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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1919)
iiOX Page of The Cabita 3 CHAKLE3 H. FIBRES Editor ui Publish ovia ourna WjritXESPAY EVENING July S3, iy!9 i-: V ; v invi vi Y i VI Edit mm b mUished Every Evening Except Sunday, Salem, Oregon. hipped the mailed fist has given place to a generation, , indicative neither of interest nor curiositv. I Addreat All Communication! To (Tbcflmliiflnial Journal '.reared, like those wanderinc TTpKrow .VnMn in tn fnn 7 w v v viiuitu, ixi viit i.cai lu'iincr 01 'of bod and the quest of that righteousness which exalt-;,hu,l:h f '.v9" My u left. , . .terest in a jCi.ii a uaiivii. I1LXM 138 S. Commercial 8t OREGON 81'BSCBIPTIOX BATES twn. fcr fsiriar. eet ver $".00 Per Montk- Daily by Mail, per year.. anyone who would talk to uie jof James Merle. I But Jeanne may be merely playing ;with Torof Then I started in. I "told ,her of my school days with Tom of jniy hi(Th school days or our gradual f .i f e a.' j ie-i separation. I in tlie the business world, if tne bermans refuse to fulfil the terms of the peace d Tom in hu urg sphere of imsi- INTERNATIONAL AIR POLICE. Per Month . FILL LKASKD W1BB TLLEUKAPU k-EPOKT nJtreatv. and enter unnn anv nlnn oitVio- lT Tl ic vi ov, .4yuu .,., t0 tie , gret companion f tive resistence, now are they to be coerced into keemne.of to.v' was aii Jeanne said. theil" Dledpes' I ?o impression so fur. r , -i ., i ... , 1 Next I told her of his goodness to his 1 rimarily, it seems, by an allied air force. mother. The hard tug he had had after Recent aircraft developments in En eland and FrantV!"8 fi1"'r.'8 .,l,ath to support her aUd . ,K . i i ,i , . . , ,. , . omiscll. Ana l ended with nis rise, .indicate nothing less than a plan to establish an interna- gradual but urc. Tom is now worth r.. Daily c.p.t.. journal ..m., boy..r. iotmeted to Put th. paper, o. the.tional air police to keep an eye on the enemy and enforce fflJZlei at font. UtU earrir doe. not do thia, ..m you, or ..gleet, fett.ng the paper the treaty. J wi,i'anl Jad flifJktfr J, eVes. Wffir It .ay be "jailed that on one or two occasions after 1.; ,i -'Td "a9 1 b.for. 7:30 o'clork end paper will be wot you by .pocial me.Sengr if the the Signing Of the armistice, When the people Of Berlin N"l 'loft. 1 had been .p.ite unsueeess earrier hai miaaed yon. lffreV esneciallv trilflllpnt thpv WPro milotorl K fU ful. Vet what did I wai.tf My inteu FOREIGN BEPKESENTATIVEa W. D. Ward. New York, Tribune Building. W. H. Stoekwell, Chicago, Peoplo'. Gaa Building THE DAILY CAPITAL JCUENAL U the only ewpaper in Salem whoae eirnilation U guaranteed by the Audit Bureau Of Circulation iiinnnnin r.t Ut Ti" u T 'ii i n ... tioiia naa ueeu to slioiv Jeanne that peatance of a big Bntish dirigible war balloon which , Tom never thought of me ex,e,,t an . relative.And 1 had ended by giving liiui an eulcL'v: 1 lai'lieti. I could forcet xm now. I could come back for a few Icruised around omniously and then flew awav The British government has eone rieht ahead manii- r! .faCtUrinsr those bie fellows. Thp tmnst.Atlant flirrVif nf minutes to my own affairs, It Via r "1 i.-n.. . ,i. . - The sunshine seemed extra bright to- p.iv. xw-..- mo yivuauiy a tueit; inuut'llt ill Uie prOCeSS Olulnv! 1 lauijhed at a little girl who was i manufacturing a fleet of those monsters and impressing goiug 1,ast h':fsi,8 rrpy fur ,o iGermanv with ihor nnwpr Tf ?c CA n w; ft .0 huW- -1 ,l",.,,l'd a,!lilne iu , . , . . i. i ,, . j r-... v uuiu huh ci uiimu xuui u be'',;ur s cup. les. rue worm nag a The German premier, addressing the national assem-times as large as the R-34 is now buildine in Ereland B'ur. The glamour of a nght ing the industrial situation throughout the country." Censmore Under Orders "At that time John U. lensmore was the solicitor of the department of labor," the secretary's letter said, "and was engaged in running down criminal cases connected with the iui jnigration service in Niu 'raneiseo. I instructed ilr. Densiaore to vet anv ad Jitional information that miht be of value iu securing a full nnderstandirg of the case. Two immigration inspec tors assigned to hint were used for that purpose. They worked in cooperation