Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, June 13, 1917, Page SIX, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1917.
HIKE W-B CUT TOBACCO,
AND INTEND USIN4 IT
b JUST A LONO AS I WANT
TO, REGARDLESS Of WHAT
I AN-f ONE SAYS OR POt
rfMATr
fl MXIRE HIS I ACCOROINQTO
I SPIRIT Or I .ItmE PRINCIPLES!
' ; : : . i ...7--."- I
I HeHASTHtf
)""' 1
I., Jk t M W 1 W I Ml
5
WHAT makes tobacco good is the sap there is in
the leaf to start with and the way it's cured some
tobacco is sappier than others. If you take a big chew
of W-B CUT, you may find it too rich for you. Take
a little chew it's made of fine, sappy, leaf: there's a lot
of tobacco satisfaction stored away in it. The touch of
salt brings it out, without so much chewing; and a little
chew lasts and satisfies,
M.J. ty WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY. HOT 8.Jwiy, Ntw T.A CHj
$346,000,000 MUST
E RAISED BY FRIDAY
THE WEEK'S SHIP LOSSES'
London, Juno 13 This week '
shipping losses through the sub
murine warfare, as officially an
nounced Into today, showed 22
vessels of more tluiii 1,(1(10 tons
-ii iik ami 10 under t lint tonnage.
Twenty-three slaps were unsuc
cessfully attacked by the tier
inun U-boats.
U M,v,.,
oiaic uuuac ncn
Edward Out muder, secretary of the
public service commission, returned
this morning from Washington, D. C,
where he went with Commissioner ( or-
ajciey to atteml the hearings of tlie in
He Talked Patriotism
Instead of Chautauqua
J. C. Herbsman, one of tho ndvnnco
sneakers for the Kllison-White Ohau-
tnuqua system came to Salem yesterday
to talk Chautauqua anil let the people
know of tho better entertainment that
lias been -prepared for them 'for the
week beginning July 15.
But when ho arrived in Snloni, he
found the air charged with patriotism,
Red Cross and Liberty bonds nin.1 while
Ihose attending the meeting lit the Com
mercial club wore willing to hear of the
Chautauqua, they were thinking of the
needs of nongovernment.
Hence Mr. ilerbsnisn briefly told of
what tho ehnutttuqua was doing, and
then turned his attention to the proposi
tion of Salem to raise i(i.'I5,(MI0 for the
Red Cross. He first mentioned the fact
hat kis father and mother were (!er
mau but that did not prevent him from
being an American first, last and for
ever. Ho then delivered ono of the moat
patriotic rousing addresses ever heard i
in tho city. i
s.
Steamer Anglian Sunk.
' "New York, Juno 13. The I.oylam
lino steel steamer Anglian has been
terstato commerce commission relative
to tho fifteen per cent rnise in freight
rates asked by the railroads. He reports
the weather very backward in the east
in fact, tho crops were retarded con
sidernbly by the cold move than the
rain.
Ho savs there is considerable troop
movements ulong the Atlantic coast
anil it will not be surprising to hear in
a few days that American troops have
landed in Franco. This is delayed only
on account of the lack of shipping la
cilities for transportation of both men
and supplies.
One million dollars is the capital of
the Willamette Shipbuilding company
of Portland, which filed articles or in
corporation with the corporation com
missioner this morning. The object of
the company to build and operate ship
building plant. The incorporators are
II. Jones, W. K. Jones and .AlnrK J. .
Karly.
Certificates of dissolution of the
Welch Holding company and the Ump-
qua Development company were meu
today.
Court House News
Totals Giyen Out by Depart
ment Shows $1,658,000,
000 Subscribed
Washington, June 13. Complete of
ficial fieuros from the treasury depart
meut this afternoon placed the total
Liberty loan subscriptions at $1,!5S,-
000,000, apportioned among tue teuerai
reserve districts as follows:
New York, 758,000,000.
Boston, $1(11,000,000.
Philadelphia, S3,0OO,000.
Richmond, $55,000,000.
Atlunta, i28,OO0,OOO.
Chicago, $184,000,000.
Clovelaud, $153,000,000.
St. Louis, 14 7,000,000.
Minneapolis, $50,000,000.
Kansas City, $58,000,000.
Dallas, $29,000,000.
San Francisco, $52,000,000.
New York is the only district which
has over-subscribed its quota, which was
$000,000,000.
THIS TO BE TAKEN
New York, June 13. The na
tion's total subscribed in the
libertv loan reached $1,04(1,
000,000 today. Tho New York
districts contributions showed
$748,000,000 an increase of
nearly $100,000,000 since yes
tenlav. These figures announc
ed by the liberty loan headquar
ters here show that $3,-,4,0i)(V
000 is yet to be subscribed by
Friday. .
