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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1919)
PAGE EIGIir. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 10919. S the national joy smokz l - ; & I rs ' -ft p ... . r 'V.;.: ''J mm puts ms ; o.;tmued from tje three) fen-nee luoked about it to find BARGAINS If! EVERY (Continued from page one) just look is tee front displar windows went out of its way to perform. TherlhT f didg e-aturda?. r ' If there is the lig sign, "This is a "v.v lunauic iiviu isr scilieilieBi of peaee. They were thrust upon it by circumstances which toutd not be over- 1 .p,riM tlt TEVER was such rieht-handed-two- 1 M fisted smokejoy as you puff out of a jimmy pipe packed with Prince Albert I That's because P. A. has the quality! You cant fool your taste apparatus any more than you can get five aces out of a family deck I So, when you hit Prince Albert, coming and going, and get up half an hour earlier just to start stoking your pipe or rolling cigarettes, you know you've got the big prize on the end of your line ! Prince Albert's quality alone puts it in a class of its own, but when you figure that P. A. is made by our exclusive patented process that cuts out bite and parch we you feel like getting a.flock of dictionaries to find enough words to express your happy days sentiments I Toppy rmd tags, tidy rtd tint, handtomo pound and half-pound tin hum,dorw-mnd that elauy, practical pound cryttai glatl humidor with tpongo moUtmr top that knpt th tobacco in mch perfect condition. R. J. Reynold Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C - ' .4 ttl Jjl' if Pi- looked. The wr had created them. Is all quarter of the world old established relationship Bad been diturueu or bruki-a aud affair were at loose end. aeeinnj to be mended or united again, btit eould not be made what ther were before. They had to be aet rijht y ap plying norae uniform principle of justice or eulightened eipedieney. League Protects Weai. And they eould not be adjust! b merely preserving ia m treaty what should be done. New atatei were to be set up which eould not hoc to lie through their first period of weaknecw wituout assured support br the great Itarjaia ti'.orv, " there ia at onee the ami ranee that the store is raking; a peeial effort to live up to its promise and really offer bargains. Aa ann-u.il condition eristv Higher prieea are coming riht siting. Every one thought ther would be lower when peaee jned and so did the far sighted merehauta. All of us were wrong. Price are going up, even bleach ed and unbleached domestiea. Every body know what groceries eoet. Why, it eea costs 93..V) for a sua to have hia shoes fca!f soled. And yet, there is the annual Bargaia Day facing everyone. It is next Sat urdar. all dar Inn? The mi-hnnt have pltvlifed themselves to make it I IF Til, RUN-DOVH OH MOOS, TRY PHOSPHATE Nothing Like Plain Bitro Phosphate to OAlTtOX While Bure fkorphate Put en Firm, Healthy neeh and, lis unsurpassed for the relief f aerv to Increase Strength, Vigor jousness, general ili-bilitv, etc., tkoee and Kerr Force worthwhile to come. ' j.t Tou will find the bargains ia the h Mtioa. that had eonaented to their ere tht big lUt lM c,rJ d ation and won for them their iade- storea are: penitence. Ill governed colonies could' Daaiet J. Fry not be put in the hands of governments I The Bemaant Store, dry coods hoerv aotieas. C. J. Brier Co., dry goods, bhoca, mea a furaisbuigs. I V- 1 Fruit Growers of Oregon: 1 Stop Gambling with your fruit- i Make your investment safe Broaden and stabilize your markets J Get a better price for your fruit The j Oregon i Growers Co-Opera- I live Association X t t t t o 4- Has organized with the following aims: 1 To nationalize Oregon's horticultural products under an Oregon label. 2 To gain wider distribution and thus pre vent an oversupply of fruit in limited markets. To eliminate as far as possible the mar ket speculator that stands between grow er and consumer. To raise the general standards of fruits so that they may command a higher sell ing price. 5 To stabilize the value of your investment by stabilizing your markets. 6 To eliminate waste caused by duplica tion of equipment in new fruit producing centers. 