c533 G The Capital Jouma 8 CHAHLES H. FliTIEg Editor and Publisher mono. TUESDAY EVENING April 13 1919 I Pa mint i sin Published Every Evening Except Sunday, Salem, Oregon. Address All Communications To d)c Mk$pH Uournat ALEM 136 S. Commercial St. OREGON SUBSCRIPTION BATES Dal. by Carrier, per year $3.00 Per Month.. faily by Mail, per year ..$3.00 Per Month- 45a 35 FULL LEAtD WIKE TKLiiUKAl'H BEi'OUT THE BILED SHIRT. FORKION REPRESENTATIVES W D. Ward, New York, Tribune Building. W. II. Etockwell, Chicago, People' Oaj Building The Daily Capi'al Journal carrier boys are instructed to put the paper on porch. If tho carrier does not do this, misses you, or neglect getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, a this i the only way we can determine whether or not the carrier are following instructions. Phone CI before 7:30 oYlork end a paper will be sent you by special messenger if the timer baa missed you. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL I the only newspaper in Salem whose circulation is guaranteed by the ' Audit Bureau Of Circulation DEMOCRACY IN INDUSTRY. While most thinking people in the world are pon dering over the problem of Bolshevism, and representa tives of the so-called "capitalist class" are particularly worried over the spread of radicalism in general, it is a good time to consider suggestions offered for the solu tion of the labor problems by Dr. Charles W. Elliot, presi dentemeritus of Harvard. Dr. Elliot is recognized as one cf the nation's clearest and fairest thinkers on economics, and he has given years of study to the subject. He holds, first of all, that employers must abandon "every form of autocratic government," because autoc racy today is no more tolerable m industry than it is in political life. He urges wider recognition of labor unions and a universal acceptance of the "collective bargaining" .principle ; better provision for the health, education and morals of working people, not as charity but as a matter of justice and sound business; an extension of co-operative management and an equal voice - for employes on managing committees; the development of the partner ship system, giving labor a proper share in the profits and business control. v ; These suggestions would have sounded very radical a few years ago. Today they are likely to be accepted, by employers awake to the signs of the times, as simple justice and practical common sense. But the duty is not all on the side of the employer. The employe is reminded by Dr. Elliot that if he hopes to inaugurate a new and better system he must get rid of the idea th;it the capitalist is his natural enemy; he must give up all practice of violence to attain industrial ends;! and he must give up, particularly at this time of world wide shortage of commodities, the idea cf an absurdly short working day and a limited output. It is undoubtedly along these lines that safety and prosperity are to be found for both employers and em ployes. What both sides must clearly recognize is that there can be no safety nor prosperity for either without the willing eo-operr.tion of the other, and that willing co operation con only be obtained through square treatment. Somebody writes to the editor commenting on the fact that "the white linen shirt has become almost obso lete in the United States," and with it is disappearing its high-toned brother, the silk tile, is reverently known as a "plug hat." Quite truea fact for which such male Ameri cans as pause a moment to ponder on changing fashions will devoutly thank Heaven. The "biled shirt" is gone, indeed. Gone with all its irritations and discomforts. We still see the immaculate and painful article of apparel worn occasionally with evening dressanother abomin ation that will pass in time and now and then find a j preacher or professor or an elderly, old-style gentleman Aiauiuiug ins snowy nom wun an air oi Qisuncuon ro lofty unconsciousness. But the present generation has almost forgotten the miseries of encasing itself in boiler plate and losing its callor button inside that impenetrable chest-protector. The soft shirt, varicolored, has triumph ed. Shirts have been made safe for democracy. In England, we are told, the stiff boiled tunic sf.ll maintains ifs hold. British statesmen keep up the tra dition. The British government functions as of old in white and adamantive breastplates, cuffs and collars with a "topper" tilted on its beetling brow. But even there the custom is doomed, for Britain, too, is turning demo cratic. Even an English premier or lord may some day be able to dress comfortably without feeling that he is shaking the foundations of the empire. P OF W LAXATIVE Lock at Tongue! Remove Poi sons Froa Siosaca, Liver And Bowels. ray kukes nuts FOR lOi GlPffi Quota For County And Individ ual Towns Less Than la Last Drive. i tt "---X So the republican leaders in the new congress are dis posed to let good legislation like the federal bank reserve rural credits, federal trade commission and some half dozen other