TUESBAY t. FACE FOUR. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Capital Journal RESTORE LOCAL REPRESENTATION. ! C6mnlaint against the selection of four out of the five Mar- an iNDT.gg?rpENT newspaper! ion county legislative candidates from Salem at the recent repub lican primaries is voiced by the Silverton Tribune as giving balem an undue proportion of representation at the expense of the coun ty. There were fourteen candidates in the field and other sec- tions were well represented with candidates, but they failed to re ceive the county-wide support essential to nominate. Published every evening except Mnday by The Capital Journal Print ing Co, 13S South Commercial atreet. Telephone Circulation and Busl- VllJCe, SI; Rational rTWITia. a a. a. PUTNAM. Editor and Publisher. G. 0. P. Convention Snap-Shots - THE STORY OF 16 NOMINATIONS By A. H. VANDEXBERQ Entered at second dona tnnd mai mer at Balem. Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier cent a month. By nail tte a month. LIS for three Month. 13 25 for all month. $4 per ' rear in Marlon and Polk counties. JEinewhere f S a year. Bi order of U. a government, all hall subscription are payable in ad-trance ThlrteWb Conremtoa. nce agreement that the place should The thirteenth republican national') to Charles W. Fairbanks of India convention met in Chicago Jne 21. 1984 na. Speaker Cannon had at first been -v-.i h nation- considered, but flatly refused to allow There were approximately 8000 votes cast in the primaries,' , and perhaps the most his name to be used. Fairbanks uke- 3500 Of Which were in Salem. It naturally followed that the cartooned man in American public life wise postponed decision until tne erev- Salem candidates had the advantage in having more extended -ZJZZSSZZ sonal acquaintance than candidates from the smaller towns or. v,ceCnairmail Henry c. Payne. Eiihu en considered. country enioved. When tO this is added the tendency to VOte Root r New York was temporary The platform again made tariff pro- lr i nsHv Mmlainwt 1 chairman, and "Uncle Joe- Cannon tectioa a paramount issue The primary is a free-for-all and any one can enter. "' ... r BYARTHUR ID KKUMilRPK WV ..r suppose yob Of course Timothy Turtle was glad tine the air ,hv 'lmsk . . i ; j-i . I - - Ana m.. iuai Jniim o w gone, nut! merry twinkle in h' na was rar irom nannv. rvinff hini ... less on his back on the bank of Black Creek. He told Mr. Crow that he hoped Johnnie would forget to come back Ward. Tribune Bide.. N H. BtockweU, People Chicago. Oaa bldg., JIEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press 1 exclusively entitled to the use for publication ef U news dispatches credited to tt er cot otherwise credited In this paper aad also local new published herein. 0 regon bservations renewed al- ptm. -I mrmanent chairman. legiance to me goiu sianuaru; inere ' . , h legation t build ud the American. "vu'" ' is no way of selecting a ticket or slate in which all sections would; convention.8 routrne, that about the merchant marine and a powerful navy;" 37 " m w T, l r.nnxu.ntatir.n Fffnrta marl tn kppn rprtain Salem ran-1 nnlv contest stirred uo in the three and declared for peaceful settlement; fj rywse. ne aw didates out of the field so that the county would be better rqwjw-J. TS. tnZVlTZZ sented. only resulted in the more aggressive campaign by the im-ih,nh .,ri..,i h. the dose mama of on of American citizens m foreign bitious. Under the present method, the result is the same in every county candidates from the harsrest city comprise the bulk; of the county legislative delegation, whether the city be Med ford, Eugene, Salem or Portland. It is the system of apportion ment that is faulty and should be changed to give the country a fair deal in legislative representation and permit local represen tation. Instead of the representatives being elected at large, the ! county should be districted and each district given representa 495 to 490. pianos; conaeiimeu uuiawiui cuuiuma- Tho noawirmtinii nf President Mc tions of Capital or of Labor, and vlg- ! Kinley and the emniinently successful orously approved Roosevelt's foreign and popular succession of Theodore policy, as particularly erapnasixeu n not be given publicity as profiteers or to refute investigators' figures on profits they have made, the commit-' toe announced. . 