rial Page of The Capital JourmMi CHAELES H. FISHES . Editor and PablUher SATURDAY E.KXING j Lg J Jf- - PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY, SALEM, OBEQOI BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. U 8. BABNE8, President, CHAS. H. FI8HER, Vic?President. DOHA O. ANDBE8EH, Sec. and Treai. A CATCHY PASSWORD SUBSCBIPTION BATES Vnilj by carrier, per year.. Daily by mail, per year 05.00 3.00 Per month Per month 45c 35e FULI LEASED WIBK TELEORAPH BEPOTtT EASTERN (REPRESENTATIVES Ward Lewis, New York, Tribune Building. Chicago, W. II. Stockwell, People'e Gas Building The Capita Journal carrier boys are instructed to put tho papers en the porsh. If the carrier does not do thie, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers aro following in structions. Phone Main 81 bofore 7:30 o'clock and paper will be sent you by special messenger if the carrier has missed you. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL Ij the only newspaper in Salem whose circulation is guaranteed by the Audit Bateau of Circulations. VILLA, THE FLEA ON THE MEXICAN DOG Villa is again in the limelight, this time with apparently a real following. One statement is that he has an army of more than 5,000 with which he captured Ojinaga, trap ped a Carranza army of 5,000 in a mountain pas3 and an nihilated it, and is now marching on Chihuahua, which is reported to be poorly garrisoned and at his mercy. It is ..- further claimed the rebel coalition has a total of 40,000 , men armed and ready to try final conclusions with Car ' ranza. It may be the latter part of this estimate is ex 7 aggerated, but that Villa has an army of 5,000 seems to be true. If it isn't so large it at least is big enough to whip any Carranza force that can be concentrated against it. The Mexican bandit has had a career that makes the plot of a dime novel seem like the catechis.m His ups and downs, up almost to the head of the Mexican govern ment and down to hiding alone and wounded in the moun tains; up to having millions in money at his call and again broke not only to bed rock, but as the old miner put it "down to the 2,000 foot level;" up to leading a victorious army where ever he wanted to go and down to fleeing for life and not only once but so often that each phase ' seems almost a habit, he is again at the top. It may be possible this time he will stay there. No doubt just now his whiskers, Carranza, would be mighty glad to welcome . one General Pershing and an American army a few hun dred miles below the border, and it may be he would like to see them at the Mexican capital. He would feel safer with the hated "gringoes" than with his own loved people. In the meanwhile "Pancho" is doing about as he pleases with Carranza's soldiers, and the' Mexican character is such that a brief success will send thousands of Mexicans -flocking to his standard. Uncle Sam having a real job on his hands will pay no attention to affairs south of the border so long as the troubles stay on that side of the ' line. However if thene is German money behind Villa, as is suspected, he may make some break across the border in order to embroil this country with Mexico. When the present war is over, and while we have an army all ready, the time will be ripe for settling not only Villa, but other ' trouble-makers south of the Rio Grande. . Our good old Uncle Samuel has been trying his hand at the German game of advising the enemy. The differ ence is that he is advising them for their own good while the German advice is for the good of the German militar ists. It started with' the dropping of thousands of copies of President Wilson's speech some time ago, appealing to the German people and showing them the world was not at war with them, but with the system which ruled them. These were scattered on German soil by French aviators. Other speeches of the president were also distributed in this manner and apparently they are bearing fruit. The French with a follow-up play advertised that whoever surrendered to the French armies with the password of "Republic" would not be treated as prisoners of war, but I would be" permitted to work with the .democracy of the j world and for the freedom of Qermany. Recent dis patches state that hundreds of German troops are sur- rendering voluntarily on the west front, giving the pass- word: "Republic." Advocates of a German republic are conducting a vigorous campaign from a neighboring neutral country and are making firffe progress. Once this idea gets hold of the German people it will stick and grow, and the kaiser may yet find his deadliest anemy is the j kind of work his spies delight in, passing information to the other fellows. If the German people understood the situation, that the allies have no designs on the integrity of German territory, and no