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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1917)
! THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 30, 1917. TXAKE TODAY Dainty-Diminutive-Lovable MARGUERITE CLARK in Snow White To see it is to be delightfully entertained. VAUDEVILLE GEORGIA CHARTRES Singing and Whistljng Comedienne . LONESOME LUKE-PLUMBER The Funniest Yet Quality Supreme "Love or Justice?" Stars Louise Glaum Louise Glaum, the well known Ince flERVOUSIIESS AND BLUES Symptom of More Serious Sickness. Washington Park, 111. "I am the mother of four children and have suf- ifered with female trouble, backache, nervous spells and the blues. My chil dren's loud talking and romping would make me so nervous I could just tear everything to pieces and I would ache all over and feel so sick that I would not want anyone to talk to me at times. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills re stored me to health and I want to thank you for the good they have done me. I . have had quite a bit of trouble and worry but it does not affect my youth ful looks. My friends say ' Why do you look so young and well t ' I owe it a!! to the Lydia E. Pinkham remedies." Mrs. Robt. Stopiel, Sage Avenue, Washington Park, Illinois. If you have any symptom about which you would like to know write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for helpful advice given free of charge, I r 1 F X?l 4 TRUNKS J FORTHAT t Vacation Trip I Our Baggage Department Is I most complete. Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases, Steamer Trunks. I Straw Cases I (Fibre Cases 79c See Window Display C.S. HAMILTON FURNITURE STORE 340 COURT STREET TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY The Fascinating "Peacock Woman" LOUISE GLAUM in Love or Justice? That was the question .before the prosecuting attorney when the wo man he loved was on trial for her life. Other Attractions TheO siren, will be starred in the new" Tri angle play, "Love or Justice " at the Oregon theater Tuesday and Wednes day. "Love or Justice f" which is the work of Lambert Millyer, is a strong drama of love and sacrifice. It tells the story of a woman of the underworld, who weans a brilliant young lawyer from the drug habit by her love and de votion. Here is a vampire who sacri fices all her luxuries and her former life for the man she has grown to love. As in "Sweetheart of the Doomed" and "The Wolf Woman," Miss Glaum will. make her gowns a distinctive fea ture. In the first part of the play, in which she appears in the cabaret scenes, she is garbed in the clothes of i a queen of the underworld, similar to those which she wore in "The Wolf Woman." Later as she gains refine-i ment through her love and sacrifice, i her gowns are of a more delicate qual-, ity. The settings are laid in lawyers' of-1 fices, luxurious homes and clubrooms. One important episode is laid in a well known Tonderloin basement . cabaret. I Another imposing "set" feature is a courtroom scene, in which over 300 peo pie are usea. lo be seen at the Oregon theater Tuesday and Wednesday. WOMEN GET POSITIONS IN BOX FACTORY AT BEND. Bend, Ore., July -30. Just as rapidly as they can be secured, womon are to be put to wark in the box iactory of the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber -company here. Six were placed on .tho payroll yester- my ,muiimg new umiury in iuh iuchi for light labor requiring manual dex terity tne new employes are superior to men. Shortage of labor caused the wo men to be put on as an experiment. SHOT BY BABY. i-ortano, ur, JUiy su. ooot oy ner superintendent of the government print three year old grandchild, Mrs. C. D. in office in Washington. In 1870 he Dickie, age 49, today, is iiovering oe- tween life and death. The child was playing with aloaded revolver. . 1 AND J ICS Alwavs a! Good Showjj HARRISON GRAY OTIS DIES ATMS ANGELES Best Known On Pacific Coast for Winning Fight Against Union Labor Los Angelos Cal.,. July 30. General Harrison Gray Otis, founder and editor nt tl, T ai. rr: I T T nnd llfe lon8 opponent of organized la borJ suddenly today at ten o'clock a ne home of his son-in-law. Harry Chandler, in Hollywood. i Death was due to the bursting of a blood vessel in the heart, according to Dr. Ferdert, attending physician, Chandler and Mrs. Chandler were with him when he died. General Otis came down to breakfast as usual this morning, apparently en joying his usual health. Just as the negro maid was serving him, he put out his hand and said: "Take away the tray Lucy, I'm gone." He died instantly. General Otis, soldier, journalist, life long opponent of union labor, was born near Marietta, Ohio, February 