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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1919)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 5, 1919. PAGE THREE OADS CAN BE BUILT IWORTH WEIGHT I IN GOLD, lit SAYS 1 ne Very Last W ord U f "7T In Over-gaiter or "Spat" style is the new concealed buckle. Adjustable. Made of fine imported broad cloth in white, castor or medium grey. New shade also the very latest New York and Chicago craze, the acit oatm These goods are the most elegant shown and can al ways be kept to that beautiful close-fitting effect that is so much desired. They are shown only at. Many new spring shoes are now in with more com . ing almost daily. ; . (Continued from page one) future of tho men returned from France who may not be able to return to their former occupations. It failed t pass the 100,000,000 Lane bill poviding for the reclamation of land as horaosteads for Soldiers. The only material provisions mado for the mon of the rturning ary was the bonus of $60 to each officer, , enlisted an and nurso provided for in the reveisue bill. Eepeal of Luxury Taxes. The house passed a repoalor of the ' semi-luxury taxes in the rcvonuo bill, . but the senate failed to act on it. This loaves the people to pay 10 percent on all articles of clothing over a cer tain price and niany other aeuu-iux-wies" unless it is appealed before Ju ly 1st. Prohibition Enforcement. Present laws will have to be applied to enforcement of war time prohibition which bocoines effective July 1. Spec einl enforcement legislation failed to i- got through the,. senate.-, judiciary com . mittce. Senator Sheppard, dry law au thor, said today, however, that present laws should prove adequate. Unemploymflflit. This question was presented to con gress through hearings before the sen ate education and labor committee at which graphic figures were presented showing that tho unemplyoment condi- tion, existing today will, if conditions run to form, be followed in a ow years by another wave of unemployment. Senator Kenyon proposed a law to pro- vido permanent means for meeting this situation, but it was assailed on the ground that its $100,000,000 would .be wasted. Congress did nothing about em ployment except to argue whether it was true thnt men wore out of work. ASSIGNED TO CONVOY Washington, Mar. 5. The war de partment today announced tho follow ing organizations assigned to early convoy: 157th, 370th and 6"9th aero squad rons; Fourteenth engineers; base hos pital 83; companies A and E, 18th en gineers; signal corps casual company No. 3. i Ted says 6 me' : "Now thai the war's overtfwhal are you om&l0do.Bo Spats for really good the kind of pie that hits you in this "mazenmm Morie's Sugar Pump, kins an the first essentUl. It is just as easy to grow them in your garden at Carrots, Beans. Peas, Lettuce, Radishes, Onions, Cabhagei etc., provided you plant MORSE'6 j climated to the Pacific Coast, true. j to-name aad full of vitality. . 5 Morse's Flower Seeds are of the i same high quality. Dealers every where sell Morse s Seeds. Write for our 1919 Garden Guide m ttslreel C C. MORSE & CO. Setdg rawer m for 45 years , MAY0RR01PH (Continued from page one) soldiors. If these contracts cannot be cancelled whv were 555 contracts in American yards cancelledi "Further, that the policy of collec tive bargaining is one of the sure methods of preventing social "unrest and the spread of bolshevisra." To Reduce H. C. L. The cost of living can be reduced from 10 to 50 per cent without cutting wages if public officials will adjourn politics and co-operate with labor and business, William Piggott, representing Mayor Hanson of Seattlo, told the con ference. Piggott also arraignod the senate as ''fiddling while Rome burned" and said that ''the panicky fooling in re card to bolshevism is all a bocev." Piggott proposed a program to meet the unemployment situation which he doclared existed everywhere. He urged, first, that mayors call together their Keep right on ealinr em r I says. never were such delicious corn flakes I' FOR $12Ji&8 A if Each District Will Be Asked To Grade And Prepare lis Reads For Hard Surfacing As one of the big problems of the present day is that of good roads and as Marion county is making an effort to secure market roads to connect with tho great highways, the following rec ouiincndadtion of the special road com mittee appointed at the February 20 meeting are of interest: - One of the first recommendations" is that each road district be required to grade out of its own funds, its own market roads, acording to surveys made by the county court. This will be one of the conditions before the county court will consider paving s, road. This requirement is similar to that of tho state highway measure that requr cs that counties grade the state high ways within their boundaries before the state will pave same. As to paving plants, the recommenda tions read: "The county court estimates that the maximum number of plants it could operate efficiently at first is