gggw8Bcw8 EditorialPage of The UYtlCLi THURSDAY EVENING January 23, 1919 CHARLES H. FISHEB Editor and Publisher mrtrmyiynnxixiAAAWAWj W W WW ww ww - Published Every Evening Except Sunday, Salem, Oregon. Address All Communication! To fbcDailnitaHfonrnal BALEM 136 8. Commercial St. OREGON SUBSCRIPTION BATES Daily, by Carrier, per year 5.00 Per Month.. Daily by Mail, per year $3.00 Per Month.. 45e 35c FULL LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES W. D. Ward, New York, Tribune Building. W. H. Stockwcll, Chicago, People's Gag Building The Daily Capital Journal carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the porch. If the carrier does not do this, 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 instructions. Phone 91 before 7:30 o'clock and a paper will be sent you by special messenger if the arrier has missed you. , THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL Is the only newspaper In Balem whose circulation is guaranteed by the Audit Bureau Of Circulations A "RICH" PRESIDENT. With considerable surprise the public hears that Theodore Rodsevelt was probably the richest president since George Washington. He was certainly not very rich judged by present-day standards. He left an estate of about .$500,000. There are many thousands of Ameri cans worth more than that. 5 The fact is that nearly all our presidents have been poor. The financial difficulties of McKinley are well re membered. Taft never ranked better than moderately well-to-do. Wilson only had the sav ngs of a college pro fessor's salary as his life-time accumulation of property w'hen elected. Roosevelt might have been no better off than any of these, despite his earnings from his writings, if it had not been for his inheritance. He has done little more than pass on the property received from his father. Presidents are seldom able to save much from their sal aries, and doubtless find it all the harder to get along after they leave the executive office because of the lib eral expenditures they have been accustomed to. " It is natural and right to take much satisfaction in modest circumstances of our presidents. It proves democ racy. It demonstrates, better than any other fact could, the opportunity of any American boy to rise to any po sition he is fitted for. But it does not necessarily follow that, having chosen poor men for presidents, we should condemn'them to continued poverty. '.. Poverty may be respectable; but as Grover Cleveland found, it is difficult and embarrassing when one has held so great an office and is expected to maintain compara tive dignity and ease after his retirement. This fact, raises the old, old question again of what to do with our cx-presidents, although we seldom have more than one at a time with us, presidential honors apparently not being condusive to longevity. Perhaps some day we shall re tire them on liberal pensions, just as most of the foreign countries do with their former presidents and premiers. As it is now, our ex-presidents as a rule are forlorn char acters and if they attempt to enter business are more than likely to make the lamentable failure Grant did. THE FIFTH WORLD POWER. The establishment of a Big Fivemstead of a Big Four at the peace conference, with Japan as the fifth member of the major league, is somewhat unexpected. It has been generally assumed that Britain, France, America and Italy woul ddecide the main problems of the conference according to their our ideas, with Japan en- RIPPLING RHYMES By Walt Mason DIRT ROADS. The highway running east and west is but a sad and sorry jest. 'In drouthy seasons it will do; then motor cars along it choo, and loaded teams climb up its hills, and dis locate no poles or thills. And this s why I sometimes say the erovernment should do away with rain and moisture of that stamp, so that the road may not get damp. For when the water drips and pelts, that doggone highway simply melts, like sugar in a cup of tea, and there's no thoroughfare to see. Some drowning mules we may be hold, and autos from the culverts rolled and swearing men who ply the jaw and say tnere ougnt to De a law. We've blown in millions more or less to make that road a big success. We've graded and we've plowed and drag trpfl we've engineered and cussed and bragged, we've foundered horses by the herd.to make the highway less ab surd. ' And when the weather's good and dry it pleases the aesthetic eye; it's scraped and manicured so nice we think it's surely worth tne price; we dowi aiong its ausiy nuies, our faces wreatnea in oeammg smues. men nuvius un corks his trough, it rains, and all the stuff is off. I won der if we'll ever rise, unswerving purpose in our eyes, and build the kind of roads that last through vernal rain and wintry blast? titled to full consideration but not to an equal voice. The four powers evidently intended such a policy. Possibly Japan objected and demanded equal recognition. Pos sibly the four allies voluntarily changed their minds. At any