desire to continue the war beyond the point where all danger of it being started again through the militarists being left in control, it would not take long to reach an agreement. It is only ignorance of the true conditions that makes them stick to the kaiser and have the burden of debt piled still deeper on their backs. "Republic", is a mighty catchy password. Margaret Garrett's Hssbasd By JANE 'PHELPS 5S sjC f 5(c Jt Sjfi SjC sjE $ sfc 5t Sl AN INTERRUPTION Two Loaves 15 Cts. The loaf satisfies; News from Petrograd, if it can be called such, shows either and both parties in control. Reports are so con tacting that the reader may draw any conclusions to please himself. However reading between the lines, and keeping in mind the character of the soldiers on the two sides, those backing Kerensky wanting to fight and those behind the revolutionists wanting to go home and get a piece ot land, the hnal result can be predicted with reason able certainty. Kerensky should, from the returns so far i, come out the victor. One thins is necessary to a final settlement and that is that considerable blood should flow now to prevent a greater hemmorrhage later. Too peace f ul a victory would be a calamity to Kerenskv. If he crets back through streets reddened with blood whose shedding was caused by unpatriotic Russians ruled by German gold, it will clinch his hold on the reins of government, and if he remains in control he will eventually bring order out of the black chaos now existing. CHAPTER LX. As I listened I was at first indig nant that Bob sould discuss me, what ho considered my faults,' with anyone. Then I thought: Perhaps if he makes John Kendall understand how much I disapprove of all that takes him away rroin me, it would make it easier tor me the coming winter. Then they spoke again: " What did you think of the story J" John asked, "now that I know 'what you think of the writer, I am curious as to tho real business side of the affair." "Crude, but promising!" Bob had replied, then as he launched into the subject, dissecting the story 'as was his fashion, I went into the dining room and prepared a little supper. I did not caro to entertain John Kendall, but I did want Bob to have something, and couldn't very well avoid asking John also. "There seems so little in one's life without congenial companionship. Per haps that is one reason I never have married," John was saying when I re turned to the living room after giving Delia her orders. "I know my friends, but who can know whetner a woman i will prove an addition to one's happi ness, or the reverse. Marriage is so often a matter of propinquity only. They meet, they desire each other, thby mar ry. The end, rather tho outcome, misery for life." "Oh, you are a confirmed bachelor! " Bob said rather ruefully. I thought then censured myself for ailowing such au idea to enter my mind. ' ' There are worse things in the world than being a bachelor. Honestly Bob . , , , -TT I don 't know a man whom I really envy '44444444,,44,,,.., a married man I mean. That may sound hard, but there are so many un- 4 . ice van? noveieue mfVivn.,mm SR JE3 RSTA n. SEES5 1 fal The bread that's clean, pure, good, snow-white; fresh every day and always right is 11 It SAP with the taste that the loaf with the flavor that gratifies. Try it for toast in the morn ins. At All Grocers. CHMY CITY BAKING CO. While calling on Americans to use corn instead of wheat, to eat corn bread instead of the kind wre have been used to, the food administration should also call on the manufacturers of corn meal to "come down." Wheat in Chicago is worth $2.25 a bushel and corn is selling at around $1.18. Yet four is selling at five cents a pound and cornmeal at eight. That is a thing of quite large pro Samuel Gompers is too old a bird in the political game to be caught with chaff. President Townley of the Farm ers' Non-Partisan League yesterday called on organized labor to join with the farmers to "help win the war." He made a strong appeal to have the farmers and labor join hands to fight everybody else. Labor leaders fear be coming part of an organization which can, and perhaps may overshadow theirs. The failure of the party in North Dakota is not encouraging and Gompers can be depended on not to get tied up with anyone who can then tie up 'labor. While fixing up the school budget it would have pleased portions and should not be overlooked. Making the corn! many good citizens if the expense of teaching any and all meal cheaper will go far toward making it popular, and will do more for food substitution than printed tomes sent out by the ton, most of which are simply a waste of paper and postal charges. j foreign languages had been eliminated. It is a dead waste of money. , : Lord Northcliff is one Englishman who realizes the in competency of many