Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, December 02, 1918, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, -SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY. DECEMBER 2, 1918.
PAGE THREE
2
U 1 ) WW.
TTTi Tl n
Special Ten Day Sale of
miwM I ires
Guaranteed 3500 Miles
'.." - . .-..'
For 10 days, only, unless our ifiV t fli
stock is exhusted b e f o r e t h a t j I f f "
time we, wm sen oyxoys oooa
year, New Tires, at, each. .
A saving of $4.70 on each tire
Salem Ay Comb
F. G. DELANO
246 State Street
-. Phone 97
m
1MI
bile Go.
A.I.E0FF
DECLARES IT IS
DUMO
ATTEND
PEACE CONCLAVE
Continued from page one)
would work better than present consti
tuted government agencies.
Text of the Message.
' The president's speech followfi
Gentlemen of the congress:
The year that has elapsed since I lust
stood before you to fulfill my const
tutioual duty t0 give to the congress
from time to time information of the
state of the union, has been so crowded
with great events, great processes and
ereat results that I cannot hone to civo
jbil 'an adHiiatdr picture 'it its trans-':
actions, or if the far-reaching changes
whiah have been wrought in the life of
our nation and of the world. You have
yourselves witnessed these things as 1
lave. It is too soon' to assess them;
and we who stand in the midst of thorn
and are part of them are less quilified
than men of another generation will
be to say what they mean, or even
Tihat tliey have been. But some great
outstanding facts are unmistakable and
constitute, in a sense, part of the pup
lie business with which it is our duty
to deal. To state them is to set tho
stage for the legislative and executive
action which must grow out of them
arid which we have yet to shape and
determine. "
, Comparatively Small Losses.
A year ago wo had sent 145,918 men
overseas. Since then we have sent 1,-
950,513, an average of 162,542 each
complete, more thorough, in method and
effective in result, more spirited and
unanimous in purpose and effort than
any other great belligerent had been
able to effoct. We profited greatly by
the experience of tho nations which had
already been engaged for nearly three
years in exigent and exacting business,
their every resource and every execu
tive proficiency taxedt o the utmost
We were their pupils, but w learnod
quickly mid acted with a promptness
and a readiness that justify our great
pride that we were able to serve tho
world with unparalleled energy and
quick accomplishment.
Braises Fighting Men.
But it is not the physical, Bcalo and
executive officioncy of preparation,
supply, equipment and despatch that I
would dwell upon but the mettle and
quality of tho officers and men we sent
over and of tho sailors who keep tho
seas, and the spirit of the nation that
stood, behind them. No soldiers or
sailors, ever proved tbomsclvea more
quickly ready for the test of the battle
or acquitted themselves with more
splendid jouragc and anshlovemonn wnen
put to the tost. Those of us who played
some part in dirocting the, great, pro
cesses by which tho war was pushed ir
resistibly forward to the final tri
umph may now forget all that and de
light our thoughts with the story of
what our men did. Their officers un
derstood the grim and exacting task
they had undertaken and they perform
ed them with an exactitudo and unhes
itating courage that touch the story
of convoy and battle with imporisha'blo
distinction at every turn, whether the
enterprise- wore groat or small from
their great chiefs, Pershing and SimJ)
down to the youngest lieutenants; and
their men were worthy of them such
men as hardly need to be commanded
and go to their torrible adventure
blithely and with the quick Intelligence
of those who know just what it is they
would accomplish, I am proud to bo
the fellow countryman of men of such
stuff and valour. Those of .us who
month, the number in fact, rising, in
May -test, to 245,951, in June to 278,- stayed at home did our duty; the war
700, in Julv to 307,182 and continuing could not have been wort or the gal-
to reach similar figures in August andlant men who fought it given their op-
fieptember in August 289,570 and in
Beptember 257,438; No such movement
of troops ever before took place, across
three thousand miles of soa, followed
by adequate equipment and supplies
and carried safely through extraordi
nary dangers of attack dangers which
were alike strange and infinitely diffi
cult to guard against. In all this move
ment, only seven hundred and fifty-
cigtht men woro lost by enemy attack
--six hundred and thirty of whom were
upon a single English transport which
was sunk near the Orkney Islands,' .
. - Support Back of Movement.
I need not toll you what lay back of
this great movement of mm and ma
terial. It is not invidious to say that
tack of it lay a supporting organiza
tion of the industries of the country
: and of all its productive activities more
BiMiiMmiiiii.iimil
liMiwjiMirmp-:nf,m
iiinif iiimiiimi , litiiw
HIHQ Mlllllllllll I Ihhw
wit
'Tis better to do than to
promise. . . '
IMPERIALES
MOUTHPIECES
CIGABETTJSS
represent years of experience
in the purchasing and blend
ingoftobacco.They're beyond
the "promise" stage a cigar
ette for the wise ones who
know a good thing. Buy and
see for yourself. , - '
portunity to win it otherwise; but for
many a long day we shall think our
selves "accurs'd we were not there and
hold our manhood cheap while any
speaks that fought" with these at St,
Mihiel or Thierry. The memory of
those days of triumphant battle will go
with these fortunato men to their
graves; and each will have his favorite
memory. !