7 To reduce growing a id market costs and to cut out the unnecessary expanses of every nature. This organization will be a business, owned and operated and controlled by anS for you--the Oregon fruit producer. It is backed by the most prominent and experinced horticultural men in Ore gon. Adequate financial arrangements are lieing concluded for handling of Products. The present list of incorporators include: ISAAC D. HUNT vice president Ladd 13. W. JOHNSON, Secretary Willam- & Tilton Bank. SEYMOUR JONES, Salem, Orgon. - J. 0. HOLT, Mgr. Eugene Fruit Growers' Association. PROF. C. I. LEWIS, Chief Dept. of Horticulture, Oregon Agricul tural College. E. L. KLEMER, Fruit Grower, Alva dore, Oregon. GEORGE ZIMMERMAN, Yamhill Fruit Grower. ette Valley Fruit Exchange, Mon roe, uregon. W. E. ST. JOHN, Sutherlin, Or., Fruit Grower and Douglas Coun ty Commissioner. E. W. MATTHEWS, Amity Walnut Grower. EARL PEARCY, County Fruit In spector of Douglas County; Sec retary. ROBERT C. PAULUS,,Salem, Ore., Chairman Organization Committee. Incorporation Closes January 1, 1920 J MEETING ARMORY, SALEM, SATURDAY, 2 P. M. JULY 12 ; ; Speakers. Isaac D. fbt, Prcf. C L Lewis. J. 0. Holt And Others mWHTWrffTmfWTfWHHTtt,,WTHM.WMIMM,H),MMTW wUieh were to act as trustees for their people and not as their masters if there was to be no common authority among me nununs to wiiieu they were to be re sponsible in the exeeution of their trust. Future international conventions with reicarn 10 tne control of wuienrays, -nil regard to illicit traffic of many kinds, in arms or in deadly drus, or with regard to the adjustment of many varying internationar administrative cr rancements eould not be assu.od if the treaty were to provide no permanent common international agency of its exe eitiun in such matters was to be left to the slow and uncertain processes ot co iHTiition by ordinary niethed;, of ne- gotintion. League Only' Hope. . If the peaee conference itself was the end of co-operative authoiity and com mon counsel among the governments to which the world was looking to enforce justice and give pledges of au endur ing settlement, regions like the Saar basin could not be put under a tempo rary ndministrative regime which did not involve a transfer of political con nections by popular vote to be Inkcn at a distant dntej no free ctiy like Dan aig could bo ereatciUKhieh was under elaborate international guarantees, to accept exeeptional obligations with re gard to the use of Its port and excep tional relatious with a state of which it was not to form a part; piouerly safeguarded plebiscites eould not bUrplir. videil or where populations were at some future date to make choice what sovereignty thev would live under; so certain and uniform method of arbitra tion could be secured for the settlement of anticipated difficulties of final de cision with regard to many matters dealt with in, the treaty itself; the long continued supervision of the task of reparation. Which Oernmny was to undertake to complete within the next generation might entirely breiJc down; the reconsideration and revision of ad ministrative arrangements and rMrie lions which the treaty prescribed but which it was recognized might not urovc of lasting advantage or entirely fulr if too loujf enforced with debate impracticable... The promises govern-i nients were mhking to one another about the wny in which labor was to be dealt with, bv law not only, but in fact as well, would remain a mere human thesis if there; was to be no common tribunal of opinion and judgment to which liberal statesmen eould resort for the influences which alone might secure their redemption. A league of free na Hons had become practical necessity. Exumino the treaty of peace and you win mm that everywhere thioughoul its manifold provisions its framers have telt obliged to turn to the league of nations as an Indispensable iimtrumen tiility for the maintenance of the new order It has been their purpose to set up in the world the world ot civilized men. Tne League's Alio. That there should he a letgue (if na timis to steady the counsels and main tain the peaceful understands of the world, to make, not treaties alone, but tho accepted principles of international law as well, the actual rule of conduct Kiiiong the governments of the world had been one of the agreements accept ed from the first as the basis of peace with the central powers. The atniemen of all the belligerent countries were agreed that such a league must be erea ted to sustain the settlements that Were to be effected. But at first I think there was u feeling among softie of them that, while it must be attempted, I lie formation of such a league was per hups a counsel of perfection, which prncticnl men, long experienced in the world of affairs, must agree to very cautiously and with munv misgivings. It was only us the difficult woik of arranging an nil nut universal adjust moot of the world affairs, advanced from day to day from one stage of con ference to another, that it became evi dent to their! that whit they were seek ing would be little more than some thing written tipoa paper, to be inter preted and applied by such methods aa the chances of policies miglit make available if they did not provide a means of common counsel wliici all were obliged to accept, a common au thority hoae decisions would be rec ognised as derisions which all mud re spect. Idea Gains Faror. And so the most practical, the most skeptical among them turned i..ie and more to the league as the authority through which international action was to be secured, the authority without which, as they had come to e it. it would be difficult to give assured effect cither to this treaty or to any other international understanding upon which they were to lepend for the mainte nance of peace. s I The fact that the covenant of the league was the first substantive part of the treaty to be worked out and agreed upon, while all ele was in soiutioa, When one stops to consider the host of thin people who are searching con tinually for some method br which they may increase their flesh to normal proportions by the filling out of ujly hollows, the rounding off of protruding angles with the attendant bloom of health and attractiveness is no won der that many and varied suggestions along this line appear from time to time ia public print. While excessive thinness might be attributed to various and subtle caases different individuals it ii a well known fart that the lack of sufficient phosphorous in the human system is very largely responsible for this con dition. Kxperimcnta on humans and animals by many scientists have dem onstrated beyoud question of doubt that a bodv deficient in rhosphorous become nervous, sncklv and thin. A Sampsoa Bros., (3 stores), lol North i noted author aud professor in his Commercial street, drv goods and no tions. Coracr Union and Commercial, groceries. Frank F. Richter, complete - house furnisher. The Price Baoe Co. The Bootery, shoes for the whole fam People's Cask Store. Barnes Cash Store. J. C. Pennev Co. F. W. Wool worth Co. U. O. Rhiplc Co. Ray L. FarSier Hardware Co. Jenks Studio Salem Hardware Co. Portland Cloak 4 Suit Co. W. W. Moore. Oale t Company. Busies: k 6otu Rosteia A Greenbaum. Hartman Bros. Scotch Woolen Mills Store Wm. Xeimeycr, drugs. Hauncr Bros. No-Vary Grocers. Roth Grocery Company. The Wiley B. Allen Company. leedle Craft Hliop. N. E. Brewer, drug store, book "Ohemistrv and Food Nutrition published in 191S. says: " that the amount of phosphorous required for the normal nutritien of man is seri ously underestimated iu many of our standard text books.'' It seems to be well established that this deficiency in phosphorous may now be met by the use of an organic phos phate known throughout Knglish speak ing countries as Bitro-rhosphate Through the assimilation of this phos phate by the nerve tissue the phos phoric content when absorbed in the amount normally required by nature soon produces a welcome change in our body and mind. Nerve tension disap pears, vigor and strength replace weakness and lask of energy, and the whole body soon loses its ugly hollows and abrupt origins, becoming enveloped in a glow of perfect health and beauty and the will and strength to be up anil doing. taking it who do not desire te put om fleth should use extra eare ia avoiding fat producing foods. mm " li Our soldiers always pick plunip, rosy cheeked girls. ut the At the seaside too, the plump well rounded figure is most admired. all, not to be ephcmercal. The concert of nations was to continue, under a def inite covenant, which had been agreed upon and which all were convinced wc workable. They csuld go forward with confidence to make arrangements In tended to be permanent. The most practical of the conferees were at last the most ready to refer to the league of nations the superintendence of all in terests which would not admit of im mediate determination, of all adminis trative problems which wore to require a continuing oversight. What had seemed a counsel of perfection had corns to seem a plain council of neces sity. Tho league of nations was the practical statesman 's hope of success in many of the most difficult tilings he was attempting. World Demands Covenant. And it had validated itself j the thought of every member of the confer ence as something much bigger, much greater every way, than a mere instru ment for carrying out the provisions of a particular treaty. It was universally recognized that all the peoples or the world demanded of the conference that it should create such a continuing con cert of free nations as would make wars of aggression and spoliation such this that htis just ended foiever im possible. A cry had gone out from every home in every stricken land from which sons and brothers and fathers had gone forth to the great sacrifice, that such a sacrifice should never again be exacted. It was manifest why it had been exacted. It had been exacted because oue nation desired domination and other nations had known no means of defeuse except armaments and alli ances. War had lain at the heart of