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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1919)
i-f-r .--. J-f- V-t- .0o -4. of The Capital Journal tmtona CHABLES H. FISHES EJitar and Publnler Tl'KSDAY EYE.VIXG July 29, 19'9 I Page aaBaaBBaaBaaBaBMBaaaEnas-a-aBBanHam rublished Every Evening Except Sunday, Salem, Oregon, ward in the fall the present shortage of dwelling houses ltd movement to relieve the situation. x Address All Communication! To THE NEEDS OF RUSSIA. 136 S. C'omaiereiaJ St. SUBSCRIPTION HATES IWIIt. hr Carrier, tser Tar $3.00 fer Month- Dally by Mail, per year $3.00 tu a ...ui.:,i T.i i i i okeuo?.! nt-i;uiaiiup ox A.nerson ana uaessa, wno is now in me uimeu Diaies, senus an open letter to ail arcnDisn- Per Monta.- JflLL LfcASiiD WIKK I'EUiUKAl'U KU'UKT -$5e'ops and spiritual leaders of all Christian churches, de 35t I ' nominations and Christian societies in general throughout ithe United States of America. In this letter. Archhishnn Pl.itnn j J & s-w, ail ;the United States and in Alaska for seven years before - v.: . j a- t i . . . . KOKF.IOX BKFEESENTATIVES W D. Ward, New York, Tribune Building. tt it o.-.. 11 l, .( n. ltil,l:iif Vt . II. DlUCIMtll, VUiingU, liwpt' PS , "vi j , i WlUi n. cny c.pit.i joumai Wrier bo,... in.tro.ua to put th. Wer. on th., being raised to his present position, asks all Christians ..r.h if th carrier duei not do this, miswt you. or neglects gettug the r .of whatever Sect to POmP tn thp nirl nf hlrorli"nrr Rnocln you on tiino, kindlv phone the eirculation nisnaK.'f, M thie U the uulir wJ j .j. f & we en dt't.'rniine whether or not thtt rnrnere ere following itntructioiii. fhono lie SclJS. IS.0 numan WOl'dS Can deSCHDe the affliction and THE STORIES THE DEVDROPS TOID (Written for the Cuited States School Gtirden Army, Depart ment of the Interior.) t i t 1 fl. T. I'.VKT II. liiZiiiUU I UI LliuUCC 1U DOLLY MEETS THE BALD HEADED FAIRy. I Jol) Printing i PKSNE 199 Th3 QuicksnerPress 193 N Com'l-over Gale 1 Co. G. E. Brookins. Popriotot TUE DAILY OAT IT AX JCUSNAL Li the only newrper in Salem whose circulation is juarantel by the Audit Bureau 01 Circulations SALEM'S CROWING POPULATION. un-ex- we een aeternnne wneiner or not mo nimn nro ' -' i j - w vun uioi.uuc me ttiiiiuiiuil ailu H before T;30 o'tlock and a ppcr wiU be nt you by edal messenger if IheOlTOrs of the Russian tragedy of today aarrier ha. n.ied yoo. , Th f uh f , np.f , , ... Mated, derided, profaned. One-half the educated class, small at best, have been massacred. Russian women have ;been violated and dishonored. . Children have been merci lessly butchered. The machinery of government has ibeen destroyed. Agriculture and industry have been de ranged. The finances of the country have been eomnlptp- i Jv pxh.tustpd." Salem has a arger population man ever ueiore in us - - . my. This is ml conclusion, based upon the circul;,-!. E ' ' S-TJS "Ji" te ? lion ol the Daily Capital Journal, which is the .acw-KKS.'9 Mp "' He tells of hunger' of ::sish l-TJn ZcnS yjl falls off three or four Christian Associa ion to increase their .benef icient work." h & Then in the fall it comes back gradually and t" n pre-lat ln thes.e. two demo each succeeding year reaches a little higher mark. This year, however, in spite of vacations and the berry harvest, the Capital Journal distributes practically as many papers in the city proper as ever. Yesterday was an ordinary week day and yet the total distribution of Cap ital Journals in the city alone was 2574 : that is pretty near ly up to the high water mark and the best showing the paner ever made on the 20th of July of. anv year. The total number of copies of the Daily Capital Journal dis tributed yesterday was 5252 which is the best mid-summer record we ever made and indicates that a new high mark will be set next fall and winter. We shouldn't he sur prised to see the circulation of the Capital Journal pass teh G00O mark before the first of the year, 1920, and that, too, without any special boosting or spectacular methods of circulation promotion. " The