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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1919)
PAGE FOUR. THE EAFITAUDURNAL AJJ INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER n 1 il t i rl avsrv tivAntnff Avoartt Run. a.iy by The Capital Journal Printing vo., I3t eoum uommoreiai mrrei Salem, Oregon. . - . O. PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher TelephonesCirculation" and Busi ness Office, 81; Editorial rooms, 82. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE Entered as second class mail matter At Salem, Oregon. Ripp'rag Rhymes. CHARITY THE DAILY CAPITAY JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1919. R With chnrity for all X walk the vil lage strot; I see a duffer fall, and lift him to his feet. I dry the widow's tears, and still the orphnn'e sighs; and when a bum appears, I feed him pumpkin pips. With charity on file, my failing do not count; my soul may Iini-bor guile in fabulous amount; but charity's, a cloak that oovers all my sins, and so through town I poke ,and meet with friendly grins. With char Ity for nil I go my modest way, and strive not to recall ill tales of yester day; the rumors foul and dire that smirch a fellow's name, and drag through muck and mire some once un- libels doubly base which make the vie-1 urns swent in anguish and disgrace. With charity I greet the fellows who have failed, and all whose futile feet have to demnitlon trailed. I'm not so snowy white that I can sit on high, and hand out words that blight, to any wring guy. If charity is mine, I may have countless faults, but my while soul will shine, when through the Gates I waltz. ' . Odds and Ends New York. Four thousand Blng Sing prisoners are going to sue the State to get out, Frank J. Hand, In since 1916 for manslaughter, Is the first to test out a habeas corpus plan to get out. . Cambridge, Mass. Harvard stu dents wont music with their meals and ' threaten to take up & collection to hire a Jaw band If the college authorities ao not provide digestive harmonies. Adalbltla The one day old daugh tdv of President Gordon f Bast Cen tral state normal school caused a strike before she was II hours old. The stu dent body walked out In her honor. Ban Pranolscft. Patrick Welch faint 4 for the first time In his life when he got a message from the hospital. The nurse said his wife had triplets, they totalled 11 pounds. . ; Ims Angeles. Cal. "Hereafter I'm M, P. Snyder," declared the mayor at midnight as ha flnluhail niirxari ditli P. Snyder" to six hundred munic ipal Donas. ( Monterey, Cal, Miss Dorothy Bra-s rii mi&aea ner train to high school. She caught an airplane and got to school on time, thus keping her rec ord for promptness intact. COMPULSORY ARBITRATION NEEDED EFUSAL of the coal miners to heed President Wilson's sorting to arbitration only in the event negotiations fail, and their avowed intention to strike on November 1 places the country in a serious predicament. The strike will inflict untold hardship upon the nation. Winter is com ing on, only a month's supply of bituminous coal has been mined, railroads cannot operate, industries must shut down and widespread suffering from cold and famine impends. It is neither flip rnnl rmprfifnvo nv Vio nnol mmnn that will suffer most on account of this bonehead dead lock. It is the Public, as usual. There is Tin altnrnnturo DUE lor the pnvernment. tn tako a himH on t,-,1 Vi operation of the mines, for the welfare of the people is yaiauivuui to uie weuare oi enner party to the contro versy. . The situation flain mils 'fcrronH of a compulsory arbitration law, such as is in effect in Australia. The right of the individual and of the factions niuot aiways ue suumersive to tne rights or the people. It should be as .criminal to bring buffering upon the populace to attain selfish ends as it is to nter into other conspiracies against the public weal. Both sides to this controversy are busy placing the wnit me utner aim uuui are proDaoiy at iauit hut the refusal of the miners to heed the president's appeal will cost them public sympathy especially as their de mands include a 30-hour week to limit production and increase costs. Most Of the coal miners are fnvei - -w iwfcviiiioj uiiu iiiuot yj the steel workers nra ffwricmpvo imnnvfo to secure cheap labor and replace native Americans.. The natiuji is paying ior us loonsn policy in permitting un restricted emigration, for the labor unrest of the coun try and the radical bolshevism that pervades its ranks has its origin and follnwinor amnno tVioqq -p; t making the United States the dumping ground for the amm .a r t?,.