to show that it , j There is something significant in this excel bas ever done anything since that jus ii.es i s ess ence. ; ek the ,uiet of that little city after the legsla- U has grown to a town, such as it is ol ne.uiy ou,wy . - ,, 1l; ..n,, olin.mtivn in his rle wnnse inhnhitnnts nre nutting the paper in shoe soles,! " . king the quiet of that little city turns and something reallv sugj oting the day to preaching and prayer, so soon after the Hanks towns. Deposits. L'ii Portland $89609,467.03 - Tendleton 5.tKi,."i(i2.2") 4 Salem 5,417.Ji03.W 4 Astoria 4,'iS;,477.77 4 Eugene U.:ili,2:5..x7 8 Baker , 3,213,902.41 :i The Dalles 2,191,544.37 4 Albany 2,140,007.08 4 Med ford I,h85,4(iu.(i0 2 I.a Orande 1,761,244.13 :i Marshfield 1,726,305.66 1 McMinnvillo 1,567,104.83 Oregon City 1.524, 244.2!" 2 Klamath Falls l.r.2 t.'ltKl. lit 4 Rosebnrg 1,454,217.17 3 Oorvatlli 1,388,907,89 3 l.akeview 1,299,027 J3 4 HlUsbore 1,087,929.48 2 Hums . . . 1,043. 169.10 2 Heppner l,003,S7l.8 85 !SSj907,974.76 jdaetloa from loon to 1569 acres of flax was made by Secretary (ieorge Quaylt I of the Kugeiu' chanilier of coiiunerce in his annual report, made before the chamber Monday evening. The annual business is estimated to be in the neigh j borhood of 9195,000, and it is to lie f i ; nai i ed by Will l.ipnian. of I'm tland, David Anld and Mr. Qnayle of Kugene. The aanouncemeat followed the re jport of the secretary as to the success of the "Kugene fla experiment," and his statement was that the indications are the Kugene experiment will pay all j expenses, including money advanced by the banks, and pay the farmers some thing in addition to the guarantee, which hat already been paid. Flax Sale Cancelled Contained also in the report was the statement that an offer of $10(10 a ton for four tons of the Kugene flax for a lielfast mill had been made, only to be cancelled when the German raider a few days ago played havoc with en tente shipping. Mr. .Tnayle reported also that efforts are being made to se-ure machinery for the manufacture of linen fish line, which now cioinmanils high aiket Waeoner. Okla. "1 never set tired I of praising Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- laoie ijompouim because during Change of Life I was in bed two years and had two operations, but all the doctors and op erations did me no good, and 1 would have been in my grave today had it not been for Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound which brought me out of it all right, so I am now well und do all my housework, besides working in my garden. Several of my neighbors have got well by tak ing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound." Mrs. Viola Fini jal, Wagon er, Okla. Such warning symptoms as senso of sufFocation, hot Hashes, headaches.back aches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart sparks before the eyes, irregu larities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and dizziness should be heeded by middle-aged women. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has carried many women safely through the crisis It may lie said that in this ultima tum game with Greece, either party would be seriously embarrassed if the i theV should do anything to stop it. prlc -Kugene Guard, To Overcome Eczema Never mind how often you have tried and failed, you can stop burning, itching eczema quickly by applying a little zemr furnished by any druggist for 2Sc. Ex tra large bottle, $1.00. Healing begins the moment zemo is applied. In a short time usually every trace of eczema, tet ter, pimples, rash, black heads and sim ilar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the skin and making it vigorously healthy, always use zemo, the. penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It is not a greasy salve and it does not stain. When others fail it is the one dependable treat ment for skin troubles of all kinds. The E. W. Iloso Co., Cleveland, O. EUGENE TO HAVE FLAX MILL Announcement of the early of a mill at Kugene to handle erect ion the pro but with nearly three cenuines i o oo u in uie.e , -sj, Ts hp" doW nennance or offering LOW II I c? A in that to make it chesty. Out West we can grow a of that