M 9 - I Pa The G m CnAEI.ES II. FKHEK Editor and Pnbliihsr i 7$ ge of ipim ournai THTfijTUY EVFAIXG June , 1P19 j3 LJ WHWWWWWWWWW r- wwwwwvvwwwwjiy,ANJk Published Every Evening Except Sunday, Salem, Oregon. IALIM Address All Communications To i 3 13S 3. Commercial St. (The DailnAHal ilouraal OBEOON VELKS urge mm fhl :t RESPONSE TO DRIVE SUBSCRIPTION BATES Daily, by Carrier, per year 5.00 Per Monta- DUt br Mail, car TMf 13.00 Per Month.. FULL LEASED VWKJS TKLKUKAPli KKl'uBT FOREIGN BEPBE8ENTATIVES W. D. Ward, New York, Tribune Building. W. II. Ktockwell, Chicago, Peopled Gaa Budding fls Di!r Capital Journal carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the porch. If the carrier duel aot do this, misses you, or neglects getting the paper t yon on time, kindly phone too circulation manager, aa inn la tna on ly way w eaa determine whether or not the carriers aro following instruction. Phone 11 before. T:30 o'clock tnd a paper will be aent you by special messenger if the aarrier has niiaaed yon. by-ways and down into the slums and raises those who'1 had no boT f ni? i n. i',r K,if ,-r. Mntn.. :i u la,,ir "" l' education, etc. Au.l aic uvm uuv ncici uui. iiiuiicv w UJI l iuuil fcUt-U (Ul.hr outlive. .. ..k I..... ,.- k..ir organization because its workers come from among the''"111 ,v rry. There much; nnnr nnd m.nnv nf thpm w "rinvvn" trtrnncoWoc -V,Qr, !Tri' Dut interest only to us, untu v V wiuuomvs mc close when he said: theV enlisted IOr life in the armV that Wars Sfl rplfntlfSS-i ''Many men have cone through Iif arrn'ner cin -lnrl oil Via lrvnr trnin 4.1,. f 11 . ' deep water Forbes, you among them.! y ftuw.ok cu. emu wn; iviig Mfllll Ul CV1I3 mat 1W1UW ,But prnj to ,, tri(1,a; in its Wake. : proud t have vou associated in busi ! J) " D tJT Ml The Salvation Army wants more than the least vouirr.r: J"rB:' " .hvd,eoPIC KetpICSted 10 iUKC .... , " . . iraviicr, um JHMiiriunvs ot worn in Mil forftr tho hartints the rosulta. 1 be- they carried our flag to victory in France and Belgium; fcc-ause of ht hH.-n.-d." Then he if WJinfs tn rlA ropntrnirPfi !io q rrrofif oinnr i. n-n,l : wislieil n all a merry I'hriatiuas, and peace as well as in war. j n,i.1, vou bett.-r u.ok at the con ! 45ecan give this time, it wants its great work reorganized by done that one u l'35c substantial help from the people whose sons it served when :!'' im' .'tT? w,. Subscriptions Without Be in? The Salvation Army, measured by its works, has never Ull," -tl dt.I5 been cheap (By Walter L. Toose.) We must muke a treineudouj effort to mine Mulem 's miota of f lo.fMiO for uvrno,- .r nuiiu 1 1 t tli Klks Salvation Army home aerriee. THE DAILY CATITAli JCUHNAL Is the only newspaper ii Balem whose circulation is guaranteed by the Audit Bureau Of Circulations MAKE YOUR SUBSCRIPTION LARGER. The Salvation Army drive is not succeeding as well is the Elks, who are in charge of it, confidently expect ed. Almost everybody Igives, but the amounts are so .small that the totals are not encouraging, as they are foot ed up from day to day. The trouble seems to be. that the people generally have come to look upon the Salvation Army as cheap. When its workers have come around to the businessman for assistance in its varied activities he has handed out a dollar and it was always received with thanks and a "God . Mess you and the Salvation Army went and did two dol lars worth of work with that one dollar. Always it was accustomed to taking little contributions and doing big things with them, and in turn the public became accustom ed to thinking of the organization as one that did not . figure upon money in large sums, but based its financial system on the penny, the nickel and the dime. That's the trouble now. Everybody wants to help the Salvation Army for no army in the history of the world ever made a more glorious record than it made during the world war but they give only five dollars where they should give twenty-five dollars