PA HE FOUR. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1919. THE CAPITALJDURIIAL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published every evening except Sun flay by The Capital Journal Printing Co., 136 South Commercial street, Salem, Oregon. G. PUTNAM. Editor and Publisher Telephones Circulation and Busi ness Office, 81; Editorial rooms, 82. j. Member" Audit Bureau of Circulation FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE Entered as second class mall matter at Salem, Oregon. National Advertising Representa tives W. D. Ward, Tribune Building, New York; W. H. Stockvi-ell, People's Cas Building, Chicago. r .SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier 61) cents a month, $6 o year. By mail, 50 cents n month, $1.25 lor three months. $2.25 for six months, $4 per year.. By order of U. S. government, all mail subscriptions are payable In advance. Rippling Rhymes. Tin: crisis The crisis of a year ago looks flabby, now its days are o'er; but, oh, what fits we used to throw, when that cheap crisis had the floor! We viewed that crisis with alarm, it was ft frightful thing to see, it couldn't fall to wound and harm the bulwarks of our liberty. It crlsed around a duy or two, and then abjectely looped the loops; an other crisis loomed ill view and called for walls and maudlin whoops. I've seen a hundred crisis come and rear themselves on end and go; I've seen my neighbors stricken dumb by threats of coming doom and woe. And still our country Jogs along, and finds re lease from every plight; and If a dozen things are wrong, about a million things are right. Whene'er a crisis blows Its trump, the rabbit-hearted tear their hair, and say we're headed for the dump, In haste but I refuse to scare. I've heard the cry of "Wolf" o long, I look on wolves as hop-Joint brutes; no crisis can disturb the song of sane and Joyous couled galoots, Bring on your crisis, one by one, or trot them fortltin groups of eight; the optimist will take his gun, and make the blamed things pull their freight. Odds and Ends Chicago, Alex Antonan, crusader apalnst the high cost of living, was jelling shoes for $1. The police stop pod this public benefactor. He stole $00 pairs, he confessed. Chicago.-Demands for more than $00 per cent Increase In wnge were presented to District Attorney Clyne by the federal grand Jury. The Jury men want $10 lnsteaa of 3. New York. Sixty chauffeurs joined a secret society, They were given passwords to got by with the Judges end traffic cops. The "high signs" didn't work. They found the lodge was a fake. Portland.' Or. Objecting to being slaughtered, a cow escaped from the stockyards and ran amuck. She pro ceeded to know down pedestrians and chase others off the streets until po lice shot her. Detroit Democratic Detroit has decided to make room for rich as well s poor. Ono mny rent a flat for ns low as $500 a month In mi apartment bouse now building, Chicago J, A. Blackburn, a bold, man. stole five revolvers rrom At lhn tiulire station tio sent out for supper: three pieces custard pie, ice cream cone, choco lates. : bad hi STAND BY THE GOVERNMENT. IT IS the people that are the chief sufferers by the coal strike, as in most other strikes concerning the neces sities of life. - Lack of coal means' cessation of. industry, demoral ination of traffic, suffering and death from cold and fam ineand the penalty falls upon the people. It is the province of the government to protect the people, not only from putside invasion, and inside revolu tion, but from suffering and hunger; That is what gov ernments are organized forthe welfare of the people. Our government is striving to fulfill its duty in pro tecting the people in the coal strike, by preserving law and order, by permitting those desiring it, to mine coal; by keeping the railroads in operation and rationing fuel sup plies, and by enjoining strike leaders from further con spiracy against public welfare. It is essential for all true Americans to vigorously stand by the government inr this hour of emergency, to back up officials' in their effort to prevent calamity, to avert revolution, the aim and object of the anarchists, bolsheviki and trouble-makers who have flocked from Russia, and Germany, to our industrial centers to loot and exploit and destroy. , .' FINAL DECISION NEEDED, ATTORNEY GENERAL BROWN reasons from pre vious decisions of the supreme court that Governor Olcott is entitled to serve out the full term of Governor Withycombe. The supreme court itself has dodged the