10, 1837. Oluo Infantry" at the outbreak of the through various grades to tnat of lieutenant colonel of volunteers, being highly hon ored when mustered cut. Entering civil life, he became of ficial reporter of the Ohio house of representatives the year after the close of the WBf. nnd Inter vna nini0l fn wa8 made uiviaiou euicf in the wteut office later being transferred to the treasury department and was given cliarge or tne Seal Islands of Alaska, In 1878 ho became editor and general manager of Los Angeles Times where he remained until his death. At tho out creak or the fspamsn-Amcrican war Otis wag appointed brigadier general of volunteers and was sent to the Philip pines, lie leu flis brigade in the cap ture of Caloocan, for which gallantry he was promoted to a major gencral 1 ship. He was discharged in 1899. I As the owner of tho Times, he began a fight on unionied labor which he carried on up to the time of his death. Tn 1910 during the heat of the Times' labor fight, the Times building was dy namited and more than twenty employ es of the paper were killed in the re sultant fire. " The Merchants and Manufacturers as sociation of Los Angeles, employed William J. Burns to run down the guilty persons and as a result John J. iieNa mara, secretary-treasurer of the Inter national Association of Structural Kteel and Iron Workers and his brother James were arrested in Detroit and Indianap olis. After a sensational trip across the country the McNamaras were brought to trial. Clarence S. Darrow, of Chi cago, were retained to defend tbem.Ar ter weeks Bpent in selecting a jury, the McNamara brothers came into court suddenly and pleaded guilty. John was sentenced to fifteen years in prison and James to life imprisonment. Ortie McManigal, the state's star witness in the case, declared that he and James McNamara had actually placed the fatal bomb, after attaching to it a clockwork arrangement which would set it off after they had left the city. General Otis' Times attacked the Mc Namara brothers fiercely during the trial and later. Shortly after the sen sational climax to the McNamara case, Clarence Darrow, chief defense counsel was indicted on a charge of attempting i to bribe jurors. He was acquitted after a lenethv trial in which he made the chief plea to the jury in his own do-1 lense. orvemi jri-am unci iiiv -i" mara excitement had died down, David Caplan and M. A. Schmidt were arrest- nA in na atato fit Wtl ill tnfl find COn- '.victed of participation in the Times . jinnenimpv j As the direct outgrowth of the Me jNamara case, practically all of the in ternational olficers of the ironworkers j union were indicted in Indianapolis and convicted of transporting explosives il legally on passenger trains. They scrv- ed various i)ri9on terms in Fort Leaven- ' worth federal prison, the last of them j having been liberated only recently. 1 General Otis wag also a constant ad vocate of American intervention in Mexico, where he had large land holdings. KILLED jY ACCIDENT Body :cf Dead Boy Lay in Road All Night -Was Found This Morning Howard, 14-year cfi son of T. Y. Mc Clelland, the West Stayton merchant, was found lying dead in the road about hali a mile from his home, by a neigh bor, Mr. Hookstraw, about 7 o'clock this morning. The horse he Had been rid ing was lying beside him and nearly dead. The boy yesterday evening about dusk started on horseback for Mr. Hookstraw 's placo intending to borrow a saddle. His folks, supposing he had come home and gone to bed after they bad retired, thought he was in his room this morning, until Mr. Hookstraw told them of their terrible loss. It is sup posed the boy was riding pretty fast, and there being a slight raise in the road caused the horse to stumble and fall, while nothing, of course, is known as to tho matter it is supposed the boy was killed instantly, his injuries indi cating that. The horse was so badly in jured that ho was shot tills morning to end his suffering. Howard was a bright manly boy, and he will bo sadly mea by the neigh bors with whom he was a general fav orite. His untimely death has east a feeling of gloom over the entire town, which extends to tho bereaved family its profound sympathy. SEATTLE STRIKE (Continued from Page One.) arbitrators from a list of 11 submitted by the company and tho representation of each side by- council. Tho company suggested that the men return to work as soon as the agreement to arbitrate was signed. Nothing was said of union recognition. Replying in the same spirit and cit ing the state law on the subject, the strikers' general committee, Sunday night announced in a letter to Pres ident Leonard calling for tho appoint ment of four arbitrators