in order to as sure Salem's quota in the home service drive for funds. . It is too bad that this campaign lags when the sphere of usefulness in which the Salvation Army moves is so liroad and calls upon its resources so great and varied. The reconstruction period is upon us, and the returned, soldier may be out of a job and in need of help and com fort, the workingman may have lost his position by the closing of shipvard or other war activity and in need of the Salvation Army's helping hand. In the place of the dosing saloon already there is the temperance bar and lunch room of the Salvation Army in the large cities of the east, and the broken wreck of the former dive and den is to be reclaimed and moulded to meet the require ments of useful Christian citizenship. Home service for the Salvation Army is jils-'t these things and it extends into RIPPLING RHYMES By Walt Mason THE AIRPLANE NUISANCE. ! dollars, ) tho businow ntvt ln'causo ship" lie had aiMcd Minri'MH'lv hiinnv. The rhivk for R.ihrrt 'j " A' f:... v. .1..H I ui int.- nits lor i m v ii until ni u'lunis. Of tlH'lUt ll. ... ,;,; j , . ...... v.t.b.i. iiu iiio iuii uui. aim SO IHHKlll ?U'U i ,1 T i 1 rru ji i . . 'I wanted to put it toward the housj, lhe enthusiasm over airplane progress is not unon-jbut xeii said Vno," h? wu..id buy me imous. In the midst of the chorus of praise for such sr brVn1.! vt, brhV8ia1'tiIn' "Tai' achievements as those of the trans-Atlantic fliers comes !'Uw. Ami ZrRrte'bTuhiTim'i a discordant note. A resident of Harbor Grace. New "",l'"0 "'"tlt he lotl hIul de!"ri'(l 111 Foundland, writing to a St. Johns paper just after Al cock's plane had started for Ireland, said: "I wish to voice a protest against an airplane being allowed to ily over the city, frightening our poultry andjl,B.v lf ln-v m'e that he k,ivo mf tho thereby interfering with the supply of eggs, so important tV0 a '"na " T,e f u'y during the present shortage of food. This nuisance is! " Aa('1 ,ha,,k liim f,,r .vou-wr hMo 1 k:.,r,;, ; t, it 4.U''il "y ""I'i'y home," and so we bade viiiiy vrguuuug, ciiiu iiuvv uic time w bivy ii, ueiure UlC pai.), (t,(r irood niL'ht on airplane becomes as great a pest as tne bicycle and the motor car."- The evil he complians of has already been noticed in the United States, though it does not seem to have ilicited any such vigorous protest in this country. An airplane is not unnaturally mistaken by timerous flocks for a chick en hawk, causing panic, and possibly a lowered egg-pro- duction, in many a poultry pen and farmyard. . Something surely ought to be done about it. If air planes continue to interfere with the hen's peace of mind how can they be tolerated in any orderly community? As an extreme illustration of pending catastrophe think what an airplane whizzing over the 0. A. C. campus might do if the egg-laying occupation of that world champion hen should be disturbed! tensely, ''Rilit living doing all one can soem to bring its own reward." Neil Kuid as we at together after tho child ren were m led. "i thank lod everv our first Christmas in our new home. A happy, thankful, mini and woman; a loving husband ami wife. THE E.l. A VERDICT ON THE LEAGUE. The Saturday Evening Post, a non-partisan publica tion which generally represents pretty well the dominant opinion of intelligent Americans, finds fault with the League of Nations not because it sets up so strong an in ternational organization, but because by compromise in the course of negotiations it has lost some of the strength expected of it. Nevertheless the Post declares in favor of the cove nant, saying: "The League of Nations, compromised at points though it is, is still the only practicable step toward assur ed peace. The pull of conditions will strengthen it. We take half a loaf, and shall presently get the other half." Out of 11,000 houses in Rheims, 14 are said to be un touched by German shells. All the reams of paper filled with German protests