every arrangement of Europe; of every arrangements of the world that preced ed the war. Restive peoples had been told that fleets and armies, which toil ed to sustain, meant peace; and they now knew that they had been lied to; that fleets and armies had been main tained to promote national ambition and meant war. They knew that no old policy meant anything else but force, force always force. Aift they knew that it was intolerable. Every true heart in the world; every enlightened! judgment demanded that, at whatever cost of independent action, every gov ernment that took thought for its peo ple or for justice or for order, freedom should lend itself to a new purpose and utterly destroy the old order vi inter- tions to lie for the execution of pres cut plans of peace and reparation, they suw it in a new aspect before thei. work was finished. Thev suw it as the main object of the peace, as the only thing that could complete it or make it worth while. They saw it as the hnpt of the world awl that hope they did not dare to disappoint. Shall we or may other free people hesitate to uctcpt this great dutyf Dare we reject it and break the heart of the world f Treaty Best Possible. Aud so the result of the conference of peace, so far as Germany is con cerned, stands complete. The difficul ties encountered wero very iiiany. It was impossible to accommodate tho in terests of so great o body of nations interests which, directly ot indirectly affected almost every nation in the wotld without many minor compro mises. The treaty, as a result, U not exactly what we would huve written. It is probably Dot what any one of the national delegations would have writ ten. But results were worked out which in whole bear test I think that It will be found that the compromises which were accepted as inevitable nowhere cut to the heart of any principle. Tho work of the conference squares, as a whole, with the principles agreed upon as the bnsis of the peace as welt as Willi llie ITIU-UCUI jiociinuiirn VI the international situations, which had to be faced and dealt with as facts. I shall presently have occasion to lay before you a special treaty with France, the object of which is the tem porary protection of France from tin reached her majority as a world power. It was almost cxMtly twentymo years ago that the results of the war with Spain put us unexpectedly in pos session of rich islands on the other side of the world ajtrd brought us into asso ciation with other governments in the control of the West Indies. It was re garded as a sinister and omn.out thing by the statesmen of more than one Eur opean chancellory that we should have extended our power beyond the eon fines of our continental dominions. They were accustomed to think of new neighbors as a new menace, of rivals as watchful enemies. ' - They were persons amongst us at home who looked with deep disapproT al and avowed anxiety on such exten sions of our national authority over distant islands and over peoples whom they feared we might exploit, not serv and assist. But we have not exploited them. And- our dominion bus been a menace to no other nation. We redeem ed our honor to the utmost in Our deal ings with Cuba. Sine is weak but abso lutely free; and it is her trust in us that makes her free. A enk peoples ev erywhere stand ready to give us any authority among them that will assure them a like friendly oversight and di rection. They know that there is no ground for fear in receiving us as their mentors and guides. Our isolation was ended twenty years ago; and now fear of us Ss ended also, our counsel and as sociation sought after and desired. There can be no question o'f our ceas ing to be a world power. The only ques tion is whether we can refuse the mnr- al leadership that is offered lis, wheth- proved aggression by the power with . ' ' ; 3." reject the cofi- whom this treaty of peaco has been lie gotinted. Its terms link it with the treatv. I take the liberty, however, of aEtlficatton Only Course Tho war and the conference of peaco nDW aittiinrr in Hn.!. a. . . reserving it for special explication on have an9WCre(1 tliat qilPStion. 