1 1 1 ,. , f roniami uwners mm vi m, , , . , , , seven apartment houses In Portland aion, uasea on population. Hie senniur aie eiiuugit to ctctfc at and an owner of a rooming house I lqrge. . - .'" . . . were today summoned to appear Tues-j It is questionable whether, even with local men representing day before Mayor Bakers committee! 1 u n i t of eight appointed to investigate cases' the various distncts.-the county would really be the gainer, for .f rent profiteering. They win be ask-jhe county is such a small unit that the interest of one section is t'd to show cause why they should;.. nf-.i. nf il .iHnnJ .W tVio-rhnnor wnnlrl jliminato mnph . v ... . f ' c - of the sectional jealousy arid petty animosity created by the pre sent method and make for county unity and harmony by restoring the principle of local representation. ' , ml rt TJ . 1 I I' . IV . . Portland. Tony Pollen, arrested f Tne successiui canaiaates are iainy representative 01 tne en- iat week at Oregon city on a charge : tire county. Though four of them come from the largest city, of manufacturing illicit liquor, iosi Ms status as a federal prisoner Mon day when he died at a local hospital ns the result of an automobile acci dent late last night. Two others with Hollch who was nt liberty on ball, were seriously Injured in the acci dent. ' " ' Astoria. Effective today sweeping reductions In prices of lumber will be made In the Astoria yards, it was announced today. The drop ranges from $7 per thousand for rough lum ' Iter to $1S per thousand on the bet ter grades, Reduction In the prices ; of shingles and lath will be from 30 to BO per cent. Roosevelt made it inevitable that his name alone should be considered fot first place on the ticket. He received 994 votes the convention total. Possibility of argument over the viea-preaidency was foreclosed by ad- the Venezuela case, in the Orient along the Alaskan boundary, and In the ac quisition of the Panama canal. (Continued tomorrow with the story of the Fourteeth convention.) "Oh, John would say I was a goose.", fJonrn RTUC A YO "Well. I'll write It to him," said iVCgfU DUy$ Sil C Sent To Father As "Packages" Charles. "That's all right, you write him. He'll take It from yu, but he would n't take it from me." "Well, I'm going to write. Because, to tell vou the truth, Katherine, I do not think this oil property of yours npps Vnch consisting nf a little necTO will pan out as welt as you expected. boy recerltiy passed through Denver I really hope John won't put any en route from Topeka, Kansas, to Og more money into it." j den T-tah.' Orville Skaggs, eight years uia you ten mm imu ueio.c ol(. wag ackaKe No. 1. while his bro- Denver, Colo. Two express "pack- no sectiori of the county is likely to suffer, for they comprise men representing diversified interests with ramifications throughout r.ne county, mere is a manuiacturer, a iarmer, a aruggist, a jour nalist and a lawyer representative of the county's industries. Still if the country is dissatisfied and desires local representation it can nominate independents and elect them in November. ; EXPLAINING THE OUIJA, Moves of theuija board are not due to ghostly fingers but to the action of the sub-conscious mind of the operator, stated Dr. Ji Allen Gilbert of the medical school of the University of Oregon at the annual meeting of the alumni at Portland, who asserts that the mysterious manifestations are based on scientific prin ciples. . ' - i .. i "Everyone has a storehouse of sub-conscious knowledge from which he draws," declares Dr. Gilbert, "though without know ing it. Ouija does not move of its own accord, nor is it moved by powers outside the individual manipulating it. . The answers are but the embodiment of sub-conscious states significant or insignif icant in proportion to the intimacy of the relation that can be es tablished between conscious and sub-conscious states. As it is not' understood, the phenomena are attributed to spirit control, messages from the dead or communications of the super-natural." The underlying