against the peace terms cannot alter that fact. The Winnipeg Bolshevist revolution ended like that in Se.ittle, but it was suppressed by different methods. Winnipeg lacked an Ole Hanson for mayor. THE PROMOTER'S WIFE BY JANE PHELPS TO DO RIGHT BRINGS PEACE AND Hint little home prow. Every night when dinner win over Neil nml I walk ed over to. see what had been accom plished during lhe day. It made no dif ference that I hud taken Elsie in her fc'o. enrt over in the morning, f tm junt as interested in goiuj; again. It seemed to me that never wn a home so long iimlv looked fur. so eaerlv awaited as I 'was that six room bouse on Iahiu Is HAPPINESS. CHAPTER CXXVI. Th Miiniiicr I'nine nml vent. Oer gar leu nns a constant source of pleasure i ; SLEEP. Sleep, balmy sleep, of which the poet writes! With that in stock, successful are our nifihts. If man can't sleep when to his couch he goes, if he can't draw some hours of calm repose, if midnight hours but fret him and exhaust, his life is vain, his world a killing frost. He may have fame in both the hemispheres; admiring men may greet his nobs with cheers; the "Welcome" sign may hang across iho ctvrfit wVlOVl hit tr llMinrvi1lii (tmnn liin nnliui.iif f..i-- . . . I . . . i"" W'" IT""!- Kolierl helped n,e but all his honors tawdrv are and cheap, if night hours ,i,er..re and after school ami though come and he can't go to sleep. He may have wealth heap-i"'" ""'"' 'lh 'y newer they 1 i u 1 . t. i . . . i . -i were cored for as thev should be. Neil . , i. ' " v....... MJ Su.um rose earn- ami woike.l nn hour in the iland. We were t mv a little down, then v hh uuii n.l'ii, w Uiii) ual? acilUS ami MitU'lV pai KS aiW """ " "; mi into mn no . ., n,nt (. r,.s g mnrtgatte PrOUnds find himtlnP' (;hlk ntl U hi-h til i-wl.l tn hnnndo '"' ,,,v ' which Ned Kevburn bad tuken at 5 per fc.OUnUh, U1U miming SUltlS 011 nitll 10 1UU tO flOUmlS, fir.t r our ma-r,.-e and did notl,.,.t. That made it easv for es. and al uat sucn possessions nave no worth or charm, life is a fail- hi'""""' ' ? 'e.ha,i bought a.loweil us to buy what was necessary to U1P find a fa St' n irill. F S con wntl t ronw ulinn hn wdimc "" .". ' 7. " J" V . " '". li"' meved in for Chr.stn.a.. 7 : . : i; ; "v " "v wio ,,11Ss,uic. 1H, decided upon a plan to bed, while hours drag on with weary feet of lead. While ,,,r ,mr ''' " imv over I can sleep I envy no one's luck; the millionaire can keep LtV:t5w!""K ulZ Irs showy buck; the statesman great mav revel in his ,' '!. " xeii .i.sd..red. fame, all shining marks can play their lustrous game; iL'',! Mee me nignt mrougn like a little man. and rise at dawn m . u next t,. us. t.t do the best 1 can. bought the lot nxt aUh) build a house 1 had vaiitione.l thfin about huildiiiff too elalHirately or e would Ik' dwarfed. And never were two pciple more thank ful than were Neil and I. ' It ' quite different ifrojn New York home, ltiib " he said on Christmas inorning. It was our present to each ether. 4 Hut I shall love it far more, Xeii. We 'are going; to be so happy here. And when it is all paid for we will buv better furnitnro. One iiieee at a Many evening that winter we cave toititue until W it all In mir likim- talking of our new home, rf our plans "What a little executive you are," hoiiert and his little sutor ho ,he answered smiling and bending down arrixed in the late autumn, and to kin m. "ll..r is a h-tti-r from LADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 1SGS General Banking Business Commencing June ICth Banking Hours will be from 10 a.m. till 3 p.m. ad msting 'getting it for ;hml whom Kid'crt adored Neil was leaking good i the affairs of the business. on its f.ot aiii'in," he said. Mr. End crick bad net emne eat for months. lie left even-thing t Neil. This entire 'grateful tears: com metier e uu piareii urn more to give Neil ba l bis wlf respect thsa any other thinj could he done. 1U grmr.iiiK brighter, more like his eld self N.me of