THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1919, PAGE FOUR. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published every evening except Sun day by The Capital Journal Printing CoV 130 South Commercial street, fialem, Oregon. " ; ' O. PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher J Telephones-Circulation and Busi ness OfEice, 81; Editorial rooms. 82. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation "pull LEASED WIRK SERVICE Entered as second class mail matter at Salem, Oregon. ... National Advertising Representa tives "W. D. Ward, Tribune Building, Hew Tork; W. H. 6tockwelli People's Gas Building, Chicago. SUBSCRIPTION RATES i By carrier BO cents a month, 6 a jreor. i By mall, 50 cents a month. $1.2u for three months. 2.2B for six months, 14 per year. , By order of U. S. government, all jnail subscriptions are payable In ad-ranee. Rippling Rhymes. $ A YEAR Op'piSAOM 'We're had a year of balmy pence, since captains said, "Let firing cease," where wearied armies stood', it's been a year since cannon roared, and sol flier waved the flashing sword, and do we find peace good? I have it beef steak' on my eye; a neighbor lot a dor nick fly, and made the blamed thing black; and in a serap down by the Jail my hut was flattened with ft rail, my coat split up the black. My sideboards now are flecked with gore, my battered head is always sore, from many swats and Mffs;' we have a riot every day, and when we've hauled the wreck away I help to plant the stiffs. Some fellows robbed me of my wreath, and broke In hnll a dozen teeth, and I'm a sight to'see; I can't enjoy my morning walks, for some one's always throwing rocks, wherever I may be. I cannot warble pence time hymns; I'm picking foirdshot from my limbs, and have no tlma to spare! and every time I take my ..lyre and burble like ft house afire, BoniS fellow, pulls my hair. The quiet of old days is gone; where'er I turn I gaze upon a lot of scrapping ment the, air is full of fur nil duy, so tnko the'Boon of Peace nwny, and give me war again. Odds and Ends A BEACON LIGHT. IN A speech in Kansas City recently, William Allen White author and journalist declared that President Wilson's illness was the result of his passionate consecration to the big tasks urging themselves upon the presidency, which has become too great a burden for even a superman to carry. I Describing the president's achievements at Paris, Mr. White said: "He had to go alone amidst the play of great forces." Speaking of the peace treaty, he remarked: "The league of nations covenant is only 70 per cent perfect; sometimes I think it is much 'less than that, but it is the big thing of the peace conference, the most significant thing west of the Ganges since the crucifixion, and it is all Wilson's work. If it were only 10 per cent perfect it would still be a step in the right direction.'? ' . Ray Stanard Baker, the publist, who like Mn White, reported the peace conference at Paris, in writing the story of that historic event says: "The president, never upon any occasion, no matter how difficut, failed to rep resent America and the American people with distinction. He never represented what was cheap or crude in Ameri-j can life, but unfailingly what was highest and best." And Mr. Baker graphicly describes the gallant and victorious fight waged against old world diplomacy in behalf of new world democracy by the piesident. We are too close to the event to be blinded by preju dice and politics to grasp its full significance or to realize what a truly great work has been accomplished by Wood-j row wnson ana wnai a reaiiy great worm leaner America has developed, but in the clear perspective of the future, the event and the man will shine as a beacon light in the history "of humanity. LABOR UNREST IN MERRIE ENGLAND. New Tork- Right to hang out the family wash Is Inalienable even If it defaces an apartment court. Magis trate1 Sweetser ruled when Sam Olns buvg complained the superintendent three times removed the clothes line. F.ust St. Louis. 111. A goat saw his reflection In a mirror in a show case here, and decided t''B0t Ibo other fellow." Damages to the building $300 . Milwaukee, Wis Frank Daukovlch was the first mnn charged with drunkenness since war prohibition went Into effect. "I smoked a five cent cigar rind It made me iisty," he pleaded, , Pun Franclsco-i-Flfty slit years of married lire ure enough, ncoordlng to Mrsl-lllznbeth Johnson, who Is suing Amos Parker Johnson, Belmont cap italist, for divorce. They were mar ried in 1803. San Francisco Hotel keepers peti tioned Internal Revenue Collector WsrtUdl to sanction frosen eggnogs ami Roman punch tor Thanksgiving and Christmas. Kruzun. t-r camouflag ed liquor Is liquor, he ruled. Sun Francisco Bob WlUlhora, full blooded Indian, gassed and wounded In France, calls nt recruiting head quarters dally at 11 a. m,, asking for re-enlistment,, but he Is physically