"Old men forget; yet all shall be for
got, but he'll remember with advantag
es what feats he did that day!"
- What we all thank God for with
doepest gratitude is that our men wenf
in force into the line of battle just at
the critical moment when the wnole
fate of the world seemed to hang in
the balance and tlwew their fresh
strength into the ranks of freedom It
timo to turn the wholo tido and sweep
of the fateful struggle turn it once
for all, so that henceforth it was back,
back, back for their enemies, always
back, never again forward
After that it was only a scant four
months before the commanders of the
central empiros knew themselves beat
en; nd now their every empires are
in liquidation!
And throughout it all how fine tho
spirit of the nation was; what unity
of purpose, what untiring zeal!
What leaven of purpose ran through
all its splendid display of strength, its
untiring accomplishment., I have said
that those of us wfto stayed at homo
to-do the work of organization and sup
ply will always wish that he had been
with men whom we sosratnes Xt,,
labour; but we can never be ashamed.
It has been an inspiring thing to be
here in the midst of fine men who had
turned aside from every private inter
est of their own and devoted the whole
of their trained capacity to the tasks
that supplied the sinews of the whole
great undertaking.
The patriotism, the unselfishness, thy
thoroughgoing devotion and disting
uished capacity that marked their toil
some labours, day after day, month
after month, have made them fit mates
and comrades of the men in the trench
es and on the sea. And not the men
here in Washington only. They have
but directed the vast achievement
Throughout innumerable factories, up i
on' innumerable farms, in tho depths of
coal mines and iron mines and copper
mines, wherovo,- the stuffs of Industry
were to bo obtained and prepared, iu
the shipyards, on tiie railways, at tho
docks, on the sea, in every labour that
'was needed to sustain the battle lines,
men have vied with each other to dc
their part and' do it well. , They cuu
look any man a; arms in the face and
say "We also strove to win and gave
the cost that was in us to make our
fleets and armies of their triumphs!"
Women Did TJoble Work.
And what snail we say of the women
of their instf.nt intelligence, quicken
ing every task that they touched; their
capacity for organization and coopera
tion which gave their action discipline
and onhuncod theeffectivenoss of ev
erything they attempted and their ap
titude at tasks to which they had nev
er before set their hands; their uttoi
self sacrifice alike in which they did
and in what they gave. Their contri
bution to tho great result is beyond
appraisal. They havo added a new In
trp to tho annals of American woman.
hood. Tho least tribute' we can pay
them is to make ..them the equals of
men iu political rights as they hav
proved thomEolvcs their equals in every
field of practical work they have enter
ed, whether for themselves or for their
country. ,. Those great days of complet
ed achievements would be sadly marred
weie we to omit that act of justice
Besides, the immonso practical services
they have rendered, the women of the
country have been the moving ' spirits
in the systematic economies by whyih
our people have voluntarily assisted to
supply the suffering peoples of the
world and the armies upon every front
with food and everything elBe that we
had that might serve the common cause
The details of such a story can never
be fully written, but we carry them
at our hearts and thank God that wo
can say that we are tho kinsmen ol
such.
The Tasks of Peace v
And, now we are sure of the great
triumphs for which every sacrifice w.i--
mado. It has come, come in its com
pleteness, and with the pride and in
spiration of these days of achievement
quick within us we turn to the tasks
of peace again; a peace secure against
the violence of irresponsible monarchy
and ambitious militaries coteries aud
mado rbudy for a new order, for new
foundations .of justice and fair 'deal
in. ,
We are about to give order and or
ganization to this peace not only for
ourselves, but for the other peoples of
tho world as well, so far as they will
suffer us to secure them. It is inter
national justice that we seek, not doi
mestic safety merely. Our thoughts
have dwelt of late upon Europe, upon
Asia, upon the near and the far east
very little upon acts of peace and ac
commodation that wait to be performed
at our own doors. While we are ad
justing our relations with the rest ol
the world, it is of capital importance
that we shoul clear away all ground-)
of misunderstanding with our imme
diate neighbors and give proof of the
firendahip we really fecit I hope that
the members of the senate will permit
me to speak once more of the unratified
treaty of friendship and adjustment
with the republic of Colombia. 1 very
earnestly, urge upon them an early and
favorable action upon that vital mat
ter. I believe that they will feel, with
me, that the stage of affairs is now set
for such action as will be not only just
but generous and in the spirit of the
new age upon which we have so hap
pily entered.