MAY PLAY LAST GAME
DAY AFTKTOMORROW
Teams Serve Notice They Will
Not Accept Cut Manager
Says They Must
Portland Rose Show
Opens With 21 Guns
Mandates from the supreme court rel
ative to eases decided by that tribunal
wore received by the county clerk this
morning. Those mandates rorer to tne
torpedoed and sunk n r.uropean wuiers. fo,owil CB(Mg. 1)U1 j Frv B)(amst
According to a cable receiveu uy uie thg (,it of Hnll,m n,,Pn y, Carson
International Mercantile Murine todtiyi ; t cit of Halem, Juliet M-
The Anglian was built in 1000; was Nord aajust t,j t'jty 0f Sulem, all of
82(3 foot lonir. and of 5,532 tons. She
traveled botweon Boston and Liverpool.
Paris,
An Artillery Duell.
June 13. Violont
artillery
which were decided against the city in.
the matter of the High street and the
Twelfth street paving, and the Slate of
Oregon ex rel Mux llehlhar against X'.
O. Hover countv clerk and the county
'struggle continued over most of tuojeonrt, to prevent the Hean bill from
Champagne front today, the war officering on the ballot for the election
rcportod. The fire was most vigorous jjn.no 4,
in the region of Moulin'Lnffnux, Mont j A marriage license was issued this
Cornillct, Butte Demcsuil, Hill .104 and j morning to Arthur K. Kunke, a farmer
Parochos. Klsewhere, the statement of Turner, and Anna Klit'iet, also of
laid, it wns calm. ' I Turner.
Portland, Or., June 13. With
n salute of 21 guns fired by bat
tery A, Third Oregon, Port
laud's eleventh annual Rose
Festival was opened this morn
ing.
Three thousand school chil
dren paraded through streets on
tho East Hide this morning and
early this afternoon Queen Nina
and King Mac were crowned
rulers of Portland- At 7:30
o'clock tonight President Wil
son will press a button in the
white house which will unveil
a fifty foot Statue of Liberty
at tho court of patriotism.
-
Probably 15 Killed
In Missouri lornado
Chillicothe, Mo., June 13. Meager re
oorts from Unionviile and Mercer, Mo.
received here this morning, indicate
that probably 15 persons were kill
in a tornado that swept those towns
last night. The Chicago & Alton rail
road offices have received reports that
Trenton, Mo., also was in the track of
the twister.
KINO IirjfTTINO A HOUSE
San Francisco, June 13. The last
game in the Pacific (oast league at
least until after the war may be play
ed on June 15.
The players of the Oakland and San
Francisco teams, following receipt of
notices that their saluries will be cut
on that date sent round robins to Pres
idents Berry and Kwing of the two
clubs yesterday in which they stated
that they would refuse to accept cuts
The round robin of the San Francisco
club was as follows:
"We, the members of the San Fran
cisco club, have decided not to take a
cut in our salaries. The reason is that
we caunot Rec where a cut in players
contracts which were signed by us in
good faith can save the league.
(Signed). "Roy Corhau, K. J. Ericlt-
sen, v. Si-haller, Justin Fitzgerald.
Charles Pick, Jack lalvo, J. C. Oldhamj
P. J. Dougherty, Charles A. Baum,
(ieorce J. Maisel, Rav Kee, Del Baker,
Jerry Downs." -
No notices of supposed culs in salary
were sent to Phil Koemcr, Leu Hofly
wood or "Casey" Smith.
The Salt Lake team arrived here to
day en route to Los Angeles and their
spokesman, who does not wish his name
mentioned, declared that the Bees also
had decided not to accept cuts and that
when the Portland players received
their notices thev did not even -take
the trouble to read them, tearing them
up.
HAY PLACE ALL PAPER
HILLS UNDER GOV
ERNMENT CONTROL
Fnria, Juno 13. Ex-King Constantino
of Greece is going to Switzerland in his
exile, according to authoritative infor
mation received today irom Aniens.
JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY
fuf' - r5 't W i ;?s V
,-! i. - r" 4- - -r 's-'f ' X '
-c -;.y ;, ' r ( . A
- Must Accept or be Dropped
San Francisco, June 13 Henry Berry
owner' of the ban Francisco Coast lea
gue club, todav picked up the gauntlet
thrown down by the players of his club
ami notified his players that all who
do not accept the salary reductions an
nounced a few days ago will be drop
ped from the club roster.