measures of importance stand. And yet when these laws were passed they were branded by the opposi tion party leadersas crude and unworkable in nearly all respects. All of which shows that President Wilson put through in his first term a bigger program of construc tive legislation than both parties had been able to accom plish from the end of the Civil war up to that time. Of course Former Secretary McAdoo will not run for president. Having become connected with the moving pic ture business, he has something that pays better and in sures greater popularity. ' Ought to be the biggest year in the history of Salem and it will be "that if the business and commercial in terests take full advantage of their opportunities for expansion. Putting men like Debs behind the prison bars is the surest way of making the world safe for democracy. In spite of the lurid stories of allied dissensions at the VP- 1 im iVry.ee. an: now officially assured tha' the German representatives will be given an opportunity to sign tne treuty .u April 2.1th. Those high-priced sp' . ial correspondents have evidently been writing more to fill fcpace than anything else- Some of our American bolshevists might change '.Vi r minds if they really had to live in a Russianized America. Many of them advocate the overturning of organized government and respectable society merely as a fad. Mentally they are weaklings who do not realize what 'the practical application of their theories would mean. Odessa has been captured aeain. der if the war is really over. Sometimes wo won- THE PROMOTER'S WIFE BY JANE PHELPS BAB PLANS A SOCIAL CAREER FOR HEIiS.ELF AND HER BOY. RIPPLING RHYMES By Watt Mason THE LAWN MOWER. How dear to my heart are the thoughts of the winter, the winter that's gone with a jump and a jerk, when law yer and banker and tinsmith and printer got snow in their ears when they went to their work. Oh, winter's a season of laughter and loving, of singing the ballad and telling the yarn; but spring is at hand and I soon must be shoving the rusty old mower that stands in the barn. How sweet is the snow when it's seeping and sifting! I'd gloat o'er a snowbank, I'd greet it with smiles; how pleas ant the snow when it's whirling and drifting we don't have to mow it or rake it in piles. The snow is all gone from the hill and the valley, it's melted and gone from the an'.' 1 " Have to quit playing baseball in the fclley, and push the old mower that stands in the barn; the back action mower, the stem winding mower, the man killing mower that stands in the barn. "TVTV t'llAI'TKU I.VIII. When Neil returned after taking Lor raine In j 1 1 1 , I thought I would lisl; hi ill where lie hud been and who he had been with. Hut lie sci.rcely liud taken off his runt before lie an id; ''1 rim see by your face that you want to talk, Bali, but 1 inn ill no mood for conversation, n ml if you don't niiml I will go immediately to lied." Mv wits went wool gathering. 1 for got everything 1 wanted to any um! meekly returned: Very well, 1 won't talk if von don't wi;nt ine to. ' ' "I certainly don't not to-night." He had Maid lie had spent nil unpleas ant evening. 1 win positive he had uot lieeu wtili Itlnncho Orton because of hut I. ermine had said. If he were really tired and worried T did not wi.nt to mid to hia anxieties in any way. J had read often, in stories of mnrried life, that when a man came home tired, Accept "California" Svrun of Fins uiny iook tor ine name ralitornia on tho package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harm less laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its delicious fruity tasto EuM di rections for child's dose on each bottle. Give it without fear. povcrfy. As long as thero is necessity for struggle, husbands and wives bear that struggle together. Their lives are so entwined by necessity, that they never get far from each other iii thought or in action. Everything that affects one also affects the other. It is a mutter of mutual concern how ev ery dollar is spent. But with a plethora of money their in terests aro apt to diverge. Each make new friends who, while not perhaps in tending to help to lead thorn farther afield in their lives together. Before they realize it ho is going his way, she hers. They have no little, problems to talk over; they neither earn, suvo, or spend together. They forget to consult each other over tho things they do, the money they spend; it isn't necessary. Ho it had been with us in all tho small things of lifo, and it was fast becoming so with tho big things.. For, while I planned my campaign I was so interest ed that I almost failed tn notice when Neil remained out, or what time he came in. (Tomorrow The Interior Decorator Takea Charge nf tho House.) NEW ENGLAND CUT OFF OF WORLDI BY TELEPHONE STRIKE Eight . Tlioasand Operators Leave Work tarly This Morning. The quota for Salem for the victory liberty loan, as announced by county chairman F. G. Peckal ach this morn- , is 20.I."0. The quota for Marion cmintv is fl 'Mi, .iil0. With