Bo far as our domestic affairs are
concerned, the problem of our return
to peace is a problem of economic and
industrial readjustment. That prob
lem is less serious for us than it may
turn out to be for the nations which
have suffered the disarrangements and
the losses of war longer than we. Our
people, moreover, do not wait to be
coached and led. They know their own
business, are quick and resourceful at
every readjustment, definte in purpose,
and self reliant in action.
Any loading strings we might seek
to put them in w.oid epeeai.y reeome
hopelessly tangled because they would
pay no attention to them and go their
own way. All that we can do as their
legislative and executive servants is to
mediate the process of change here,
there and elsewhere as we may. I have
heard much counsel as tu'the plans that
shoid bo formed u'd personally con
ducted to a happy consummation, but
from no quarter hai I seen any get
eral scheme of ' reconstruction"
emerge which I thought it likely we
could force out spirircd business men
and self-reliant laborers to accept with
duo pliancy and obedience.
While the war lasted we set up many
agencies by which to direct the indus
tries of the country in the services it
was necessary for them lo render, by
which to make sure .of an abundant
i supply of the materials nueded, by
which to check undertakings that could
for the. time be dispensed -with and
stimulate those that wore most serv;
iceable in the war, by vhieh to gain
for the purchasing departments of the
government a certain control over the
prices of essential articles and mater
ials, by which to restrain trade with
alien enemies, make the Most of the
available shipping and -tystematize fi
nancial transactions, both public and
private, so that there would be no. un
necessary, conflict or confusion by
which, in short, to 'put every material
energy of tho country in harness to
draw the common load and make us
one team in the accomplishment of a
great task. But the moment , we knew
the armistice- to havo been signed, we
took the harness off. P.aw materials
upon which the government had kept
its hand on for fear there should not be
enough for the industries ihut supplied
the armies, have been released aud put
into the general market, r.gain. Great
industrial plants whose -whole output
and machinery has beon . tr.kcn over
for the uses of the government have
been set free to return to the uses to
which they were put before the war
It has. not been possible tj remove so
readily or so quickly, Hha control of
foodstuffs and of shipping, because
the world ha still to be fed from our
granaries and the shipf are still need
ed to send supplies t our men over
seas and to bring the men back as fast
as the disturbed conditions on the fill
er isido of the water 'permit; but even
the restraints are being relaxed as
much as possible and-more and more
as the weeks go by.
Never Before Such Agencies
soever .before have there been agen-
cies in existence in this'country which
knew so much of tho field of supplies,
of labor and of industry as the war
industnes ooarti, we war uauo uoai-u,
the labor department, the ;food,admiuis
tration and tho fuel administration
have known since their labors bourne
thoroughly systematize;1.; and they
have not bcei isolated agencies; they
have teen directed by men which rep
resented the permanent departments of
the government and so have Been tno
centers of unified and cooperative ac
tioni It has been the policy of the ex
ecutive," therefore, since' the armistice
was assured (which is in effect a com
plete submission of n0 enemy) to. put
the knowledge of those bodies at the
disposal or the business wen of the
country and to-offor. their intelligent
mediation at every point end,, in every
matter where it was desedv it is sur
prising how fast tho projite 6f return
to a peace footing hasfmaVed in'the
three weeks since the fighting stopped
It promises to ofttrun any inquiry that
may be instituted and any aid that may
be offered. It will not be Chsy to "direct
it any better than it will, direct itself
The American business man is of quick
initiative.
i et Work for All .
. The ordinary and normal processes of
private initiative will pot, howover,
provide immediate employment for all
of the men of our returning armies,
Those who are of trained capacity,
those who ard skilled worlfnien, those
who have acquired farniTvftiity with es
tablished businesses, those who are
ready and willing to eo to the farms,
all those whose aptitutes are known or
will be sought out by employers will
find no difficulty,, it is fe to say, in
finding place and employment. But
there will bo others why will be at a
loss where to gain a livelihood unless
pains are taken to guide them and put
them in thg way of work. There will
be a laree. floating rcsiduo of labor
which should not be left wholly to shift
for irsclf. It seems to we important,
therefore, that the development ot pub
lic works of every sort should be
promptly resumed, in orjer that. oppor
tunities should be created for unskill
ed labor in particular, and that plans
should be mado for suen. developments
of our unused lands and our natural re
sources as we . have hitherto lacked
stimulation to undertake.