principle is the psychological state which re flects every action in the imagination before there is a muscular response, rms condition is sub-conscious ana is in proportion to order mid win preside during thefthe aseendency which the sub-conscious gains over the conscious Portland. A. M. Fry and his nsso lclates of Aurora, Ore., have applied "to the controller of the currency at Washington, D. C, for a charter for n bank with a capital of 125.000 to le opened at Aurora and known as . the Liberty National Bank. Portland. With a full quota of 4(Ue officers and delegates in attend ance, the annual convention of the, state council of the Knights of Col umbus opened here Mondny. The convention will close Wednesday venlng. Frank J. Lonerf an, .Portland, j state deputy, called the session to three days of the conference. Baker. Baker In to become the of ficial headquarter --of the l.eyul Le Klon of Loggers and Lumbermen for the district comprising Baker, Grant, Union and WahVwa counties and the floutheaxtern , part of Idaho. Head quarters hiwe been established. , Portland. Value, of cargoes cleared from Portland for offshore destlnn , tlon during the month of May total , more than $4,300,000 according1 to ; figures tabulated from record) kept : by the merchant' exehanie. Of this amount, ft, 680, 088 Is represented In the value of rrunorul freight, exclu sive of lumber, wheat and flour. that the rnuscular reflex gains definateness In the process of time, we will learn more about the sub conscious mind, and the knowledge gained will, afford a scientific explanation for much of the phenomena of life now shrouded in mystery. . i - ; An extract from lerbert Hoover's cablegram from Paris. July 23, 1919, regarding sugar policies reads: "Any continuation of control will require action by congress and it must embrace; n' 1 T1nn '.appropriations, the continuation of power and embargo,, control .y'-enillS trian ... A.. . ........ .. . . .. V- W . rt. - or speculation, proriteenng ana aistriDution. urns congressional , fcXpLOTatlOn Uf or the sugar situation rests at least partially on the failure of Congress to act in this, as in all other reconstruction matters. ' : Editors Discuss Paper Shortage At Convention Boston, June 1. The- newspaper shortage was discussed Monday at the National Editorial association annual convention hero. A resolution, unani mously adopted and forwarded to Chairman Porter of the house foreign .relations committee urged the pass- , age of senate Joint resolution No. 152, designed to afford Immediate relief iin the emergency and to benflt coun try nwspnpers, Edward Albright, Oallatln, Tenn., president, declared "the ubiquitous ; profiteer Is throad In the print pa per field Just as in many other lines.'' ' ''My opinion Is." ha added, "that 'congress should restrict the Issue oi , very newspaper to n maximum of s.i many pnges per day and define a ' maximum page site. Largs users of ' print paper with their own mills or contracts should keep out of the spot market. Congress alwo should make a mibstantlnl, appropriation for a deter- mined effort to find a substitute for 1 wood pulp." ! President P, T. Dodge, of the Inter national Paper company, predictel higher price for newsprint, due to threatened rise In freight rates and S wage demands by labor. He suggest ed some amendment to the postal law , requiting an added rate on newspn- per above a certain weight and sire. "Canada Is permitted to keep tntr mnterlala from us," he said, "and so long as we er thus deprived, the International Taper company will not put another dollar wllh my consent Into American mills." "8ijkT tit Ml : ''rt i came away?" "Yes, my dear, I told him "What did he say?' ther, Lester, six years old, was package No. 2 Their mother, who resides in Tope . . , . iiinr mutual, niiu icaiwro .11 avwc- That he was gomg to see the thing tQ fa ..ml .'