the announcement of the quota for S.ilrm libcrtv lean headquarters at the 'Commercial club took on new life. The quota for the fourth Im.'rty loan fer -'Nilem was if'.'li". :''. Wi'.h the smaller amount to be subscribed for this fifth loan, there is a feeling among those in charge of the eanipi.igu that the people uf .the city will respond uib erally when the workers are out nest week. John II . Mi'Xary as genera!, bus as--limed char jo of the wera and went to I'ortland this morning to rcvoive final instructions from the state headquar ters. TW four cjlouels, to report di reiilv to (iviieral JlrNarv a'e T. A. Li.esley, W. M. Hamilton, W. 1. Staley ami Joliji 11. Farrar. The uppoiiitement ef captains ')' ul' colonels are as follows: By T. A. LivesK.v W. Conn. 1 Dy er, .. A, Kurtz Jos. Waunigartner. Frank Pavey, Fred Krixon, T. K. Fo'd. M. Ij. Meyers, Hal I). Fatten and Homer II. tiuiih . liv W. M. Hamilton W. 0 . Allen, A. N". Moreficld, Chns. Vick Jl. tt. Suelling, V. E. Fullerton, E. F. Carle ton, Jos. Graber, Lot L. I'earce, W. A. ?warshn!l and John Jiaync. By W. I. Staley U. !.' Rover, Hen P. West Dr. Morehouse, A. A. Lee, Hurley O. White, Elmo White, (. A. Uartmnn, Percy M. Varney and El mer Paue. By .lohn H. Farrar (!. E. Halvor sen, E. S. Tillinghust, J. A. Baker, ii. E. Purvine, Roy Shields, W. A. Wiest, Wm. Gohlsdorf, Paul V. John son and Arthur Lawrence. Each of the captains has been assign ed a certain district to work. And as worker in each district, the captains are to select ten men each. Monday morning tho 3(il workers will go out in to the city nnd the seven rural routes lending into tho c!ty to receive sub scriptions for the victory loan. The quotas for the other cities in the county outside of Salem are as follows: Auaisville $ 9705 Aurora 24,230 Donald 7,5.10 Gervais 10,!)'H Hubbard 13,250 Jefferson 15,1110 Monitor 6,000 Mt. Angel 44,11'JO Stnyton and Mill City 51,1)0 Sih orton .' 142.150 Ht. Paul 10,700 Turner 7,1150 Woodburn T1,S00 CITIZENS OF PENNSYLVANIA TOWN DISPERSE BOL3HEVIKI tn i lyi flJlTUff T WITH NEURALGIA Use Soothing Musterole When those aharp pains go shooting through your head when your skull seema as if it would split, just rub bttla Musterole on your temples and .leek. It draws out the bill.iromation, soothes sway the pain, usually giving quick relief. Musterole Is a dean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard, tetter than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Many doctors and nurses frankly rrc-or-mend Musterole for sore throat, bron chitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neural cii. congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pr.ir.s and aches of the bock or p'rts, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted f.et colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). It is plways d-pendable, COc and 60c j-us; hospital size 1301 simi the best, the only thing, a wife could do was to keep still. 80 I kept still. It takes ij woiiii.n n long timo 10 "get unto" ull tho liltlo kinks in her lina bund's nature. 1 had not yet become accustomed to ull of them in Neil's. But one thing I had soon learned: If he were either tired or sleepy, it was of no live t.i tr- t.. I ,, 1 Lr l.lii, r nll. surelv; but he paid not the slightest at- llti"l0 ,worl(1' blowing tho strike of tent ion, and would often leave me iu!'" operators at 7 o'clock the middle of a sentence. 1 this morning. 1 wondered what the business conl.l ' . ,u0 Overnors or Massachusetts I'Vrrell, T'a.. Ap-il 15. (nited Tress.) -Scores of Ftirrell business men and private citizens, headed by the enure borounh police force, state constabu lary, firemen and the police force i f the XJnitrd Stntes Steel corporation, nil armed with bayoneted rifles and revol Many men spend a major portion of their waking hours in their offices. Why not, then, have good desks, tables, and chairs to live with. If in need of anything in the office line, see this up-to-date Olson line of sanitary built, natural oak, wax fin ished furniture, at moderat . prices. MAHOGANY TABLES For the library, living room or parlor, finished in the beautiful mahogany dull wax- Nothing furnishes just quite so handsome as does mahogany. A beauti ful colonial table, 30x42 inches, $35.00. A massive colonial table, 30x48 inches, $43.50. A Queen Ann design, 30x 48 inches, extremely hand some, $43.75. A 26x70 inch Davenport table with drop leaf ends, in Boston. Muss.. April 15. ( lnitod meeting here last night i ress.j .cw .cngiand, with the excep tion of Conoctieut was practically cut teli i.hiine connection ivn !i th- , off t- Tors, broke up an alleged bolshevik j that new dull wax broom fin ish at only $18.50. Smaller bandits r.oB messenger I tables and pedestals at small er TKISCO BANK TODAY j er prices. have been that it should hvo given him Mail'. Kiw Hampshire und lihode isl a disagreeable evening. That it was ,"'l?v rulJl,',11 un "I'I'eal to president put into effect with remarkable speed who was a new emnlnve. into a doorway 1 rvirtmont