TAGE FOUR. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, ' WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1919. THECAPITAUDURNAL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published every evening except Sun day bv The Capital Journal Printing Co., 138 , South Commercial street, Salem, Oregon. ; .. G. PTJTNAM, Editor and Publisher Telephones Circulation' and Busi ness Office, Si; Editorial room. 88. UTOPIA. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE . Entered as second class mail matter art Salem, Oregon. . ' '" 'a ' ' National Advertising Representa tives W. D. Ward, Tribune Building, New Torlt; W. II. Stockwell, People's Gas Building, Chicago. SUBSCRIPTION KATES ".. By carrier 60 cents a month, $fl a year. By mall, 60" cents a month, $1.25 for three months, $2.25 for six months, $4 "pet year. By order of V. S. government, nil mail subscriptions are payable in ad jrance, - Rippling Rhymes. . . ROMK, KWI'l'T DAY Sume'' day I will reform the world, and make the crooked places straight; then e-.eiy evil will lie hurled to outer dnriuiesa, sure as fnte. But now I have to ilo-my choreH. and keep the well known wolf awny; I have to fix the cellar doors, anil lay In coal and flour and hay. Some day, Willi you, I'll tnlie the stump and talk from morn till night arrives, send old abuses to the dump, and brighten up men's darkened lives. But now 1 have to mine the price rf things we need it takes some roll and pay the chap who brought the ice. and t'other guy who brings the coal- And sometimes, as I pay my Mils. I think perhaps that helps as much as whooping tip and down the hills, demanding, things to bent the rutch. And often, ns I do my chores.. I think that helps the world along ns ninch as "raising raucous roars, nna showing that all things are wrong. Pome day I'll leave my useful tasks, for fake my simple homely joys, and eland on boxes and on cask, and wave rod flags, and make a noise. Then you will know, if you are near, that nomething's wrong beneath my thatch, mid you may take me by the ear, and load me to the bobby hatch. Odds and Ends Pasadena, Cnl. Homer Langdon bought a bottlo of grain alcohol. lie Kft the "drug storo" variety contain ing sold to prevent its use as beve .ge. Physicians saved his life with etumnch pump. Berkeley, Cal. Mrs. Francos Dexter tried to hang herself. She told the policeman who cut her down, "I Just wanted to see If it hurt." It did. Pnu Diego, Cal. The sheriff's office today is searching for "Cinderella." A burglar who robbed a store of candy and soda water left the Imprints of a Kronen heel and a most dainty feml- Los Angeles The burglars union is getting ready for a cold winter. One thousand gallons of fuel oil and ?00 worth of overcoats noro stolen here tiMt night. THE miserable lot of the common people of- England under Henry the Eighth, a "life so wretched that even a beast's life seems enviable," inspired Sir Thomas More, the brilliant scholar, councillor write "Nowhere or Utopia", in which his exuberant fancy painted ideal conditions for humanity or conditions then deemed so impossible as to be deemed ideal. And Utopia has been the synonym for the visionary ever since. In the 400 years since More sealed his faith in human ity with his blood on the block, for he was beheaded for opposing the tyranny of autocracy, the world has pro gressed so far that most of the "visionary" reforms in ef fect in the imaginery Utopia have actually become real ities. In many ways, economic and political conditions to day compare favorably with those pictured, in More's dreamland island.. - '.. ,,-;; . The aim of legislation today is largely to secure so cial welfare, as in Utopia, Men work 8 hours and less in stead of the Utopian ideal 9-hour day. Public education has long been established. Physical aspects of society are receiving attention. Houses are built light, airy and com fortable, with real glass windows. Streets are far wider than the ideal 20-foot lanes of Utopia. People are no lon ger hanged for simple theft and the improvements that More anticipated centuries ago in the criminal code are in effect. Our religion, like that of the Utopians, rests on toleration, and political liberty has overthrown the mon archy. More's dream of Utopia has tome true, at least par tially, and "Nowhere" has become "somewhere" our own United States, not so much by revolution, as through evo lution. There never was a time in the world's history when the lot of the average man was better than it is to day. It is still very far from ideal and we dream of a still fairer Utopia but it also will come lay evolution rather than