. . i v Miii,. ther who ts lhing In. Ogden. She de- ' That s Just like him, especially as " B , , , . !. !t ,1, ' , -.ith cided to for-ard them by express and. " b " glnce the company acCepts animals of r,nt i Mm nv more of vour'a" kinds for transportation, the off! . m. d..r cia'8 decided that the boys could be "I nnlv isve is. ooo. ns vou know. ' accepted. In the bank, but as I gave him my The company suspended one rule power of attorney, I can't very well governing the shipment of live animals keen that from hliti." however, which undoubtedly added "But surely he won't ask you fori much to the boys' comforts. That rule any money or use your money; he' requires the crating of all animals to must have plenty of his own if he be sent by express, wants to carry out his idea," The boys .though, saw to It that an- llu Particular Ideas other rule, which provides that anl- "I see you don.'t know John as well mst be fed at all Junction points as you think you do. My husband, f and wherever else it may be necessary Charles, has the' most peculiar idea was not suspended. abuot money that. I have ever known. I I think he makes a great deal of, J7iiwtc Cnlfh mnnev. ftnd vet I have never known UrlHUU'O VvUl"itt where he has Invested it or what he has done with it If John should die tomorrow,-without a will, I would not know where' , to look for his Invest ments, or anything ' that he might leave." ,. . .. . ."Don't you think he has any life In surance?" asked Charles. I laughed, "Have you any Idea, Charles, "that John Gordon would in vest In anything that would not bring money tb HIM?"!' "But of course he wants to take care of you?" . "He expects tf while he is living, and In his own way." "But If he should die? Charles. ' it-. few. w awav" m Srowled. 4uaai But hi$r ffiiM -There's UkV iT L here," he thought, , ? tend to miss it" t If Timothy Turtle Mr. Crow i.tttini . little later Johnnie rZ!ti other boy whom he .auei . account of hi, hair) can, to the spot where Ttafe L pon the ground JT"" number of things. cn ' rope, an old graln. ZtT' "Goodness!" said Mr eX? self, as he looked on. "iC H not. Timothy Tuhi. Ba t that he', going t0 u!?? ttnij, "I U be sick." . Outlines Rules To , Condition Men Philadelphia: Lawson Robertsan, coach of the University of Pennsylva track team, in announcing his training rules for the present season, urges his athletes to make the Olympic Games the goal of their athletic aplratlons. "Every man has the highest obtain able athletic honor before him," he says. "This is to represent the United States In the1 Olympics. It means no lit tle sacrifice, but the men who are will- persisted lng to forego the pleasures of social life I and attend strictlv to the tasks Ir-.-nn- "Who was It who said, 'After me ea by the coaches have 75 per cent of the . deluge'?" I asked.. I inccess in thel. mm. Th ntW 5S at once that Timothy- Turtle knew next to nothing about boys. "I should think, Mr. Crow told Timothy, "you'd want Johnnie Green to return."- , . , "Why?" Timothy snapped out his question in an angry tone, as he lay there upside down and stared at old Mr. Crow, who sat in a tree nearby. "Well," Mr. Crow answered, "who 'll set you on your feet again If he doesn't?" "Don't you worry about me!" Tim othy Turtle sneered. "I'll right myselfi as soon as there's a freshet. If there's a big enough rain the creek will rise as high as I am now. And nobody could keep me on my back m the water." Old Mr. Crow actually snickered "You might have to wait till next spring for a freshet," he said cheer fully. "And what would you eat meanwhile?" Having had a hearty meal of fish Just before leaving the creek, Tim othy Turtle hadn't once thought efi eating.' And naturally Mr. Crow's question troubled him. So he frowned ftightfulty. And he snapped his hook ed Jaws together', for he had to take something In hi Jaw and bit It, if it was no more than the air. "I suppose" Mr. Crow Tomorrow Charles ,' Doesn't Understand John- Hie federal supreme court has : decided the referendum amendments to state constitutions are inoperative insofar as they affect ratification of federal amendments. ... This sounds -the nell to the hopes of the wets, and it means that the people have nothing to say in amending the constitution. It cost Wood nearly a dollar apiece for every vote he received in Oregon. Cheap at half the price. V' Rippling Rhymes BY THE SEA. I'm at La Jolla, bythe sea; the view is something fine,' with large blue billows rolling free five' thousand miles of