issue, and is evidently divided on this mooted point. The question involved is whether the secretary of state serves as governor during the full term of the de ceased governor or only until the next general election, when the people have a chance to elect a governor. Fail ing explicit instructions in the constitution on this ques tion, court rulings upon the intent of the fathers of the constitution decide .and the court has passed it up. Notwithstanding the attorney general's learned opin ion, and the legal quibbles and technicalities involved, it seems clear to the average layman that if the framers of the constitution had intended the secretary of state to fill out the governor's full term, they would have said so, instead of making him acting governor evidently to serve in the interim before an election. The fact that they refused to create a lieutenant governor to replace the exec utive, indicates that they regarded the secretary of state's elevation as temporary. . . The subject should be taken before the supreme court as soon as possible for final decision for the fact that a new secretary of state is to be elected might open the door to further complications.-' A decision either way would not change the actual situation. If the courts held an election was necessary, in all probability Governor Olcott would be re-elected by -a large plurality, for he has made good as executive, just as he did as secretary of state and there is no desire, even among partisans, for a change, for a level-headed business administration is assured; LQVE and HARRIED LIFE otne notea autnor aldahMSGlone Gibson r i:Fir.TioNS Kemp, Tex. With water standing between the wide rows, and no pros locts for cessation of rains, a farmer near here hitched a mule to a bout, loaded in his children and picked for ty cent cotton. San Franotsco "Hello witle," said Manuel Hall. "Witle?" said she. "We have been divorced for weeks." Hall gasped. Now he is asking the court to set aside the divorce and make her get another to hla face, , Los A"Sc'e "Three drunks a year wont cost any man his wife In this fcourt," Superior Judge Crall doclavod In denying a divorce. Ml . ffU it TTTm 1 1 Art Mtt' J Mi Mihs l'awn T.lppiocut has sent th follei'iu' beauty hint t' 111' newspaper A jnai'KhmnlUnv '11 be found very ef fective In bullilin' n a flot noxe. Love may be blind, but It'll find 111' way if you line violet talcum. I really do not know what I wanted ns a wite. I only know that I found John very different as a husband than he was iir n lover. We had only known each other three weeks when we were married three halcyon weeks and looking back it .seems to me those weeks were the hap piest of my life. I believe there romps a time very soon after a woman Is married when she begins to understand that the god of love In a very jealous little Rod that he allows no other Idea in the minds of Ills devotees than thoughts of hl-ii. For three week I had done nothing, thought nothing, lived for nothing but the sight of John Clordon, the sound of his words, of love, the warmth of his caress. The hours lagged on leaden feet when he was away from me, and swept away like a whirlwind when he was by side. I believed him Implicitly when he said that no love since the world began had been quite like ours, for, in my egotism, It did not seem possible that any one could ever have had the joy that was ours. When he was away from nm I used to search my brain for words In which to express my love, when I should be again with him. Dur ing all that seeming preparation for marrlago we did nothing but think and talk of our love for each other. Together we used to bewail the pov erty of the English language which could so inadequately describe so glor ious a passion. During those three weeks John was a perfect lover. In the entire world there seemed to be nothing of real im portance but Just us two. We must have made ourselves very annoying, to our friends. Indeed, Helen Van Ness said to me one day, when we had for gotten to return from a motor trip in time for her luncheon, given in my honor: "I would like to get hold of that ly ing poet who says: 'AH the world loves a lover.' I am certain that if he were around where you and John Gordon are, ho would bate yon as I do. Per sonally, I think lovers are the most selfishly impolite people in the world, and had I known you were going to make such an idiot of yourself, Kate, I never would have Introduced you to John." I certainly was shocked when I real ized that John and I had forgotten