of The Capital Jomnai THURSDAY EVENING August 27, 1917 CHARLES H. USHER Editor and Publisher 1 cf& I Page PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY, SALEM, OREGON, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. h. 8. BARNES, President, CHAS. H. FISHER, Vice-President. DORA C. ANDRESEN, See. and Trees. 45e ..35e SUBHCBIPT10N BATES Daily by carrier, per year. .55.00 Per month Daily br mail, vet year 3.00 Per month FULL LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT EASTERN EPKESENTAT1VE8 Ward ft Lewi, New York, Tribune Building. Chicago, W. H. StoekwelL People 'a Qaa Bntlding The Capital Journal carrier boys are instructed to put the paperi en the porta. If the carrier does not do Thii, misses you, or noglects getting the paper to yo on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are foHowing in structions. Phone Main 81 before 7:30 o'clock and a paper will be sent you by special messenger if the carrier has missed you. . THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL Is the only newspaper in Salem whose circulation is guaranteed by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. PEACE OFFER WAS ILLTIMED 'l late dispatch yesterday stated the metal trades Miions which had been holding up the settlement, of the strike in San Francisco had voted to accept the govern ments offer and to return to work. Previously it had been announced that the Seattle and Portland strikes would be settled on the same basis as that at San Fran cisco, Samuel Gompers being the authority for this state ment. At the same time it was announced that the gov- The Vatican yesterday expressed the opinion that "Austria and Germany had strengthened themselves at home by apparently accepting .the pope's peace terms." There is food for thought in the suggestion; and some will find the alleged "strengthening" was perhaps the ob ject of the offer. While few will be disDosed to doubt the pope's good intentions, many will believe the offer was ernment arbitrators, or managers, would start for Port illtiv.rl I'lliiofKnfnn VinmMfn. V,n j:rf:U J! -J it. O J u 1 1 il. . 1 uimiicu. ii muouara iiuncu mc uu.xicuitj' ui liicciici-, icuiu anu tue ouuna soon, ii is nopeQ uie senseless move ing in others quarrels without making a bad matter ment has run its course and that the sound of the ham worse. It is stated in the same dispatch that the pope is mer and saw will be heard again soon in all the shipyards satisfied there can be no "victor's peace",'that a stalemate and will continue to be heard until America's answer to is bound to follow, and this being the case the allies have . Prussian ruthlessness is made in the shaDe of a fleet made a mistake in not accepting the . terms suggested, steadily increasing in numbers despite the submarines. STATE FAIR IS EDUCATIONAL Apparently the Vatican overlooks, the fact that there is no responsible government in Germany with which the allies could deal 11 they consented to discuss peace along the lines suggested. How can any country safely make a treaty with another that in advance notifies it that any treaty it makes is but a "scrap of paper?" When the ' everywhere allies can deal with the German people, when they are I Yesterday was the banner day at the state fair, though today gives promise of giving it a hard rub for the pen nant. The antlered herd has charge of affairs today along with Portland, and the royal purple is in evidence Onlir turn mnva Aoira Qnrl trio fif fv-Rl' vfh state fair Will ua o minor nf r,i0tnrv nnhr f.vpvv vpflr it. becomes more willing to bind themselves just as the countries they treat u" u ,u"111-' v.v. j j -- ,,jii, i ,;n u Tt : 4-1 i? . and more a real event and draws a larger attendance and , wuu lil.lL. " f IW1 , The DaEv Novelette honeiul sign though that even the militarists at last realize " from a much wider field. This year the exhibits are un usually good and the attendance shows a growing inter est. The most noticable feature is the wonderful increase in the quality of the livestock. There are few fairs that can boast a better showing in this line than that now on exhibition. at the fair grounds. The interest taken in growing hoes has caused a great improvement in that stock. It is not so many years ago that the Oregon hog, was a close rival of the Arkansas razor back, known in Texas as the "sunfish" brand. One of the pure breds of this kind could run her nose through a picket fence and root up the third row of corn. Some of them it is claimed could go between the pickets unless a knot was tied in their tails. It is different now when a nine months old pig just bursting into hoghood weighs nearly five hundred pounds and is not overly plump at that. Another feature of the fair that has attracted much attention is tne iarm machinery. Scarcity of labor and the handy little gasoline engine has caused the farmers to go to investigating along that line to see what can be done toward relieving the labor shortage, and at the same time reducing the cost of production. More and more the State iair is becoming looked