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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1919)
PAGE FOUR THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAYSEPTEMBER 10, 1919. Published Every Evening Except Sunday, Salem, Oregon. liLIM GEOKOH PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher 138 8. Uommeroial 8t. OEEGON s SUBSCRIPTION BATES Dally, by Carrier, per year tS.OO Per Month Daily by Meil, per year 3.00 Per Month..... .45e 35c FULL LEASED WIBB TELEQBAPH BEPOBT FOBEI&N BEPBE8ENTATTVES W D. Ward, New York, Tribune Building. W. H. Btookwell, Chicago, People'! Oae Building Tk Dnily Capita,! Journal carrier boys, are instructed to put the paperg on the rth. It the carrier doei not do this, miitea you, or neglect getting. the paper you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, aa this is the only way we van determine whether or not the carriers are following Instructions. Phone II before 7:30 o'clock and a paper will be tent you by special messenger if the arrier has missed yon. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOTJ3NA1 Jj the only newspaper in Salem whose circulation is guaranteed by the Audit Bureau Of Circulations THE SHORT DAY. Organized labor has secured the adoption of the eight-hour day in many industries. In skilled occupations it has proved beneficial both to employer and employe as ' records kept show the output per individual speeded up by : the shorter day, and the health of the toiler improved. ' None of the arguments which secured the recognition i of the 8-hour day, can be used to justify the shorter, days now demanded by labor. . From eight hours some unions Victory cannot be- successfully -rifc---M',x .oa:iiriMsSt t. tie I attornov -toners . rntiirnpri Tursriav ing German morale icised. Those in charge of spruce production were selected,' afternoon from Columbia county, -where he had been sent by Governor Olcott 4.u v i r i . v . i no investigate me circumstances snr- iirve muse m Clttllgt; ux UUier JUI ailCIICS OI .ar WOfK, W1U1- rounding the indictment and imprison out regard to pontics ana toned without thought of par tisanship or hope of profit. It so' happens that all were republicans and now a republican congress is rewarding their patriotism by a poison gas barage of slanderous in uendo, in the hope of discrediting the president. No wonder, with the Senate dilly-dallying with the League of Nations and prolonging the era, of uncertainty by endless recriminations on the peace treaty and the House engaged in futile investigations of the methods by which the war was won, that the country is losing faith in the ability of Congress as now constituted to meet the problems of world reconstruction. Hunting A Husband BY IttABY DOUGLAS LONGUE VIEW The blue limousine was wailing at the station. A man in blue livery saluted rigidly, "Miss I.nnef " He stooped and picked up my well-worn traveling bag. He held open the door of the car. I stopped i. In a moment ho was up be side tho cheauffur with a'rms folded The ear was sweeping through wide smooth avenues. But I had no eyes for the arched trees, nor the lawns running back from ornate gateways, ALL AROUND TOWN For the benefit of those who happen to remember the income tax which amounted to 6 per cent of all income for the unmarried oyer $1000 and 6 per cent of all income over diOOO for the married, the internal revenue of-, fiee located in the postoffice building gives thoL cheering news that the iu- eomo tax next year is to be only 4 per cent of incomes after exemption, up to $41)00. Anyone having an income af ter exemptions of more than $4000 will pay 8 per cent in excess of tho $4000. lasf year it was VI per cent. ment of Ham Kautaman, Houlton news paper man, on charges of criminal li bel. McGilchrist's report is now in the hands of the governor who has as yet taken n oaction in the matter. The state hospital is maintaining, a crew of 20 inmates on their wood cut ting job at the cottago farm, south east of town, where they intend to cut some 1000 eords of wood for the use of the various state institutions this winter. . , " A building permit was taken out to day toy F. A. Anderson for the con struction of a cottage at 720 Mill street, to ebst $1000. Mr. .Anderson is a carpenter and will do much of his own work. The house when completed is estimated to cost about $1500. ,From Sublimity comes the suggestion that the right name with which to ad vertise Oregon products would be " fininbow-Toiiehed" or