rate, Japan is to have five members in the conference, the same as the others, and is thus formally admitted as one of the five great powers whose will is to determine the future of the world. It goes without saying that there is probably good reason for this move. It will hardly be argued even by Japan herself that she has earned the distinction by playing a part in the war equal to that of Britain, France, America and Italy. But there are other important con siderations. Doubtless it is Japan's potentiality rather than her performance that is considered. . She has a unique and powerful place in the Orient. Together with Great Brit ain, she is in position to determine the future of the great Asiatic continent, with its teeming millions. Thus for what she is capable of doing for the furtherance of civilization and the establishment of world peace, Japan is welcomed to enjoy full fellowship of the Big Brothers of Humanity. There is no reasonable excuse for continuing to hold up the business, industrial and social life of Salem on ac count of the influenza. Closing the town has no effect upon the progress of the epidemic one way or the other, it simply puts people in a bad frame of mind and causes inconvenience and f requently financial loss to everybody but the doctors and undertakers. The influenza situation is not bad here now and it may continue to improve. Doctors admit they know very little about it, but expect a third "wave" of the epidemic, the one we are passing through being the second. We had best go about our business and occupations in the usual way and en deavor to isolate all cases of the "flu" as strictly as pos sible. Nearly all authorities agree that, this plan seems the most effective weapon against the spread of the epidemic. ' t, The Bolshevik sentiment even in this country is strong. Like influenza and other pestilences it follows in the train of war, and would disrupt society and destroy organized government. In our state legislature its repre sentatives like Smith, of Multnomah, are.; active' in their assaults upon the safe-guards of law and order, and worst of all many of the politicians who make iro the member ship of the legislature lack the backbone to'stand for good government, frightened by. threats of losing the votes of a few agitators. The United States has naturalized all foreigners serving in our forces. First naturalize, then nationalize. They have made good soldiers, the next is,to teach them to' be good citizens. There is room in this country for nothing else. f Out of our 4,000,000 men drafted or ready for immed iate call only 1200 were unwilling to serve. There are many reasons for hoping that all wars are over, but fear is not one of them. Secretary Lane says that forty different plans for a league of nations have been presented to the. peace con ference. Surely out of all those they ought to find one that is workable. THEWIFE By Jane Phelps. RUTH CONFIDES IN HER EMPLOYEE. CllAPTEB CXLIV. Ruth realized, for the first timo, that nothing counted save Brian. Money, beuuty of surroundings, case and lux ury, mount nothing compared to tho de sjro to possess him entirely; his love as lie had given it when they first enmo to New York R-ul lived in tho little flat uj tho tin flights of stairs, and sho did her own work; when he used to come running up three steps at a time whistling, and catch her in his Eras and waits about the tittle living room or kitchen. Sho forgot her hatred of drudgery in her desire. She forgot also her love of her work. Her heart ached with the longing for his love, and tho old-time hearty expression" of it. But she also owed something to Man del. Sho knew sho vu n.lmost iudis pensiblo, now, under the aftcr-tho-war business conditions. Blie would say nothing to Brian not until she had talked with Mandel. But before she slept, that night, Euth had decided up on a course that only a short time bo fore she would hsve deemed impossible Strangely, after making her dicision, she slept more soundly than she had in months. Once or twice during the night she woke and raised herself on her el bow, trying, in the darkness, to dis tinguish tho features of "her soldier" as he lay sleeping in the bed so close to her on. Then dropping back to sleep st once. "I shall go down town today," Brian said abruptly at breakfast. "I've loafed long enough. My leg is pretty nearly all' right, and I em's afford to star idle any longer," he waited a minute then added, "living on you." "Oh. Brian, don't talk that way." "It's true. Except paying the rent I haven't done one thing toward run ning this shebang since I came back. It's getting on my nerves." "How much money have you saved, Brian His astonishment at Euth's question was evident. "Half niy pay, about. I haven t had it nil, but I'll got it. Why!" "Oh, nothing. But I wish yon would tako a bettor offico, dear. That horrid little two-by-four place isn't fitting for a man wearing that" She pointed to his breast. "What's that got to do with itf