revolution, as humanity stumbles painfully up the winding spiral of progress. . .As. More's Utopia has. been realized, so will the new Utopia of our dreams. This is the hope that lures human ity and inspires mankind somedav and somehow, neace will reign on earth and good will to man prevail and pov erty oe .auousneci tnrougn tne establishment ot social justice. . for home that night, I have rebelled, but rebelled silently. I packed our trunks which I had unpacked while he had been away, supposing that we worn! spend at least a part of our honeymoon at thu hotel -and handed him the keys. It never. anfl Stfltesmfln tO!ccurrea to me that he would take me i which he called home. When we arrived, however, he bun dled . me Into a taxi and gave the driv er the number of his house. THE CENTRALIA OUTRAGE. Broken Blossoms" One Of Griffith's Greatest Plays jliavid Walk Griffith, whose now rihoti.plny drama, "Broken Blossoms" will soon be seen at he Oregon then tre, 1h the sort of man who, leaving nothing to chance or to his stib-oriU-nates always insists on personally look ing after every artistic detail of his productions, however seemingly insig nificant. , In "Broken Blossoms" Mr. Griffith lias achieved new distinction ill the field of motion picture drama, for here for the first time, Instead ot using tremendous scenic effects and great crowds of people, he works on the emotions of his nudlenoes by the sim pleat and most artistic means. His r.teturo. made from the story "The Chink and the Child" taken from Titos. Burke's "Limchonso Nights," contains lcs than half a down characters, and yet its appeal to the deeper emotion Ik iiu'te os striking and potent as was the appeal of the "The liirtii or a .Na tion" or "Hearts of the "VSorid " Mi AT CENTRALIA yesterday, anarchists opened fire up- on the Armistice Day parade of returned soldiers, Kiiung iour ana injuring several otners ana a mob m re prisal lynched the secretary of the I. W. W. organization, from whose hall the shooting took place. The motive behind the crime was the same as that inspiring the bombing of the preparedness parade in San Francisco a few years ago for which Mooney has been convicted, the same that is causing the industrial unrest throughout the country and promoting the propaganda of Koisnevism tne desire tor revolution and its accompany ing anarchvv The Centralia tragedy is the result of tolerating the I. W. W., and similar organizations whose avowed pur pose is the destruction of American government and American institutions. As long as anarchists are nermit- ted, under a mistaken idea of political toleration, to abuse the liberty and privileges they are enjoying and plan their campaigns of assassination and destruction, just so long win similar scenes oe enacted. Led by hair-brained fanatics and unbalanced minks. there is.no community harboring these avowed enemies oi society, sate trom their depredations. There should be nu sit'Kiv sentimentality in tneir treatment. Every I. W. W. hnlnn the country should be permanently closed, every anarchist placed behind the bars and every alien agitator deported to the land that spewed him forth on his mission of destruction'. The American people have reached the limit of ra- tience. If those entrusted with enforcing the law and pro- itxung tne peopie ian to act, we may expect that an en raged public will protect itself in the effort to purge the country of these enemies of society. ' The I. V. W., the syndicalist, the bolshevist, the anar chist or whatever name he masquerades under, must go if the republic is to survive and the going must be speedy and without ceremony. - fA LOVE and MARRIED LIFE jhj, xne noiea aumor S Idah MSGlone Gibson ktraxgfus morcm mariufd 'A few more ehowups an' not no; howdowns might help out, Very ften th' feller that ny Jest what he! thinKii.ifi thlnklii' o' what seme one else! 0.il. ' - '. I I was very glad that John had' nu Appointment with Mr. Dunham to dls- cups advertising matters, for It took him nwviy from mc dining iho ufler- oon. I had to be nlone to pet hold of myself. In the short twenty-four hours Hint I had been married to John I learned that I did not know him at all and that he did not know me. We were absolute strangers. I almost came to the conclusion that I never could like John very well. It's a strange thing, isn't it. that we can love n man passionately and not like John very well, It's) a strange thing. Isn't it, that we can love a man pas sionately and not like him at all? John and I were great lovers. The sight of him coming through the door way with that smile In hla eyes al ways has given me a thrill. The toticu of liia hand on my shoulder has always made my heart beat a little faster and even when I have been angriest with him, nt the first advance on his part my lips were ready for hla kiss. John and I were not friend we never have been friends. You expeot so much from a friend than from a lover. Passion blliyU you to your, lover' faults. Friends' must have tastes in common. The other night 1 heard John re peat the-old saying that no man who would marry nt thirty-five the wnm.iii whom ho married at twenty-three. 