size in a week or two. Salem West Virginia, also gets swelled up because it is asked to efface Itsel t So far as it is concerned it never even burned a witch, and if it ever did anything else no one ever heard of it. Besides before it gets the highead it should remember its state was like the balance of the cont i aba nils, onlv set free through the civil war too, it has refused to pay what it owes to its old Mammy, praise i A Judge in New York granted a wife a decree of GIRLS SN SCHOOL OR AT BUSINESS who are delicately constitut3(J, who have thin blood or pale cheeks, will find in SCOTT'S EMULSION a true tonic and a rich food to . ... a: B U,. U,,.d,nn,l aAanflii KonoiiuO Via Vlfirl not. separauiMi ltont uci iiiimmuu lamuj ""- . - . 1 . . ,,... Ai a..-.!. 1.1.. u .v,: Overcome tiredness, nourish m rust, utubti un , . , ; faker! tar to n theater in five vears. rlAM wwm like inhuman and cruel conduct but we should fhen not overlook the fact that the movies have put about all the theaters worth seeing on the uum, aim as iui uie i . ! J.I. 11 ..!U4- niiVinurt f V O f L?j iAu :-5 .tu ti,., fWlm.nl enrom r-nni-t movies, while most 01 WHSin are an ngm w w ym pou v . . ... ... . , w . : . : - 0 ,100 I husba.nl had run against a real bad one and so held aloof lias (teCHieil UUU It lilt cut l.iu.v smui. v...,ww,v., - -.--..u ;r.,l.rmf fini 1MBM further says it cannot be collected because perhaps the j Lets see, wasn t it about five ytais wVinl,. BfAte Rfllom nnd all. is not worth it. and so refuses; Chaplin made his appearance ago that Charley tn lot t.hp state fro on the auction block. No one would, bid for it. Go to. you insignificant one. You never got; into the limelight or any other unless it was the gurgling "moonshine." (Jo join your shadbelled namesake down east at I witch town 'and seek an alias to hide behind. As for the others no one knows when' they are and it is for this reason, this, the one and only Salem, wants ; them to efface themselves. This Salem is going to do things and wants a chance without some measly back east village infringing on its patents and copyrights. This Salem the real one has a reputation to maintain, it wants no smell of burning witches connected with what it does. It wants no betrayed pastor on its conscience, no repud iated debts to its' old mammy. That is why it wants a fair start. It has done things and is going to do more. It has grown more hops than any section of the country for years. It is supplying the allies with prunes for the men in the trenches and would supply the other side too if it could deliver the goods. It has given the world the their nerves and feed their blood. Start with SCOTT'S to-day and say "NO" to substitutes. ' Scott dt Bownc. Utoomficld. N.J. 16-20 BEWARE In This Sign 100 We Shall Conquer Watch This Space RtisnlMRhiiraQ WHUSB t D LADD & BUSH. Bankers Established 1868 CAPITAL $500,000.00 Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes .SAVINGS DEPARTMENT THE RICH MAN The rich man, in the diatribes of virtuous and moral scribes, is full of sin and tricks and guile, dishonestly he gets his pile. Wealth is for him the only lure; he has no patience with the poor; that he may gain his place on deck, he steps upon his brother's neck. He is a pirate and a fraud; the law should strip him of his wad. We all applaud this sort of stuff, and hail the scribes, "Lay on, MacDuff!" We yell "hooray !" and wave our hats, and help to roast the ultitocrats. And while we cuss the wealthy lads, we're busy hustling for the scads. We bust suspenders every day, in fear a plunk will get away. The more we get the more we need; we have the rich man's grasping greed, without the wondrous skill he I owns for gathering the shining bones. And that is why he has our hate; we're down on any soulless skate who I takes in plunks where we get dimes; we can't forgive his I godless crimes. ASTOR IS DEMOCRATIC Mis. A-uor is trying to link Fifth ave- inio in a neiguuornood DCttermcnt piau. ; Now York. .Trni. M. YtMt Astor. vil;01M,t was one of the chief mourners the WOfM'l rtekMt voting imin. nnd his , tlu, funerRi 0f the colored janitor of (beautiful vouiik wife, each scored once ,i10 ot-f;,.ej 0f ,he