to meet with the state commissioner of labor as pre siding officer, to arbitrate the strike situation. ." . Strikebreakers Working. Tacoma, Wash., July 30. One hun dred strikebreakers from the cast were spirited into Tacoma during the early morning hours today and are at work for the Tacoma Railway and Power company, it was disclosed by a check mado by the police and union pickets. Thirty cars are operating, though the public, as throughout the two preced ing weeks' of tho. struggle, refuses to ride. K ' ' Forty two of the? imported strike breakers were brought in on the Mil waukee railroad, it was reported. They constituted one - carload of a special train that arrived at Seattle. The ons car was taken off at Maple Valley and brought here. The others wcro brought over the Georgetown car barns in auto mobiles. Tacoma police, anticipating trouble when the arrival of tho strikebreakers becomes generally known, are taking fevcry precaution to forestall riots. Guarding the "Army" Seattle, Wash., .July 30. Guards on duty at the Georgetown enr-barns of the Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power company where five hundred strikebreakers are billeted, opened re volver fire into a small crowd of half grown youths Sunday night. No one was injured. According to strikers, who took no part in the affair, the shooting was in retaliation for an attack made by the youths on a strike breaker who left the barns yesterday morning and was set upon and beaten. . Thee guards appeared at the top of the fence and commenced shooting in the direction of the crowd. Police dis persed the crowds around the barns. There was no further disturbance. RLIGH THEATRE TO-DAY Gold Rooster Feature in Nature Colors PEARL WHITE .in MAY BLOSSOM Five Parts Also Comedy and Educational 2 Acts of Vaudeville No Raise in Prices Matinee 10c; Evening 15c MasflOBBHSSaMBraHi Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday Margaret Fisher in 9 The Pearl of Paradise' GOOD ATTEIMiCE AT ASSEI-iBLVMEETIfiGS Afternoon Conference and Young People's Meeting Held Under Trees Large crowds attended the sessions of the summer assembly at the fair grounds yesterday. The afternoon con ference and young people's meeting were held under the trees, the evening service in the building. At the opening of the afternoon ses sion there was a short business meet ing of the state B. Y. P. U. at which the newly eleetcd president. Harlev Halgren of Portland, outlined his iilans and made recommendations. He urged tnat the state union work to increase the standard societies from 11 to 25 and the organization of twenty mis sion study classes; that we enlist and train all our young people for all forms of Christian service; that we cooperate with our denominational societies in an educational drive In October and November for mission study -classes and "win my friend" week; that we establish a uniform plan of association al young people's organizations, modi fied according to the exiting state or ganization, especially so far as the de partments of education, evangelism junior and intermediate work are con cerned; that for the coming year's work we assess each society ten cents per member. It was voted to make the summer as sembly a permanent feature of the state organization and strivo for an attend ance of one hundred registered students next year. Following the business meeting Harry Wade Hicks of New York gave an ad dress on training young people for mis sionary leadership. At the evening service Dr. W. B. Hiuson preached a thoughtful and in spiring sermon on "The abiding Christ Miss Lena Belle Tartar sang "Abide with me." Tho morning classes have been start ed with an attendance of from thirty to thirty five each- This evening 'g program will be a very interesting one. After the musical preludo Miss Edna Ilnrida, art teacher, O. A. C will give a chalk talk render ing of Hiawutha. She is the equal of ! any lyceum professional artist m this line. Again let the announcement be made that all these sessions are free to the public. Return From Long Trip to Southern California Mr-, and Mrs. Sam Ocrlg and two children, accompanied by Harold Cron, a born Californian.who drove his own car. arrived in Salem Julv 27th, leaving Brawley, California, July 1st. They reached Mill City July 24th, which it to be their future home and leaving the children there came on to Salem to vis it Mrs. Gerig's mother, .ra. Margaret Hunimels, of 1094 N. Seventeenth street' They drove 2285 miles in all. Mr. Cron says he drove as high as 7180 feet with the little Ford. Found good roads all through California from the Mexican line to the Oregon line, roads all paved, but not good through