.Land Should h Eeciaimed
I particularly direct your attention
to the very practical plans which the
secretary of the interior has developed
in his annual report and before your
committee for tho reclamation of arid,
swamp and cut over lands which might
if the states were willing tOCooper
ate ,redeem jwme 300.000,000 acres of
land for cultivation. Thero ore said to
be fifteen or twenty million acres of
land in tho west, at present arid, for
whose reclamation water i available,
if properly conserved. Thero are about
two hundred and thirty m'liion acres
from which the forests lave been eut
but which hag never yet been cleared
for the plow and which lie waste ond
desolate. These lie scattered all Over
the union. And there are nearly eighty
million acres of land thnt lie under
swamps or subject Jo pe.-iodical over
flow or too wet for anything but graz
ing, which it is perfectly feasible to
drain, and protect and red-M-m. The con
gress can at once direct tnousands of
the returning soldiers to the reclama
tion of arid lands which it has already
taken, if it will but enlargo their plans
and appropriations which it has entrust
ed to the department of the interior.
It is possible an dealing with our un
used land to effect a great rurfefcand
agricultural development which will
afford the best sort of opportunity- to
men who want to help themselves; and
the secretary of tho interior ha that
the possible methods out la s way
I Red Fox Fur Neckpieces and Muffs, Suitable for Christmas Gifts ONE THIRD OFF
fContinned on page six
W Vmj Cash for
CREAM, EGGS,
POULTRY, VEAL
and EOGS.
tdkkrMntalTisi
Hazerwood Co., Front and Ankeny St.
&0&
PORTLAND, ORE
Old White Corner Building
Salem's Greatest W omen s Apparel Store
Continued Monday and Each Day During The Week, With More and Greater Values in
Coats, Suits, Dresses, Furs, Waists, Millinery.
" ' 1 .......
WE MUST UNLOADING OUR SURPLUS STOCK
Women's Stylish New Suits
Away Below Manufacturers' Cost Some at Half Price And Less
SUITS
: Regular values $29.50, Sale Price ...?..,....................v......... $15.50
Regular values $32.50 Sale Price".... $18.75
Regular values $37.50, Sale Price $19.75
Regular values $52.50, Sale Price $28.50
Regular values $55.00, sale price ..$30.00
Regular values $59.00, Sale Price $32.50
' Regular values $42.00, Sale Price ................ $23.75
Regular values $45.00, ; Sale Price ...r.::...;.L.i;:. .1:.....$25,00
Regular values $49.00, Sale Price .$27.50
Regular values $65.00,' sale price .. ..:.:....:..:..:.::2...:..35()Q
Regular values $67.50, Sale Price $37.50
Regular values $72.50, Sale Price ...1. .......V. ..$39 J5
Big Reductions in New
Winter Coats
Only our determination to hurry away our surplus
; coat 'stock makes possible the folWwing. pride reduc- .
tions, under strict orders from our distributing; head
quarters. We are forced to radical . price reducing
measures for immediate unloading. - ; r
Silt
COATS
Regular values $24.50, Sale Price.....
Regular values $27.50, Sale Price
Regular values $32.50, sale price
Regular $37.50 Sale Price .................
Regular values $45.00, Sale Price ..
Regular values $52.50, Sale Price
Regular values $60.00, Sale Price....!
Regular values $75.00, Sale Price
Regular values $98.00, Sale Price .....
Regular values $110.00, Sale Price ..
$15.50
$19.75
.......$21.50
$25.00
$32.50
$37.50
$39.50
$47.50
$52.50
$59.75
The Greatest
Dress Sale and Biggest
Bargains YouVe Ever Seen
Exclusiveness is the keynote of our dress showing; our styles
are not merely copies of London and New York models, but on
the contrary, strongly individual. An inspection will convince
you of the air of exclusiveness and beauty that pervades our
suit and dress stock. . . ..i
DRESSES
Regular values $17.50, Sale Price '$11.95
Regular values $20.00 Sale Price $13.50
Regular values $25.00, Sale Price....... $15.50
Regular values $27.50, Sale Price $17.50
Regular values $32.50, Sale Price $18,75
Regular values $35.00, Sale Price.. .. ..: $2000
Regular values $39.50, Sale Price $25.00
Regular values $42.50, Sale Price .. .. $27.50
Regular values $47.50, Sale Price...!.............,........:.............. $29.50
Regular values $50.00, Sale Price........!..." $31 jJQ
EXTRA!
Women ' Gabardine and Serge
Bulti; regular values up to
25; Unloading Sale Priee
$1150
EXTRA!
Heatherbone Petticoats, in a
good assortment o sizes, and
colors; values to (2.50; Un
load Bale Prica " - .
89c
EXTRA
.Trimmed Hals
regular values up
to $7.50; Unload
ing Bale Price -
$1.93
EXTRA!
Another lot of beautiful I
Crepe de Chine Waists; reg
uWr prices 3.50 to 6.50; X
Unloading balo 1'rice
$3.45
--