; L.jjji..L.:ii iU:,,N-(p;':i. ci i.rtJui. r: ...Sub?,: ;,; ;j::'fc'K;;, i,:;',:? :,:::::;.r.: -ii in i imimiiiii 1 1 1 1 1 I i mini rnnminii iihihtj iinm'. O-i i ,n,,i Qi. The Capital J huma CHARLES H. 1TBEX1 imtiai ram or SATTRDAY EVENING September 8, 191$ :n;:::Ll.:!;;. i,lili::'i:i::iifffg r I PUBLISHED EVEKT EVENING EXO EPT SUNDAY, SALEM, OREGON, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. fc. BARNE8. 1'reildtot. CHAg. n FISHER. Vlc FrMldfnt. DOHA C. ANDRESES. Be. and Trru. srBst'RaTios hates rHT by carrier, per year 5.n Pr Month by mull, per jear .0 f er Mouth KILL I.KASED WIKB TKLEUKAl'H KE1"0HT SASTKI1.N ItKl'lthSt.S'l AllVtS w. D. Wsrd. Knr Tork, Tribune Building. Th Ctpltnl Journal currier boys are Inntructed to put th paper on th pore. U tbe carrier due not do this, misses you, or neglect getting th paper to yon ca time, ktodlj phone the circulation mannuer. a tbl it the only r we ean determine whether or aot the carriers are f.illowlug instructions I'hone Muln 81 before 7 :3U o'clock and paper will be ent you by e-lal oimmbiew It the carrier ha ailwed you. TUB DAILY CAPITAL JOUUNAl. la tbe only newspaper In Salem whose circulation la guaranteed bj the Audit Buraaa of Circulation NO TIME FOR PEACE MAKING. Bulgaria, which went into the war to earn a bribe of fprwl hv r.pvmanv. Dart of which has been paid in the riv ing her territory taken from Romania known as the Dob rudja, wants a truce in which a separate peace can be dis cussed. She shows the yellow streak of th$ hireling, and is ready to abandon her ally because she is getting in a bad fix and wants to save herself. She had no interest in common with Germany, but she had instincts and a dispo sition very similar, in that she was willing to advance her own interests at the expense b fany of her neighbors, re gardless of all rights. Now her army has been beaten by the allies and her old enemy the Serbians, for whom no brc ality was too great when the Bulgar was in power is at VfiK trirnnr and demanding vengeance, n wuuiu uc miu- innl to make neace with this hired assassin of a country until the wrongs she has perpetrated are in some measure righted and her leaders responsible for the atrocities against the Serbs at least punished. The Bulgars and Austrians treated Serbia with as great cruelty as that in flicted on the Belgians by Germany, and that she should fiofano n nnnisnmenL is ununimauie. muc num ow.. to be but one course in treatingwith this hireling govern ment and that is to say to the gang, "Unconditional sur render is the only terms we can make. Disarm your troops, send them to their homes and let them take up their usual pursuits until after war. At the same time no aid or sym pathy must be given the central powers, and no interfer ence made with allied troops quartered in or going through Bulgarian territory. ?hen the war is ended and Belgium Serbia and Rumania along with the greater powers assem ble around the table to make terms 01 peace ior an, men the punishment to be administered will be agreed upon and inflicted." As to Turkey, she is in the same boat, and any peace made with her should be along the same lines, the term to be made when Hohenzollernism is ( driven from power and Prussianism is no longer permitted to menace the world. Just now the civilized world is not in a forgiving mood, and its sense of justice demands that those criminal countries that have destroyed its peace, cost millions of lives and piled up a debt tor luiuw gener ations that is staggering in its immensity, be punished for their crimes, and that they be not forgiven and allowed to go free simply because they say they are sorry. When the final peace is made, the Turks control of the Bosporus and-the Dardanelles will be a tning 01 tne pasi, anu uiutc world highways will be made forever free for the com merce of all nations. It is quite probable one of the terms will be the removal of the Turk from Europe, and another the loosening of his grip on the Holy Land. At any rate just now there is not time to go into the details that will insure a world peace, and hence there is no time for talk ing of separate peace -with the hired helpers of the Prus sian assassins. Tonight another state fair passes into history. War conditions were against such an exhibit as the good old state usually puts up, and yet despite this the falling off in the exhibits was only in quantity and not in quality. The attendance, too, was lighter than usual, taken the fair