?ob rouit THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1311. Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal WEDNESDAY MAY 6, 1914 f PUBLISHED BY CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc. CHABLES H. FISHER, EDITOR - OS AH AM P. TABES, MANAGER PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING KCEPT SUNDAY. BALEM, OREGON SUBSCRIPTION BATES: Daily, by Carrier, per year J KM P "n0Bth 458 Daily, by Mail, per year 4-00 Per month 3jo Weekly, by Mail, per year 100 ""th 50c FULL LEASED WIItE TELEOBAPH BEPOBT The Capital Journal carrier boys art Instructed to put the papr on the porch. If the carrier does not do tbi, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this is the only way we can determine whether or not the niers are following Instructions. Phone Main 82. A FATHER'S CONGRESS THERE is need in the United States of a National Con gress of Fathers, the objects of which might be sim ilar to those of the Mothers' Congress, a body which has accomplished many things for the chil dren of the nation. Are the fathers any less interested in the welfare of their sons and daughters? Have they no time to devote to consideration and espousal of the chil dren's betterment and conservation? The national prob lem of the child has been left too long to the mothers ex clusively, who could accomplish so much more if the fath ers will organize and bear their just share of the burden. Complaints are growing that husbands and fathers have been growing too busy with their work to the exclu sion of their time and sympaty from the home. Perhaps, then, it is not strange that these same men are finding no time to drop affairs of business, forget competition, and cease money-making, to consider the prior duty they owe home and children. The hurried gift of a coin or bill to child welfare work ers is not enough. The sharing of attention with one's own son, as in the father and son movement, is insufficient. Your actual services to help the home and to demand laws less for pigs and more for children, are required, Mr. Father. Your sympathetic co-operation for the welfare of your own and your neighbor's children is essential. You we have been giving all our attention and money to building machines (often for child labor to operate) or to raising better calves or turnips. We have forgotten the nation's greatest asset its children; even our own children ! ' Personally, the result has been a drawing apart of fathers and sons. Men wonder why their lads are not a "chip off the old block." Have you, then, an influence over your son? If not, perhaps you allow him to have no influence over you. Why does congress give great sums for animal and plant improvement and begrudge a few paltry dollars for child welfare? Why is the wealth of the nation given for free seeds while a pittance is denied for printing docu ments to save the children? It is because the men the fathers have forgotten the children ! A FATHERS' CONGRESS It may well be doubted if wealth in such vast amount as to compel its owner to maintain armed guards by day and to sleep in an armored bedroom is a thing greatly to be desired. The situation the Rockefellers find them selves in is certainly not one conducive to complete happi ness or even average comfort. The scriptures tell how difficult it is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heav en, but wealth has grpwn to such an extent that in the case of the Rockefellers, at least, they find it difficult to even get into their church. The latest dispatches tell of the senior Rockefeller being locked up in his house with a big negro loaded with arms guarding the gate to the grounds. Another dispatch the same day says' young Rockefeller was confined to his room and sick from reading what the press of the United States had to say about him. If that is the result of unlimited wealth, he was wise indeed who said ; "Give me neither poverty nor riches." The inspiring news comes over the wires that congress will remain in session indefinitely. There is a large amount of unfinished business and the senate puts in its time making long-winded speeches and copy for the Con gressional Record. The bill to repeal the tolls exemption on the Panama canal has been talked and talked until the public patience is worn out. Every high-brow in the sen ate seems to think that his talk amounts to something, or else is talking just to keep in the limelight. The senate is as well