- i. i . ,i i . industry, we have admitted elements that threaten nation Ol lnniin-1 a v ?ere a general sentiment throughout the country that the epidemic of strikes, which are largely responsible for the increased cost of living through curtailment of needed supplies, has about reached the limit of endur- ancc. ; ges are tne mgnest ever known, the. workman's condition better than ever -in history; there is abundant Work fnrull crinr- Vimi ,,nil U 2.1. . . , - ", v. w iwma ticvan, uut tiiere is apparent ly no Wav Of satififvinor frio-loKA loo cession is a spur to new" demands apparently with the uj. i-uiixiacaung property ana Kussiamzing indus try..., :. . ( ,..V i . ..y The reaction against radical laborers has' set in and u titc eventual snowaown, openly counted, organized la bor will receive a set back that will restrain it within the i t w iTreason, ana utterly smash the "one big union" FROG. HOPPEK GOES AITEK THE SUGAR The chief menace to sugar cane in the West Indies is the froghopper, an insect that sucks the nan from the root and leaves of the sugar cane, and that owes Its name to Its ability to take prodigious leaps. In recent years the Insects have mnltinlled enormniiAlv. especially In Trinidad. :; ? 40 Years Ago Blood Poison Was Conquered By Old Doc tor's Prescription Within . i our Keach Today. 40 years aeo ""Number 40 for .th Blood'' conquered many cases of spe cific blood noisnn In ItH wnrxt fnmiB which have not returned .This dis ease is manifested hv ninrnin imtcliu Icopper colored sopts, aching bones! uioers or running sores, falling hair, glandular swellings, pimples on the face. COBStiantion anrl a tnrm nt ,lv. pepsia. Your health is important, In sist on "Number 40," put up In a blue carton bearing the signature of J. C. Mendenhall, 40 years a druggist, Evansville, Ind. Sold by Schaefers drug store. (Ad) 4 Cut This Out Come in Monday Chicago. Heat was shut off In the aanrtment occupied by Mayor Thomp son by order ol the health officials be cause of failure to comply with the anti-smoke rules. New Tork. For hours detectives with drawn guns guarded a papier traehe safe In a store, Burglars had removed the real safe to a safe point for cracking and left a camouflaged one. Mount Carmel, Pa. Electricians en gaged In Installing a meter In it real flnce here mnde a mlstnkn nnil tinnV. 1 it onto a telephone line. Instead of nezios- tne exchange girls are getting aits. Love and Married Life Portland. Or. Two armed men en tered Frank Jacovarne's tailor shop, bound and tagged Win, dressed them selves in two of the best suits in the shop and departed. Bpokane, Wash. T. II. Broeksahfnk, prominent citizen, has pnlntod "Maud" in large letters on both sides of his Ford. He cranked It during a eold nap last night The doctor says his arm may knit in a month. ABB aiAHTIN Hi ?.' ,-'; - " ft "Lovs and Married Life," a great siory by the noted author Idnh Mo. Glone Gibson, a TOOst unusual story mat evory woman will be absorbed in will begin next week In The Canital Journal. It Is the married life story of John and Katherlne Gordon a story re plete with Interesting incident, packed with thrills and brimmine with situa tions dramatic in their setting. From the transcendent hannlness nf thn hnn. evmoon there comes reaction. u.rA wiih It a revelation of characteristics little dreamed of fn the ardent days of judgment-blinding courtship. The arrival of a son a tie that himlfl Rnrvnfl fny a tme to save their frail matrimonial craft from the shoals of divorce. But soon life-tons' habits. modes nf thought, Instinctive reactlons'threat to triumpn even over the world-moulding force of paternal and materal love. And soon the conviction In rennhsn by both John and Katherlne that a great mmtaite naa been made. They contemnlate divorce end walirh flia . suits upon their child, the effect of public opinion and they hesitate. The idea crows unnn them that thnv have been trapped that they are in nocent victims engulfed In a system of matrimony from which there is no re call Without