unfit, .. . Su?ar Situation Will Be Normal By End Next Week New York, Nov. 7 The sugar situa tion will probably be normal by the end of next week, according to Arthur Williams, federal food. .administrator. To achieve this result, ho warned the people they must economise. Henry K. Costello. of the sugsr cqunl I'atlon board said 1(5R,000,C00 pounds lire being unloaded from ships In New York nd Philadelphia and that about 13,410,000 pounds will be released to consumers no.et week. mm new Mr. Joe Lftilt w prohibition hs made lw husband so thoughtful that nhe don't even hare f g V Hi' cellar fer can o' fmators. Of U th sides f th' coal strike, th' fireside Is th' most Important. . THE I. W. W. of today had his counterpart in the troub . led days of the 14th century in "Merrie England" when British laboring classes were in stubborn revolt against a feudal system which chained them as serfs to the land owners and aristocracy, and bound the small far mer or villean to the noble. .-.-.' ; Victorious campaigns of the Black Prince in France had been followed by humiliating disasters. The black plague had decimated the land. Oppressive taxation by a profligate king had pauperized the realm. The drafts of the prolonged war had made labor scarce and the em ployers bid against .each other for toilers. Despite severe penalties and restriction laws, serfs fled from their mas ters to find lucrative work elsewhere, or roam the forests as free booters. The fugitive serf enjoyed a prosperity above that of the toiler bound to slave on the estate of his birth, a pros perity hitherto unknown to the laborer. His desertion horrified the nobility who saw in free, labor the ruin of society. His prosperity improved the lot of the free laborer as well, so that men who. had "no land to live, on but their hands, disdained to live on penny ale or bacon and called for fresh flesh or fish, fried or baked, and that hot and hotter for chilling of their maw." ' England was seething with political and social unrest produced by misgovernment, injustice and slavery and the run-away serf became a wandering apostle of discon tent. He is described in the chronicles of the time as the "waster that will not work but wander about, that will eat no bread but the finest wheat, nor drink but of the best and brownest ale. He grieveth him against God and grudgeth against reason, and then curseth he the king and all his council after such a law to allow laborers to grieve.'' That the miserable serf of Merrie England had good grounds to grieve is revealed in the preaching of John Ball, dubbed "the mad priest of Kent", against the system of social injustice which until then had passed as the divine order. Ball was the first Englishman to assert the natural rights and equality of man, as follows: "Good people, by what right are t hoy whom we enllod lords greater folk than we? On what grounds hnve they deserved it? Wily do they hold us in serfage? If we ull came from Adam and Eve, how can 1hy say or I love they are better than we, if It be not that they make u.i gain for them 1 y our toll what they spend In their pride? They nro colthed In velvet and warm In furs and their ermines, while we are covered with rags. They have win and splco and fair bread; and we oat-cake and straw, and water to drink. They have leisure and fine houses, wo have pain and labor, the rain and tho wind In the fields. And yet It is of tis and of our toll that these men hold their state." I The peasant revolt in England, culminated in Wat ; Tyler's rebellion, when hordes of people marched uponj London burning and sacking the palaces of nobility on' their way, and then quietly dispersed when the boy Kingj Richard II. promised them freedom and amnesty. They j soon learned how worthless a king's word was, for their j charters of freedom were cancelled and over 7000 of their j leaders adorned gibbets, ghastly monuments of a mon arch's perfidy. But terrible as were the measures of re pression and violent as the reaction among land owners, serfage was a thing of the past. Fear of another rebel lion caused it to die a lingering death, and the work of freeing the serfs went quietly forward. The I. W. W. of Merrie England were the product of; unjustifiable economic and political conditions. They j had no rights under the law. Man's inhumanity to man! made them little more than beasts of the field. But the I. W. W. of today whose rights are constitutionally se cured, who receives high pay for short hours, wars upon society because he has to work at all and would elevate brawn by the simple expedient of delapitating brains, j seeking thereby to secure the luxury and leisure of the! good-tor-notmng idle rich whose profligate existence is as worthless to society as his own. you that I am starving." "Besides,'' said Helen, "I Want to hear the story Kate has promised To tell." "Can't she tell It to us?"'asked Bob. "Yes.V 1 answered, "but wait till we