Helen, tut she immediately put her arm about me and said: "Never mind, dear, I think I would forget the world gladly to be as radi antly happy as your face shows you to be." Poor Helen! I did not know then though I learned soon after my. mar riage that her love affair was to bring her great unhappiness and misery. And yet, looking back over Helen's life and mine for the last few years, I really wonder if she has been unhap pier than' I. Her troubles have, been very different, from mine and heavy enough Indeed, but still. I do not be lieve that- through it all- she has ever wished that she might never see her husband again. And because I have done this ane it has brought such a horror to me, I think is the reason that I am going back in memory over the last three years- of my life for my defense. And I love to dwell on that three weeks' of ecstatic Joy that was mine from the time I was introduced to John until I married him. Whatever has been mine, whatever shall Come to me, nothing can take that away from me. Today it seems to me that had I been taught or told that the kind of love which John gave me then, and which I, of course, expected to have forever-aftpr. wna nnlv ntip nh.iA nf love whichnarrlage, in the very na ture of its relation to everyday life, must dispel, I would not have suffered so from disappointment and chagrin. Sometimes, to be perfectly honest wtih myself, I have thought that John was quite as much disappointed in me as I have been in him. I wonder if men expect that glorious ecstasy to go on and on and light up all the monot onous hours of workaday life after marriage, or are they so constituted that they can put the thrill behind them and plunge into business and the sordid affairs which money-making entails, without a desire for the return of a gossamer radiance that seems for ever lost? 1 Perhaps I am too introspective too analytical. John ays I am. In fact he told it to me the first day after I married him when I tried, with a lit tle story, to explain away his absolute ly iorgetting me. it was then that I came up a most horrible revelation John had no sense of humor, (Continued tomorrow.) THE FIRST TYPEWRITER So long ago as 1714 a patent for a typewriter was taken out in England by Henry Mill; it was called a "ma chine for impressing letters singly and progressively as in writing, whereby all writings may be ingrossed in pa per so exact as not to be distinguish ed from print." His machine was very clumsy, and it was not until more than a century later US20) that any: thing further was attempted. Then the first American typewriter, called a "lypegrapher," was patented by W. A. Burt. . . ' . - LADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 1868 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. SECRET MEETING HELD Dublin, Oct. 81. The Sinn Fein ex ecutive committee- Announced today that the "Daille Iran" (Sinn Fein) parliament met secretly In the Man- son house on Monday and adjourned Tuesday. ' Arthur Griffiths, acting president. reported that Sinn Fein propaganda was making good headway on the continent. j Los Angeles Dollars are like prunes "the more there are the cheaper they &re," declared Dr. Cross university economist. But invesiga tlon hasn't revealed boarding houses serving them for breakfast. Rub.Musterole on Forehead, and Temples A headache remedy without the, dan gers of "headache medicine." Relieves headache and that miserable feeling from colds or congestion. And it acts at oncel Musteroleisaclean, white oint ment, made with oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Used only externally, and in no way can it affect stomach and heart, as some internal medicines do. Excellent for sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum bago, all pains and aches of the back: or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the. chest (it often prevents pneumonia), , 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, A.i .A Read This If You r Kidneys Need Help men ana women put w yrun or it, end even younger, who work t confining, indoor occupation! ire ueceptible lo weakened, inactive or luggith kidney that isil to properly cleenn and purify the blood. Symp tomi of diaeaaed kidney are pntli neu under the eyet," tallow tkin, Hosting speck, dry mouth, bilious net, nervoutneu, backache, rijeu mitie pain, swollen or it iff joint, ore muicle. Many' bed ridden ittfteren owe their condition to their failure to take heed oi the fint warn ing of kidney trouble. WANTS PEOPLE TO KNOW cannot praise your kidney piita enouth for th wonderful benefit 1 have derived from their use for aurh short while. Pleete publish tliie atateonent aa 1 want the peopie pf rtocky Mount and everywhere to know of Foley Kidiwy Pill.." Mre. A. O. Walia, K. P. D. 5, Has W. Reeky Mount. N. C. Foley Kidney Pills Invigorate," strengthen and heal in active, weak and dieenscd kidney nnd bluddcr. They help the kidneya in their work of purifying the blood trcam and earning out poisonous waate. Clean blood make poeeibit Eood circulation, healthy neryea, etrona Jt'k, cleetbend, active brain, eound hart. jtit'wtory dujeaiion and perfect braltU. SOLD BY " hl.'ie.