b?ine. The grand old oceah is my lawn, it slops against my door; no dande lions grow thereon, to make my spirit sore. The water booms into the caves, reminding me of this : I do not have to mow the waves ; and Bitch a thought is bliss. I see the billows, high and dark, the endless surge and swell ; I see the seals, and hear them bark, as though they'd things to sell. And I could sit and watch the sea one thousand years of two, and every hour 'twould bring to me some message strange and new. It's saying, as it sighs and raves, and murmurs, moans and pleads. "You do not have to mow my waves, or from me dig the weeds." The salt sea sloshes round my coop, and sharks come up and play, and I sit out, upon the stoop, and smile the livelong day. I've always had a lawn to mow. and weeds to dig at night ; no sandbura on the ocean, grow, to mar my chaste delight. . s Pacific Ocean San Franclco.iThe project to sci entifically explore the resources of the Pacific Ocean will be further advanc ed by the scientists who will gath( at Seattle, June 17-19 for the fourth an nual meeting of the Pacific Division of the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science. The Immediate, practical benefit' in be derived from this work, which will require international cooperation, it Is said, wllf b the replacing of hit or miss methods hitherto used In uu fishing Industry which an orderly pro cedure baaed on an accurate know ledge bfthe ocean flora and fauna. "We shall be able to farm the oc ean," said Winthrop W. Sargeant, sec retary of the California Academy of Sciences. , " W. E. Allen of the Scripp Institu tion Tor Biological Research at La Jolla, California, will present a paper in the symposium on "The Animal and Plant Resources of the North Pacific Ocean." Dr. D. T. McDougaL director of the Desert Laboratory, ef the Carnegie In stitution of Washington, will present a paper at this meeting In which a discussion will be made of ome of the biological and physical barrier which limit the distribution of plant. LOVE and MARRIED LIFE By the Noted Author ID AH McGLONE GIBSON success In their grasp. The other 25 per cent la athletic ability. . "Every, man must train himself and the "Honor System", will tje used. Smoking Is prohibited for athletes and for visiting friends. Every athlete must be in bed at 10:45 p.Yn. and 'there is to be no unnecessary noise after 10:15. "Eat slowly and chew . your food well. A small portion of food well chewed is worth double the amount bolted. Don't drink water after exer cising or before meals. Two days be fore and on the day of competition. the rations will be cut In half. Try to go to sleep at a definite hour and He in bed ten minutes after awakening before arising, "Try to be cherful. Cheerfulness is next to Godliness. -A sulky athlete nev er won a.- championship. Remember that training Is regularity." - And Timothy himself ., think the same. He passes at Johnnie and Red they came near him. But th t! good care to Eeep beyon4 l a most foolish mann.r kZ!w. drawing his head as far u JL into his shell, he thrust as far as It would go. . " And that was exactly what v.. wanted him to do. Before. T Turtle who was somewhat slw-w. ' ted before he reallied what ay. plan was, Johnnie Green Mj h friend Red had slipped 0M : around his head and another ami his body. And after turning a captive right side up they staked hi, "P"" '"e sana so that ke tetii ; not move. "There!" Johnnie Green em when they had Timothy Turtle te they wanted hmi. "That's the way fc Redskins, do with then- enemiei" And his friend the red-talrel bs danced something that might bin been an Indian war dance. Anyhow, neither old Mr. Crown Timothy Turtle had ever aeei m thing like it. , Tank Ingenalty Triamphi. Philadelphia. Yankee Inpnuttj has triumphed; in far off Belgian oat The American steamer Ogantt Mt at Hog Island last May as an en to. ner, ran short of " fuel at Mattel at tain H. Kerr managed in 21 hounk convert her Into a ooal burner. Attn discharging Its cargo, the Osu steamed nearly 1,009 mtfea So Im Pal ms Island and obtained a supply d fuel oil. She was reconverted lots a oil burner there and returned te Km remarked York. j Merchants. Will