of those who have had the manage ment of the war. He talks right out and asserts that America will not stand for this kind of management, nor will it. The time for putting men in place for past serv ices is not now. What is demanded is that those placed in power be put there, not for past services but for what they can do now. . Results will be the only object, and not reward for past services. Camouflage is defined to be "the art of making things .that are seemed to be things that ain't.'' The University of Oregon has opened a course in this branch. The gov ernor while passing on that flax superintendent bonus might take a few preliminary lessons. Ecuador, being shut out of the war in Europe, is hav ing a small one of her own in the shape of a revolution. The biennial state election seems a long way off, and yet, in less than a year it will be over, and people will have ceased to figure out how it happened. - MMtWttttt er in According to the latest reports Kerensky is eith Petrograd or he isn't. 1 lADD & BUSH, Bonkers ESTABLISHED 1SCS CAPITAL $500,000.00 I I FT" TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUf TNELS SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Rippling Rhymes by Walt Mason - 04 - FREE SPEECH Free speech is certainly a blessing! With out it life would be distressing. It is a boon we long have cherished; for it our well known fathers perished. It is the rock on which this nation was built, to all men's admiration. While I am privileged to chat ter, I'm gay, no odds what is the matter. While I can roast our statute makers and call them mutts and boobs and fakers, I'll stand for all the laws they re passing; my safety valve is harmless sassing. Free peech, sweet boon! We must not lose it, 2 ana tiierej.01'0 jiever slmnm abuse it. Snmfl gents, who wish to awe or dazzle, are work ing free speech to a frazzle ; they hand out sentiments ex otic, they're saying things unpatriotic; they're toiling like so many yeomen to dish up comfort to the foemen. These skates, to whom tact is a stranger, will put our free speech graft in danger. Because of guys who've no dis cretion, no common sense in their possession, I may be pinched when I'm unreeling a mild and harmless line of spieling. So I maintain we should be stopping all ven omous and rancid yawping. ( j THE WOED. congenial marriages that it makes mo shy of the entire proposition. ' Bob made some inaudible reply and I stepped to the door and askod them nut thn HiiTM-ipr'Tii'lla linil t.nlrt mo was ' iTld nelTaK 1m had traveled six hun- them alone. As usual their conversa- "j miie to see Vab great Twombly tion had not interested mo, and I was Kails, and now, as he stood "on Ma thankful when a few moments after- jone's precipice, gazing at that indes ward I heard the front door close, and eribaMe vouma of korsmoo3hing water I was again alone with Bob. . . , . n tlfw1 . ! Whr. xuaa tlm writer VOll SW for . .. ...j,. vvnax; u ecstatic Tapturo, he knew his journey naa not been m vain. In vain he searched in is mind for an adjective to fittingly describe the mighty spectaclo. "Thrilling no, that's not it. Noble slamditious inspiring slosbun derful grand- no, none of them seems to just fit," mused the poet. I Ll I I 1 JL . . L ... 1 T !, BiA T,ntl,;r tn von Mnr-' m mu U .u mm, .M 7 "'" - , ' . , . who, if it had not been for his promin- hnrflnun vnn urn sn (iotftrmmea to ' ... . i.. ent ears, would have been quite insig nificant, spoke. "Majestic!" he breathed. Oswald Leezicks seized his hand and John Kendall!" I asked, and once more I noticed the dull flush creep slowly over Bob's neck and face before he answered: "A find of John's whom ho tought promising so wanted my advice." "It is strange that a publisher, an editor even should want the advice of a real estate man." And He Did 3C jfc garet, because you aro so determined to dislike Jolin. sut 1 nave an interest in his publishing house and from now on I rather imagine I shall be as keen to discover new writers as he is." I wrung it. "Sir, I thank you! " he exclaimed. "Hajestic! The word of words! Stran ger, you have a soul that understands! " I The other spoke again: j "Yes, Majestic." And producing a box from under is arm, he resumed, "Want to buy a Majestic Cholera but ton! Two for a quarter!" I Oswald Leezicks grasped him by the seat of the trousers and with one mighty Kobert Garrett you don't mean to tell me that you have gone into business with a man I dislike, aud who is in evevv way uisagreeauio to nie- I have a small interest in bis busi ness, yes." "I shall not allow you to spend your time with him because of your foolish action. You are married to me, ana X shall insist that you spend your time Tavu me." . i,,, ,(. v;, ,.4.,; ki, I shall spend my time as seems best I,," r: rn to me." Bob replied quietly. "You