Daily Capital Journal is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the only organization of the kind officially recognized by publishers' and advertisers' asso ciations as guarantee of known (circulation. Every paper printed is accounted for and the records are regular ly checked up and verified by official auditors. We started out to say, however, that Salem's popula tion is growing; that in spite of the exodus caused by the vacation season and berry picking the city's population is r.s large as ever. We fear that when the people turn city-j Wou't you tell iu h"' you urow? All the oilier Kiiiries have tbl nie, said Dully. 41 Vse, of eourse. A yrtiw het front the seed. Smu ep!e put out what thev cull 'seN. Of eourse if you waut verv earlv Hiirion unions, it is t fnntt plan to put in the seta in th we gtiav very fast from seeits. and ivm it vim it-uiif i ic.ru fine li,.,ls S.,... ',, 1,. r.. t l,-,v ! ''f f Amernnjjen, is the J "I have been weak before. But you jarp stroll;. I know you will elp uie. When I first met you 1 saw thnt hiil- P i p 1 'den strength. With vou I tett 1 rouij reature Former Kaiser ;ronqiler- . . r j ''Jim," I snid softly ''it eaimcit be" Los Anjroleaeal., July 30. Jack I "Rut Sum," he sai.l gripping my IVmpsey, Jess Willard and other eele- hands, ''I thought ynu loved me," l.ritiee who have been raid nionvv for 11 " . 1 kaia a&iXn x,r' " tluir pictures, please jump in the lake. ' f"!l Put w,lmun ' enua to prsuco neiore r tne movie camera. ! William Hohenjiillern, the wood saw- ! That the American people would be glad to help Rus sia is certain. How to go about it is an unsolved problem. Nor is there much doubt that it is only after the tantrum of a naughty child is over, and the emotion exhausted, that any help offered would be effective. N. R. Moore, of the Corvallis Gazoot and R. J. Hend ricks of the Morning Mummy of this city, contend that Haig was wrong when he said the British won the war they assert that the black soldiers from the United States turned the trick. Possibly this explains why they are shooting up Washington, Chicago and other cities got the world conquest idea like the Prussians had once upon a time. . Ihe nearest we can get to a satisfactory reason for the rising cost of living situation is that everything is going up because everything else is. Bryan was right when he said that it is high time that the profiteers were curbed. One good way would be to stop buying the things you know are over-priced. You can generally manage to get along without them. to raise reallv "ooii onions. You see. th ground should lie worked up very fine ami snft before we are planted. T'un we should be hood over quite often. Ami no weeds must be allowed tu grow near us.'' "Oh," said Dolly, '"I saw the weed Imp." ''Wasn't he a mean thiiiy?" said the Onion h'airy. "Well ami then we need ti li.iht fertilizer wood ashes are good. And the ground must nut be allowed to grow up around us tn'cnuse our heads need a lot of air and we grow best partly out of the ground. Our seeds must not be planted verv deep, cither." Mlow deep.'" nshed Delly. ''About as far in the ground lis your little finger nail would go," said the Fuiry. "Then', when our tops begin to get yel!o,w, we should be pulled up and laid sidewise on the ground so we can ripen in the light ami air. Then we can be stored in some dry place that will not get too cold in winter. Or we can be tied up in bunchea and hung up in the cellar. In France, where inuny onions will be sent this year, the peasants the people who live in the country you know hang uh up in their kitchens. They eat a great many onions in dif ferent ways. Soinetiines they eat on ions just with bread. Sometimes they niako them into salads. And then they make onion soup." "Is onion soup good!" "There is nothing a hungry French peasant likes better than onion soup when he comes home at nUht tired from his work in the fields. Vhey raise a groat many onions with ' qt'ite fancy names over there." "Oh " said Dolly, "I is!i you would tell me your nanie. " ''My name, " said the l aid headed Fairy, 'is filverskin." "Oh, how pretty. I 'lease tell me some other names. ' ''Well, one of my yellow brother:' is culled . ' Vellow Globe,' 'Red Wether fiebl' is the name of one of my red bmthers. Ho is very popular. " ''Thank you so much for telling me all about yourself," snid Dolly. ''I think I must go now. It is breakfast, time and Mnriu wants her milk. I!ut I will conic attain toniorruw moruint;." if vou love me vou cannot leave mo Tlliu i tllP tilllK I ntMl VOU." A humble woodsman has been offer-, Mj try t(f llp.