Oregon. When they left Hrawley it was ex cessively hot and dry. Crops of cotton there looked good. Very near Brnwley a rancher is raising watermelons on a patch of 400 acres, cantaloupes on 2000 acres; they ship on an average 230 to 250 oars of melons a day for six weeks. Both men report a scarcity of farm help all through California, and all along the way were besieged to stop and go to work, but Mr. (lerig has work ed before in Mill City, and as he had tho promise of work there again at in creased wages returns there, preferring the Oregon climate. They leave Salem for Mill City Sat urday afternoon perfectly delighted to get back to Oregon. Tho arrival of fifty strikebreakers from St. Louis on a special train Sun day morning was marked by the en tire absence of violence. "THE CLOCK" Based on Aaron Hoff man's $5,000 Story Directed by Wm. Worthington Franklyn Farnum and Brownie Vernon ': Supported by Blue bird's Cleverest Photoplayers Elko Comedy A Knock-Out Special VITAGRAPH Feature 'TOMORROW LIBERTY THEATRE ! Last Times Today I. ONLY n FOUR MORE DAYS Left Great Opportunity CUT THIS OUT PROFIT SHARING CERTIFICATE Upon purchasing a Suit or Overcoat at my storo any time before and up to and including July 30th to the amount of $15 or ovct and presenting this cer tificate properly signed and addressed, the holder may select $3.00 in merchandise immediately or may retain certificate and at any time prior to Sept. 1st may select the merchandi se, which consists of Hats, Shoes, Overalls, Caps, Raincoats, Underwear, Hos iery, Neckwear, in fact anything in the store. BENJAMIN BEICkI V ' At Brick's Corner, state and Liberty Streets Signed Address .... . L , DON'T MISS THIS The above certificate when properly endorsed by Benjamin Brick, will be good for $5.00 in trade any time up to September 1, 1917. BENJAMIN U The House That Guarantees Every Purchase. The House With a Conscience CORNER OF STATE AND LIBERTY STREETS State House News , . Formal announcement that Chester A. Moores, son of C. B. Jloores, well lriiftU'n OrAirnil rinlitii'inu. it to he Tiri vate secretary to Governor Withyeombe was maae oy me governor oaiuruuj. Mr. Moores succeeds George rainier Putnam, who resigned recently to take , 1 : u ...ill CUargO OI nis juivaie uurmiesa. Jiw assume the duties of his office No vember I. During the interim Miss Esther f'arson, assistant private secre tary, will perforin the duties of sec retary. Mr. Moores is a graduate of tho Uni versity of Oregon of the class of 11)12. He has been employed on the OreRon ian staff and recently was admitted to the Oregon bar. He graduated from the University of Oregon law school in Portland this spring. TOO WEAK TO FIGHT 'The "Come-back" man was really ; never down and out. jus weaneueu I condition because of overwork, lak of ! exercise, improper eating and living de mands stimulation to satisfy the cry for a health giving appetite and the re freshing sleep essential to strength. 'I n UL'llir. Il'inrlnm (lit f 'fl 1 IRU ll'R. !,),, Vitlniinl Himiedv of Holland, will do the work. They are wonderful! Three of these capsules each day will put a man on tiis reet ucioro ne uu it; whether his trouble comes from urie acid poisoning, tho kidneys, gravel or stone in the bladder, stomach derange ment or other ailments that befall the over zealous American. Don't wait un til you are entirely down aud out, but take them today. Your druggist will gladly refund your money if they do not help wou. Accept no substitutes, i ihA ,!,,, (!()!, I) MKUAL on every box, three sizes. They are the pure, original, linporieu nuuncm Capsules. fiontli.nipn who fail to make the grade in the officer's reserve should cheer up. There are still a few vacan cies in the rank and file. FOR f CATARRH and HAY FEVER a Ssnnis Eucalyptus Ointment AT ALL ORUQ STORES TUBCS 26C JARS BOC of this I NO TYPHOID FEVER SCARE AT MONMOUTH, IS CLAIM Monmouth, Or., July 30, Tho rumor that Monmouth had an epidemic of ty phoid fever circulated in all parts of tho state, is refuted by Health Officer Price, who sny that not a single case of the malady exists in the city. The shortage of water for domestic use is thought to have started tho rumor, for the supply became so short last week that it was turned oft' entirely for two days. President J. H. Ackeiniaii, of the normal school, threatened to adjourn the summer school if the trouble contin ued and Water Superintendent More laud at once remedied conaitions. x t ! YOUR TIRE IS ! NO GOOD t if your tpbe isn't RIGHT The best tire made Is only as good as the tube supporting it t GOODRICH I tubes have proven their worth Ve carry them i BRACKETT&GRAY i VULCANIZING I 279 IS. Commercial St, near Chemekela -4