dlflffrAPA nnrl aVinut ...V.lnk tuara is a iiiiaucy mat sounds as doom. With the poignant pangs of remorse they feel that they have been cheated, that there is somethine Wrotlff with n system in which on error may not be honorably recitfled and at the hopelessness of a situation from which rhere is no honorable relief no surceaie. . The hatred so engenered nerlla their very soula And to her horror and ter rified amazement the thought flashes across the mind nf Knthm-ina ihit wishes her husband were dead. Here the storv V JIUDOIO with action and tlramntln "limn. one heart grlppinir scene tn flnnih.. Gradually understand comes to John iuu ivatnenne. Their characters un dergo a change. Sympathy for each other comes and almost unknown love comes to both love born of nnmmnn tribulations and children, and with this love comes contentment and the cur tain falls. It is a tri-eat tni-v ,.. wan a moral. . it's a story that will command attention everywhere. SUFFRAGISTS FAIL TO ALTER OLCOTTS STAND ON SESSION OU t mmrS. ml What gits us is why a teller that's makin' forty or fifty dollars a day should care whether anybuddy recog nised liitn or not. Th. best advertise ment fer any town is a good cup o' ctffee. ... Intimation on thn unit of iIoUcto. tion of suffragists that failure of the governor to call the legislature in ex traordinary session for ratification of tne sutfrage amendment would neces sitate a state-wide campaign of educa tion In an effort to force action by pressure from Uie autnlda fnJ1,l tn move Governor Olcott from his previ ously, stated position relative to the need of action by the Oregon lawmak ers at tliis time. ; delegates Urge Session. The delegation commuted nf Mn, w J. Hawkins and Mrs. A. C. Newell of f'oi'tlaii.l and Mm, Abbie Scott Rnlcr an eastern representative of the Na tional Woman's party urged the imv. ernor to call the legislature at this time on the ground that the attitude of the western states was delaying ratifi cation of the amendment. The legis latures of 89 states are favorable to ratification according to feoent an accurate polls, the delegation declared and only the failure of the governors to call them into session was prevent ing nn expression of thetr sentiments. r Governor Is Firm. Governor Olcott reiterated hla nr. vleusly Mated position to the effect that the situation did not Justify the expenditure by the state of the amount necessary to pay the expenses of a spe cial session bat staled that lis would not stand in the way of a session if the legislators themslv u badly enough to serve at their own expense. William Baker, a resident of Ore gon for 60 years and a well known retired farmer, died at Pendleton Tuesday. 5 room house on S. 19th street. Will take some trade $800 Good 6 room house, fairly mod ern, In south Salem. One" block from car line. East front, good lot, good garage. $1750. Good 7 room house on paved street. Close In. Fairly modern. $2500 Good 6 room bungalow in South Salern. All modern, good base ment. $300 down, balance month ly payments. $2500. 7 room house with 2 large 'lots on Highland Ave.. east front. Good barn, lots of fruit. For quick sale sittuo. . . ; ... 6 room modern cottage on 15th Bireci. wiuae io jjouri. sauuu. - 7 room househig lot, plenty of fruit, east front., Location on I5th street, it sola soon 81800. Good S room bungalow In south salem. Modern In everV " wav Small payment ... down balance monthly. $2250., Nice S room bungalow in north Baiem. Not fax, out. All mousrn uum in leatures $25tKt. .. 14 acres six miles from Rniom on good rock road. Vnir h.iiirtinr, Nearly all -undnr mnivon.,., -i io scnooi. $3200. Good 10 acre 'chicken rn n nh S 1-2 miles from Salem. Some fruit. iair Duildtngs. If sold by Novem ber first $1800. - 5 aores Close to fair crnnni and paved road. Land all cleared.' $1100. 40 aCreS 1 1-9. OH Of nf tnnrn r pavea road. No improvements. 44 acres S mll fmm fine set of buildines. knil ininl place that sold for sfiOn nor nnra This one can be had for $200 per aore. , 22 acres 8 miloa frnm ol.. Good set of buildings. Close to o! station. Land all iinMnr nuiti. vation. $8000. i 4 78 acres 12 mitoH frnm Th,. non. About 35 m-m nnrlsr .nitiv.. tion. Some mi fit ii r a nn 1 1 tyi it at Good well and spring. Fair set of uuuuings. suavu. 