gust "Kain-bow-Tucht." T4ie suggestion is made that the name would be very appropri ate as so often after showers, one sees clear, exquisite rainbows in this sec tion of Oregon." !, ..... wisui ll UIW l-ttl UUIU 1I1U (11 I n.m ll'o noma tranced, It was lined with a deep sap-l4 .,;i..i ... .n. r r. phire blue. Tho fittings were silver. At ; to cck.brate jast Sunday. They were tho side I touched a mirror, a silver-1 f,mmi to have celebrated a few davs r -i o k tit. 3 . il a 17 ,..a, .rTO uim-s iuu- ( duty by partaKing too treeiy oi I liave guilt; IU I IIUUIS, Willi lUCieaseu yuy , men tu I , den away in a blue pocket. In front of i something that suggested Old "Crow. ' with another increase, and are now demanding a 6-hour m yrfiow rnses nooded from a silver, They were arrested and put up $10 .day. with' double their pay of a year ago. Should they L-u F 2?L SUCCeed in Securing a O-h0Ur day, We may expect a Strike jWo were moving swiftly througli a p!ne Placed to the credit of the city of f-fcw a ilhniin Aotr'anA Anmnlafa nnaaoeainm nf iTiritlfnv nsiwood. The later afternoon sun bright-, J. oned tho tips of the black treos. . . We made a wide sweep, Huge gates ! Mr9- AUce H- Dodd w again in of wrought iron stood open. "Longue !ar0 f tho Hme service department View'M read. Up the winding drive o?.0 .Bc?,?"K.tlie. IZt J n"T m! ' Bli"1Pseg10f id bar Jtion. This department of the Bed Cross ullljllHin) 111 HU IVI,.SLD UIIU O. IMIQM dllll glonm of rough blue waters. Ahead I saw a flag blowing from a BAnLESHIP OREGON TO I Historic Old Fighter To Re main Untouched Until Giv en To State. Sa- ' for a 4-hour day and complete possession of industry as in Russia. . Minimum hours means Davment for over time and i the employment of more men to do the work. With min imum hours have usually gone a decreased output per . hour, a lack of efficiency, disloyalty and the practice of -: sabotage which spell the eventual destruction 01 the labor organization and social and industrial chaos. Minimum hours and the very short day should have 'no consideration in this crisis of affairs when there is a m - m Jl , 1 . tttt t 1 11 1 1 worm shortage 01 essentials to ce iinea ana which hiuhv be filled before normal conditions are restored. THE SPRUCE PROBE. Probe of spruce production now under way at Port land, is typical of most congressional investigations, cer tainly all of those now under way. Politics and the de sire of securing petty partisan advantage is the inspir ation of the inquiry, and not the desire to ascertain facts. So far, in spite of the bias and unfairness, the char latanry and demagogy of the investigators, the testimony .of disgruntled promoters and disappointed profiteers, nothing has been developed to besmirsch the honesty and integrity of those entrusted with the program, nor is there likely to be. Waste and mistakes there undoubtedly were, and probably gross extravagance, but all were justified by the emergency which the nation faced. The spruce was be ing produced in quantities demanded and the fact that ' such gigantic preparations for a prolonged war were under way materially helped shorten the war by break- RIPPLING RHYMES By Wait Mason The historic 0ld battleship Oregon A National Problem Solved. Pure, Wholesome Food -f Nujol Health : PURE, wholesome food is necessary, but it is not enough. The purest, most wholesome food will hinder rather than help health if allowed to ' clog the colon the large intestine. And doctors agree that about 90 of bur ailments are caused or . intensified by constipation. . Some part of even the purest and most wholesome food is waste. . If this waste is not kept moving out of the body, it stagnates and breeds poisons which saturate the system and cause or nourish disease. The old, wrong way to attack such stagnation was to force a passage through the impacted mass. The new', right way to overcome it is to let Nujol. induce easy self-elimination. And since health is as much a matter of how we eliminate waste as how we assimilate food-fuel, it must become evident to every thinking person that the use of a natural, ilrugless lubricant is as sensible and necessary as the e:iting of pure, wholesome food. The three vital processes upon which health is based are . Mastication, Assimilation, Eli mination. Therefore, the perfect recipe for health is thorough Mastica tion; Pure, wholesome Food, and Nujol. Try thistrinity. Getabottleof Nujolfromyourdruggist to-day. For valuable health booklet "Thirty Feet of Danger" free, write Nujol Laboratories, Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey) 50 B' way, N. Y. TTVy yn 2m ff Nujol U sold OTlljf IflU rr Ul j, f,jo le n KKieil botlW bear. : Mark. Ail drug- InsWt oi Nujol. Vou may tufer dom tubittcutea. Nujol For Constipation Sickness Prevention "Regular it) i ' toll white pole. Then the house lay sprend out before mo. A hugo pile of white that shone with sparkling lights under tho dyiiid sun. It was an Italian villn or thiit it seemed to, me, spired and turretod extravagantly. The ear stopped. I slipped out. Tho place was empty, deserted. I looked for a welcoming face. There was none. The very wealth of it overawed me. Then across tho wide lawn, I saw a tall, slender figure coming towf.id me. It was a man. Ho did not hurry. His dark hair was tumbled. His whole figuro showed boredom. An elderly woman in black mot ms lit tho door. "Mrs. Thurlow is out. Will you go to your roomf" I ws climbing the-broad stans. I wanted to phuso, to look back, i'ur tho room wc had passed through was pan eled in curved oak. The light silted dowu'thinugh rOBc-stnhiod windows. It seomed to my dazzled eyes more lika tho hullwny of a castle, than a country homo. I was left in my suite. For that it proved to be. A sitting-room in blue and gold, a bed-room all daintiness. A bath whose windows looked out to the blue waters of the Sound. AndI am frightened. If tho peo ple are like the house dazzling, beauti ful, what am I doing here? I looked at the figure reflected on the door. Slender, young, perhaps. But I do not' look my best the si mined look in those slntoeolorod eves tho white, faintly hollowed, cheeks. - Here 1 shall need my hard-won experi ence, mid the small good looks I pitsess. Again I saw the slender, bored figure si tolling across the lawn. (Tomorrow All the (tills Expect It!) the ship. Except for this feature there was absolutely nothing new in the" stam ment (riven out by Secretary of the is the only place in the city where the. Navy Daniels Monday, relative; to the soldier can recclvo nirormution ana , Oregon, according to Governor Olnotr. " ' - . It is estimated that $20,000 a year will plies from but three, but every mention will not be scrapped but will bo main- be. necessary to ' properly maintain the oi the ship's name brings rounus oi en- tained intact at the Bremerton navy ,lln nsi M-torio relic in Orecon waters ittlllsiastle applause, the governor states, yard until such time as the state of Ore- f'7 " , LnrnrA Alt,,on,,. 1,0 de8 Kd"bt tha gon is ready -to receive and maintain . . u . .---j ' inext legislature wm u jn vi&iuii in DtgnK ivi meeting tnc neea tne governor cun wra help. The Home sorvice section also has done much to relieve soldiers in need and in many instances has secured em ployment. ' who returned last night from his trip ro Asroria,'wuere lie met the secietary of the navy. tenanee expense, according to the gov- no way to any furtnei action toward crnor. The government is ready ana aceepting tho ship for the state at this willing to turn the ship- over to the timei state but the state is not ready to ro- j ceive the ship. Appeals for an expres- On his 12-acres of orchard near sion from the people of the stato rela-: Medford A. C. Joy harvested 00 tons tive to the future disposition of the 1 of high grade peaches famous fiffhtinsr craft have brought ro- received $4ou. for which he To test one's intelligence, there is now devised the Otis group intelli gence scale, copies of which have 'been received for inspection by county Su perintendent W. ivl. Smith. For .in stance, if one is fairly intelligent, the answer is supposed to be given ngnt off the bat to the following: "A cer-( lain leuer is me rounn iciier to iue, left of another letter. " One of these lust two letters next atter F in the alphabet and the other is just before L in the alphabet. What is the 'cer tain' letter first mentioned?" If this is too easy, here -Is another test of ones intelligence, according to , the Otis method: ''A cer-toin letter is the sec ond letter to the right of another let ter. This second lotto? is the fifth let ter to the left of R. What is the 'cer tain' letter first mentioned?" Work is aipidly progressing on the rebuilding of tho entrance, to tho post off ico. 