have - objected to my friends my mosF inno- qt John Kendallt cent pleasures ever since our marriage. whv!" I have begged you to share both friends j and pleasures, but you have refused overspread is face. Could it rlENRf' PULLDOWN ONE W, OF THOSE 75nKLF.i fvM cSl THflT SHELF FORME? I ! M) HE DID ?) r V', 7. it be possible no, she was simply a writer. Had it been anyone else I might Now, I shall do as seems best without reference to you, but if you feel that - n A ivmti. iiu vuu eau u "T""" " - have but not a writer. wile i Shan be more timn pieaseu. nw , f Bob If being a companion means be- , . . . . ... . ".. . ' , ...... anent his havme a small interest with coming one or tl.at tfonemmn set you are so tend ot," I interrupted, "I or time j g. aone m suau ut'coiiiu a cuiiiiuiuim Backing Heme Industry Means Bigger Payrolls g one of that Bohemian set you , fond of," I interrupted, "I never f lifinAinn a nntnnil " I ,i T3..'- t i.n nmw'eago station, t s'poil my life, offend my friends , f, f1:l" liko most women I eago station, talking to this woman wri- wondered how she were pretty, etc. But un- uever thought or be ing jealous of her. (To Bo Continued Monday) V . v Very well. Bui, you to because have asked you to know anyone save men aud women wnom you, anyone should be proud to know. If you aro too small to appreciate them I am not" " ion iorget iioo xuai 11 is uoi-uubu I love you so much that I have no care nor thought for others. Then those ar tists and bookish peoplo bore me, I want vour society, not theirs.", "Verv well. Margaret, we won't dis cuss it further," and he turned to his t)le paper, suddenly l rememoereu wiai when I had asked him about the new want to 0(.casionallv writer he nad seen, ne naa not toia me if it were a man or a woman. So I inquired: "Was it a man or a woman you Three hundred women in the north west aro now employed as engine wip ers and probably about the same num ber of men have regular jobs as dish wipers- Salt Lake City reports Indians on e warpath again. It was the Ute who put the Ute in Utah and they just want to occasionally renunii the coun try that tin y are nor. all dead yet. TRY JOURNAL WANT IDS Last week but one vessel above 1,600 tons was sunk by submarines. This is cheering news, but it must not be taken to mean the submarine menace is over. It is Ger many's only hope and she will make desperate efforts to increase the number of sinkings. Besides it is quite pos sible the Germans are up to some scheme that caused a temporary withdrawal of her U-boats from the danger zone. Conditions are such that even with partial suc cesses in Italy, and with Russia torn by dissensions weak ening one of her strongest enemies, Germany dare not admit that her submarine warfare is a failure. That hope gone from her people and the consequent safety to the allies, and especially America's transports, admitted, what is there left for the German people to hang a hope of final victory on? The leaders know this and will not give up pushing the submarine activities to the limit. When they do admit it peace is not far away. These two earthquake shocks on Mount Rainer must have rattled the citizens of Tacoma. A dispatch from that village telling of them called the mountain "Rainer." No individual making his home in Oregon can say to himself "I have no sleep interest in bigger payrolls for Oregon. ' ' In some wav or nthpr pwrv TArnn . r""-- in this state is benefited by circulation " of payroll money. In past years, and even now, Oregon 'a effort has been principally directed to marketing the natural resources of the state and cavinc no nttt ing up payrolls. Consumers and merchants must give preference, on terms of equal price and quality, to products of our factories. If the manufacturers of Oregon can grow to a size that will enable them to reach out into other states, the increas ed business means bringing just that much more money into the state in which the payroll is maintained. We have formed a habit of thinking that the lumber industry is the back bone and ribs of all our prosperity, and yet several single factories, in compara tively smau eastern cities carry more people and pay more money in pay rolls in tiie manufacture of one auto mobile, than our entire lumber industry of Oregon amounts to. This is true of the Overland Automo bile company it is true of several others. Several auto tire factories may be similarly compared. And yet, if our lumber was diverted to finished products made here, think ' of the thousands that would be added to our population to obtain the neces sary workers. Oregon people must get in back ot Oregon products and demand them from merchants in all lines of trade. OurWapt 'Ads arc theyarebound tobnngrfbe Results uou wont Try Otiq loMorrow JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY