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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1920)
4 (f I; n PAGE FOUR The Capital Journal 'AM INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Sunday by The Capital Journal Print lag Co., 138 South Commercial street. Telephones Circulation and Busl i: Editorial rooms, 83. il. PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher. Entered as second class mail mat- . tnr at Salem. Oregon. unuar'BiprroN RATES By carrier 60 cents a month. By, Ma.ll 60o a month, $125 for three months, $2.25 for six months, $4 per year In Marlon and Polk counties, lsewhere $5 a year. By order of V. 8. government, all ms.ll subscriptions are payable in ad- Advertising representatives W. U. "Ward, Tribune Bldg., New York; W. H. Stockwell, Peoples Gas. Bldg., Chicago. ; MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published herein. Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God is one Lord. Deuteron- omy 6:4. o regon bservations The Dalles Juniper Flat, a great level plateau south of here, which contains something over 100 square miles, has never produced any'hing ' but wheat. Now it la springing Ui in orchards, berry patches and divei. li fted farms. This change, which hi s converted a near desert to a veri table garden, is all due to the opera lions of the Wapinlta Irrigation com pany, which began work - here si.; months ago. Water was brought from the high hills to the east of the pla teau and works have now been com pleted to the point where every farm on the flat can be supplied with abundant water. Juniper Flat is bounded roughly. Thb principal towns in Juniper Flat are Wapinlta, Maupin, Tygh Valley and Wamio. The territory 1b tributary to The Dalles and is connected with this city by a railroad and stage lines, Bheorur. The falls of the Des chutes river near hero, which have been the site of nothing but a toll bridge and a white elephant hotel for the past 30 years, are to be har-j nessed soon by the Eastern Oregon Iand company. Enormous potential electrical energy is now going to waste, Harrisburg. Hundreds of tons of liay recently harvested near here are lying around and may be lost, all be cause there la no baling wire to be had in this vicinity for love or mon- Hood River It Is estimated that this year's apple pack will reach only 50 or 60 percent of last year's 2,000,000 box crop, but the fruit Ik of exceptional quality. ' liend The two sawmills and all the logging camps of the Booth Kelly Lumber company have resum ed operations, The plant closed down for Independence day, and the mills have been undergoing repairs since that time. Portland Iceless ( refrigerators, manufactured In this city by the Ico les Refrigerator company, have been on the market lesH than a year, but are already selling In large quanti ties throughout the northwest and middle west. The loeless Ice box works on a principle of water cir culation mid evaporation. Astoria A six side logging camp is planned by the 8adile Mountain J,ogglng company, now operating a two side camp in Us big tract of tim ber on the Lewis & Clark railroad. Two other companies are also log Kins along the lines of this road, and a. third Is moving in. Portland This city Is destined to bo tho largest wool manufacturing center In the west. In the opinion of 8. M. McClure, manager of tho Co lumbia basin wool warehouse, who was a recent visitor In Portland. Portland The Portland Trust com pany is offering stock in a new mo tion picture concern to operate in this city. Demi A tract of limb,- 12 mlls In length, containing 20.000 acres and located from 32 to 50 miles from ltend, has been purchased by the Urooks-Scanlon Lumber company for about $1,50(T,000. Assurance of the permanence of the lumber Indus try here ta given In the announce ment of the company that this tract of timber will not be touched for another 10 years. Klamath Falls. Klamath county will within a few years load the world In mint production, in t ho opinion of O. H. Todd, Oregon's pi oneer mint grower, . - .'i THE VICIOUS CIRCLE Award of a $600,000,000 raise in wages for railroad em ployes will require a similar raise in freight rates to meet the added expense of railroad operation, and this in turn means an increased price of the merchandise and materials transported to meet the added cost of transportation and increases the already exorbitant cost of living, supplying a new cause for still further increases in wages. So it goes in a vicious circle. Every increase in wages means an increase in cost of production and all the increases are eventu ally placed on the consumer who seeks to lift the burden by individual increases to benefit himself at the expense of the community and finds himself the victim of similar action by others. The railroad employe pays his own higher wages by paying the increased freight charges on all he consumes or purchases. The factory worker pays his own increase in wages when he buys the Droducts of his factory or those of other factories whose worknlen have secured a raise that is passed on to the consuming public. So it goes throughout industry. , It is a scheme that works all right as long as there is an under production and an unlimited market, as long as there is more work than there are workers, but when stocks depleted by war are markets become glutted and industry slackens, when closed mills replenished, when surplus of products replaces shortage,' when and idle men fill the land, the vicious circle will break and there will be a violent reaction toward normal. But the increased cost of labor Is only one of several factors in the increased cost of living. Almost universal profiteering is as great or a greater cause. A raise in wages is made the excuse by the manufacturer for an excess profit on the wages. The fabulous profits in the steel, oil, coal, fabric and other industries are not due to increased wage scales so much as to 'prof iteering. The increased freight rates will not in reality be due so much to the increased wages as to the payment of interest on watered stock and inflated valuations guaranteed by the government regardless of actual invested capital. There are signs that the era of profiteering, of fabulous wages, of limitless extravagence is drawing to a close. Pressure by the federal reserve bank, is curtailing speculation and luxury investment and forcing a gradual readjustment by deflation. There will not and cannot be a pania in the old sense, for Wall Street no longer controls the finances of the nation, but there will be a slow and steady readjustment towards normal that cannot be other than beneficial. And it will be a long time before e world shortage in supplies is replenished. Living will never decrese to its former cost. Wages will never be down to the old level, for as a result of the war, the; world is on a new and higher financial plane. The dollar will never have its former value, and much of the unrest and con fusion of today is caused by failure to recognize this fact. We still insist on using the old dollar as a measure for present value. The wise man is the one who recognizes this fact and readjusts his affairs accordingly and who practices thrift and economy as remedy for high cost of living. ' Rippling Rhymes OUR LITTLE JOBS Some jobs are worse than writing verse, and some are more enchanting; I'd rather play a harp all day than be a statesman ranting. For office high some men will fry, in beastly summer weather; and thresh old themes and hopjoint dreams, where reubens get togetther. I wouldn't speak six times a week to be a blooming seraph; I'd rather sing than be a king, or coroner, or sheriff. Let others rise, 'neath burning skies, our sacred bul warks guarding; I've no desire to soak my lyre, to be a Warren Harding. The statesmen scrap and fuss and yap, and Gilbert jumps on Billy, while in the shade I drink limeade, and knock the timbrel silly. My record sleeps and no one weeps o'er crimes I have committed ; the country grins when statesmen's sins are to news columns fitted. Some jobs are slick and span and spick, compared with writing sonnets, but oh, the woe that statesmen know when bees are in their bonnets! I do not sigh for office high, I wish no White House laurel; I'd rather write my rhyme tonight, and spring an ancient moral. tr hi at rm uvvTm crmmii rr-v vm r- r'.i The CuriH'iiter Bee After Buster Bumblebee left the u in,,,, in h meadow, where ,. ". eVio stnid "I "I shouiu mm should think that the son of a ueen ought to have a no. - "I don't think I'd well," he said timidly. like it very of the farm-buildings. He really night, provided it was not too far from the flower garden or the clover field. Not being one of the worrying kind, Buster was quite contented with his lot. And it would never have occurred to him to live in any different style had it not been for a remark that little Mrs. Ladybug made to him one day. old house in the meadow, wnere oub - f":,eeuTng like a tramp Mrs. Field Mouse nad once lived, he instead of had no real home. Like that quar- wne em - Lading's words did not i -i woior Mink, he would1 Now, Mrs. wnu cmw. into an'y good place that he offend Buster ;Buee !""t ?T:llV:J he, -But now can I build a housed Lva iziiuav a, nui'; i t,aA in oil mV 1116. Au sometimes a crack in the side of one I've never worked in a WM "Whv not get some one u a house for you?" she asked im. "I never thought of that! he cried. "Whom would you suggest? "I know the very person!" Mrs. Ladybug told him. "He's a Carpen ter Bee; and he lives in mc i lar by the brook. Perhaps you . know him. Johnnie Green calls him V hite face," she said. "They do say he s a very skillwul workman." T,..,k.oi, ,-enlied that he lousier DuiiiL-itu had never met the Carpenter, but that he would go and see him atj once. So over to uie u,b flew And soon he was knocking boldly at the door of the Carpenter's house. Pretty soon a mild-appearing per son, who looked not a little like Buster himself, stepped through the doorway. He wore a white patch across his front and his clothes need ed brushing sadly, for they showed many marks of sawdust. "Are you the Carpenter?" Buster Bumblebee inquired. The mild stranger said he was. "How would' you like to build a house for me?" Buster asked him. The Carpenter seemed greatly surp rised at the suggestion. "I don't think I'd like it very well,' he said timidly. "Why not?" Buster demanded. "Well, I'm busy building an addi tion to my house," the Carpenter explained. "And besides, you're a total stranger. I've never seen, you before; and we might quarrel If I did any work for you." - h. no!" Buster Bumblebee as sured him. "You couldn't quarrel with me, because I' m the most peace-loving person In Pleasant Val- '""There!" the Carpenter cried. "I knew as soon as I set eyes on you that we were bound not to agree. . . . I've always claimed that there's no peaceful person than I am In this whole neighborhood. So here we are, mim-rellne already!" "Mnvha vou're right." Buster said then. "I'll agree that you like peace more than I do. ' But remember! WEDNESDAY, JLlYa Next tn vnn i . Next to you therJTSS a fight the way i al HS work, too!" doH w Sure i Relief Z LL-Ar Doctor Tells Horn to Detect Harmful Effects of Tbfiaccc Try These SIMPLE TESTS Democratic Convention Snap-Shots The Story of Nominations By A. H. VANDENBERG ; LOVE and MARRIED LIFE By the Noted Author ID AH McGLONE GIBSON The Convention of 1802. Although there was bitter antagon ism to Cleveland In some Party quar ters he was once more the dominant Party favorite when the 1892 Demo cratic National Convention assembled at Chicago, on June 2. Cleveland's old and persistent enemiels in his home state of New York, were again the head and front of such opposi tion to him as existed; and they left no stone unturned to accomplish their purposes. No sooner had the National Com mittee issued the National Convention call, than a New York state conven tion was assembled four months ahead of the National Convention and 'a "snap" delegation set up to support; Governor David B. Hill in stead of Cleveland. Around this nucleus, which was bitterly assiled by those who were called the "anti snappers," the Cleveland opposition rallied; but to no avail. Out of were necessary to a two-thirds choice, 909 14' votes in the Convention, 607 and Cleveland's vote for a third nom ination was 617 on the first roll call. Governor Hill polled 114, and Horace Boles of Idwa was third with 103 in a total field of eleven candidates. I One roll-call for second place snuwea jaiai a. sievenson or Illinois leading, but not with a two-thirds llyiH'oerisy It was a long while after I reached my room before I was able to think coherently. K very thing, had been so wonderful since the coining of John until now, and now my world had been broken into pieces again. I had only one comforting thought about it all, and that was that I was glad to have John read Karl Shep herd's letters. I had always felt a little sting of conscience 1 n regard to liiem, I wanted him to know all Karl Shepherd's position and mine and, more than all the rest, I wanted him to know about that queen chord of intimacy which stretched between were enabled I more Imperfectly Kail Shepherd and me, by which we than he to translate ourselves to each other's side at will. An I'licnnny Situation It was an uncanny situation, and I knew that John would noot acknowl edge an understanding of anything of the kind. He would say that Karl Shepherd, knowing my Interest In the occult, was playing upon my romnntlcism. However I wantedt him to know all that had passed be. sleep, and it was some time afterward that I awakened . to find my arms empty. For a moment I thought I had awakened naturally, and then it came to me that my sleep had been broken Info by the "honk, honk" of a motor horn. Miss Parker evidently was listening for any sound that I should make, for as I awakened with a sigh she tiptoed In. There was curiosity In her eyes as well as in the tones of her voice as she made the announcement. "Mr. Gordon has just left to make the noon train. He told me to tell you that he had had a telegram which called him immediately, and he knew that you would not be able to go so soon. He said that he would meet you whenever you wired him that you were coming." "We shall try and go tomorrow, Miss Parker," I said, "just as we had decided to do. You may wire him to that effect. Wait, I will send a night message as he would not get it until tomorrow, anyway." Miss- Parker brought me the tele- Bosko Sloon has sold his farm as it wiiz too ronfinin. Who remember when a woman had some money left t'j ji:t in her 5tockin" after she jiaid fcr tween his friend and me, wanted him) graph blanks and placed the bed table across my lap. I thought very long and carefully before I wrote the message, which I decided should be perfectly common-! place aand casual. I would Intro-' duce some of that hypocrisy he had: Intimated I might use in my relations' with him, to good effect. ) I knew perfectly well that he had' received no. telegram, and he knew that I knew it, but" for once I pre tended, as he had. and said: "Sorry! your business called you away. Baby and I leave tomorrow afternoon. Meet us if possible. Katherine." I knew that It was very likely that John would not meet us, and so the eery height of my hypocrisy were the words "if possible." Then I went about calmly making arrangements for closing the house: with the exceptions of a few rooms; on the lower floor, in which Hannah; could make herself comfortable. , j In a Ouze ' j I know now tht I spent most of the day in a kind of a daze, mechan-j lcally doing things that it was ueces-j sary for me to do. j Charles came over to dinner, but he left early, savin that he had' promised to take little Bobby to the, to know that it was only a paper friendship. I wondered If I could make him realise that while I loved those let tors, yet, because Karl Shepherd had written them, I never wanted to see his face again. Because he had writ' ten them I tould never feel imper sonal In his presence, and I did not want to feel anything else. I waited a long time. Miss Parker came to me again and again, asking about the packing of this or that artl cle, and I am sure that I answered more or less sanely. But at last I could stand her inquiries no longer and I said. "I am sure that you and Hannah will know just what to do. shall lio down a while." I nni very tired and I think that I "It Is time for the baby to nurse. Mrs. Gordon," remarked Miss Parker questloningly. "So much the better. Bring her to me and we will go to sleep togethter." "I think I had better take her away as soon ns she has finished. Mi's. Gordon." "Oh. all right. I'll probably be asleep by that time,", I said, determ ined to appear so at least when she came in for the baby. vote, with 402. His nearest competi tors in a total final of eight were Isaac P. Gray of Indiana, who had been a spectacular contender in 1888, with 343 votes, Allen B. Morse of Michigan with 86 votes, John L. Mitchell of Wisconsin with 45- votes, and Henry Watterson of Kentucky with 26 votes. .-Following this one roll-call, however, Stevenson was made the Vice-Presidential nominee on motion from the floor, without a second roll-call, The temporary chairman of the Convention was William C. Owens of Kentucky; the permanent chairman was William L. Wilson of West Vir ginia. The adoption of the Party platform was preceded by a bitter contest precipitated by a proposal that the tariff plank should carry in implied promise to "protected in dustries" that there would be no sweeping tariff reductions. The Con vention refused any such expedient however, and by a vote 564 to 342 adopted a substitute plank denounc lag "protection" as a "fraud" and declaring that the Government has iiu jjuwer to levy taxes except xor revenue only. The resul of this campaign was the second election of President Cleve land. To be continued tomorrow with the story of the Convention of 1S96. New York: Doctor Connor, lorm- erly of Johns Hopkins hospital,1 says: Many men who smoke chew or snuff incessantly and who are seemingly healthy are suffering from progres sive organic ailuents. Thousands of them would never have been afflict ed had it not been for the use of to bacco, and thousands would soon get well if they would only stop the use of tobacco, The chief habit forming principle of- tobacco Is nicotine, a deadly poison which, when absorbed by the system slowly affects the nerves, membranes, tissues and vital organs of the body. The harmful ef fect of tobacco varies and depends on circumstances. One will be afflict ed with general debility, others with catarrh of the throat, indigestion, constipation, extreme nervousness, sleeplessness, loss of memory, lack of will power, mental confusion, etc. Others may suffer from heart dis ease, bronchial trouble, hardening of the arteries, tuberculosis, blindness or even cancer or the common af fliction known as tobacco heart. If you use tobacco In any form you can easily detect the harmful effects by making the following simple tests. Read aloud one full page from a book If, in the course of reading your voice becomes muffled, hoarse and indistinct, and you must frequently clear your throat, the chances are that your throat is affected by ca tarrh and it may be the beginning of more serious trouble. Next, in the morning before taking your usual smoke, walk up three flights of stairs Bobby's love and even Alice had seemed to desert me for the politics which she had recently taken up. "Never mind, Mary," I said, with my mouth close to her shell-like ear, "mother will never be alone as long as she has you." Tomorrow Selfishness Light Mystery Is Solved by Police A mysterious light was burning in the office of Dr. L. R. Springer on Court stret Tuesday night, said a re port made to police. Dr. Springer was thought to be out of town and officers were asked to investigate. Out went Officer W. J. White to solve the mystery. The report was cor rect. The light was burning. The doctor's door was locked. Officer White looked over the ground and was contemplating forcing an entrance. At this point, however, Dr. Springer ar rived on the scene and perhaps feel ing that he might need his door in the future, explained the illumination which had caused anxiety. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY Incorporations. The Peninsula House Building co, poration of St. Johns, Puitlund, rin articles of incorporation with the state corporation department here Tuesday. The corporation is capitalized at $25, 000 with the collowing incorporators: F. C. Knapp, J. N. Kdlefsen and S. W. Durham. Shipment of new potatoes in car lots will soon begin from Yakima vallev. It is estimated that 150 carloads will be shipped out under ice this year. S. C. STONE, M. D. TREATS CANCERS and does a general office practice Office Tyler's Drug Store 157 South Commercial Street till STATES STREET DiCRONelll . OPTOnETRlST- OPTICIAN lackUBush Bank Buidin XfCar Stale apf I walked to my bedroom in a state I movies. After he had gone I picked of uncertainty and worry over myself! up my baby and held her close to and my affairs, but the moment that! me. It seemed with the exception of I f.'lt the little, moist lips' of my baby! the budding little soul which I held pullinif at my breast everything eN in my arms. I was completely alone In all the world retreated behind th In the world. By plving Kari Shep vcil of content. j herd's letter to John I had cut my- For the moment I felt as I know self off from Karl's friendship and T.uth did over her children that probably estranged John's love, nothinsr else mattered. I Charles was becoming interested in Finds Her Atom lmpty . I Ruth and her little family. Helen Strange a it may seem, I did go to' was still racking her mind to keep TA Fact and a Remedy - "Of the 3,000,000 widows in the United States over 65 years of age, 1,000,000 lack the bare necessities of life and 1,700,000 of the others lack its comforts." Many of these widows received life insurance money at the death of their husband. But statis tics show that most insurance paid in a lump sum is gone in a few years. Assure your wife a steady income through a Life Insurance Trust. Make certain that she is not among the majority of widows, able only to pur chase the bare necessities of life. Ask our Trust Officer about Life Insurance Trusts. Capital National Bank . TRUST DEPARTMENT SALEM, OREGON '88 SB 8 at a regular pace, then . .. find that you are out of h.'.v heart beat is forced, trembling functional or organic heart tn.il If you feel that you mm- chew or snuff to quiet your n.! you are a slave to the tobacco haw and are positively poisonine vnZ. with the deadly drug, .nicotine, u either case you have just two natives keep on with the sell oning process irrespective of uiiigcia aim auiier ine consequent or give up the habit and escawtJ dangers. You can overcome the n, ing and stop the habit in a very sb,n time, by using the following h pensive formula. Go to any druuitm and ask for Nlcotol tablets, take or tablet arter each meal, and in a em. paratively short time you will han no desire for tobacco, the trotyl will have left you, With the nicotta! poison out of your system your gig. eral health will quickly Improve. Note When asked about Ntohl tablets, one of our leading druggim said. "It is truly a wonderful rem. dy for the tobacco habit; an ahead of anything we have ever nit before. We are authorized if Ik manufacturers to refund the mowj to every dissatisfied customer, aj we would not permit the use of c name unless the remedy possrt unusual merit." Nlcotol tableti mi sold in this city under ah iron tit money back guarantee by all m date druggists, including D. J, In, White Teeth, Healthy Gums, and a Clean Mouth PEOPLE who use Klenzo Dental Creme regularly, tell us that it keepa their teeth white their gums firm and their mouths healthy, clean, and comfortable, with- that Cool, Clean, Klenao ? Feeling. And Klenzo is a safe dentifrice, approved by the dental profession because it does all that any dentifrice ought to do. Try it.-.- .SHI I t r.v iff mjzv DENTAL CREME 2f0 J. C. PERRVS DRUG STORE -CbiidreriSkQIv jr ' .sasfir n "c rut - an- m D jlSORDERS of the stomach and constipation are the most common rlisMsws nf children. . .To correct them you will find nothing better than Chamberlain's Tablets. One tablet at bed time will j ,i . . ... . j uo me woric and will make your child bngnt ano f cheerful the following morning. Do not punish, 'i,n..l!ll ' ... f Tuur L-minrAn hit .1 I'hamDQ'i kin's Tablets are better and more pleasant totake. No Meal Is CompW of course without a loaf of br we might almost say, -without . ... v because or 5aKe-nito atanif bread haa come to mean the ... a ni this or quality anu - munity. Every family " to expect when our bread W BAKERITB BAKERY 457 State St. LADD & BUSH Bankers Established 1868 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a.m to 3 p1'