through, but that was caused by light attendance on the first and last two days. Salem and Portland days, espec ially the latter were up to the old standard and this was largely due to the Elks who simply crowded the big grounds to overflowing on their day. Taken as a whole the fair can be considered a genuine success. The flax exhibit' at the state fair was one of the very finest. It should be remembered though that the initial steps which permitted this fine display, the retting, was done by Superintendent Crawford, and this is the most important step in the manufacture of fiber, for if it is not ,..45C 1 , il.J 11 ,,U., i. - 1- - i. f i. ..i5c j yivyciij xencu cui auustqueni wvrn. cannot maite a lirsi class article, superintendent Crawford's work at the prison flax plant speaks for itself and so does the gov ernor's action in discharging him without paying him the bonus promised him by the board of control. Portland lacked five million dollars of subscribing her quota for the Fourth Liberty loan within the time set' for "going over the top." This is not at all creditable to her as practically all the extra profits made from war indus tries in the state were spent in Portland. More than $60, 000,000 were expended in that city for ship-building alone, and this makes the falling down that much the harder. The campaign will be continued and the full amount will no doubt be subscribed, but the proud boast about "Ore gon and Portland being first in everything" has gene into the discard. ; Rippling Rhymes last thought again veered back to Bri an. And before she finally slept, she whispered: "1 hope he isn t with ilol lie King." (Tomorrow Brian spends another erening with Mollie King.) BULGARIAN PEACE 10VE P Washington, Sept. 23. The state de partment received official information this afternoon from an. unrevealed source eonfirming the report that Bul garia has offered an armistice to the allies. Thiagovernment has reason to oeneve tuat tne otter is siueere not a maneuver cloaking a deceptive Teu ton peace scheme. London, Sept. 2S. "The Bulgarian proposal will be naswered cither by me ained commander at Salonika or by a joint allied reply," Lord Cecil, assistanj secretary of state for foerign affairs, declared in an interview this evening. He said the Bu'-dnan proposal miirht dc a tncK, dp .nat the allies will taxe care not to be caught. by Walt Mason mm THE GARDENER. The man who doesn't do his bit is worthv of nn nar- don; and I feel chesty, I admit, when I survey my garden. I always hated honest toil, but wartime needs impressed me, and I got down and tilled the soil, although the stunt distressed me. And now, through Autumn's golden haze, I viewed the greens I've nourished, the product of my toilsome days, the plants that grew and flourished. My cockleburs are large and tall, they grew in rank profusion my neighbor views them o'er the wall, and makes pro fane allusion. My sunflowers stand, some twelve feet high, fajestic in their beauty, and turn their faces to the sky as though it were a dutv. Between the and the shed where stands mv shorthorn heifer, the milk weed rears its stately head, and bows to every zephyr. Bull thistles shade the fertile soil, and none of you is knowing how much of hard and earnest toil it took to keep them growing. My prunes and souash and rahWp died, but I have compensation; my dandelions are my pride, the finest in the nation ! I stand and view my handi work with wholesome satisfaction, and how I loathe the slacking shirk who took no proner action! A man should raise enough of greens to feed his own gross body, and though rather I slumped on beans, my jimpson weeds are gaudy. . a MM - Paris, Sept. 2S. General D'Espray, commander in cniet ot tne allied armies in the Balkans, has received at his headquarters Bulgarian plenipotentiar ies, wno propossd an armistice wiU the view of conclusion of peace, ac cording to dispatches received here to day. The general said he could not grant armistices, but would transfit the pro posal to the government. 