( VOUt ,mi, lm j ;1 the largest sum ever used t,. tempt v vou. ''Then you ar ruining me. Vou, on. whom I have depended. You have de serted mo. Murrv me and I will give up man. .,...,,. , , ..-.n... ... r a cre, wen Known i , pro-, l&t h()w (,ft(,n ,,nv( ,ie. dmer, heading a group of California - , k)1(, moving picture men, has forwarded to" j diJ , hRve V(lu th,,lt ,.. Ym, Insiilent .Is .,. an ofter to pay a mib : . , , ; linn dollars to whoever such a pavment ... ", , , . , fc , , ,. . , i, i , . , ... , ,l ,- , with that wonderful timbre was ul sliould properly go, it he would be per-1 . . . , . mttted to film Mr. Iluheu-'jillern either in America, Knghind, France, Belgium, St. Helena or whereer the ailii's may designate. ! The offer contains niuuy liiberal terms. Keet agrees to protect the wood sawyer from budilv harm and re-1 lllt-n tl!l11 inlui'l ti, tin, Iniitkiiy ,i i,l l,rri . I tie. And he will permit Uohen.ollern ' "r,MI "mK- 110 "ir i,1 n,M: p, 'i'8 n 1 .... ' I III'..., .... .,.. ,..,.,. U' 1 oL-. i! to pick lus own support uii cast. Keefe i ' , . . said he wrote to the president because "U111 "''l"f-'- w J l,"k'"' "P ' no one could suggest any one else thru '""" "BH ""I'ty. ' heard the flit k of i inn t in nffi.r mil,t h ,,hn,ltio.i me uuor as ir ciuseii Kjicr hum Ho stipulates that the picture must bu olll.v " FnK ,( "Don't make me go ull through it, Jim.", I said. "It is not you alone. I would niairv you if there was only you to think of. Hut it is more than that. It is those that come after us the children." dim rose. He looked at me once with rush I hail after him. taken before- the llohcnziilern trial. j'r 'ry ''Xothing matters but our iovp, io near again mui iichu tiftil voice. -To so the look in thoso dear eyes. Hut I am alone. I have done what I thought right. Hut oh, how hard how DESPONDENT WOMEN A prominent writer claims thnt "women are nutiirallv despondent," but often mental depression mav beiul"er' attributed to an abnormal condition of I I looked around at the room. It the system, which expresses itself in, looked old, dingy, pretentious. I felt nervousness, backache, headaches, !I could not stand it nor the four walla sleeplessness, and consequent despond-that shut me in. ency. Lydia K. l'inkham's Vegetable I opened tho door softly. I walked Compound goes to the root of this- swiftly up the dark street. I walked so trouble, it gives tone and strength to I fast that soon I had outstripped the the system and restore women normal, healthy condition. to HUNTING A HUSBAND BY MAY DOUGLAS THE BITTER DECISION. ' CHAPTEli XXIX. This note came tlis morning. ''Dear, ''I must see you. Can it be tonightf Wire uie. Jim." When I saw Jim I was startled. His face was drawn, haggard. He looked at me out of sunken eyes. I felt so badly that I could onlv sav, ''.Mv dear, mv dear." Jim looked at me with the patheti" expression that a beaten dog gives its master. ''Sara you know all,'' he said. 1 nodded. last house. I am returned now. I am peaceful. Whether it is ieace or only the numb ing of my feelings, I do not know. I do not care. (Tomorrow Looking Back) Beecham's Pills ! will rapidly improve your complexionbyarousingthe liver and putting stomach and blood in good order. Ursnt Sale of An M.dicin. in th Wot 14. Mderwrwban. la baiw, 10 ZSu RIPPLING RHYMES By Walt Mason PERVERSA HUMANITY. Wherever men assemble, in wilderness or street, they rn.