are at luncheon." "Wait a minute," said Bob Gaylord as we reached the first floor. "1 Just remember that Ruth said something about her mother coming to our house today for luncheon and that 1 told her I would try and be there. Kuth's mother rather makes it a point of see ing me on her more or less frequent visits. Excuse me a moment till X phoneRuth." .."I wonder," said John, innocently, as Robert left; us, "if it is a case of too much mother-in-law between Bob and Ruth?" - "I should say," 1 answered, "that K is a case of too much children." "I wouldn't blame him there," said John, quickly,, for to tell the truth 1 have never had an great desire for a houseful of children. One or two, per haps, but more must be a great nuis ance." ' , Helen said nothing, but I noticed the color slowly -flood her face and then recede. For a moment I wonder. Then I took myself to task for being suspi cious. "Why, John," I said, more to take his attention from her apparent con fusion than for any other reason, "I am sure no husband and wife want to go through life without children." "Certain not," he answered, "but Ruth Gaylord has been more of a mo ther than a wife ever since her first baby came, and now that they have three, she has absolutely deteriorated into a governess and nurse maid. We were talking about it at the club the other night and Fred Smith said yu.. l:now Fred Is one of Bob's greatest friends that he never went there any more because, although he loves chil dren, he does not eare to spend the en tire evening listening to their Ills and their smart sayings. "It is a sad slate of affairs, don't you think so, Helen?" For a moment Helen was quiet, and then she said! "Yes, I think Ruth Is making a mis take. But you know,. John, some wo men are made to be mothers aiid some f wives only. I think Ruth is per fectly happy with her children." "But what about Bobby?" I asked, curiously dazed by the turn the con versation had takett.' "Oh, Bobby can take care of himself, I guess," said John with a grin, as though' he had some inner information that he did not tell us. Again I was surprised at Helen. She looked at John with a flash of angry concern and seemed about to speak, but she evidently thought better of It and compressed her lips tightly. "Surely you don't think that Bobby Gaylord is the kind of a man who would neglect his wife, do you. John? Why,.: he " "1 don't think Bobby Gaylord could be really neglectful," interrupted Helen quickly, "but I have been there quite a little lately and 1 must say. that Bob .seems to be an unnecessary ap pendage to the household." To my relief Bob returned at that moment His arrival ended a conver sation that was rapidly drifting into embarrassing depths. "It's all right," he said. "Ruth thinks Bobby'' Junior is coming down with the chiekenpox and Grandmother Graham and she will be too busy in the nursery to think of me or lunch eon or anything until the doctor comes. "Wait until yon get to be an old, married man, Jack, and you'll Bee of how little importance you are about your own household upon the occa sions when both your mother-in-law and your children are on the scene," said Bob, fretfully. "Don't be edgy, Bobby," I interrupt ed. "Listen to my story. I have been wanting to tell It to John all the morn ing. It shows that there are men be tides my John wtio forget their wives. "It seeniB that once upon a time " "Hold on, hold on, Kate," put In John, "let's order the luncheon first. I'm starving. Everybody can have ex actly what they want, but I'm going to have a beefsteak. French fried pota toes, combination salad and a piece of pie." "Nice, healthy appetite for a lover," laughed Helen. ' "Your observation, young woman," nald Bob, with renewed good humor, "does not keep me from duplicating that order." "But you're not a lover," she said quickly. Glancing' up I caught the look which passed: from Robert to Helen, and it said as plainly as though he had spoken: "I am your lover." (Continued Monday.) When you buy Your Car LOVE andMARRIED LIFE bil tiie noted autnor S Idah MSGlone Gibson : hiii i in1 in eaa IS HOBBY IIXXF..VS IiOVEH? would do anything possible for you or ' ii jnny other friend who has lit trouble." Tluvre was more earnestness lu tills "Come on, glvls," Interrupted John observation than Helen would have me j ' Remoinber. you are beautiful to us think, and I went over and put my '. without any dolling up. It may not be arms about her, sa.iu: n romantic confession for a newly "Helen, you surely must know that I married man, but 1 don't niiud telling : j " BE SURE THE QUALITY IS THERE HOW ARE THESE SPECIFICATIONS? WHEEL BASeM-115 ' inches. Short turning radius. Standard tread. TIRES -3!x4 Inches front and rear on Touring car and Roadster. -33xlH Inches on Sedan and Coupe: Straight side-type. Non skid on rear.!. Five demountable rims. MOTOR Entirely new type; Velle-Continental six-cylinder. Full 40 H. r. Well balanced; no