Discuss , Lever r Act At Sessions . San Francisco. Merchants of na tional standing will discuss the Lever act, designed to prevent profiteering, at the National Retail Dry Goods as sociation here June 2 and 3. . A group of prominent British drap ers will attend the sessions, In con nection with which an elaborate enter tainment program has been arranged. The California Retail Dry Goods as sociation convention will be held here immediately at the conclusion of the national body' meeting. Woman's Intuition Charles came home this morning full of enthusiasm tor John and his business capabilities. "I tell you, Katherine,' 'he said, "that husband of your is one of the best business men I have ever met. He' put his hand right on the weak spot of the whole matter." ' "Then vou think, Charles, there's been some underhanded work 7". I aaked. ' ' , - , 'Undoubtedly," he replied, "Have you found out anything definite us yet ?" "Only the fact that one of your wells, that- up to date has been iuk Ins no pmgi'ess whatever, suddenly developed Into a real gusher the day before I left. This, you know, is un precedented. Hut we think, or rather John thinks, that 'those crooks,' as he callH them, knowing that he was new in Ui oil fields, thought they could put something over on him." "J'erhnp none of my wells has been a gusher," I said. PotMlbiiltlra Hinted At "Why wouldn't It be possible for 'thomt crooks," as you call them, not Mother never told me that she had had wells dug on It, and I am sure that father had 'never done so. In fact, I think both of them had tor gotten about the land.. Now' wouldn't it b feasible for some unscrupulous person to think they could teal the- title to the land? You know you had sum trouble about It before you got down -there. I've heard of salting gold mines why .not salt an oil well? They could go ahead and dig a well, and perhaps pipe the oil from one of their proven well on the other side, expecting to sell the fake 'gusher' Im mediately to a 'greenhorn." Then' when they found that the owners had turned up and were- really going to fight for the land, they just deflected the oil back to their own wells again. i Now, when John has gone down there, they are playing the game again, expecting in some way to get even with him. This may Je, prob- ublv Is. n wild Idea of mine. Charles.' but I am groping around In my mind for some explanation of the strange behavior of my oil wells." '.Why, Katherine, that's a very Utile rhilil i.nr ven- ': in - - I . , 1 1. 1 i .. ,. . i - .3 : i ...... I. .... anticipating we would ever turn up to '"' ; . claim our property, to have slurt.-d such a iu,n- a y well going with the idea of sell- "l didn't hear it at all. It struck me inf a "fake" gusher to someone?" j ,naS U might be possible. It s a kind "I never thought of that." j of woman s intuition." "As von Know, l'hiHt. I have only "Why don't w a Vi n littlo spot of Irtn'i down tere.1 John?" CHEERrllP Bheaicfast? A have;l ; dishvof Hide by Poshra Cereal Calkttle Gre&JEch this s to 1 A Service Station for Eyes When anything happens to your automobile, even a very little thing, you stop at a motor service station at once and have the trouble remedied. ' But When something happen' to your eyes, how apt you are to Jet it go from day to day, putting off the bother of finding out Whether anything serious is really the matter. Yet your eyes are many times more valuable than your automobile. , . We like ,to . consider ourselves a Service Station 'of Eyes, always able to give you whatever help your ' ' need. As optical specialists we are equipped with the material and the necessary experience to fit you tB ' the particular kind of glasses you require. We operate our own lense grinding plant, one of the best on the coast 1 Room 205 to 211 Bank of Commerce Building. Henry E. M orris & Co. SALEM, OREGON. irSATREtf To eat, with or wflio a slice of our ligM, "1" BAKE-RITE bread. and grown-ups bothf our bread; it's so soft110 flavored, like rich a loaf and judge yourseil. Bdke-meBM 40 CUUC -" II LADD & BUSH BANKERS Established 1SC3 General BasMng BiiseSl ' Office Hours from 10 1. m. to I F- A! ,1U Sal t ;! Jui t dul i . ebon I Ju i : Jul i ; I 1