That is nil over now. Tho hum-drum every day lifo enters; exit everything else." His tono was light, yet Ruth sensed a bitterness. "Wait a few more days, Brian. I don't believe you are fit to work." "If you think I will stay another day in this jilc-ce alone, you'vo anothor guess coining. It's worse than the Ger man guns, this facing tho long hours hero with nothing to do but think. No one to talk to but Rachel and a baby that can't answer. No, I shall go down this morning." Then, to he noted th real distress on Bath 'a face, he added: "I won 't stay long at first just an hour or two." With tint Kuth had to be content. That morning Euth asked Mandel if she might see him in his pnvate of fice. He seceded to her request at once. "I must leave you, Mr. Mandel, a; soon as you find some one to fill my place," sho said quietly. ""Leave met WhaJ " "I want to tell you just -why, may It Have you time to listen t" "As much time as you want.'' Euth told, in a quiet, restrained voice of her marring, of her aunt's objec tions, of her own luxurious bringing up and of her dislike for house work. Then sho told of Brian, as he was when she had marrfed him. She said nothing of Mollie King, but she told that she near ly had lost him before he went to war. She did not spare herself in the telling, tnd she elossed over Brian's faults. In fact she did not admit that he had any She told of the call of Major Williams, and of how Brian felt about hia eom rades knowing thtt she worked outside of the home. "Ho may be old-fashioned," she AN ODE TO THE TLU." When your back is broke and your eyes are blurred, And your shin bones knock and your tongue is furred, And your tonsils squeak and you hair gets dry, And you're doggone sure that you're going to die, But you're skcered you won't and afraid you will, Just drag to bed Mid have your chill, And pray the Lord to see you through, For you've got the flu, boy, you've got the flu. When your toes curl up and your belt goes flat, And you 're twice as mean, as a Thomas cat, -jj And lifo is a long and dismal curse, And your -food all tastes like a hard boilcJ hearse, When your attic aches and your head 's a buzz, And nothing is as it ever was, Hero are my sad regrets to you, You'vo got the flu, boy, you've got the flu. What is it like, this Spanish flut Ask me, brother, for I've been through. It is by Misery out of Despair, It pulls yoar teeth &nd curls your hair, It thins your Diooa an irays your bones And fills your craw w"itk moans and groans, And sometimes, maybe, you'll get Somo call it the flu, but I call it hell. Marshficld, Or. PRINTERS FORCE PAPERS TO QTJIT (Editor and Publisher) Rather than meet the demands of Al ton Typographical Union, No. 306, for an incroase in wcges of 1 a day, the two newspapers of Alton, 111. the Evo ninir Telegraph and-tho Daily Times- have suspended publication. Tho in crease was to have been effective Janu ary 1. Wcges wero Increased January, 1918, and again voluntarily in July. " The pro- nosed scale was $5 a day, and a con tract for eight years wassked. smiled as she said it, "but I love him Mr. Mandel, and I shall never make him feel that he cannot aBk anyone tc his home again. I have been selfish whilo not meaning to be so. I have i)iado hira unhappy while looking for happiness myself."' Mandol skcd many questions, all of which Ruth answered frankly. Then he said: "Go at once, Mrs. Hackett. You never will know what your being here has meant to me. I want still to, be your friend. And if he will let mo; your husband's friend also." He then told Ruth of something he had in mind. which sent her home fairly walking on (Main And Newaakma . Valleys Raging Torrents Chehrlis, Wash., Jan. 23. The Che halis and Ncwaukum valleys are raging torrents this morning, and old timers say the present high water equals the record established in 1888. The Wktcr is still rising. Rail communication is open, to Port land but there is none to Tacoma and Seattle Streetcar traffic here is tied np. Tho rurui mt.il carriers are unable to cover their routes. The damage te roads and bridges in the county amounts to thousands of dol lars. Thirty feet of pavement on the Pacific highway, five miles east of Che halis, and a small bridge wore washed out. Bridges and. culverts have been washed away in all parts of the coun try. The total damage cannot be esti mated for several days. Martha Washington And LaLorraise Due Soon Washington, Jan, 23. Thirty offi cers and 1981 men including companies E, F, G, H, I, K, L and M, supply com pany medical detachment and head quarters Second and Third battalions of the 330th infantry, arc aboard the transport Martha Washington, Brest for Newport News, due January 28. The transport LaLoriainc, Bordeaux for New York, i due January 31 with the following organizations of the SSth division to be discharged at Camp Dodge: Battery F, 339th field artillery; de tachment of 339th field artillery; med ical detachment of same organization. Legislators Would Have Raise In