with the department of justice." Clues of alien anarchists still beins followed are expected to lead to the Mooney case, Wilson stated, but se crcy must be maintained for the pre ent. Secretary Wilson said he refused to direct Densinore to appear before the aii Francisco grand jury because Kick ert. leal adviser of the grand jury, was "reflected upon by the Uensm.ire report. ' ' Ueiisinore's connection with the Mooney cae esus.'d no additional ex pense to the government, Wilson stated. Portland Waiting Cooler Weather For 10-Rouud Go roitUtud, Or., July 23. Although the ten round boxing law has Ix-en in ef- ft in Oregon sinee May, not a fight of that extent has been staged i-i I ortlaud. Oregon is the only state on the cotst iiliowiug ten round fights. Other cities in Oregon have taken ad vantage of the law. Hexing comniission- 'ers here are believed to be v. aitin" for cool weather. j Kctchell Beats Trance. ; I."S Angeles, t'ul.. July Voting Kctchcl beat Voting France iu t'.ic main ! event ft Vernon's four-round show last iiikht but chief interest eenteicil id the i way Kr.inkie Tucker "came back'' and deflated Jack IV.pkc. muc'.i to tiic de jlifilit of Elizabeth Tucker, Tim :kie' sister inn linger. THE GERMAN WILDERNESS. 1 wonder if James Merle I'l'nmorrow Tlit Wonderful Day.) bly on the occasion of the ratification of the peace treaty, Hugh airplanes of the bombing type are also being rushed Koeu-' 1 B"aU "ut u"1 My ?aia: ,10 completion, t ranee is doing nothing so spectacular, "We are about to enter upon a forty years' march but has made almost as large an appropriation for air through a desert." 'craft as Great Britain has, evidently, with the same pur- It was an allusion, of course, to the wanderings of the j pose in mind. Children of Israel. It was meant as a lament over the . The United States, which would naturally be supposed - ... Ti i . il : i- , i!l i! ..I'll" , 1 . bitter fortune ot tne uerman nation, it was pari oi ineiiu itay u iiumg part in tms preparation, has appropriat general weeping and wailing which have characterized Germany ever since it was foiled in its attempt to crush and dominate the rest of the world. In reality, it w;is a happy allusion, far more so than the speaker realized. The Germans have long been wont to regard themselves as a sort of modern IsraelGod's chosen people of the new age. They may appear so now in a sense different from anything they contemplated, and yet fortunate. As the New York World suggests, "the Germans also have escaped from the bondage of cruel taskmasters"--the militarists, who forced them to toil fruitlessly, in slavery to false ideals of grandeur and glory in which the masses could have no part. The parallel might be carried much fuither. The Hebrews were krut forty years in the wilderness to cleanse, purify and strengthen. It was there that they party advantage. gained the Law, and learned to forsake their false gods. .They were kept wandering until every adult who had come out of Egypt was gone, and there was wholly a new generation, reared with a new discipline and new ideals. Then, and not until then, were the Israelites permitted to enter the .Promised Land. There may be a Promised Land awaiting the Germans, too, to lie enjoyed when the generation which has wor- ed the comparatively small amount of $50,000,000 for the air services of the army and navy together. That will enable this country to do far less than France or Britain. Senator McNary will vote for ratification of the treaty as it is. He stated this fact in a speech to the sen ate yesterday, giving, it seems to us, the most logical rea sons for his stand of anyof the senators who have expres sed themselves up to this time. Many of the republican senators are trying to make rejection of the treaty a par ty issue, just as some of the democratic members seek to gain a party advantage by forcing ratification of all its provisions. Senator McNary, however, is fair enough to consider only the interests of the country and discuss the treaty and League of Nations covenant as a non-partisan issue regarding wnicn mere snouid be no jockeying for RIPPLING RHYMES Ey Walt Mascn SEASONABLE SONG. Some of the talk heard nowadays about "internation alism" is curious. There arc people who use the word as if it were quite new, and full of peril. As a matter of fact "international" merely means "between nations." The moment one nation enters into a treaty with another, I like to talk of Christmas time, alone in mid-Julv: I!lt (nt0IS lll,(,n a course ot "internationalism." I kp tn snie.'iU of rnlil ninl limp snow f.