"I will have to make arrangements
as soon as ltossible to supplant a turn
ber ot you by other players who are
willing to work for a salary that tho
business is able to pay," he wrote the
plavers. Berry also addressed a meeting
of players and urged them to reconsia
Meanwhile the spirit of "strike" ap
pears to be spreading to other league
clubs. Salt Lake and Portland players
have already openly voiced their deter
mination to reject a cut and the ixis
Angeles players and those or the Uaic
land team who would be affected by
the reductions are also reported to have
taken similar action. - '
June 15, when the proposed cuts
take effect, will see a showdown all
over the league. Some owners, have ex
pressed their intention of closing down
their parks for the rest of the season
if the player continue to stand pat. . -
)fc sjc jf 3fc sc s(c sc sc 4 fi s(s
Watching the Scoreboard
Those proposed salary reductions
didn't affect the Oaks playing, not iu
the least.
Thev walked right over the prostrat
ed Seals and grabbed another game 8
to 1. The San Franciscans could do noth
ing with young Kreiner and their eight
hits were mostly made when they did
uot count.
Meanwhile the Oaks were hammering
Indian Smith and Dougherty with great
abandon and eclnt. Captain Murphy got
three hits out of four times up, while
Lee scored thrice out of three times at
bat.
Washington, June 13. All paper
mills in the United States will be
placed under government control dur
ing the war, and a request made that
the Canadian government take the
same action, if a recommendation made
to the senate today by the federal
trade commission is carried out.
The' price of newsprint paper, al
ready high in ffllfi, has risen more than
fifty per cent since that date, accord
ing to tho report and all efforts at
arbitration to restore competitive con-
.mious unve lanea. it is estimated by
the commission that paper manufactur
ers during 1916 received over $17,500,-
000 in exeess profits and that paper
during 1017 will cost $35,000,000 more
to tne consumer than last vear.
"Tho news print paper situation is
very serious," says the report, "not
only to the consumers of paper, but to
the public generally and to the gov
ernment of the United States, which
is itself a large consumer of paper.
The. commission has reason to believe
that this situation will be still more
aggravated and serious in the ensuing
months.
Prices Keep Climbing.
"It seems probable that with the
demand for news print paper increas
ing and the supply remaining constant
and possibly diminishing, there will
be a repetition of the panic market of
last year and tho exactions of prices
mat are entirely out of measure with
the cost of production. The conse
quences to thousands of smaller news
papers and many of the larger ones
and through them to the reading pub
lic, will be most serious."
By reason of this condition and be
cause of the vital interest to the pub
lic of an efficient dissemination of
news in this crisis, tho commission
recommends as a war emergency meas
ure that congress by appropriate legis
lation provide:
' "1. That all mills producing and all
agencies distributing print paper and
mechanical and chemical pulp in the
United States be operated on govern
ment account; that these products to
be pooled in the hands of a govern
ment agency and equitably distributed
at a price based upon' cost of produc
tion and distribution, plus a fair profit
per ton.
"2. That pursuant thereto, some fed
eral agency be empowered and directed
to assume the supervision and control
thereof during the pendency of the
war.
Canada May Stand In.
"3. That by reason of htc fact that
approximately 75 per cent of the
production of news print paper in Can-
tda comes into the United States,
Iljl III
ft il lEHracracarJi
msM 01LCGDXSK5YE
PI Look for the orange I J Jj J
fu discs in the special- fjf 111 I
i r..r .nfflf ii i it nr t : .inii'iiiii
1 irnTIIlf Ifilllfll ii 1 1 riernratpd store S IS I I IF!I
' I j
CO.
W. W. MOORE FURNITURE CO.
E. I. STIFF & SONS
SPACER HDW. CO.
RAT L. FARMER BOW. CO.
SALEM HOW. CO.
IMPERIAL FURNITURE
C. 8. HAMILTON ,
MAa O. BUREN '
CHAMBERS & CHAMBERS
co-operation of tho Canadian govern
ment in the creation of a similar gov
ernment agency for the same function,
which shall be clothed with power and
authority to act jointly with the gov1
ernmental agency of the United States
for the protection of the consumers and
manufacturers of print paper and the
public of the United States and
Canada.
"i. That in "case the Canadian gov
ernment shall not join in such a co
operative enterprise, then importation
of paper and mechanical and chemical
proper action be taken to secure the pulp into the United States shall be
made only on government aceonnt to
or through the federal agency charged
with such supervision and distribu
tion." This plan contemplates the opera
tion of mills under their present man
agement and the use of the present
distribution agencies, but directed by
federal agents. Such a plan has al
ready been successfully operated in.
Great Britain.