Their Salaries Salaries of Oregon's representatives and senators will be increased from $3 to $5 per day, providing a house joint resolution introduced today by Representatives Lewis and Hare is passed. Tho resolution provides lor a legislative session of not to exceed 60 actual working days, as against 40 days under the- present law, and a salary of not to exceed $300. The du ration of extra sessions would else- be limited to a period of not to exceed 20 days, under the terms of the resolu tion, with tho same pay for tho legis lators as provided for regular sessions. Progress on the municipal railroad ifrom Klamath FallR to Dairy, 20 miles ig being made under increasingly fav orable circumstances. California's gold production for 1918 wan 17.207.000. her nearest competi tor being Colorado whose production approximated $12,8o3,500. Wheat misers of Grande Eonde val ley are jubilant over the protracted raing that have set dn over a wide area of the Blue Mountain region. 80 YEARS OLD- " ATTRIBUTES HEALTH TO INTERNAL BATHS Mr. D. C. Newcomb, 704 N. 4t4 ave, Atchison, Kan., writes Tyrrell's Hygi enic institute of New York as follows: "My next birthday is July 13th 80 years old. Have used Tyrrell's 'J. B. L. Cascade' for more than 20 years. Best and only remedy that brings ro lief without the use of drugs. My ex perience proved1 that it always relieves. No danger from it. My ailments wer. principally Uric Acid, Biliousness, Jo3 tiveness, etc." This is by no means an exceptional letter for Tyrrell's Hygienic Institute to receive, ag there are now over half a million Americans using Dr. Tyrrell ' "J. B. L. Cascade" with like results. By the scientific use of nature' cleanser warm water it eliminate all poisonoiig waste from the lower iui testine and gives Nature a chance te work unhampered. You will be astonished at the dif ference in your feelings the morning after an internal bath. , The "J. B. L. Cascade" will be shown and explained to you by Daniel J. Fry, wholesale druggists and mfg. pharmacist, Salem, Oregon, who will also give you free on request an in teresting booklet by Dr. t'has. A. Tyr rell, " Why Man of Today iB Only GO . per eent Efficient." Get this booklet and know just why Internal Bathing is so effective in the promotion of better health. Well Known Banker Of The Dalles Dies Of Fla The Dalles, Or., Jan. 23. Max A. Vogt, president of the First National Bank, one of tho best known bankers ia the Pacific Northwest, died here this morning after a short illness with in fluenza. ' " ' SUCCUMBS TO HIGH COSTS. (Editor and Publisher) The Brantford (Ont.) Courier hal censed to be published. It Fas founded under its present name in 1839, but claims 1833 as the date of birth. The publishers say: "The step decided upon h bcea reached as tho result of the greatly in-, creased cost of everything which goes to the output of a paper, the constantly increasing levies renderhig an inade quate return on capital invested." Lieutenant James MoCullough, at-, fnlin tn tfm army's aerial eunnerT school near San Diego, shot and kill ed a small whale with the machine . gun of his airplane off Imperial Beach Captain George R. Wilbur, -who- rep onr,oJ TTnnrl River and Wasco coun ties in the twenty ninth session of the legislature, has been discharged from the army and nag rciumea w iu-. River. tMttMMtttmtttMMMMHMnMMMtMMMMMMMMttlHmMtn A ousani Yous When you pick up your morning or afternoon news paper and glance over the advertising you quite uncon sciously multiply yourself a thousand times. In half or three-quarters of an hour you can, meta phorically speaking, visit every progressive store in town. You virtually poke your head into every department of every department store. You run into the florist's, the confectioner's, the oculist's, the leading groceries, banks theatres, all the various places that supply the things that make this the twentieth century and life worth the living. Here is a greater choice in clothing, food, furniture, books pictures, musical instruments, travel, entertainment, op portunities for investment, the service of public utility corporations than any monarch of old could command. It would easily take a thousand yous, traveling hard all day, to find out for yourself what the advertisements tell you in a few minutes morning or evening. They deserve your attention. They deserve your con fidence. Without them, without the progressive spirit of the merchants and manufacturers who back them, the great abundance of things you now enjoy would be a memory or something still to be realized. Without ad vertising the prices you would have to pay for many of the necessities you now buy for a few pennies would make a dollar look like a snow ball on the kitchen range. Read the advertisements. Read them for your own information and advantage. Read them to encourage the advertisers who are making these better things possible w .jHttt'ttt ttttttttHIIIIIIHMIIII ...,,...,.,....,..,,....llllt MMtMMtMMtHttlllMttMMIMMMMMMMt)MMMHtM