vibration. Heat-treated manifold. Burns low-grade fuel efficiently, CYLINDERS Cast en bloc. 3 -inch bore, 4 H -inch stroke. Remove able head. Perfectly ground. Pistons balanced and ground to Size. CRANK CASE Unit power plant type. Pistons removable through bottom. Oil level Indicator with pressure gauge on dash. .CRANK SHAFT Very -large; nickel steel; . running balance; four bearings of great dimensions; readily adjustable. Flywheel bolted "on crank shaft flange. Runs solidly even at maximum speeds. VALVES On side. Very large with high lift. Completely enclosed and self-lubricated. Made noiseless by removable hand plates. FRONT DRIVE Pump arid cam shafts are driven by train of helical gears. Quiet and positive no noisy chains. COOLINO SYSTfiM Large honeycomb radiator of new shape. Cen trifugal water pump with double connection. 18-inch belt driven fan. . . ' - . LUBRICATION Combined pressure, thru hollow crank-shaft ano? splash systeinB. Pressure supplied by positive i.eed gear- pump. Oil continually filtered. IGNITION Atwater-Kent with semi-automatic spark advance; also hand control on steering wheel, giving full advantage of both systems. 120-hour YVillard storage battery. CARBURETOR Rayfield new type. Air adjustment on dash. Makes cold-weather starting easy. Hot-air supply. Vacuum .feed from seventeen-gallon tank on rear. Gasoline gauge on tank. STEERING GEAR Worm and wheel type fully adjustable. Belf lubrlcatlng bearings. Horn button in center of wheel. Spark and throttle levers above wheeL CONTROL Left drive with center control. Clutch and brake pedals adjustable for position. Hand and foot throttle. Starter button on toe board. All Instruments within easy reach, CLUTCH Borg & Beck dry-plate clutch. Completely enclosed In flywheel housing. Dust and dirt-proof. Simple adjustment. Smooth and positive; does not grab. A perfect clutch for all drivers. TRANSMISSION Selective rocking lever shift. Three speeds for - ward and reverse. Heavy nickel steel gears, dust and oil-tight" in unit with clutch and motor housings. Shaft drive through two Arvnc universal joints. AXLES -Tlmken axles front and rear. Timkeu bearings all around. Front axle single drop-forged unit. Rear axle, floating type. Drive shafts easily removable. Spiral gears in pressed steel housing. Hotohkiss drive no noisy torque arm. Large and powerful brakes. Spoke bolted brake drums.' FRAMES AND FENDERS 4-inch extra' heavy channel steel. Single drop no weakening offsets. Frame narrows toward front to give short-turning radius. Heavy steel bevel-border fenders entirely new type beautiful in appearance. SPRINGS Front springs semi-elliptic, 37x2 inches. Suspended directly under frame.. Rear springs three-quarters elliptic, 48x2 inches; underalung. Many thin leaves insure easy riding. Velle cars ride comfortably. DETAILS Running boards nickel-bound and covered with linoleum. Flush louvres In hood. Splash aprons protect entire car. Storage compartments everywhere. Increased room in driver's compart ment. The best of real leather upholstery. Forty days given to painting. All metal work heavily enameled. LIGHTING AND STARTING Two-unit Bijur system. Powerful starter , engaged by sintnle touch of foot button. Octagon -shaped headlights. Double bulb with extra reflector on dimmer. Cowl light on special switch. All wiring enclosed in metal conduits with fused junction boxes for inspection. EQUIPMENT Tailored top and envelope of "Drednaut" waterproof metal. Large plate-glass window In the rear. Curtains open with doors; stored In -compartment in .back of front seat Rain-proof shield. Sixty-mile speedometer. Motometer. Front and rear license-plate carriers. Elegant interior trimming, with robe ranger, foot-rail, motor-driven horn, full tool equipment In door compartment. Everything in and on ready for the road. SEE THE " New Velie Six 99 NOW ON DISPLAY AT Salem Velie Go. 162 North Commercial Street. Do holiday Shopping in November Every indication points to an unexampled Holiday buying this year. This buying, if ' it should follow the precedent of other years, would be largely concentrated to the weeks just preceding the Holiday. But it will foe very unwise to delay Holiday shopping this year. Conditions are abnormal. Merchandise of the right kind is not as tasy to obtain and will be less easy later on. Then why not look up and secure the desired article now when selections are at their best. A number of sensible articles are men ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANER LIBRARY TABLE TAPESTRY DAVENPORT LEATHER OR LEATHER CRAFT DAVENPORT LEATHER OR TAPESTRY ROCKER FLOOR OR READING LAMP TRUNK OR SUIT CASE DESK OR BOOKCASE . DINING TABLE, BUFFETT OR CHINA CLOSET MORRIS RECLINING CHAIR REED OR RATTAN ROCKER PIANO BENCH DRESSER, CHIFFONIER OR BED SILK FLOSS MATTRESS A small payment on any article will reserve it for you until wanted. A word to the wise ' etc., etc. ; Chambers & Chambers