nrnvM ,10 f.rof and without disordor. while pedestrians looked on. The rob- 'Pajtment PrO-VeS. bee US lirSt In Boston it was said that not one tery occurred when the messenger vaa before ' bUVing linoleums, of the several thousand girls reported, en route t tho sub-trer.sury. ,Vp nro oftr o fo,V eWn vf slightest twinge of niuay. noupmui, doctors.l ' ' " oiiuit er woman, although f"cori.1'' "l" auJ brokor w "- C8S w tur.nci over to the telegraph the linoleum business Of this anything but business, I never dreamed because I thought I knew ho had not been with Blanche Orton. Just why I should have believed her the only wo ninn who might interest Neil, I could uot have explained, but the fact re mained. Aside from Blanche Orton, I had never felt th .jealousy of any other .Neil was a treat favorite w?th them and was always joking and "carrying on" as mother would say. But there was a something about him, about his manner when with Mrs. Orton, that was! entirely different thau when with oth ers. At least it seemed to to me. t above i.ml bevoud everything !se I had the feeling that if I "could keep Neil and Blanche Orton apart I would liavo no cause fur anxiety. As 1 have said, I had begun to plan a social career. At first it wu with baby Robert's future in view. But I soon wanted it for myself. I would show them that I did not only have money, but that I had position. I urged Noil buv a house on a fashionable street a little east of the avenue, and hire expensive decorators to do it over. Then when it was ready, I Indulged in a per fect riot of spending .assisted by Lor raine Morton who had exquisite taste. Nothing was too good for me. In deed, it was a task to find things which were good enough. Loraiue, who was one" of the elect socially, had assured me that she would sponsor me in such a way thr,t I would soon havo a select circle of friend. I was delighted that we were able to gratify my expensive tastes. How little I renlir.ed that money dies not really get people anything! I eoina wn uuve believed then, so wrapt tip was I is worldly things, what I firmlv believe now: that more married people tre sep arated by wealth, especially if it be (jnick.lv acquired, than by the direst Sun Francisco, April 13. (United! rress.) Twn bandits held up a nies-i senger of the TSank of California to day and robbed him of ;t000 in cur rency. Thev ecr over the 1 Keports from Maine, Jsew Hampshire volver. and Vermont showed that tho strike was Tho bandits backed the mo.,.- lv inri-PflSpH snlpa in tViia tin. Remember this firm is y first struck the messsen- quoting the lowest prices on head with the butt of a re- UrmU,, iinivicmua i! uut wuiiueixui- IlimlV hunilt.ir.wl in thin .,iiiii. ... . 1. - . .... j i ' vv.uiiuu.vo mm mo rcsuu tnut oltues Police Hold Beady. throughout New England were swamped The police department is in readiness with messages, to handle emergencies which may arise I Small boys reaped a harvest as mes as a result of the strike. At many fire sengers at unheard of prices. ..mi. mr ujr leicpnouo, the tire rerun mat tne strike pickets Idopartnient took extra, precautions in would appear "all fussed up- in icr 'answering all alarms. millinery, caused hundred of persona to A great amount of the tC!cpe fcusi- out of their way to pass the cx changes. Thev were not dis.niiwint,i The millinery was plentiful and of many colors. Business Losses Great. Undertakers hastily inserted adver tisements advising the public to use taxicabs at their expense In ease of death. Hrokers declared they would lose thousands of dollars. Many customers rushed messengers with orders to sell and the messengers r.rrived after the stock had dropped. Two reported that much of the curb market business will be transferred to New York. . Orders are said to have been received by the New England Telephone k Tele graph company from Postmaster Uener 1 Burleson, directing that strikebreak ers be placed in tho company's ex-' changes. community, and are going to make an honest and fair effort to get it by giving our customers a good article at a fair profit. Aches, Pains and Soreness When you want to stoo nam and do the job quickly ami surely the original improvement on the old fashioned mustard plaster dlcgy 'a Mustarinc the kind that contains real yellow mustard. It cannot blis ter and there are no disagreeable fumes to irritate the nose and eyes. Just rub it on for any mho or pain it penetrates quickly and re lieves almost instantly by gently stimulating the circulation and dif fusing all inflammation and con gestion. , Always in the yellow box be mre to ask for Begy'a Mustarinc. AND I I Mrs. K. J. Anderson, who crossed th piams -o uresna m !S.'i2. died SatnrdaT near The Pallet ngcu 80 years. After a jnurnahnic 'aree r,f 32 years in Unkcr, O. E. mll has disposed ef his interest in the Ucker Democrat. i,d comes fr. H,.ni. i .v. - . . wu..iiuu ui in. d.nth there of C.ex.rgo 8r.ners, known lumberman of Hoouiam, Wash, j CHAMBERS 467 Court Street ,i We're For America! Are Yoa? BUY VICTORY E0M)S