the boyUhiif- was noticeable at times, and I fairlv gloated wrer it. It the old Neil i had married .ou.iiig back lo me the best part of him. I Ity spring we had pared for the bd. and started building. Whnt a constant sail res of pleasure it was to watch Commencing tomorrow and taking the place in tho Capital .'ournul col uuinN of The Promoter's Wife, which ends with Hiia installment, will be a new serial, ''Hunting a Husband " by Mary Douglas, a fascinating, interest ing, gripping story. Chronic Constipation Perhaps you have never thought of it, but this disorder is due to a luck of moisture iu the residual matter of the food. If you will irink an abundance of water, eut raw fruits and take lots of outdoor exercise, you may bo able eventually to overcome it entirely. In the meantime use the most mild and gentle laxatives, Strong and harsh ca thartics take too mucn water out of tho system and make a bud matter worse. tCtiemberlaJn 's Tablets are easy and pleasant to take, and aiost agree able iu effect. Give them a trial do it now. Let every one qualify as I'll! per cent booster and vutory js certain. j Take notice of the following opinions of the Salvation Army from the lips of our greatest leaders in this our beloved country; 1 "I sincerelv wish flniWiepd in thn Iflulvnt ion Armv, which has as it main object the betterment of humanity and! the making of bad citizens into good ones. i "No ono who has watched even su- perfirinlly the work and progress of! tho Salvation Army cat! fail to feel the! deepest and most sincere intetrst."' I Woodrow Wilson. j "I am thoroughly in sympathy with your work. You reach people who arej not reached in any other way. Your! practical methods of charity arc of the' widest usefulness." William Howard! Tuft. "The Salvation Army has won its wnyto recognition. There are few seri-l ous thinkers nowadays who do not rec ognize in the Salvution Army an int alu-i nble social asset. "Theodore Boose-1 velt. Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore has' repeatedly given tho Salvation Army a' sweeping endorsement for their heroic i and glorious service at homo and over sens. The churches everywhere add their uiiauiinous endorsement. All of the great fruternnl organiza tions in this mighty nation endorse this c 1 tale House Notes Mayor Pakcr, of" Portland, respond ing to a request from a number of prom inent citizens for an investigation of the Wnverly Baby Home, has commun icated with Governor Olcott with re tpird to the appointment of. a commit tee for this purpose. In reply the gov ernor calls attention to the law pro viding for a child welfare, comiuiBsion, which commission is charged with the duty of making just such an investiga tion as is culled for by the Portland citizens. He stales that there is no pro vision of law that would euaoiu him to institute sin h mi investigation in such a manner, and goes on to sav: "1 huve the greatest confidence that the newlv created child welfare commission will do its fullest duty in the premises, and that it is the only dutly constituted body in Oregon to have this particular inquisitorial jurisdiction over such agencies bs the Wnverly Baby Home.' . .LIBERTY BOND QUOTATIONS New Ymk, June 2li. Liberty bonds todav: 3 Vs. PO.SO; first 4'i, Pi.Sti; cotid 4's, m.00; first V, Dj.?0; second 41, 's. fM. IK; third 4', W.U; fourth 4'i's, 91.22; victory HlO.tUi; Zt 's, H9.!S1 To Prevent Belching Make a regular hnliit of cetirg slow ly masticate your food thoroughly, and you may have no further troubV. If vou should, take one of Chamberlain ' Tablets immediately after supper. TELEGRAPHIC TABLOIDS Chicago All is fair in love and war especially ia spring time. Yet liT romance hiving gobs'are in the brig at Ureal lke iinvnl training station, it was re-ported today. Kre.U'riek. 1 fori'ot it for a moment. The nttMtnmn in I.ft it. I We stoosl together as he opeued it. I read it with him, then he read it aloud while we bidh