informed now as it will be a month or six months from now, and the vote would probably not be changed a particle if delayed for a year. About the only thing that is being accomplished is the emphasizing the fact that two legislative bodies are a relic of the past and entirely unnecessary. The senate will succeed in talking itself out of existence is it keeps up its gait. SALEM is certainly long suffering and full of pa tience. There is not another community in the state that would submit to having such a depot located in it as the Southern Pacific has maintained here ever since it snaffled on to the railroad built by the late Ben Holiday. It would make a good sheep shearing shed for an Eastern Oregon ranch it' it was big enough. Still it fills the bill in a way and serves as a sort of land mark by which passengers can locate the place where the cars stop. First it needs a coat of paint. Then it needs some nice new brick or stone placed under the paint. Then inside this structure it needs a splendid finish of native Oregon wood Coos Bay Myrtle, say, or birds-eye maple, or something of that kind. It need not be a marble palace just a depot that Salem folks will not be ashamed of. The fact that the Southern Pacific is not ashamed of it is accounted for by the fact that, being a corporation, it cannot feel shame, and its. of ficials, traveling around in magnificent private cars, re fuse to be ashamed for it. A comparison of one of these private cars with the Salem brevet-depot would make a moving picture and one that should make the S. P. offi cials get a move on and also a move on the old sheep coral they compel Salem patrons of the road to use while wait ing to patronize it, and give it their good money. It is an insult to decency to put strangers off the cars in the vicin ity of the old cow barn and tell them they are in Salem. An Irishman once expressed his opinion as to a small piece of pie he was invited to sample by saying, "It is good enough what there is of it, and there is enough of it such as it is." It is that way with Salem's alleged depot. THE ROUND UP. f Walter .Tones, ap.l 1!), who is umler sentence for nt'saulting Bev Frank Hopkins, wus nnrolccl by Jutlgo Ander son Tuesday, at tiio request of the min ister. A tract of npproxi nntely 32,800 acres has been excluded from tho reservation of the Siskiyou national forest, Most of it, however, is already located, many hoiiipsteud filings being made on it, and tiieiie locutors will not be disturb ed. This settlement was ono of -the reasons for excluding the land from the reservation. The body of Mrs. Boso McXcal, of White Salmon, Wash., was found in a slough at tho foot of Kiliugsworth avenue, I'ortlnud, Tuesduy. Who wan dered nway from a friend's house, and hail been missing since Monday morn ing. She had been in poor health for some time. The will of tho Into Bufus Mnllory was filed for probate in Portland Tues day. ; His sou, H. F. Mnllory, is ap pointed executor, nnd the estato is val ued at 11(10,000. Morgan ami King, tho hold-up men, who robber W. IS. I'errinian nt itnndon some time ngo, were found guilty and bis't week sentenced to the pen for from three to ten years. Senator Lane has had n bill passed by the senate permitting vessels to pass in and out of tho Columbia bound to and from Portland without stopping at Astoriu. Jackson county has 7.S0S registered voters and mining these is one lone pop ulist, a woman at tin t, in tho prohibi tion and independent list the women outnumber tiio men. J. D, MeKennen lias been buying horses and cattle in the Lntirnnde sec tion, which ho will ship to Alaska. Eugene is nt Inst free from a mensjes epidemic which has ?wept tho city for moro than a year. The reason the epi- IF KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE SALTS Says Backache I a Sign Ton Hare Been Eeatlng Too Much Meat Which Forms Uric Add. When you - rake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been eat ing too much meat, nays a well'known authority. Meat forms uric acid lrhu-b overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the- blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggisa and elog you must relieve them, like- you relieve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy ajiells; your stomach sonrs, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The mine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels oft eii get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek reiief two or three times during the night. Kither consult a good, reliable physi cian at once or get from yotrr phar macist about four ounces of Jad Halts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days nnd your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for genera tions to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, aUo to neutralize acids in tho urine ro it no longer irritates, thus end ing bladder weak nets. ' Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, effer vescent lithia-water drink. TEACHING EWES TO OWN TWIN OR ORPHAN LAMBS I demic ended was because there was no more fuel, everybody having had the disease. ! V Two hundred Woodmen of the World met nt hugene Wednesday for a two' ' days ' session. ., ' i Bcports from Baker county snow i that rabies among cattle on lower Burnt river, is becoming alarmingly' prevalent. Farmors have been forced ! to kill 18 head of cattle there in the 1 past week. , Father Time Time drills along,, aud, never stop ping, winds up out spool of thread; the yunie to do our early shomiillET is 1001111111! I .l"Ft ahead. It sim- . y""" -v ''-51 I I "y ueaia oui james u Thunder how U til t'me 0PS scooting r . nn- anil n,w nn.l then we pause and wonder where all the days have gone. When Vfl fire nlil n .rS! "lon"1 see,n short- j Vjar , in youth; the years f 6 A r are smaller by a TK . hi f i !: ftnil quarter, and 'still I they shrink, Ior- sooth. This1 busy ; world we throw our Iits In will soon he ours no more; time nurries us, aud that like blitzen, toward another shore So do not make mo lose a minute, as it goes speeding by; I want to catch each lnur and skin it and hang it up to dry. A thou sand tasks are set before me, import ant, every one, nnd if yon stand around and bore me, I'll die beforo they're done. Oh, yon mav go and herd to gether, and waste tho transient day, and talk about tho crops and weather until the roosters lay, but I hive work that long has beckoned, and any Jim or Joe who causes me to lose a second, I look on as a foe. TXJ A Ooimlittit. 114 br Attains .NuwnpapiT Smtcft ! Let the Journal want ads be your I agents in buying, selling, routing, ex changing and hiring. Public Schools Not Founded to Furnish Clinics For Sex Mad Fanatics By Bishop WARREN A. CANDLER of Methodist Episco pal Church South Lapp & Bush, Bankers Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes Traveler's Checks ALOXO process of reformers (so called) have sought to bring to pass oil sorts of mnchine made "millenniums." If they deal with tho social evil they proceed on the notion that purity is only possible to thoso who nro above want or have good wages. , They are never deeply concerned to work on the souls of men and women, but they are absorbed in trying to improve surroundings. THEY HAVE MOKE FAITH IN THE TOWER OF ENVIRONMENT THAN IN THE STRENGTH OP CONSCIENCE. . They have done much to lead multitudes of men and women to wait for something to bo done for them rather than by them before undertaking to live virtu ously. NOW OUR REFORMERS, WHO HAVE BEEN GIVING SUCH ATTEN TION TO ENVIRONMENT FOR MANY YEAR3 AND WHO HAVE FAILED, TURN TO A VAIN ATTEMPT TO REGULATE HEREDITY. HENCE THIS HUGE 8CHEME OF EUGENICS, WHICH IS, INDEED, A TRAGIC BLUN DERING WITH 8ACRED THINGS. ALREADY IT HAS YIELDED A COR RUPTING BULK OF SALACIOUS TALK ABOUT SEX HYGIENE AND SEX INSTRUCTION IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. THE WHOLE DISGUSTING MOVEMENT RESTS ON THE ASSUMPTION OF MAN'8 8AMENESS WITH THE BRUTES. IT LEAVES ENTIRELY OUT OF THE ACCOUNT MAN'S FREEDOM OF WILL, WHICH DIVINE CHARACTERISTIC LIFTS HIM IN FINITELY ABOVE ANY AND ALL BRUTES. It is time to tell these pretentious mechanicians to stand aside. Let them KEEP THEIR nANDS OFF OUR SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL CHILDREN AT LEAST. Our public schools were not founded to furnish clinical opportunities for sex mad fanatics. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis, Ore., May 4. Ewes that have lost, their own Iambs may still often bo utilized for the raising of twin lambs or lnmha thai have lost their own mothers. "Nearly every year one lamb or more dies, even out of the small flocks that run on the general farm," says E. M. Nelson, siieop spe cialist at O. A. C. "In such eases the ewes may bo made stop-mothers. But of course it will bo necessary to get the eye to own the strange lamb. This may be accomplished in either of the following ways: 1. The skin may t dead lnmb and plac( to be adopted. we lambs by the scent, the lamb skin will I liove that the lamb akin should be rcn- i, hours, or sooner if : 2. The ewe mny be caught auu "every two or three hours for the new lamb to suck. In a few days, gener ally five or six, the ewe will own the lamb. Sprinkling a little of the ewe's milk over the lamb will be a great help in this method." ROOSEVELT IS FETED. Tarn, May 6. Colonel Theodore Boosevclt ami party spent today visit ing places of interest here. Tho colo nel was also the gu-st of honor at u reception luncheon at the governor's palace. Colonel Koosevelt will sail to morrow for New York aboard the liner Aiden. ACRES OF LIBERTY. o This is the slogan of hack-to-the-land enthusiasts. Whether you want two acres, or twenty, or five hundred, the place to find them offered is in the Want Columns of this paper. Just wateh "Farms" and "Real Ec tato for Pale". Perhaps you have some set ideas of your own regarding the littlo place in the country you hnwe dreamed of for so long. If you have, then state your re quirements in a Journal Want Ad of your own. t Wanted to correspond with Banker, Attorney or Business Man, retired or active, must be well known In Salena and throughout Marion county to act as Financial Agent for an In corporated company, organized under Oregon Laws; must be will ing to assist in placing a stated amount of stock, with the under standing that one-half of the stook sold will be invested in first Mortgages, City, County or School District Bonds through out Marion county. Remunera tion in proportion to work done. Address P. O. Box 290, Portland, Oregon. SalemFence Works E. B. FLEMING, Prop. Headquarters American Wire Fence, Morley's Patent Hop Bas ket Send your orders in now. Big stock of hop and loganbery wire. Bubbor roofing, $1.60 up per tqnara. Elastic roof paint, eaaf t beat Stock of painta and Tarnishes at 20 pet cent dnction, three brands. Cedar feacc posts and wood, and iren alk and drira gate. 850 Court SL Phot 134 P. O. Box 355. Back of tihi4 SUM 9T016-IN. 19-INCH EMBROIDERIES EMBROIDERIES AT 15c A YARD AT 25c A YARD 43-INCH VODLE CHILDREN'S EMBROIDERY OXFORDS 65c A YARD Good Quality. $1 Pair i I MEN'S OXFORDS LADIES' OXFORDS TWO GOOD LINES GOOD QUALITY, $2 AND $1.73 PAIR $1.25 A PAIR Millinery This is where you get the best at the least price. We have the newest of the new. Nice trimmings at little prices. Little hats for little tots. Nice assort ment of girl's hats the kind you want the hard to get. See us for flowers, ribbons, laces and shapes. Rostein & Greenbaum 240 and 246 Commercial Street The Journal want ad way is the up-to-date business method, and it never fails to work. Trj it now. 1 IN THEY COME AND OUT t f THEY GO. They como into our J nt Boom ll,--Busn Bank T -" of "Out of J - X Republican Candidate Stands for fewer laws, few er commissions, lower taxes, semi-annual payments, sim ple registration laws. Vote this: 59 X THOS. BROWN. Be sure of the number. Primary May 15, 1914. There are scores of good houses, flats aud apartments advertised- daily in the Journal Wants just read them and seo how quickly you can be suited. Household Worry Is 99 Per Cent Wash Day Good Riddance by the Laundry Remedy. Linen, blankets, curtains ap parelall come back beautiful when we do your work. Salem Steam Laundry 136 South Liberty Street Phone 25 Dry Cleaning. Ask the Drivei tr , if '.--... i l..:.mmm:;,L. -1r...: E. N. GILLINGHAM Republican Candidate POE County Recorder (raid Adv.) T -A. I GOLD DUST FLOUR f Made by the SYDNEY POWEB COMPANY Sydney, Oregon Made for family Use. Ask your grocer for it . Bran f nd shorts always on hand. P. B. WALLACE, Agent. House ot Half a Million Bargains Come and see the biggest wonder in the history of Salem. We buy and sell everything from a needle to a piece of gold. We pay the hitrhest cash pnee for everything. Monster stock of all kinds of grain sacks. H. Steinbock Junk Co. 233 State Street. Salem, Oregon. Phone Main 2M ItlHUHIIIHIHtMHMM i Marion Second Hand Store T Mvr 1aB 'ma 1PntnMJl 3 A. . r- A " r" Y"r Tanery or new and eecond- ha.d goods. We boy sell art exehange clothing, shoes, musical in " ! -." "U k",dS. i t0, honid furnishing,, trunks, suit eases, .. stOTos, ranges men's forms&iaga, garden tools, ete. We also sell all . . Kinds of goods oa comausefea. Marion Second Hand Srrr f Forry and Liberty streets. PtoM 2329. : ........... SfiS.J'SWWf o MM