6 acres 4 1-3 mllaa finm No improvements. $3000. COME IS AND LET US SHOW YOU THESE Laflar & Laflar 406-407-408 Oregon Building Planting Time--We Have the Trees Italian Prunes Bartlett Pears :: Apples, Peaches, Cherries, Nut Trees, Ornamentals, : ; jjutitiiuciTieis ana utner tsma rt'riiifa t WFJ.L CROWS STOCK IN THE VARIETIES TOTJ WIIXNEED I . UlVUJVft HU SALEM NURSEY COMPANY 1030 CHEMEKETA STREET SALEM, TREGOJf . """"limlIHHHMHMMII L ADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 1868 ' : General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Can You imitate a Phonograph? Possibly not but there are people in the world who do imitate the re production of a record so cleverly that it is sometimes called Re-Created M'dsic No Phonograph is musically Perfect, but there is one phonograph above all others that will reproduce the work of all artists (regardless of what com pany makes their records) to a greater degree of perfection and with less needle and mechanical noises than any other phonograph in the world. It is the TNI IfSSTRUMINT OF QUALITY CLEAR AS A BELL "Tkt Hightit Qua MUug Maciint in tiu World "The inevitable choice of those who demand the finest phonograph that money can buy'' ' The Sonora is designed for use in the home. It is not a concert phonograph. The Sonora was recognized in 1915 by the highest musical authorities in the world as a phonograph capable of reproducing music more perfectly than any other phonograph in the world. It was not a perfect instrument then, nor do we claim it to be such today. The fact remains, however, that since 1915, the Sonora has made startling improvements in their instruments, and certain phonographs which boast of being perfect and capable of re creating music, are no "different today than they were five years ago when they competed with the Sonora for first honors in Tone Quality award at . San Francisco in 1915. . . . At the close of the Panama-Pacific Exposition, Mr. O. H. Fernbach, Secretary International Award System, , wrote the following from San Francisco: "I beg to inform you that the only Jury which heard and tested all the phonographs exhibited at the Panama Pacific Exposition recommended that the Sonora be given a marking for tone quality higher than that given to any other phonograph or talking machine." The Sonora will reproduce any make of disc record more perfectly than any other phonograph in the world. You can prove this fact to your entire satisfaction if you will bring any record you are thoroughly familiar with to our store. We will play it for you on the Sonora. We will leave it to your own good judgment. Investigat Sonora merit today. -We will gladly assist you. Sonora represented exclusively in Salem by Myrtle Knowland 415 Court Street tMMMMMHMMHIt I u MtM),)(tt))t1tt)))()))( THE STUM NEW BAKER V Beautiful in De sign, Thoroughly Modern; Mechani cally Right Studebaker manufactures completely in its own factories its bodies, axles, motorstransmissions, steering gears, springs, tops, fenders, and cuts its own gears and other vital parts, eliminating middlemen's prof its. With such manufacturing advantages, and large quantity production, Studebaker is able to offer cars of sterling high quality at prices that make them the most exceptional values on the market. Studebaker maintains the largest and most completely 7 equipped labora tories in the automobile industry. In these laboratories the special formulae . for Studebaker steels are worked out and the steels are tested and analyzed to be sure they are up to specifications. . t ; Studebaker operates huge heat-treating plants where all steel parts are toughened and hardened to withstand severe strains and terrific wear. Many . of the heat-treating methods which are now standard in the entire industry were developed in Studebaker laboratories and shops. Studebaker makes all its own forgings, casts, machines, and builds complete every Studebaker motor; makes it's springs in its own spring plant. ; Being complete manufacturersand one of the world's largest and oldest 'industrial institutions Studebaker can and does make, its parts of better stronger, longer-wearing materials and puts better value into its cars at a stated price. . . : .; . :" : :: ' -: - ; STUDEBAKER CARS SAND SERVICE AT. THE ' Salesrooms255 South Commercial G. E. HALVORSEK ' C. G. MILLER Phone 362" G.P.GRIFFITH