-tV:i th welkin tremble with howls about the heat. And there are countless critters, all bathed in summer sweat, who sigh for gin and bitters, to make them hotter yet.' Uut recently red liquors were banished from the stores, iiiul there are countless qikuors who miss the swinging! doors, who miss the old brass railing, the old time forty) drops; and they put up their wailing, and fill the air withj yowps. But in the bright hereafter, the golden years to tonic, they'll greet with jeering laughter the very name' of Rum. They'll wonder much how mortals whose sanity! got by, could seek those swinging portals, to douse their! works in rye, to pay good coin for sickness and sorrow and disgrace, and throw, with crazy qu'ekness, red poison, Uv uueh their face. Some men have had their bitters since! Jirst their whiskers grew, and now, unwilling quitters. Ui .-x raise a howdy-do. But when they've learned to swal I,).v coltl water, plain, undyt d, to fill the aching hollow thai e-xch ere has inside, they'll wonder, oh, they'll wonder in groiips of threes and twos, how in the name of thumbr tbi v ever cared for booze. 1 i LADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 1SGS General Banking Business Commencing June ICth Banking Hours will be from 10 a.m. till 3 p.m. HAZELGREEN (Capital Journal Special Sen ice.) Miss Flossie Overman, who hu been visiting Mis?. Emma Fisher ir two vveeks, returned to her homo in I'hilo nuitli this week, Mrs. Ailuli Junes of Miiumoutii spent the week end lit home. Miss Ceiia Zeilinski is spending a lit tle time with her parents hero. Curl Munis of I'liilmuiith is helping Cliiiili s VtiM Cleave. Henry Keppliuger aid wife of Mill City spent Sund'iy ill K. A, lHu.igan 's and on their return were act iHup.mieil l,y tln-ir sun and daughter, I,c!uuti and Mi inie, who have been visiting tiieir aunt fur two vveeks. Mir-s Kiuina Fisher went In M juluiiut h Kiiduy to spend the evening with friends and attend the operettas given t. v 1 he normal. Mi.-s Hilda Williamson, who lias been vv oiking in Salem, returned hetue Sutur- due evening for a tew days. lialpli Harvey, wlm formerly lived in lliis ili-tiiet. is woiking fur ( li.ulis Vim Cleave and is glad to be bat k among old friends. Mrs. A. F, imert is visiting her mother ui lioiie tt it ( 1 1 she regains lie! health. The Cliiipiiiaa family is e.g.iid in peciiiu: chittiui bark in (heir wools. Kev. V. Fisher, who spent last week at I'liiiuiiiiitli and I'euk, leturned Sun d .v Mtituing in time for t lit union serv ice at the V. II. chinch. Mr. and Mrs. (1. O. I.tumey, Misses Flossie Overman, Nellie Heiuetl and Ciniua Fisher, Messrs, Carl Moris and Hnlph Harvey were also present. Dewey Crook, who hits been eiiipl.iyed at H. C. Ziilui-ki's, return, d to his heme in l'ortlniid Si.tutdav. AH in an Cleave gave a Ufl'y pull fur the benefit of his berry piektrs Sat utdav evening. ' WOI.GAST WOULD COSuX BACK Yu,.,r, Arid. Juiv Ad W'oigast.j ence the wor'd's lightweight tii.ii.ipion,, lui- stinted n come hark" effort. j , He will fiuht a local pugilist 'here! Vnd:t y iiig'it and the wiener of the bout is I'ttjufted to meet Johnny McCarthy i f San Frnn.'isfo at S mert"n, Ar'..., Jur, ih tite f:iir to be held there seme time1 in OctoWr. ; I 1 ' $$ Dcn'j Let 'en hm $$ Jf Keep 'cm IiTha Circle $$ Most People Don't Think Those Who Do Save Money , DEPOSITS OF $1.00 TO $5.00 WEEKLY AT :! PER CENT COMPOUNDED " " SEMI-ANNUALLY AS FOLLOWS " Weekly 1 4 6 8 10 Deposit Year Years j Years Years I Years Years I Years I Years Years Years J1.00.. . $ 52.77$107.10 $15,117$ 220.82 $ 280.26 $ 341.50 $ 404.59 $ 469.59 $ 536.55 $ 603.54 ?2.00 $3.00...... .1!105.57 $211.32 $32G.."?6$ 411.78 $ 500.70 $ 683.21;$ 809.43 $ 939.16 $1,073.42 111.13 ; $ 1 5873 1 $32 147 $l8(X5 $ "27657$ 811.02 $1,021.78 $1,211.19 $1,409.22 $1,610.14 $1,817.14 $1.00 $211.13 $128.63 $652.74 $ 883.CQ$1,121.43 $1,3G646.;$1,618.90 $1,878.96 $2,146.SS $2.422.90 $5.00 ;$263.90 $333.78 i$$15.8S.$l,l0-U5$l,401.74i$l,708.02 $2,023.55 $2,348.61 1$2,683.50;$3,028.93 IT IS NOT WHAT YOU EARNIT IS WHAT YOU SAVE THAT COUNTS TODAY NOW IS THE TIME TO OPEN A SAVINGS ACCOUNT. $1.00 Will Start You alem Bank of Commerce