Astor estate, for democracy today. t MURIEL TEARS THE OUTCOME OF HER PLAN ci , coffee, aud you are tg spend the j with me, " and Jluriel arranged ! pillows comfortably before she left iluy the me VI'TKK I'.XXXI. I meant you to carry ou a cheap fllrta- I had confessed to Bums Mayson jtion with Burns -Mnyscn, did yon? that 1 loved some man other than iuy Didn't 1 tell you that it was women l,,wl,.in.l niv- cheeks tmrnert as 1 ' of noise, ot' charm who such men ns thought 'of it. But he had forced the Mr. Hammond desire; and of whom I to get the coffee. confession from me I reasoned, as he! they would be jealous. You could easi-1 With a sigh 1 closed mv eves, and and Clifford smoked and talked busi- J ly have let him see that Mr. Mayson tried to rest: but it was' impossible, uess for the short time he remained. i was pleased to be with you, without j Burns Mayson's declaration had " No I will not stay for supper, thank ! making that poor man think you had , brought the possibility of leaving Clif you," he had replied to Clifford's urg fallen head over heels in love with ford more stronglv before me than it ing: and I knew he felt the embarrass-, him! I'm ashamed of you, really 1 j had been before. 'Then too I had now ment of the situation almost as much, am!" acknowledged my love for another, as I did. "Oh, please. Muriel! " I begged, then i The thought of divorce was in my After he left neither of us talked out ! to her astonishment and mine I burst t mind. I someway felt sure Clifford much. Clifford appeared distrait, and 'out crying. "1 never said I wouldn 't j wouldn 't fight me. But divorce wa. I felt that his business excuse had been i cry before you!" I declared half , to me an abnormal thing. Father and a false one; and that he probably had hysterically. mother never talked of such things, been with Mabel Hortou. I wonder! "Cry all vm want to, I don't care, ami I never had known any divorced yet why I was so jealous of Clifford at I should think you would cry. Of all . couples- I was a long wav from feel this time? But that I was. and intense : the blundering oh I won't say what ! ing that it was wrong; vet I couldn't lv so 1 could-not clenv 1 telt tnat i no i a urc to longer loved him, but it hurt me every ! more. time 1 thought ot nun as spending his tome wav- i m sorry i ever iota you. en me from my musings, time with another. It was wounded : to make Mr. Hammond jealous. It is1 "No, only thinking. " I replied as I pride, perhaps, but it was there. jail my fault." and Muriel put her arms I sat up and took the coffee. "Thank you The next morning immediately after around me. Her sympathy was worse j Muriel. I'm sure I shall be more like Clifford left I went over to Muriel's. ! than her scolding, and I cried and sob- a normal human being after I drink "Are you a child, or a woman. Mil, bed for quite a time before I could con-1 this. I didn't eat any breakfast, and dredl she asked when I told her of trol myself. took only a sip of coffee." my failure to make Clifford jealous, I "There! that will do for another j "I was afraid you hadn't eaten any arid that my action had only brought j five or six years." I said as finally 1 : thing, so Norah's making you some mo embarrassment, and to Burns May-Controlled myself, "please forgive me, toast." sh returned just as Norah at- t .11 i . v i v. , l 1. If.. : 1 i..,,, , K - l:..i.. -it., t . . , . . r SOU, I1HU1. 1 IUKI Ul'l liiai ur liim ;i!- iwoii av wiu ;.u, u n ..miir ..nil, DUt i guess my worries lately nave been too much for me." Sympathy Next. "I don't wonder. Now dear iust lie I down on the couch for a while. I'm H . - ,i a.i ,iiuu, , ti i COUK t to there dear, don't cry any persunde myself that it was right. It will all come out right in " Asleep dear? " Muriel's voice r rous- I told her that he had ask ed me to leave Clifford and had told me he loved me. ' An Arraignment. "I did the best I could, Muriel," I said weakly. peared with a tempting breakfast on a tray. ' ' Now don 't say a word, but eat. I 've done enough damage to want to repay you in some way." ' "You didn't think for a minute that going to give you a cup of good strong (Tomorrow- Mildred Meets Brooke.) Leonard