four or fivo and that each one could pave five miles of road each year at a cost of $12,500 per mile. This cost per mile for paving does not include the gra-ding expense. Wo find that the county has ono paving iant and that three more will cost $112,500 ana a lifth one $37, 500." Money with which to build roads are estimated by the committee as'follows: For 1920, thcro will be received by the county $21,106 from the auto license tax returned to the county, $43,000 from tho ono mill tax and $175,000 from the general road fund, making a total of $239,106. The first year of building 20 miles of road will be a lit tle moro expensive than others a8 there must be included the initial cost of $112,500 for three paving plants, For tho second and third years of building 20 miles each, the cost is estimated at tho $12,5000 per mile rate. Ono of the suggestions of the com mittee is as follows: "We recommend that the county be authorized to sell ten year serial bonds to tho extent of not less than $200,000 when tho funds are needed, or a special tax of 4.65 mills to raise the said $200,000. This will provido" suf ficient funds for the 1920 requirements and provide a surplus to defray the miscellaneous expenses above mention ed." If the bonds are to be retired at the rate of $50,000 a year beginning with the sixteh year, they will all be retired by the ninth year. loading merchants and insist in force ful language that they must reduce the cost of living anywhere from 15 to 25 por cent 41 And they -jjan do. it,M he added, and later said that living costs could be reduced irom 10 to 50 per cent. His second proposal was that manu facturers should be asked to start re pairs and enlargements immediately. ''You will find in all your towns jobs for men if this is done," ho said. Ask Shipping Board's Policy. He next recommended that the ship ping board be called upon to announce its policy, pointing out that contracts on numerous steel ships were being held in abeyance on the Pacific coast while men wero unemployed. Tho railroad problem must be set tled immediately, Piggott said, declar ing business is not so much interested in what is done as it is in having some thing done. He scored congress for failure 'to ap propriate money to finish the Alaskan railroad and for not acting on Secre tary Lane's $100,000,000 reclamation project. "Make Them Do Duty." 'We must get after these senators," Piggott said. "We must make them do their duty." "It is not necessary, at this time to reduce wages. We're going to take care of our returning labor on the pa cific coast and we 're not going to do it by fighting labor " Piggott praised labor on the coast and said that bolshevism is practically impossible because conditions 4icre do not compare with conditions in Eu rope. Ernest Trigg, a Philadelphia labor leader,, followed Piggott and advocated home loan banks to aid home building and correction immediately of the schedule of freight rates on building materials which, die said, was design ed to prevent their movement during the war. Mayor Carmichael of Sacramento, Cal. advocated tho formation of citi zen's associations to aid in home building, PoYkta, Sierra And Santa Marta Arrived Now York, Mar. 5. The transports Powhatan, Sierra and Santa .Marta ar rived today with a total of 4,097 offi cers and men aboard. The. Powhatan, which carried 2,530 men left Bordeaux on February 7. but was obliged to turn back because of an epidemic of influenza aboard. The Sierra had 1,469 troops aboard which will go to Camp Merritt. She left Bordeaux on February 19 and was delayed five days by boiler trouble. The Santa Marta, which sailed from Bordeaux on February 17, carried 98 casual officers and men Those on board the Powhatan were the Sixty Sixth regiment of coast ar tillery complete, and portions of the Forty Seventh regiment of coast artil lery. The 335th field artilery and 336th field artillery Aboard the Sierra were the 31Zth ammunition train complete; detachment i of casual company 34; Bordeaux con valescent detachments 72, 109, 110, 111, 112 and 114, threa naval officers and kt l r r : I Milwaukee Man Says Mcther Suffered Eighteen Years Taslac Restores Her. "If everybody in Milwaukee knew how much good Tanlao has done my mother there, isn't a one who would n't think just as I do that it 's wortn it's weight in gold," was the inter esting statement made by Frank P.. 'Pasage. brakerulnn on the Chicago, -.Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad, living at 26 35th St., Milwaukee, recently. Mr. Passage's mother, Mrs. Minnie Passage, at the time she came to Mil waukee, four years ago, had been a resident of Shannon, Illinois, for fif ty years and is beloved by all who know her. "For eighteen or twenty years," continued Mr, Passage, "my mother has had trouble with her stomach and I can truthfully say that Tanlac is the only medicine I hae been able to lind in all that time to do her any good. (Nothing she would eat agreed with her and she wag subject' to frequent at tacks of acute indigestion. In a little while after eating, her food would sour and bloat her up with gas and cause her to puffer for hours. At times this gas would press on her heart, al most cutting off her breath, and I actually thought she was going to die. She complained of awful pains thru her stomach and left side and would belch uip sour gas for hours. T have oft en had to get up in the middle of the night and doctor her on account of this gas, and I don't believe she ever got a good night's rest on account of tho pain she suffered. During the past year she lost twenty five pounds in weight, or moro, and all her strength seemed to leave 'her. During the past six months she 'has failed very much faster. All sho was able to eat was a little soup or milk and soft boiled eggs anrf oven this would hurt her. Her con dition became so serious that on De cember the seventh I quit work in or der to stay .home and take care of her. "One day I noticed a Tanlao testi monial in tho paper which was so straightforward tun! convincing that I told mother I wanted her to try the medicine. She agreed and at the time she started taking it she had been down in bed for five weeks and couldn't stand on her feet but tt few minutes, if she tried. Well, she' has taken two bottles now and you may'bclieve it or not, she is tip doing all hor cooking and housework and is just feeling fine. She. is now sixty nine years of ago, but I declare she gets around like ono many yearg younger. She sleeps liko a child, eats anything she wnnts and that gas and indigestion has stopped bothering her almost entirely. I have never seen such a change in anyone as Tanlac has made in mother. I am very grateful for it and she is feeling mighty happy herself. Wo can't say "too much in be half of Tanlac, and ha"Je been telling everyone in the. noignboruood about it." -' ' .' ; Tanlac is sold in Hubbnrd by Hub bard Drug Co., in Mt. Angel by Bon Uooch. in (Jervaia by Jonn Jveuy, m Turner by H. P. Cornelius, in Wood burn by Lyman H. Storey, in Salem by Dr. A. C, Stone, in Silverton by Goo. A. Steclhnmmcr, in Gates by Mrs. J P. MoCvrdy, in Staytonr by C. A. Beau champ, in Aurora by Aurora Drug store, in St. Paul by Groceteria Store Co., Inc., in Donald by M. W. Johnson and in Jefferson by Foshay & Mason. crossjSsii w is n OR CONSTIPATED Look Mother! If Tongue Is Coated WTe California Syrup Of Figs." Every mother realizes, after jiving hor children "California flyrup of Figs," that this is their ideal laxa tive, because they love its pleasant taste, and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels without griping. When cross, irritalble,- feverish or breath is bad, stomach (our, look at the tongue, mother! If eoated, give a tea spoonful of this harmless "fruit laxa tive" and in a few hourg all the foul, constipated waste, soar bile and undi gested food passes out of the bowels, and you have well, playful child again. When it's little system is full of eo!d, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoet, indgeetion, eolie remem ber a good "insids cleansing" should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothorg keep "Califor nia Syrnp of Figs," handy; they know a teaspoonful today save a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for bot tle of "California Byron of F'lgn," which has direction! for babies, child ren of all ago ftui growa-nps printed on the bottle, Beware of counterfeits sold here, go don't be fooled. Get the genuine, mads by "Oaliforaia Fig Sy rup company. " UTE BELETDiS. Sacramento, Cal Barkeep Scott ex hibits a six inch fish that issued from the water itap. Ho dropped it hastily in a jar of alcohol to preserve it as an argument against drinking water. Ixi8 Angeles. A quiet wedding was solemnized here when Frank Burson, former ball player, and Mrs. Vinnie Mills weT married. The ceremony was written. Bride and groom are deaf . a v H i OS Spring house cleaning time will soon be here, let us save you money on your purchases. All Rugs are Reduced Let us show you TRADE - IN TO CALL GERMANS TO PARIS WITHIN WEEK AFTER WILSON COMES By Time President Arrives, Arrangement For Sending Food Will Be Made. By Fred S. Ferguson, (United Prcsg Staff Correspondent.) Taris, March 5. Tho Germans will bo called to Paris to receive term, of the ' i:,.,; . " .,. pciumumjf pcttuo W11IUI1 U WUUK Or ton days after President Wilson's ar rival, ucording to tho belief cxpresed in certain otticial quarters today. Conditions of the separate trouty wore saia to havo been worked out to an ex tent where formal approval of Wilson, Premier Lloyd-Georgo and Premier Or lando would be obtained within a re markably short time af tor they had un dcrtakeu discusion of tho tonus. While the mechanics of the dealing with tho German delegates have not been worked out, it was assumed that enemy emissaries would first bo callod to Versailes to receive the terms which they would submit to their government as was done with tho armistice After the German government had ratified the treaty tho enemy delegates would