PAGE TEN. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL PROFESSOR DELIA CRO VDER 14ILLER RESIGNS FROM WMM FACOIV Professor Delia Crowder Miller has resigned her position as head of the puonc speaking department 01 rru lamette University. Since her strenu ous work on the pageant last June, Professor Miller s health has been un certain and she feels that a Changs la needed. The following is from President Carl G. Doney's letter: "Dear Professor Miller- v, jgnation presented last week has been considered and it is with deep regret inai me university accepts It. to take effect from this date. Coming to the to the Institution two and a half years ago as the head of the department of puoiic speaking, you have strengthen ed and increased the enrollment, you have sought to build permanent foundations and you have been devot ed to your work. Personally and on behalf of the university, I thank you. I trust that jour release from heavy Muruen. win enable you to take com plete rest and that your strength will speedily be restored. "Very sincerely yours. "CARL O. DONEY." Willamette University has been for tunate to retain the services of Profes sor Miller for the past two years ana half. Her Ihnrni..!, . ---- -e- unu niunern methods of education have placed her ... w.e jronc ranks of her profession both as a teacher and as an interpreter f literature. Her department has been m me most popular In the univer sity because the students have recog nized her superior understanding of her work and they have swelled the enrollment of the department from than fifty to one hundred and six ty .luring the time she has been here. Her strontr r"hfHn i . helped many a doubting young man and woman at Willamette into a new concept on of life and .,. m,ln"Z "cr influence and Inspiration will be missed in university circles and her place will be hard to fill Shipping Board Diverts 22 Ships To Coast Service Suit Will Test Federal Trade Board Powers Washington. Mar. Id. Suit to test the powers of the federal trade com mission was instituted todnv in the supreme court of the District of Pn. lumbia by the Maynard Coal company of Columbus, Ohio, the first of sav- eral legal actions planned by the Na- . I lionai ( :oal nRrwntion n 1., ....... i i I .... . . . ... ...I.llll.v Portland Cir Ufa. 1 A a . hnw f.. . v, . . . : - . : . , ... . . A vuiiuuiMiun limy go in ed demand by shipping interests of requiring private corporations to fur- the Pacific Coast has brflnrhr from nish information nt th..i. l. ------ -. ........ vi ..... . i vuaiucaa. ohMZPiaf fZfV, i ?-ciation said the suit, were started vessels from the A,.a e ," " "5JP .mnt and no wa "Uiito service on th. P..!,.- .."7." Z, Bn a"acK on lBe commission. .... . .viiin UVVVI uius IU MAWS HEAR DISCUSSIONS ON Um PROBLEMS The action instituted today took the a leiegram received by the Portland uumuicu muay iook me bene(its chamber of commerce from United form of a relest for an injunction to ' subieet- States Konatnr Ch.,l r i-xt.j (restrain the commission frnm I J" U McNqfry States Senator Charles made public today. what proportion of thin tnnno- which Will coma from lh Atlantic . the Pacific will be available for Port land loading is not stated, though it e'ierany presumed that at least three of the - .L..su vu ai those of the Columbia-Pacific Ship- s uuinpuny lor the establishment and maintenance nf a Vnn, nui.. iwuii v-umti line. Negotiations Over Railroad Wastes Re-Opened Today Washington, M,r. 10. Wage ne ot atlon. between the railroads and tlie r organized 'employes were for mally re-opened today when commit- tZ n'8 UnlnB M the A - tlon of Railway Executives the own era organization-met to begin the ; Ti'"n 01 J,,lnt boa to handle ...uui controversies. , " '" was understood to be 10 "iv a definite program before the conference with rspeo o the wage demands which the unions lHt August laid before President Wil- Three distinct propositions to be nldered by the Joint board are the union demands, the reported program 'f the railroad P,.i,.i. , rln Sand And Gravel Rights Decided M. W. Payne of Marshfield and the Rcedsport Warehouse & Supply com pany of Reedsnort wer .u. sand and gravel rights in the vicinity of Brandy bar in the Umpqua river between Gardiner on on(,..i t the state land board in session Tues-day. The lessees will