-illiurr frmn tlip skv! I like to tell of Santa Clans, the dearest fake that ever . . The thunder storms came along on scheduled time was, the most alluring guv. I seem to see the crowded: .ms week just as the weather forecaster said they would. stores, where eager shoppers swarm, and thoueh tuitsiile V. e mention tins localise there is always an inclination to & tempest roars, in there it s bright and warm; and I be-'i;si-Itlu- "? oiuciai weatner prognostieator and deny Wm. J. Bryan will entertain his audience when he speaks at the Chautauqua tent tonight as no other man on the lecture platform is capable of doing. And he will inflame no partisan or class prejudice because a Bryan address only engenders good feeling and advocates only good citizenship, which in its turn is productive of good sound Americanism. The average man or woman who hears Mr. Bryan talk is more liberal in his political views and has sounder ideals of Christian citizenship to guide him than before he listened to the gifted Nebraskan. hold the weary clerks who cuss old Santa and his works snd clamor for reform. And I forget the summer heat, the weather that's a crime, while dreaming of the crowd ed" street at merry Christmas time; I see the wreaths of evergreen, with holly berries strewn between, and hear the glad bells chime. The stormy clout's by winds are roll ed across the wintry sky; and tingling shoppers cuss the cold and wish it were July; "Ah, me," they sigh, "how' fine 'twould be to sit beneath a streaming tree, and sim mer, bake and fry!" I see the children with their sleds Upon the gleaming snow; and soon, to diverts little beds in ecstacy they'll go, to dream of Kringle and his pack, of reindeer on their shining track, fine presents to bestow. Ai d d reaming thus of Christmas day, the anguish in me him the credit he deserves when he happens to guess right. The old controversy has been resumed in the East, "'Is the tomato a vegetable or a fruit?" Of course it is. Hunting a Husbana By MARY DONGLAS iHE CHAMPION. dreams are wise; and I look blandly at the sun, and smile! s lew, and take a gun, and shoot a dozen flies. Iiiii.it v in her eves a to the rsuse of my call. She . however, unite a dif. t'UAITKK XXIII. iff rent Jeanne from the girl ho hai" I went to sec Jeanne tinlav at Toin'slenme to see me oertel be T.m dies; if dreams will drive one's grief away, 1 hold that H''U7' 1 "", wlii,in for 1,rr' Si"h , T"-. ,,,,r ianuer a son and np n ti m mniu , ivii!iui:. mil il wws nisii ii,HniHi. ..uw ifew stubs of cigarettes, some llliistrat 'she seeno-d languid, or rather lxued fe. papers on the couch. It ns all un-jt'nnversntien did not interest her. And j inviting. Jeanne, when she eftme at last l less. Mm is the type who is always m refte .liing sighl. She seemed j bored ilh women. iquile at ease in the untidy atmosphere . Why was Tom interested in her? jHie puxled me. For tliete she sat in a'ould he not see that she was vain and ; fresh shite frock, silken ankles crossed shallow 1 My dear old Tom! Must he ! iru''cfu!!y. Mho touched her hair lightly . be sacrificed to the hollow egotism ot juith a white slender hand. the girl 1 l'erliaps that Be, mints for it all. The I de-ided quickie. I would talk t hite slender h ti I thst is ready to her quite fra;ikly. 1 should try to make adorn Jeanne, but unwilliig to soil it 'j her see him as he was. biu'. roonh. self iii keeping the house epiully spic clumsy, but in the main alwe petty :i'"l 'p. ! wenki'iesses. M poiite. ft.it 1 could see cr- ' 'Tom Angus U mv neighbor yor LADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 1868 General Banking Business Commencing June 16th Banking Hours will be from 10 a.m. till 3 p.m. 121 "Chin Chin" Will Be At The Grand Monday Night With Charles Dillingham jts produc er, Walter Wills and ltoy Hinder in the lend, J vita t'aryll its cnniKser, Anne Caldwell mid