'building, on the south side. To the general public, the main difference will be in having the two sets of heavy doors swina several feet apart instead of about three feet. The specifications" call for the replacing of the- same doors that made entrance to the post office somewhat of a task for women and children. The office of the county recorder is now working overtime to earo for the large number of instruments being filed daily. Yesterday was an average day with the filing for reeord of 11 deeds, two assignments, 12 satisfac-tions.-four chattel mortgages, two affi davits, four army discharges and 10 MiurtgNgus. ' ON BEING FAT. There's not much sense in being fat, in wearing too much lard; the weary years have taught me that, for I'm an obese bard. Diseases punk I entertain, dire ailments two or three; and though I'm twisted up with pain, I get no sympathy. Men laugh to hear a fat man groan; and and though he's feeling tough, and has an ache in every bone, they think it all a bluff. If I were thin and drawn and pale, they would not treat me thus; if I put up an an guished wail, they'd make all kinds of fuss; with sooth ing words they'd quell my fears, and bid my pains depart, and shed the sympathetic tears that reach a sick man's Heart. "But I am fat and when I yell they all Ibegin to laugh; and they'll be laughing till my knell precedes my epitaph. A lean man falls, and people sigh, and wonder if lie's hurt; they bring his hat, arrange his tie, and brush from, him the dirt. There's tender feeling in the glance that everyone bestows: and for a padded ambulance soma n,.M,MniL:.AH . .. A -C - r . 11 .11 1 1 , 1 v "i'oimi.ci sura, tai uicui xun.-s an m ;i neap, aim leies copes his spine, and people stand around and weep but laughter brings the brine. 'The fat man goes his greasy way, with large and bulging vest, and to the whole world, every day, his every move's a jest. Ulacliheads, blotches and pimples , while some towns up the valley are jj,-,-.i.i,,v ,lr. y improper ac-; suffering from a shortage of sugar, Sa tion of the bowels, Hollister's liocky i ieln is ,mirc fortnate. Grocery stores Mountain lea regulates tho bowels, that happened to he. well supplied when cleans tho stomach, clears tho ,com-: tllp gimrtagc occurred, arc selling in plexnm from the insidenature's way sm,i iot9 w, purchases to a certain LADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 18G3 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. are selling in $1 lots. t.ot tnnt tieaiwy, nappy loon." J). J. nmount. Those not s abundantly sup- " ' 1 , il,lu'rti More State Guards Sent To Two Rivers To Quell Rioting Madison, Wis., fcept. lO. Three more state guard companies . were today or dered to Two Hi vers by tho sts.to nd,n tunt general, to om'll strike disorders involving two thousand workers. Yes terday the fSheboygnn company was sent to tho scene. Tho Appletou, Green Bay and N'eennh eonnwnica wore called out. I Karl Fisher of Alliany was in the J city looking . into the proposition of ; finding a home."AftersServing a couple j of terms as county assessor of Linn (county, he was recently appointed to ;a 7osition in the tax commissioner' ioffiee, succeeding Frank Lovell. j Tho county court has appointed ) IHiisv Wood as guardian of .Francis liWood, a minor, who inherited real es j tate to the value of :!(M)0 and person ;h1 property valued at I1S0Q. "Don't Cheat Yourself" ay the Good Judge There's nothing saved by -chewing ordinary tobacco. A little chew of that good rich-tasting tobaccogoes a lot farther, and its good taste lasts . all the way through. Little chew lasting satisfying. That's why it's a real saving to buy this class of tobacco. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW tut ut in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is, a long fine-cut tobacco Economical, Delightful, Light Place to Tradei Fall Styles in Ladies' Ready-to- Wear - INTRODUCING A WONDERFUL ENSEMBLE OF THE MOST FAVOR ED PARISIAN AND AMERICAN CREATIONS TO APPEAR FOR FALL '. ' WEAR ; . ' "-'v No doubt you have been wondering for some time past, what the new styles are like for the coming season and, if you have, our showing will present you with the opportunity to become thoroughly acquainted with them. Certainly they are from every point of view the prettiest styles we have ever had the- pleasure of presenting to you for inspection. This you will admit," we know, once you see them and note the subtle beauty and witchery they display in ' their straight and slender lines., . , THE DISPLAY COMPRISES SUHS--COATS-WAISTS DRESSES-SKIRTS Ladies' Store 466-474 State St. Men's Store 416 State St. "SALEM'S EXCEP TIONAL STORE r 2