-tort Worn Out In Mind and Body Your child is quick to observe disturbances in your mental attitude or physical condition. And when he asks: "What's the matter, Daddy?'' there'a a tone of solemn anxiety in his little voice. The depression stamped upon you reflects intensely upon him because of his profound solic itude. Ha at once drops his playthings and rushes to your side, but his happy smile lias disappeared and his buoyant spirits are gone replaced by a countenance of worry and a bearing of hopelessness. You owe it to tt hawinvaa anil welfare of your family to keep thru in body aad keen in Intellect. Yon ere the aim and the inspiration of their liroe. Dark, thrvuu'tiing clouiia huver tivc-r their hende the inguutt you ahow aiirna of being "out of aoru" or "under tbe weather,'' lo t iinperil their futurv by nutflecuaMT your health, mtam , a mm The Great General Tonic V ; ; .vs a . ; - FT I YKO is jHlt in oHitlnatl MokfeSa onty. w!l tatnish that "timl fI:nR"'atdJiifyfHKitt wyv-na . look, tl will ronc w yourtre;Kth HBi vtyor. vrwtw the rvihin eif.ictsof ovartt-orkund Worry, revive your pirit and incrcude your hold on life. Hine ret'rstv tear appetiswr. valuable nki to dit(ifio nut a "Kthy prvtitKitcrtrftheiteJwra. hih, because of it positive r viMtiuinff and reconstructive taiiw. n use is wp?cta'!y dvvirablctn caw-sof nbjurmal wndition. If you suffer from nervmia ox.vuu.non, muacular or mimthV fatiguo. or drticivncy of vital ftrc &, to ircwtstl vheakKr or wasttn illn8, yua H tin J "1YKt.V' iMiwticuUriy bo..e ticiM. It tone ui th utiiit system aud ki's ju fwlintf lit. Auk. yvur imagiM for a botti today. Sole M&imfVcturera LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY New York Kaneaa City. Ma. An Economical, Delightful, Light Place To Tradei Women's Seasonable UNDERWEA If you are a scientific shoppereconomical of your time and energy, as well as your expenditures -our knit under wear department is sure to appeal to you. Here you will find unlimited variety of styles in Union Suits and swpar ate garments, in weights and weaves to suit all tastes and best of all prices are reasonable and qualities re liable. Women's Extra Quality Fleece Lined Vests All sizes, 34 to 38 in 'styles with medium high neck , and elbow sleeves. - 98c a Garment WOMEN'S SPRINGFIELD UNDERWEAR . LADIES' UNION SUITS CHILDREN'S UNION SUITS Cotton, low neck, sleeve less, ankle length," $2.00. Out sizes $3.50. Low heck, sleeveless, an kle length, part wool $3.50 and $3J95. Part wool, Bishop neck, elbow sleeves, ankle length, $5.00. ' Part Wool, low neck, el bow sleeves, 'ankle length, also in high neck long sleeves and ankle length $3.00. Non-shrinking wool un ion uits, low neck, el bow sleeves, ankle length, $3.95. Ladies' ' Cotton Union Suits. High neck, long sleeves, ankle length, $1.35, $1.75, $1.95 Bishop neck, elbow sleeves, ankle length, $2.25, $2.75. Children's Suits, Part Wool, high neck, long, sleeves, ankle length, $2.50, $2.75. Cotton Union Suits, High neck, long sleeve ankle length, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75. Cotton, Bishop neck, el b o w sleeves, ankle length, $1.75. Cotton, high neck, long sleeves, ankle length, $1.35, $1.59, $2.25. Cotton Pyramid Waist suits, $1.50. Ladies' Store 466-474 State Street Salem's Exceptional Store Men's Store 416 State Street The NEW VELIE SIX Here It Is! New Velie Six You must SEE the CAR to appreciate the striking beauty of this new, Straight Line, High Cowl Body Design, Distinctive Radiator and Hood, Bevel-Border Fenders, Octagonal Lamps. And you must try the car to know what the sen sational new Velie Continental motor . means. This is the first mention of a new type power plant. Burns low grade fuel. Has more responsive power, more speed, no vibration, no noise. Costs less to run. See this Wonder Car. NOW ON DISPLAY at m Veil e Company 162 N. Commercial Street; Phone 1604