Dav th -tot. .u. rate of 10 cents per cubic yard for all sand and gravel taken from the strean, with a minimum annual royalty of JuOO. The lease runs for a period of ,u.8 ana is the first to be exe cuted under the law of 1920 which gives the state lanrt hn. ..,,.,. . lease the beds of streams for sand and gravel purposes. Similar leases will be made on other streams, it was stat- The price of 10 cents per cubic yard has been f xed hv th i, , ' . restrain the commission from renuir- ing monthly reports showing costs, in come andtonnage, and an annual re port of financial conditions, it wa re cited that the commission issued full) Harmonious labor conditions, nmio able relations between employer and employe and the value of arbitration in labor disputes, formed the topics of mscussion at the regular weekly meet ing of the Salem Rotarians in Hotel .Marion this noon One pecularity of ne meeting wag that each member of ine ciuo brought- na nt h. from his establishment to derive the uoirms irom tne talks on these vital The solution to the ! il.ri, nmklaM e tuudy, Aauison Bennett, newspaper man, Said, is the erWatinr. f Kt. worklngmen and the employer of the uwi i"B commission issued lull ) aim me employer of the instructions for the preparation of the p?blems thaf confront both . From it-puna, wnicn in iact nresrrihAH u system of accounting for coal mining operations differing substantially from those commonly in use. Board Places Ban On Sale Of Olives Helena, Mont., Mar. 10. Sale of olives and olive preparations in glass containers Is absolutely prohibited in Montana bv a decision of h ofoto board of health. This action was taken discord and dispute! a inuu ui me ueains oi live per- jim ... , sons at Java, Mont., from bacilli bo-LA T qUe in that U is' 80 far tullnus. " ,heknew- the only city in the United """" imving an arbitration board to f .w... VWVM . mill tnis education come on .!..... , . .. uuucioiiiim ing from which must rise accord and harmony, be asserted. The watchword of the Salem Cen tral Trades and Labor council is co operation. L. J. Simeral, president, told the Rotarians. He spoke of the aim of the council f on .i preach co-operation and harmony, and .ueu me arbitration principle that is gradually becoming an integral part of labors existent .u .. r- . , ' lc t,u lnat tne Central Trades and Labor council, so as ne had a voice in Its control, would aid at all times in keeping down LaRose Planned To Give Himself Upy He Declares Jack La Rose, Portland "gasoipe" murderer, who was returned to the state prison here Tuesday after a year's absence as a fucritive from hi- tice, had planned to return to Oregon l soon to give himself up to prison of ficials with a view to seeking a par don, according to the story he told iu r. iv. enyaer, state agent who brought him back from Shawnee, Okla., where he had been arrested. LaRose at the time of hi arroxt and for six months previous there to had been runninir a hotel In Shiirnu under the .name of Roy Cassie. Some three months ago, according to his story, he was married to a Shawnee girl, to whom ho haj v I - : . . me storv lL hcrime arl his prison tMarvi and who, according to his i..."' l , . . "'"'I IldU Pixvaiiea upon mm to return trt gon to "square his aecnnnt ii.il iiio state. It is expected that Mrs. LaRose no is reputed to be wealthy in her own right, will come to Oregon soon to intercede for her husband in an attempt to secure his release. Lanose escaped from the prison wooa camp March 5. 1919. oft.. .,.. is ien years or a life sentence for manslaughter, killing a Portland pawnbroker with a length of gaspipe w IPiff, n MEDFORD IAN FDLEsl H. A. Canaday of Jledford tn.iov filed his nominating petition with the secretary of state's office for a nn on the republican primary ballot as a candidate for district attorney of Ieath cint .. m- Wednesdavi-Wl. tt 3 uiness from k s mily rJi N t street The 1S35 - the chapel of tne 'Lke4 company , Q J and In the investigations mnd hv tho state board of health In tho lnhnr. atory at the cauitol one of h con. tainers in which olive were offered. ror sale in Montana was found to be contaminated. BANK STOCK INCREASF.il The capital stock of the Statu nnk of Rainier at Rainier, Columbia coun ty, has been increaspd from $15,000 to $20,000, according to a certificate nam with will H. Bennett, state su settle labor disputes, said. T. E. McCroskey and h s employer comes only when there is a feeling of partnership be tween them. T: P. v. . .1.. mt i i.