4 National Array Camps Are Being Isolated Washington, Sept. 28 Army corps in this country are gradually being iso lated from the rest of the nation as a result of the spread of influenze. The first calls for nearly 150,000 men have been postponed so as not to expose new men needlessly to the epidemic and in camps where the disease is worse passes are practically prohibited so the epidemic shall -not bo spread to civiU ian communities. Massachusetts, the storm center of this infrequent but severe type of the grippe, had appeals out today to Prcsi dideut Wilson and governors of near by states asking doctors and nurses' aid- This will be forthcoming probab ly through Bed Cross or other means. WHO SAYS SACRIFICE? WHO is questioning whether this 4th Liber ty Loan means SACRIFICE? Of course it does but compare the CASUAL TY LISTS from "Over There" with our SUB SCRIPTION LISTS Over Here. Which IS REA LSACRIFICE? The United States National Bank Will be open early Tomorrow to receive the subscriptions of VOL UNTEER SUBSCRIBERS. -rjjr - Salem . Oregon, . f THE WIFE e t3 . It urn nnpi rn 7 - M t RUTH PLANS TO BEING HER OLD NURSE TO LIVE WITH HER . The commission appointed by the governor to con solidate commissions and rearrange the form of govern ment for Oregon, met yesterday and made some minor changes in the original plans. The changes do not amount to anything, but then come to think of it the work of the committee is all in tluU class. With German commissioners' selected by the governor, a German form of centralized government could naturally be expected, and that is what is proposed. LADD & BUSH, Bankers arc receiving subscriptions now for the J.TU . LIBERTY Mil BONDS 3 'ITA1'TKU Xl' Eulh had b.'en phriiui?, for some tinio, to bring old hnchcl north us soon as hi could afford It. it seemed to her, now Ihnt. slio had a duint place to Vive, alio longed fur her '"mammy" more than ever. While Mrs. Crawford was a (food cook anil kept the place very clean; she never had been accus tomed to wailing either on the tattle, or helping her mistress. Both missed I he little at Ioniums Uiifliol always had jjivcu her, and now that slip was so busy at t ho Bhop they would bo doubly welcome, As sho packed her Thins to go away the thought eamp to her that, the very next raise she had, she would send for Kuchel. The thought made her smilo thru her tears. It would bo heavenly once more to have 01110 0110 of her very own with her. In tho niorninp Hriitn had partly forgotten his grouch and she left him in a much better humor than she ex-. pected from his actions of tho night be fore. "Don't mope!"' she said when she -Kissed him goodbye. That was as much as she could bring herself to say. Khe hoped he wouldn't spend his time with Mollie King. When she left, that afternoon, Ar thur Mundel went to' the. ,train with her. lie had a few directions ho want ed to give her, he hud buM things he had overlooked. Ktilli had no faintest ides that it was an excuse to bo with her, away from the prying eyes of tho elevss. Neither had she mistrusted that Mr. Mamiel knew that id ian w as with Mol lie King when she-was in Philadelphia; or that ho also had seen them togeth er that day in Washinptoa Square. Yet all these things were so. And like most men of the world, Mandel put his own construction on what he had seen, knowing nothing at all about tas cir eumalauees. He insisted upon slopping at one of theAvenue fruit shops and buying Ruth a basket of fruit. Then when they reach ed the station ho bought tho late mag- ja.ines and papers. In every way pos j silde hp looked after her comfort, and jslie was grateful. Hut one word from : Hrian. a simple telephone message, cv jen, bidding her goodbye, would, have ; meant more to her than all Arthur j Mandel could have done, more than all !he did. Yet It was but natural that ho should be pleased at the attentioi her employer pave her, "I must be doing well or bo would n't be so kind to me," she said to her self as sho sunk her tooth in a delicious peach, and opened a magazine. That she herself was the causo of this kindness, sho 'nevef dreamed. It was because of her value as a business asset. She must wurk terribly hard to make good. Sho had ueh a wonderful chance. So sho thought, for a bit, af ter Air. Mandel left her. Then her mind reverted to Brian, as usual. She wonder ed what he was doing. It wa near din- nor time. Would ho go homo and have I his dinner Or would he take Mollie! King and go to some restauraju anc1 spcuu the evening? She. nover yet had visioned him ns spending the evening at Mollie 'a little studio. In some way hud not occurred to her. But Ruth was young, vitally alive, and easily interested. Sho never had traveled west before, and soon gave up all thoughts of home and business to watch the shifting scenery. Until it was too dark to see, she looked frour tho window upou tho new country con stantly unfolding to her gaae. Then sho went into the dining -car and had her dinner. But after she had gone to bod in the narrow berth in the state room Mr Mamlel had secured for her, her thoughts again souirht out Brian, and she lay wondering what he was doing. I "I want him to be happy," she said aloud, knowing all the tune sho did not want him to be happy if it meant being with Mollio King. Kuth was jealous of . pretty Mollie., More jealous, perhaps, because she had! hidden it from Brian. She did not un-! derstand Mollie ' charm,' even tho she had no understanding of her character I Then, too. Mollie was a Bohemian, one j of that class with whom Brian assoe!