H. H. Butnside it librettists, the musical fantasj "Chin Chin," to be seen at the tiraud opera house one niiiht only on Monday July -Nth, seenm to have been particularly fortunate in its choice of sponsors. "Chin 1iin" with its Chinese title and atmosphere is the bicst mid most successful of all inusici(l plays. It is a riot of fua from be(inninK to end; the music is sunji or whistled by every body and the scenes are marvels of beauty. The artist has cleverly carried out the producer's desijjn iu arranging the dresses to blend with the scenery iu one complete scheme, evolving a ser ies of knlcidom'opic pictures. Sent sale oins l'Viday July 115 ut Opera House pharmacy. DENSMORE SAYS (Continued from page one) MM mine PKCXE IS9 a Qu.ckensrPrsss 193 I Com'l-ovir Cal & Co. 0. E. Breaking, Proprietor The report then enumerates the fol lowing objections to methods used at the trial: 'the ai'pifient fnilure of the district attorney's office to conduct a real in vestigation nt the scene of tln crime; the easy ndnptaliility of some of the star witnesses; the irregular methods (pursued by the prosecution in identity- iii various dncnibints; the sorry type of men unci women brooght forward to prove essential matters of fact in a cas. of graved importance the seem ing jnpffiency of welt established ali bis; the sungfroid with which the prose cut ion occasionally adopted an unten able theory and then changed to anoth er not quito so preposterous; the re fusal of the public prosecutor to call ituc-.-vs ho actually san the full ing of the bomb. "In short the general flimsi tiess it n il iinpri Ssihiliiv of the testi- imony advance 1 together viith a total absence of anything that looks like a genuine effort to arrive nt the facts ill the ens.'. These thinos are calculated to enuse in the minds of most blase a mental rebillion." Graft Openly Charged The report declares testimony of Frank ti. Oxinan, stur prosecution wit e.ess was piovcd perjury and that the residing judge at the trial anil the at torney general of the state, ashed a new trial for Meom.y. KicKert, previ oiisly agreed to the- new trial, Oeiismore so id. then refused tn ajree to it. Of this, the report says:- " There are ex -ellei't grounds for the belief that the prosecuting attorney's sudden chsi se of attitude was prompt ed by eni!s"iiric from some of the cor porate intercuts most Jiittcrly opposed 'o union Ir.bor. IVkcrt 's efforts thence forth were directed st a clmuy at tempt to whitewash Osmiin and justi fy his own motives and conduct thru out. ' ' With the reHrt there were more than Nht closely typewritten pages of eon versations of i'ickert, said to have been obtained through the dictagraph plac ed in his office by Pensaiore. -1 wo or more persons heard all tne records of conversation offered the re port alleged. Dictagraph Used I'lseinj the dietngmph in the office was most difficult, IVnsmore said, as the office as alwnvg heavilv guard ed. Iff did not state how this was accomplished. IecTetarV Wilsons communication, rcfu.-iog to make public details' tff IVnvmore ' activities, was attached. It aid: "In S, p'emk r, 19 17, the raw of T!iomn J, Mooney had become not on iy a criui'eal case, bet an international and a labor cane, diplomatic corre pondenee indicated that the Mooney case was heing oscrt in foreign conn trie. particularly in Rus, as a means of destroying the friendly relations ex isting' between this people and the peo ple1 of Russ'a. and was affecting the conduct of the war Labor strikes were taking p'see or were- threatened as a meat's of irifluenfing the judicial and exceptive aitthnT'tirs, therebr disturb WATCH AND WAIT FOR BIG ANNOUNCEMENT FRIDAY I " '-11 '' - - -.S1U . .. , DAVIDSON'S IDEAL BREAD White Whole Wheat Raisin DELICIOUS and APPETIZING TRY IT! And Be Convinced On Sale by The Peoples Cash Store 178-186 North Commercial St. Phone 433 3 FV-rT'"7 i Before You Fly Learn to Walk in Comfort Our Models teach you the pleasure of Walking LOW PRICES On LOW SHOES Ladies, come in and see what we have to of fer you in Pumps and Oxfords; those beau tiful RED CROSS low shoes at specially re duced prices. Also stylish Oxfords for men. HIGH in quality and LOW in price. J. B. LITTLER, Manager il ' f1' 1! I