-.. "l 1 nomas thr. ?Jen mil,S' '"wl- He said that it is the dutv of ,h , . give good wages, good working condi t.o, , . to provide care for emp.oyes uccmont. The emlowr must associate with the en.p.oves gX their good win resDect ; ' f.a2 permtentlent of banks. A certificate , ,AH complete support and !tat hn.,k or " "'""-n. ne Besides his na." id Mr rii. ir. r.. . ' his untime,; J Pru has hZTTT-" New Scrims, Marquisettes and Curiam Materials JUST RECEIVED Portland Veteran Fatally Injured Portland. n m m . .. Burch, 30, :ZA""."r company B, 81st engineers and re cently employed as brakeman on the I ,i irtif KRln5 comlany's logging ir r "regon, was fatally njured when he fell between two cars according to advices receiVed here today. Burch is said to hull Wt a widow in Seattle. 9 filed by the Clatskanie State bank of oiatskante, Columbia county, shows an Increase in capital from $25,000 to $50,000. OAS SALES ARE BIO 6 "?mhetlc strike were -"rfvvt iur, ivay A total of 303,219 crallmis of ,Sfii0 ana ti(,.ii gallons of distillate were hold by the Union report led today with the secretary for president. tC soldieTlln SOLDIERS OPPOSE ARMY OFFICEK FOR PRESIDENT Davenport, la., Mar. 10 A spread poll among returned ,i,n. ff this vicinity brought n m. One of the irrontct 1, . .. world Th r 1 , ""'iis in the blln A t , Gl'"nhaw Wllkinson-ls Wind. But by tuste, touch imi mn "SSjn.d. by President Wsou j ZT!l or states office. Accompanying the report was a check for fans ia i cover the state tax imposed on fuel oil sales. Former Kmperor Charles of Aus tria has now in his own right less than $500 a year on whih tn ,... himself, his wife and six children. Uncle Joe Cannon is the only man living whose name appeared on the same political ballot ith , f Anrnnnm Lincoln. S ififlra. fcV mi in, mm, 111 against prohibition bv a large vote and the score on military train ing was close. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT Bought several months ago before the recent advance in nrW w able to offer this lot at prices below the market 36 ih Je-&YZ 29 c, 50c, 55c and 65c Our Prices Ahvays the Lowest GALE & CO. Formerly Chicago Store Court and Com'l Sis. A New Hospital Would Be a Great Asset to Salem We Have An Extra Fine Stock of bins U resses In mi, from 2 to 14 years. They are mad. n a ereat variety ot styles ot such Eood mater ..o nun.,, junii, wiute vones, popnns ana ginghams. White lawn and voile dresses. Poplin and Peque Dresses Gingham Dress , HATS FOR Women and Girls We have just received another fine new; shipment of the latest in Spring Hats. You owe it to yourself to come and look them over and see what we will save you. GMs hats $1.29 to $4.98 W omen's hats....$4.50 to $16.50 42.98 to $8.90 .$3.98 to $5.50 .$1.69 'to $5.90 We call your attention to our new Summer Dress Goods fTLh n make your selections the lowest. dreMes- 0ur Prices Fancy voiles....59c to $1.19 yd Fancy crepes ....'..........p yd Novelty silks ..... ,.$1.39 yd 1 11 , 11 1 11 j 11 11 11 I I ryr 11 iJ I I SS Pf 1 1 i II V s '-Mm - li MM 1 ti 71, ft w jr 7. J? 0 Incorporated A NATIONWIDE INSTITUTION You can economize by baying Hart Shaffner and Marx Clothes. Every man knows that Clothes are high priced; and the poor ones cost about the same as the good ones. Every man wants to get the most for his - money. There is only one thing to do Bay Hart Shaffner and Marx All Wool Highly tailored Clothes. " They save for you because they last Ion ger. There are no Clothes more stylish, more dignified, in better taste than the new ones for Spring from Hart Shaffner and Marx, One, two and three huUnn c.;r ..,, . ..... , sauare nntrhoJ n0u. " viir vreasiea suits, coats a little longv, Teare thea-ouble breasted; they are M?edZl?ri .conservative suUsM many different ZCantja1lTJa,i and Marx S" cause throughout the -Swr rd"',i?arf Shattierand Marx have supplied us Let us show them to you rccommd to any one. . You take no chance to lose if you purchase Here. it fj&i$r$t - nm 111 Hi ami, .Copyright 1919, Hart Schaffner & Marx Salem Woolen Mills Store l CP. BISHOP, ProP' Every Family in Marion and Polk Counties a Patron. in f- lru Cup St I