0ur par another occasion. , ticipation dn tho war established our American Bole sei. I position among the nations and noth- The role which America wns to placing but our own mistake of action can in the conference seemed determined as ( alter it. It was not an accident or I have aitid, before my colleagues and I got to Paris determined by the uni versal expectations of the nations whose representatives, drawn from all quar ters of "the globe, we were fo deal with. It was universally recognized that America had entered the war to promote no private or peculiar interest of her own but only as the champion of rights which she was glad to share with free men and lovers of justice everywhere. We had formulated the principles upon which the settlement was to be made the principles upon which the aimistice had been agreed to and the parleys of peace undertaken and no one doubted that our desire was to see the treaty of peace formulated along the actual lines of those principles and desired noth ing else. Wc were weffomed as disin terested friends. We were resorted to nutiounl politics. Us arbiters in many a difficult matter. People Demand League. j It was recognized tha-t our material aid Statesmen might see difficulties, .utlwoiild be indispensable in the days to the people could see nono and eouldomc when industry and credit would brook no denial. A war in which they have to be brought back to their normal had been bled white to beat the terror opers tio-i again and communities beat that lay concealed in every balance ofien to the ground assisted to their feet power must not end in a mere victory once more, and it was taken for grant of arm and new balance. The monster led, I am proud to say, that we would that had resorted to arms must be put play the helpful friend in thc things in chains thM could not be broken. The as in all others without prejudice or united power of free nations must put a favor. We were generously accepted as stop to aggression and the woild most I the unaffected champions of what was tie given peaee. If there was not tne! right. It was a verv responsible role to will or the intelligence to accomplish 'piny; but I am hnppy to report thai the that now there must be another and final w ar a "id the world must be swept clean of every power that could renew the terror. The league of nstions was not merely an instrument to adjust and remedy old wrongs under a new treaty of peace; it was the ouly hope for man kind. Again and again had tiie demon of war been cast out of the house of the peoples and the house swept clean by a treaty of peace: only to prepare a time when he would enter in again rith spirits worse than himself. The house now must be given a tenant who I could hold it against all such. Conven ' t...l.w.l .a M.nL. IU rrmiilahnf nf rh 'ret easier. The conference was, aftet nt. '...deed indispen-ble, statesmen found the newly planned league of na- fine group of Americans who helped with their expert advice in each part of the varied settlements sought in every transaction to justify the distinguished confidence reposed in them. Friendship KealUed. And that confidence, it seems to me. is the measure of onr opportunity and of our duty in the days to come, in which the new hopes of the peoples of the worl$ is to be fulfilled or disap pointed. The fact that America is the friend of the nations, whether thev be rivals or associates, is no new fact; it is only the discovery of it by the rest of the world thst is new. America may be said to Lave just' matter of sudden choice that we are no longer isolated and devoted to a poli cy which has only our own interest and advantage for its object. It wa our amy to go an, if we were indeed tho champions of liberty and of right. Wo answered to the call of duty in a way so spirited, so utterly without thought of what we spent of blood or treasure, so effective, so worthy of the admira tion of true men everywhere, so wrought of the stuff of all that was heroic, that the whole world saw at last in the flesh, in notble action, a great deal asserted and vindicated, br a nation they had deemed material a, and now found to be compact, of the spiritual forces that must free men of ry nation from everr unworthr bondage. It is thus that a new role and a new responsibility havo come to this great nation that we honor and which we would all wish to lift to yefTiighcr levels and service and achievement. The stage is set, the destiny disclos ed. It has come about bv no plan of onr conceiving, but by 'the hand of Uod who led us into this wav. We can not turn .back. We can only go forward" with hfted eyes and freshened spirit, to'follnwi the vision. It was of this that we dreamed at our births. Am-r-ica shall in truth show the way. The light streams upon the path ahead, and; nowhere else. ASK YOUB NEIGHBOR It has been said that there Is now Hardly a city, town, or villus, in it.;. country wherein some woman does not rciae wno nas found health in that eood, old fashioned remedy, Lvdia E. I inkham'a Vc?etahU rnnu'.j n fore, if yo ,rc suffering from son itmcnt, and hardly know what to do for it, and have tried other remedies hout help, ask your neighbor if aha ha- ever used Lydi. E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. If she herself has) r.rr nao. tne need for it. undowhted i.v she knows others who were i T"ur condition and who have h ... stored to helI, Ki- :.. . Try SaJca Firs! Ia Esjbj