1 wonder If any woman, nt thirty, would marry the man that she wedded at twenty? I wouldn't give up my life with John for the hint three years for anything in the world, nnd yet this morning I wished that he were out of my lifo. I think every woman should marry and very one should have children, and, strange as it may seem, John Gor don Is the only man t have ever known that I should like to have for the father of my children. I wonder If I am like the queen bo who has no more use for her partner after she knows her progeny is secure? Marriage is necessary, of course, but today, thinking over my own experU enoes, t feel something should be done to make iiinivlage more difficult and divorce somewhat easier. I know this woud have helped me. I have learned one thing. If only one, in three years of married life, and that is: if married people are to be happy or even season ably contented, they must have some thing In common than that feeling which we call love. 1'erhnps that something is friendship. It may be that when John and I are older, and moro sedate, we will have come to look upon married life more philosophically, but just now it seems to me that I cannot live with him an other day and sometimes I think he has the same feeling toward me. John has always considered me a : part of himself, or rather a possession of bin, and ever since that far away afternoon when he came back from his Interview with Mr. Dunham and In formed me curtly that we were leaving Yudenitch Beaten Back J By Forces Of Bolshevikij Copenhagen, Nov. 11. Dispatches from Reval today reported Gcnerr.l 1 Yudenitch had been forced to surren- I der Jelisvetino to the bolshevik! oper-1 oting out of Pskoff. . ' i The Russian White army was report j ed retiring all along the Murman front. A dispatch from Riga quoted Colonel ; Eermond. commandin&r German-Russ- But John," I remonstrated, "youjlatl forcefl fighting the Letts, as ad- ure surely going to 'phone your moth- ,niin hi, attri, ti wi fail. before you descend upon her?" Lj it was then I learned that the house belonged to him. . "I think I have a right to enter my w n house when I please," he answer- ROr.MAXIA MAKICS REPUY " ' Paris, Nov. 12, Rounianla today re ed, "and if mother does not particular-ir lied to the peace conference's note of ly care to see me, she has my sister to October 12. Neither the contents of go to." - I said no more, but it seemed to me that he had absolutely ruined any kind. of inlimacy and confidence that might have sprung up between his mother nd me. I instlnctly felt that she would think the entire plan had been mine, and I was rirht-r-ahe did. "To whom and what am I indebted for this visit?" she said coldly, meet ing John In the hall after he had let us in .with his latch key. "Oh, come off your high horso. mater. This is Kate your new daugh ter, and I hope as I telegraphed you, tljjit our rooms 'arot ready." This was the first time I had known that John had answered his mothers telegram. The reception she gave .us was finite in harmony with the tone of her telegram. ' What a home-comingfor a bride! (Continued tomorrow.) th note nor the rejily have been made public. - BEST MEDICINE FOR WOMEN" What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Did For. Ohio Woman. Portsmouth, Ohio. "I suffered from irregularities, pains in my side and was bo wens, ac nines x could hardly get around to do my work, ftnd as I had four in my family and three boarders it made it very hard for me. Lydia E. Pinkbam'tt Vege table Compound was recommended to me. I took it and it has restored my .health. It is certainly the ' best medicine for woman's ailments I ever saw." Mrs. Sara Shaw, R. No. 1, Portsmouth, Ohio. Mrs. Shaw proved the merit of this medicine and wrota this letter in order that other suffering" women may find relief as she did.', Women who are suffering as she was should not drag along from day to day without giving this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, a trial. For special advice in regard to such ailments write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. , Lynn, Mass. The result of its forty years xperieuce is at your service. LMPLfK Ruddy Cheeks SparklingEyes Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physiciarr Dr.F.M.Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ail ments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will know them by tiieir olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers' on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying . off the waste ' nnd poisonous matter in one's system. it you have a psle face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowzls, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards' Olive T ablets the suc cessful substitute for calomel now and then just to keep them fit. 10c and 25c. Good for Asthma and Hay Fever - Pungent, clean and whole some pine tar, and tasteful, de mulcent honey, together with other simple, old-fashioned and homely ingredients the kind 911 r grandmothers ted for cough tyrup go to make Foley's Honey and Tar the splendidly satisfying cough remedy (hat has gained (or it such a desirable reputation. v Relieved Him of Asthma 3. M. Woodworth, Ore Hill. Conn., writes: "1 have uitd Foley's Honey nnd Tar for the past ten years and it is the only medicine I ever used that relieved ma of asthma. I would not be with out it. You may use this testimonial in anvway you see fit to advertise Foley's Honey sad Tar." Foley's Honey and Tar v COMPOUND . HAS RELIEVED THOUSANDS of sufferers from hay fever and asthma after health resorts and change of climate have failed. It promptly checks coughs, colds and croup. It soothes and heals raw and inflamed surfaces. Foley's Honey and "Tar tastes good and will not injure , the most, delicate stomaeh. CONTINUED To give everyone a chance to purchase their winter supply of tires at this remarkable'low price ; - -. ; if t - .- 30x3 in. Smooth Tread T i re s We shall continue this sale for a few days or until our stock is depleted. HURRY! They will not last lon ORDER YOUR FORD TODAY Valley Motor Co. LAJDD & BUSH BANKERS - Established 1868 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. T i l IF tiff ' -3 o. s. p. M elpdy instrels Today Tomorrow Get Your Tickets NOW. Tickets on Sale at Perry's Di-ug Store, George C. Will, Patton Bros. Book Store, Commercial Book Store, Crown Drug Store, Y. M. C. A., Cherrington. Piano Store, Chas. Max well, O. E. Depot, Alex Cornoyer, State House. Tickets 50c. 99 "Take it "from says the Good Judge Wise tobacco chewers long since got over the big-chew idea. A little chew of this real quality tobacco gives them better satisfaction and they find their chew ing costs even less. With this class of tobacco, you don't need a fresh chew so often and you find you're saving part of your tobacco money. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW put up in two styles RIGHT GUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco tr , .. utLzs 2 f I ttrjtttfh Uotr Today We Go Even Further Fifty years ago before Sir Tosentv Litter founded antiseptic surgery surgical opera tions often were followed by gangrene and blood poisoning. . Today such consequences are rare exceptions, and medical science has so extended the idea of sickness prevention that the great plagues of the past no longer ravage the w orld. Serums, vaccines, anti-toxins, sanitation all stand' guard before the citadel of health. Now science has iltveloped ail effective ajrent against that general condition that underlies W of all hu man disease constipation. That effective aent is Nujol. Lejidiiip: medical authorities agree tliat pills, salts, castor oil, etc., simply force and weaken the system. Nujol softens the food waste anil encourages the in testinal muscles to act naturally, thus removing the cause of constipation and self-poisoning. Nujol helps Nature estahlish easy, thorough bowel evacuation at regular intervals the healthiest habit in the world. Get a bottle from your druggist today. Var v.,!uiIU, hntlih iwirt --"Thirty Feel of Danger" t'm. u-tltt Nujol UbontuOrs, Standard Oil Cu. (Ncwlcriey). S Bruadwav, N. V. Warning thnvn-htrt at iVtyj". Nui ol Ku l it uld miy hi ttaltd faults if, nine ilie S'uitl Trad Msrk BtVfttrt feeitttctt rrfr, tnted It it the Mm Ynt may turftr frtm tu!.:it;tt:. R6. US. PAT. OFT. For Constipation SICKNESS PREVENTION Mail Orders Received Now SOUSA'S BAND Only two Engagements in Oregon Portland and Albany JOHN PHILIP SOUSA, Condactor Miss Mary Baker, Soprano Miss Florence Bardman, Violinist ALBANY ARMORY Saturday, Nov. 15, 1919 , Matinee and Evening Evening $1.65 $2.20 Matinee-$1.65 $2.20 Make Checks Payable, and Address Globe Theatre Co. Albany, Oregon. Enclosed Addressed Staiipcd Envelope i