upon as an educator, and its practical help is be coming of more importance than its old time amusement character. In this latter line, however, this meeting has been a success, for there have been some fine races and there are some speedy ones yet to show their paces, un' fortunately another feature excels in number all other meetings of the Oregon fair and that is the side shows and barkers. There was never a scarcity of them and this year the crop is a more than usually prolific one. I hey are so plentiful as to be a real nuisance. The United States, especially the northwest coast has no advantage over Russia so far as concerted action to ward winning the war is concerned. The foolish ones at Petrograd standing in the way of the government taking action against the invading Germans, is no more senseless than the actions of American citizens who by strikes are discrediting the nation abroad and hampering it at home. Before wasting sympathy and indulging in regrets over Russia's actions we should clean house ourselves. With the strike in San Francisco settled and the heads of Union labor back east stsnding in with the president in his efforts to bring industrial peace it begins to look as though reason would resume her throne in the labor camps and the strikers be settled. It certainly is to be hoped this is the case. THE SOUVENIR. The Dumpoff family hud motored all the way from Clieeseboro to Twiddlo burg without passing a thing to eat, hopeful sign though that even the militarists at last realize their dream of world conquest has had its awakening and the vanishing of the vision, and are willing to make some reparation in the way of rehabilitating Belgium. They offer to pay part of the expense. It was they who over ran Belgium. Thev who started the war for their own aggrandizement Thev who eave the countrv to destruc-; they wera venous when they drew tion and its people to worse than slavery, and yet they j uf r Dmp trucked hiHpan'd pick ask those on whom they forced the most dreadful war in ed up a spotless -new menu card and all history to pay part of the expense of repairing their,1'18 cye d0WI1 tbe sumptuous bU1 of "Um yum," he swoggled, "this looks good. Well, family, we'll start in with some little eared clams on the quarter shell as an appetizer, and then we'll have roebuck soup a la Dr. Cook." "I'd rather have prissie egg broth, Adolph," said Mrs. Dumpoff, glancing over his shoulder. "I'm passionately rona or prissie egg Drotn." "You shall have it, Paulina," agreed Mr. Dumpoff, "and the children, too, if they prefer. And after that let's see ah, stuffed bitsy fish a la Bryan, with sqoozed potatoes. Or would anyone pre fer pickled herring with lingo sauce? " "Me! Us!" clamored Clarence Dump cpff and his sister Neerums. "Very well, children," smiled their father. "And then some roast alabaster squabs with stuffed mushrooms, and " " 'Scuse n.e, boss," cut in the waiter apologetically, "but j'Be afraid if you all want to eat heah vou all '11 be 'bliged to partake off o' liver 'n eggs. Liver 'n eggs is all we got, sah. That yeah bill of menu card must o' been left heah by that travellin ' printer that done passed last night under our hos pitality." So the Dumpoff family decided to have liver 'n eggs. damages they have done. It is hopeful only in that it shows they begin to realize they are responsible and must make good the damage they have done. German con cessions will have to extend further than the rebuilding of the ruined industries and ravaged homes of Belgium before peace can be considered. There must be a suf ficient guaranty that such ruin shall not again be inflicted on the world. Gerard will not be a candidate for the presidency is the statement coming from Spokane. This can hardly be classed as news, as no one supposed he would be. Besides it is three years before the present incumbent of the of fice steps down and it is decidedly too early to talk about his successor. Here in Oregon we will have a governor to elect and also a senator next year, and that is enough to keep the Oregon politicians busy guessing for the next nine months anyway. Colonel Roosevelt is hitting the high places in the mid dle west and making twd or three speeches a day while doing so. He is to make a speech at St Paul as a sort of disinfectant for LaFollette's talk before the state commis sion of Public Safety at that place a few days ago. It is a safe bet the colonel will inject some formaldehyde into the situation. Instead of the bridge being completed in time for the fair it now seems that the date of its completion is a thing to be learned in the remote future, and when the Southern Pacific at its pleasure sees fit to handle its cars properly and haul the freight its charter provides it must haul for the general public. Instead of trying to assist in getting the bridge completed in time for the fair the management has apparently, placed every obstruction pos sible in the way. Sometime when the people of Salem have been kicked hard enough and often enough they will fight back. Until they do they