-! atcd before she, Ruth had known him.! What was the fascination about auch men as Claude Becklyl she wondered, her thoughts shiftinfg. To her he aeeml ed such an outre sort of a creature. I She recalled her determination to make 1 Brian's friends her friends, if thoyi would have her. "If thoy were all like the Curtisesl it wouldn't be so bad," she aid to j herself. "I wish I knew that nice couple across the hall," once more herj thoughts strayiug. "They both Jook; good, as well as intelligent. They look j like the right kind of people," then: aha thought of Mrs, Clavborne. Would.! she ever forgivo her for going to work! Hor letters, since Ruth had refused to( stop, to givo up her position at her! behest, had been few and very short. I "1 hato to have Aunt Louisa eross at mo," she murmured sleepily. But her New Books Received At Public Library and courage of tho Serbians, written by a lieutonont in tho Serbian army, Milutin Krunich. ''The Emma Gees'' the story of a machine gunner as written from" the front, by Herbert McBridc. This IIoo sier because of his hair breadth escapes in the Canadian battalion goVe rise to tho expression, McBridc ' luck. To the soldier Emma Gee means a machine gun. 'The holy city", the second volume of "Jerusalem" by the Swedish writ er, Selma Logerlof. It is a book com plete in itself, but following tro same characters found in the previous work. ''The Brown study'' a new novel by Grace Richmond. Tor The Children "The travels of birds" the habits of birds in migrating by Frank Chapman. ''Our backdoor neighbors" interest ing incidents of some of the animals we may observe, written by Krank Pel lot t. ''Serbia crucified" sketches ' of the' "An Atnericon Crusoe," a record of Serbian retreat, full of the patriotism remarkable adventures on a desert is land with onlv r a jackkuife- DONT LET THE JARS GET THIS HEADACHE we KutJBtK Kino f Oscorfi? P05iNfa KCAUiE ITS PAJnP HERE IN THIS ur mt ltm.O UfcFtCTVVE. r AFTER piERiL) tnO.THE TOPS ARE REMOV ED f ROM. THE 3AM TO RFPlOrC TMF P.UBDR RINGS . AND IF THE .TOHS QRt ntKt in h uhciw VLHCE WHERE E KUOtJtK rov lECOIlf05E. The free canning book, which the National War Garden Commission at Washington will send you for two-cent stamp to pay the postage, will tell you how to avoid this. 4 On accounj of our lease expiring, we will sell at Public Auction at the Brink meyer place, 15 miles, east of Salem, 7 miles south of Silverton and 1-2 mile north o(4Victor Point, on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1918 ' At 10 a. m. Sharp, the following described property, to-wit 1 gray mare, 6 years old, weight 1600 1 gray mare, 5 years old, weight 1550 1 gray gelding, 4 years old, weight 1550 1 bay driving horse, 4 years jold, weight about 1150. 1 gray colt, 4 1-2 months old. 17 milk cows, ages vary 5 cows, coming fresh this fall 5 heifers, three years old, will fresh en in the fall 15 heifers, two years old. 8 heifers, one year old 3 heifer calves, nine months old ' 1 high grade Holstein bull, 18 months old "1 high grade Holstein bull calf, four . months old (All cattle tuberculin tested) Cattle mostly Durhams and Holstein Many beef cattle among them .55 hens and 30 chickens 2 good cattle dogs ' ' 1 Buckeye box wagon 1 iron truck wagon with hay rack .. Litchfield manure spreader, nearly new 1 5-foof Deering mower, run two seasons 1 Oliver plow, size No. 50 1 steel beam plow, size 40 1 2-section spring tooth harrow 1 2-section drag harrow 1 bundle rack, new 1 double set of heavy work' harness 1 set of work harness 1 buggy harness 3 21-inch collars ' 1 18-inch collar ' 1 grind stone 1 No. 15 DeLaval separator, good as new Also cans and buckets - 2 cross-cut saws Oat hay, what is left ... 1 Sterling range -Other household goods . LUNCH WAGON ON THE GROUNRS Stoller & Gantenbein OWNERS A. L, STEVENSON, Auctioneer. J. W. HYETT, Clerk