let fall a few f I Pear Friends: I wish you a very merry Christmas. I have planned for yuu to receive this en that day. I en close a contract for next tear for yoo Eerbes; and a .beck for th ' and childrca. Buy then something they want, but don't real! need. Barbara has gone witho.it the pretty things St. Paul, Minn. Ou his 100th birth day, Philip tlrecn decided to make out his firt will. "I've reached my pb jeelive for longevity, " he told his at torney. .New Orleans A drive by B-bhy Jones ia the eouthera golf tourney hmded ia an old shoe. B.wly walloped it with a niblick sd holed the shot. Kingxter., N". Y. When bi daughter failed iiy graduate from (hool. Mar tin Coons held the principal responsi ble and bent him up. Washington Coldva Rule, a printer, is being sued or divorce by his wife, women love so long, get her something , Elizabeth Iiul, for aot "adhering to reany timiish-as plie may thins. .owthe sentiments m hts asm. I hae something to tell ymi. Kohcrt I aid I jdiould be third with him beeaue ' Nvrristvwa Ta. The laeanest thief WE HAVE HAD THE PLEASURE ' Of fitting with g'asses the fol lowing: All the Physicians of MtMian ville All the Osteopaths of MeAIinn ville All the Chiropractors of Mciliun villo All the Dentists of SicMiunvil'e All the Trained Nurses of Mc Miiuivillo Nearly all the Attorneys and Stenographers Nearly all the Ministers One or more puir of gla&ies in liractieally every business house in McMinnvillc mid thousands of others. You are invited to write any of the ubove MAY WE SEItVE Ol i HENRY L MORRIS & CO Eyesight Specialist i 305 State St Salem, Ore- local police have Wen asked to appre hend is tho one who stole white crepe from a door here. San Francisco The musicians union is unablo to supply the demand for musicians to play funeral dirges. The dirges are features of "farewell bunts' for King (Barleycorn which aro preva lent here this week. Atlantic City Too many Iiack to na ture sights on the beach,' police warn ed, directing bathing girls to don reg ular stockings and hitch up their shoulder straps. Tonopah, Nev. Houses are scarce 'of the war-time nere witti tho silver boom on. During 11. B. Horensen 's absence some ono stole his house. Ife offers a )2."i re ward for its return with no question asked. campaign for funds. Every soldiers who has seen service in our great army is .unqualifiedly supporting und contiibut ing to this righteous cause. One mil lion members of tho Benevolent and Protective Order of Klks of tho inited . States are leaders in this grei.t eauso and depend upon tho loyal and devoted support of every citizen. If you are not personally solocited cometo our head qunrters at 121 South Commercial street and put up everv dollar that n gener ous heurt cun contribute. A contract has been entered Into by the Klamath county court with th Pacific Foundation company of Port land for the construction , of a steel bridge at Merrill crossing Lost river. Proposals that the government clear the channel of the Tualatin river in Oregon have been rejected by the board of engineers for rivers and harbors. A suit to restrain the Cuited States . attorney from nrosecutinir infmclin... prohibition act hni Deen filed at San Francisco. The old Clatsop mill plant at Astoria, which has been closed down for three years, has been purchased ibv Clem W. Rodgers and will Immediately resume opera Hons. EYES EXAMINED GLASSES MADE X FITTINGS GUARANTEED f Consult us about your eyes HARTMAN BROS. CO. J Jewelers and Optician Vc rthwest Corner of State and Liberty Streets UsedC ar Bargains This Week Only 0ne Overland in A-l condition throufrriont at. $2' One Saxon Six runs like new. A good buy at $673. 4 cylinder Cole, repainted in A-l shape, only $850. . We guarantee the cars we sell new or old. SALEM VELIE COMPANY Salem, Ore. 162 North Commercial St This Coupon is good for Five Votes for Goddess of Liberty, Fourtli of July (Write name here and deposit this in ballot box)