proceed to Versailles a second time when tho pact would be signed. In ovent this procedure is carried out, it is probable only a special committee will receive the German emissaries on their first visit, a plenary session of the conference beng called when the sig natures are affixed. Jiu,d New Atmospcwv, President Wilson will find an entire ly new atmosphere when ho arrives here. Concern over what is going on iu Germany will be topmost among the anxieties, rather than individual de sires and designs of tho various ua tioualtics. It is possiblo thut arrange ments admitting 270,000 tong of fats and cereals into Germany win do com pleted before tho presiaem ickvuvs .far-is- The Fronch view that the allies are entitled to Gorman money is apprecia ted, but it is pointod out, and tho French realize that unless the Gorman situation is relieved chaog is likely to result. The reparations committee will have reported on the amount o luuvinni- ticg Gormany is able to pay, pnobably between $25,000,000,000 and $40,000,- 800,000. Reports Ready Soon. In addition to tho framo work of the military, naval and air' terms of the preliminary peace being completed, the report of the committee on internation alization of ports and waterways will be ready and strong iiidicatmontg have been drawn up by the responsibilities committee. Tho president will also finl that any signs of hostility toward him have van ished. Attacks on tho league of na tions in the American senate have brought abou he sharpest reaciot hero, with open expression that the lenguo will bo impossible without the United Stales as a member. Tho Russina problem will still con front the allies, but the Americans and British are clinging to the principle than investgation is necessary to deter mine the true conditions in Russia and are maintaining their strong stand gainst intervention. The dispute between the Italian and Jugo-Slavg dobutless will require oarly action. Springfield, III. Wilo gin fizzes may not eomfort anyone after July 1. A bill here prescribes prison for him who tappeth the fodder fermenter for jag juice. I E. L STIFF it SON! Worcester, Mass. Worcester boys advereising a dance urged patrons to "come audi park with Worcester's beautiful girls.'.' No girls attended. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY .:y V ( jf V-.:J A J ff our fine line of rugs priced - YOUR - USED - GOODS Ye LIBERTY TODAY NOW TODAY INHfa.SECpNpJ'rTTrvl Hopkins Jenkins Addressed Monmouth Normal School (Capital Journal Special Service) Hopkins Jenkins, principal of the Jef ferson high school at Portland, was a recent visitor at the normal. He ad dressed the chapel assembly on the sub ject "Power and Influence of Anion cun Ideals," stressing tho special ideals of liberty, nationality, sacrifice and sorvico and showing in a most con cise manner how each of these idoals have dominated national thought and how all have served to influence and form the America of today. Ex-students of Jefferson high woh aro now at tending normal, entertained at dinner on Thursday evening in" honor of Prof. Jenkins, Prg and Mrs. Ackerman, Dean Todd and Mrs, Currain, the dinner being served at the dormator. Gave Intrepretatlve Flay. An illustration of tho modern peda gogic idea of what a school entertain ment ghould bo was given last Wednes . km. ; iff t- -:: .- -s sir , i p - Safe UUtfChilm mtdXnim No Cooking For Infanta.In valiels andCrowIng Children. The Original Food-Drink For All Ages. r.AY2StACH CftPo-FRMGE SHAPE HMR NKTS I within your reach "IT A HlV re day at the chapol hour when. Misi Houx, fifth and sixth grndog critic at Independence, presented her pupils in an intrepretetion og the "Cause of tho Tiojun War." The play was dra matized and staked entirely from the regular daily work in tho class room, showing the originality and merit on the part of the teachers and pupils and developing creative talent in the lend ers. v ouM Explains League of Nations, Frof. J. B. V. Butler, head of the his tory department, occupied the ehapcl periods Monday and Tuesday with a very detailed explanation and elucida tion of tho terms of the league of ua tions treaty. Mr. and Mrs. J. C, Mulkey, who have bought the Model . grocery of C. C. Liglitfoot, took possession Monday morning. Herbert Hoover has been appointed by President Wilson as director gen eral bf the American relief administra tion created under the 100,000,000 famine relief bill: I V( Ml I Rich Milk, Malted Grain Extract in Powder I OTHERS ar IMITATIONS - i 4 ' . t X 4 T Sal "HOLD-TICHrHAlS NCTS RNJOY AN ENVIASLC NATIONAL lSuTrA110NAND711fRlWOSHlPOFMlUJ)NSOFWOMtN HOlMKiltT" HAIR NETS ARE MAD OP THE HNIST REAL HUMAN HAIR. ALL SHAUES. tVERY "HOLD-TIGHT HAIR NET 'A"NTEJS?,??SR SkvUHDU). ORDtR AT YOUR FAVOiUrE STORE. IFTHLY CANNOT SUWLY YOUh WRITE US. STATE COLOR AND SrtAlfc . .j tu hic M i i st rvi r- is-v t r r r STARCHED OR SOFT THE ARROW IS A DEPENDABLE INDICATUH OF A SMART SBRVICEABLB COLLAR Cl ntnr, Pt Aonv Si Co.. Itt.. Makrr$. Troy. W. Y. and dumb. f 17 casual army officers.