will get the same kind of treatment they have always received, and uitil they do fight back, they will deserve it The kaiser's law was that "might makes right." A very simple code and perhaps a pleasing one from the kaiser's viewpoint so long as he represented the "might." Now that things are not prospering so well with him and his aims, he is constrained to change the sentiment around and let right make might"' Hudibras remarked: "No thief e'er felt the halter draw With good opinion of the law." The mayor of San Francisco suggests as a solution cf the car strike in that city that the city buy the canines of the United Railroads on which the trouble has oc curred. The company is willing and it is possible the city may take over the roads. St j(C SS 3jt )c 3G Sjc 3S And He Did I'm CjOintobuy a EOZEN EAK5 OF CORN ANB E-AT'E-M ALL. MYSElFfl WMDHEDID" - OPERATING ROOM LI HAS SERIOUS ACCIDENT. lost no time in getting to where Clar ence was. He found him nearly covered with lumber and as quickly as possible lifted it off. Grant then went to C. J. Newton's for help: a sled with a wao-on I box -and a lot of sacks were auicktv nxea ana wnn iiarry JNewton drove to where Clarence lay. He was pressed so far into the dirt that it was a problem to got him out without adding greatly ... 1.:- JM ! TT I , , n . . tu uia Huuenujj. xiuDoara enterprise. Are Yon Looking Old? Old age comes quick enough without inviting it. Some look old at forty. That is because they neglect the liver and bowels. Keep your bowels regular and your liver healthy and you will not omy icei younger Dut look younger. It is rather strange, but the dispatches announce that Argentine has lost confidence in Germany. The weather clerk has the thanks of the Capitol City for real nice conduct on his part and also the request that he keep up his lick. It is fair weather and not the old fashioned state fair kind. LADD & BUSH. Bankers Established 1863 CAPITAL $300,003.00 TRANSACT- A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS SAVINGS DEPARTMENT ; Rippling Rhymes i by Walt Mason MOTORING Clarence Bcvens was caught under a load of lunifoor Monday morning and his right leg broken very near the hip joint, as well as a dislocation of the hip joint. Ho was hauling a load of lumber, and driving on top of the load, to the west line of his place to build a fence. Tiie fence "was to be built on . a side hill near the stream. In getting the wagon into a convenient place for nnloadinc ZhZ .hiftr fi , 1 Whon troubled with constipation or oil- ,T ZX t ' .C.Wn J'""P clear iousn0S8 take ChamberlaiA 's Tablets, fore ,,?!, I ll Ti rth d be- They are intended especially for these in S i - g the lumber was ailments and are excellent. Easy to ?n tyrant Jones was work- take and most agreeable in effectf Ob mg near by, and hearing calls for help tainable everywhere. EIGHT PEOPLE OUT OF TEN R E A L I ZE THAT THEY ARE IN THE WRONG VOCATION But there is no excuse for remaining in a line of work that does not bring out YOUR BEST. There is no reason why your son and daughter should not find the vocation for which they are best fitted. Vocational counsel, the newest science known to educators and the business world, enables a person' to KNOW whether they should be engaged in a professional, mechanical, or commercial pursuit. ' Vocational Counsel is hot Phrenology under a new name, neither is it Palmis try, Clairvoyance or any so called "Fortune Telling." It is a scientific study, " phychological in character, the result of the best efforts of some of the world's lead ing educators and business men. Vocational counsel is for You and your Child. Don't put it off---The most import ant choice in life is the choice of a vocationThe choice has to be made and as Solomon has said, "In the multitude of counsel there is wisdom." I would like to be of as sistance to you. I have studied Vocational Counsel for a number of years, in the University of California and elsewhere. The charge for my service is small. I guar antee satisfaction. After October 1st my office will be located at Room 2, Salem Commercial Club Building. Before that you can ar range an interview by phoning 1355. - JAMES M. HEADY ine program was to he ships, ship and yet more ships, not strikes, strikes and yet more strikes. t: ... 1 i:, r. tniinnyriii-hina. CHAPTER XVI. loni took me home about eleven o'clock. "Bob will be waiting for me," I had said when Elsie urged me not to hurry. "Don't be too sure!" she returned, "If John Kendall has a book which is so unusual that he wants Bob to read it before deciding upon publishing it. Bob is sure to stay until he reads the last word, then they- will have to dis cuss it." "You see Elsie was right!" Tom had insisted upon going up stairs with me, and we found everything dark. "He'll be along in a few minutes," I answered, not so sure as I pretended. I couldn't help thinking of that other Margaret Garrett's fiusDand QyJANE PHELPS UNWELCOME QUESTIONS go to sleep until I knoow you are, of you and home, sately at home." I hope you will also eniov these thirds "One would