Two men arrested in Vale this week
for importing liquor each had 250 "
quarts of booze in his auto, and Baker
was the point they intended to sell it in.
ritAlNttlBkiiMiyiilAiUltfMSWiikttMMMMMlMIMlfllMUIttilMiAMHKfeM M&Mtt
Curlv Brown went clean out of his
head, apparently, in the third session at
Portland and walked two men. Hogg,
who replaced him, hit one and walked
another. When tho second inning closed
Portland had scored three runs, which
was one more than enough to win.
Wilie. of the Beavers had a success
ful day, hitting at a 1 .000 clip.
Three binales bunched in the third
gave the Angels their two runs. Fiual
count 4 2.
TUK SEAMAN Vil'NXER-
lJmiHc!;ctu );i
-A GREAT DEAL OF Ol R SUCCESS IX THIS WAR WILL DEPEND UPON
THE
im'.)a:;.t Mintvn as seaman gunners. Seaman gunners are remitted from blucptcketa that have served at least
one tMilixtment of lour years. A bltie.jai-l.-ct t indeed a lucky fel'ow if he wins assignment to either of the seaman
vnrtiii'r -sehi'nls. The bailor 'student i uiven a groundwork in elementary electricity, bovause it may be necessary for
liim lo handle dynamos. Next, he is fainiliarinetl with the dynamo as an electromotor more directly concerned. Seame
ii !; sin iii-i i are given a special course of three e. i;s iu machine thop praetiee.This work has beeu so aysteinatined th
,i! i he saiiur students lire subje.'teil to an intensive training that is. radicallydistinct from the instruction of a machi
ii.- .hop apprentice in civil life. It takes a good many week to master all ofthese details. The seaman gunner nil
M liiiuM p,v lo t-.iiret t any faulty performance on the part of the torpedo, andthis he cannot do unless thoroughly fam
ii::.i' still tli' capon in its entirety.
Venerable Austrian
Bays Liberty Bonds
Antone Wirth lives with his son at
0-,ri P.iirrrrnun.ld i-nn,l He WHS llflril 1 11
Austria in 182(5. so is 9t years old. He
took out his first papers in this coun-
in IS,,,. He served under siiermaji
during the civil war. He came down to
the l.add &- Bush bank this morning
and brought with him the money to
buv a liberty bond. "I meaut it when
1 took the "oath of allegiance to this
country." said the venerable patriot.
Here my children and theirs will live.
It is their country by birth and mine
hv adoption, but just as much mine as
theirs. ' ' . . '
ROUNDED UP SLACKERS
Duluth, Minn., June 13. Federal
agents rounded up 104 alleged slackers
iu the Mesaba iron rauge district to
day. More arrests are to follow. Many
under arrest admit they have not reg
istered, it is said.
GOOD'UJCft
FCa COFFEE DRINKERS
Instant I
Postum
El
ii
El
II
II
ii
II
II
63
tl
tl
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
tl
Ii
tl
II
U
El
II
II
II
tl
il
II
II
II
11
tl
U
II
II
II
II
II
If
II
II
II
II
M
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
tl
II
II
tl
II
II
II
tl
If
ii
ii
u
ti
ti
I?
ATTENTION, BEAN GROWERS
We desire to call your attention to the fact that we have ordered and will
have installed in plenty of time to handle the coming crop of beans, the most
complete bean cleaning machinery on the market.
We will have CLEANERS, Graders and POLISHERS,, and also CLAY
CRUSHING ROLLS for removing the small clods from your beans.
Our cleaner will clean them in first class shape, the graders will grade
them into the various sizes, and the polishers will remove all dirt and weather
stains so that your beans will go on the market in first class shape.
We do not tie you up in any contract; you are at perfect liberty to sell
where you can get the most money and not take what the other fellow says,he
sells them for and pay him a fat commission for selling them.
We WI
11 Buy Beans
ge
We represent the largest dealer in beans in the world and expect to be able
to pay the highest market prices, but if you can get more money some place
else, the beans are yours to sell where you please. ,
ora
We have ample storage in a first class brick warehouse "and will only
charge a very moderate amount for storage, according to time left on stor
age. Insuranca very low.
Do not tie up on any cinch contracts, but sell your own beans to the highest
bidder. ..."
Charges for cleaning will be reasonable and as low as any one else will
charge for doing an equal job of cleaning.
251-261 STATE STREET
WHITE I SOUS
SALEM OREGON
m mw-mwm ww ww mm mm mm mn tm mmmmwmm
II
Ii
II
tl
31
II
If
II
It
II
II
It
!!
II
!!
II
II
If
U
Ft
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
n
u
ii
ii
ii
ti
n
u
kl
13
11
II
tl
n
ri
Fl
il
II
n
ii
ii
u
ii
ii
ti
n
u
it
ii
ii
ti
it
ti