think mc a baby, in-P"4" me- not, I shall be obliged to " i i ill 'Alt Hi til I . I chug along from burg to grad, good gaso line a-burning, where roads are good, where roads are bad, on highways straight and turning. "Oh, motoring," I sigh, "is bliss, my good old car's a treasure; what outdoor pastime equals this, for pure and lasting nleAKiire?" And sr T o-nmhnl thmn trh tho niRht when h th Hem? J 4. '4.1. .u j. r . Creedmore. until three o'clock. I did dust, with other autos racing, my thread- hop thu was not to be a repetition of bare tires begin to bust and spoil both tube j thV". . . J A oo; T nrA 1U- ;.v t:1 I ""dressed and found something to "'u wiji. a wn aim lauui u.i uic ouu unui roan, nut as the time passed I real- 1 bust a gallus, and ere the weary work isJ "VonM done I drink from sorrow's chalice. . Fori John Kendaiu, ftaq mpj changing tires will break the heart of anyj1 wait ' ' 41 4.i j. i i r sent to lo o;.resg it bluntly. and tell him I would not eon- nnrflv TnrfQl imof Vic tl J isont Xo. loT.,n? mv ,n the "ng f " J -, mo oyjjic-vai i, nnless he came home at a decent time. and kill his smile and chortle. At last new tires arp on i decided to wait. The remem- the wheels and I resume my spinning; my laughter rings oliTL'V in merry peals, my smile is sweet and winning. Then ; perhaps tad something to do with mT something breaks about the torque; no more my car islV iV! f g Bob, still a little anxious otild have no. cause to find me. It was after one when he came in- didn't you go to bed,.Mar- steaa of a man old enough to know his own mind. I will come in just as early, perhaps earlier if you will be sensible and go to bed." 'Now you are annoyed with me. when I am the one who should be cross," I returned. " Yes, I am annoyed. I like freedom, the privilege to enjoy my friends, my books and other things. You are al together too critical, Margaret. Be as aomestic as you like, but don't expect me to be continually by your side. You seem lately to find a" lot wrong with Please don't get an err. Bob! am only asking what is my due, what belongs to me. You seem to fore-et l "mm imiy laieiy-- i added, "but I want you to understand just how I reel aoout it before it become lmhit was again going to be;,,usl Because your mother encouraged I call him Hp. I knew ! J"0" to remain out evenings or to be had a telephone, or should J witn certain people is no reason- I snouw do the same. I am a young wonran, yon are my husband. "Your time, ontside of yonr business belong to me." " "And speeded; I'll have to send to far New York, to get the part! of "Win that's needed. When fixed, some other Darts will break.! ii.f some oeanngs, pins or couars, and wnen repairs the 11 was workmen make, they'll charge me ninety dollars. And soL'' T,V; i ni waiKing near ana iar, on highways broad and nar-j "Because i prefer sitting np than to row; i think i ll dump the motor car, and get myself ; "S ravg . ; 1 nui UUl- teiM iu wrr a barrow. 'But why J am outf " I "I can't! not go to sleep when I I love you too much to yon cannot sav that T hr. not given it 4o you," Bob replied, two hed spots on his cheeks. "I have scarcely been out of your sight since we were married, save on business. But now that cool weather is nearly here, things naturally will be different. i s.-iall vant to do some entertaining; shall want to go out with mr old friends; take up some of the threads of my life before mother died." "You mean that you are not sat isfied with me, with our hornet" "Ko I do not mean that! not in the way you put it. Bat I must have some recreation, some interests outside ! have them anyway. I am not domestic, never was, Margaret. I love my home, yes, but because one cares for one thing is n osign he wants nothing else," he explained, as he saw the shocked ex pression on my face. "I don't se your point of view at all," I said stubbornly. "I'm sorry." "It isn't nice in you, and it doesn't sound right toward me. When I be came your wife I expected to take the place of all these things in your af fections, and in your life. Don't you tninjc yon should consider me above everything elset I do you." "I kaow you do, Margaret," he said gently, as he turned out the light. "You are too thonghtful of me my bodily comfort. But, dear, that isn't all there is in life, we soon rust and grow st.ipid and rn interesting unless we have something ontside of ourselves which appeals to us. Physical comfort is to be desired, but it never takes the place of juental stimulus." "I don't agree with yon. Ton 're married now. You have a big- library, more books than I have ever known i bachelor to possess. VThy can't yon be rontent with mr ticiefr -as I nt with yours, and rvt what mental srim- nlns ns ron caTI it r-ou need from ronr books here at home instead ft ching ont and leaving me alonet" "T enn't seem to make von nr-der-sfanV" he raid wearily. "Suppose we ston telW-iw about it and go t sleen. " "Vrn love me do" 't ml darlinfft" T fkfd s I kissed him good nicht. frr.efhin? 1'Ctwecn a grunt and sni-e yras m-r answer. Tomorrow Centered Enmance .