The Capital Journal Salem, Oregon An Independent Newspaper Every evening except Sunday Telephone 81; new 82. George Putnam, Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION KATES By carrier, 65 cents a month By mall, in Marion and Polk countlea, 60 cents a month. Elsewhere $7 a year. Entered as second class mall matter at 8al em, Oregon. Member ASSOCIATED IESS The Associated Pre3s la ex clusively enti'.led to the use for publication of ail news dis patches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this pa per and also local news pub lished herein. Aliens Try Tricks To Invade Law New York, Aug. 9. The new law, which has been effective for about two months, has certainly Jazzed up the business of immigra tion. It provides that the number of immigrants from any one coun try be limited to 3 icr CJiit of thai Uillon's 1810 population. :.'tl !i bjp a Joker which says .hi", only one-fifth of that 3 per cent shall come In In any one month. Now with a country like Ger many, which had about a trillion population in 1910 and hew sent less than 500 here since the law became effective last June, thi; new restrictions don't mutter very much. Hut when It enme to Greece, Poland, Turkey and some of the smaller nations!, they are eating up their quotas in record time and hollering for more. The 1'nited States is still to them the laid of freedom, ami the roper I that tlielr coming here Is about to be curtailed has raised an swful furor among intending Immi grants. If the law merely ttlpuliited that when a nation had sent us 3 per cent of Its 1910 population no more would be admitted there would be no difficulty; the over flow could simply be shipped back home, with Uncle Sum's regrets. Dut this one-fifth of 3 per cent each month business has them all guessing. Or did at first. It didn't take the wllyforelgr(sr . long to catch onto the Joker and turn the trick against ua. Klght little nations used up their rjuotas during July, which was th i firm month. When it came around to ward the last of the month, did the liners bringing Immigrants to thi.i county put in, learn they wero too late because the month'! quota was full, and put back? They did not. Much to the disgust, even to 'he fury of some hundreds of Ameri can citizens who happened to be passengers, eight big transatlantic liners due late In July calmly de layed their arrival In New Yoi'K until the first of the month. One the Megall Hellas, a Greek liner, with 130 Americana nboard, arriv ed off Klre Island July 29 and, de spite the rage and hair tearing of the United States citizens, dropped anchor and stayed there, just out sldo the three-mile limit, until August dawned. Several other liners, one big one from Italy among them, followed suit. Os the stroke of midnight. When July became August, there Was a grand rush across the Hue. With a tooting of whistles the Immigrant-bearing cavalcade swept down upon Ellis Island. Their pas engers would have been In excess of the first month's quota, but this Was August now, and that was an other matter. It is reasonable to suppose, Im migration officials say, that this performance will be repeated round September 1 nnd again the first of each month until at mid night, November 30, the last grand rush begins. To cope with the situation it has been decided by local officials that 11 surplus Immigrants shall be ad mitted upon personal bonds. If they can find them, until October 1. It Is hoped that a federal law, somewhat less exciting, will be en acted before that time. It Is be lieved that the framers of the pres ent measure, which is temporary, failed to foresee the Jasay effects of their legislation. So the Immigrants who val: outside the line until the new month begins are really wasting their time, because they could get In, anyway. But they don't know It so the game is Just as exciting as though it were real. A Barbaric Custom When a Japanese commander meets defeat in battle he commits hara kiri, in accordance with the customs of his race When an American captain loses his vessel in shipwreck, he goes down with the ship, in accordance with tradition of the sea. Such acts may be called relics of barbarism", survivals of the Spartan discipline that required a man to return with his shield or upon it. They are supposed incentives to a man to do his best, with his life as a forfeit for failure. Yet it is questionable whether the sacrifice is of any value to the world, whether humanity would not profit more by the skill and trained services of those who have risen to responsibility by merit and meet misfortune by accident, than by their loss which profits no one. The ablest soldiers lose battles through circumstances over which they have no control and the best navigators are help less in a dense fog amid uncharted reefs and drifts. The Japanese could never develop a William of Orange or a George Washington who became great soldiers through repeated defeats that enabled them to win final victory- And the sea loses the skill acquired in handling a wreck when it bars those who have had the experience and the loss of life is the greater in consequence. If the law of the sea was applied to other callings, the world would be depopulated rapidly, for most people are failures before they are successes. It is the lessons acquired by failure that build the most enduring success- Success is far more demoralizing than failure. It is a character destroyer rather than a character builder. It brings out the domineering, selfish and unlovely traits latent in all, while failure develops human sympathy, unselfishness and charitableness. The person who has never known fail ure has lost much that makes life worth living. It is far easier for a captain to perish with his ship than it is to live and endure the consequences. There is nothing heroic about it any more than any other form of suicide. While a sea captain should always be the last to leave the ship, it iruers on cowardice when he makes no effort to preserve mat which his Maker entrusted to his keeping. Tabloid Sermons For Busy People by Parson Abiel Haile "They that sow in tears shall reap In Joy." Psalms, 126-5. The rare delight In reading the Psalms of David Is one of the greatest pleasures open to every man and woman. We all of us at heart are humans. Often we stray far and then, when w los the way, we moan and weep. We have troubles, sorrows, Joys and they all tend to temper us If we take them as we must as part of life as It Is. David, exalted from shepard boy to earth's mightiest King, was very human. He experienced every emotion know to man. He may be taken as the hero of any story-love, fortune or fame: and In his Psalms he records his emotions. In a lesser degree, alt of us suffer the Jests and enjoy the rewards of fate; but not to all of us Is given the gift to speak and write of our trials and our sentiments. Thus David's psalms do it for us. David lived, In the fullest sense. His conclusions are not the mere platitudes of a scribbler. They toll tho story of a strong man who made his own mistakes and paid for them. He lived to know things nB tbey were. Our text gives us one of his great observation. History Is replete with the stories ot men who achieved great things for themselves and for humanity, and not one tells af a really worthy accomplishment by any other Irrigation than tears; not necessarily briny. Bait boiling or blubber ing, but the spirit of tears anguish, weariness, disappointment, re buff and trials. Lincoln in tears sowed, and reaped In the Joy of a rounited nation; Arkwrlght In tears built the first power loomed and reaped lasting reward; Watt In tears gave us the steam engine; Morse In tears perfected the telegraph; Howo In tears evolved the Bcwlng machine; Susan Anthony In tears freed women; Washington In tearB reaped the Joy of a nation ; Jesus, Who Wept, in tears gave us Christianity: as the writer of our classic, creedlcss, "Nearer, My God to Thee," wrote: "Out ot my stony grief, Bethel I'll raise." So all of us can only reap enduring Joy through a sowing In tears. fen BY i -I . J II I .'iSBsF w 1 fWlM nt W M kI a. W Id IH.Mi Uli.jVln. I)(givi fixation seems to be costing more than ii is worth. (D A woman likes rtotbinft better J , Jiving is foe to the cost of eating and wearing more them is necessary for plain comfort. (There is but one way to yow, end that is by associating with other people who a know things that you don't. Pit J mm fv)When love runs into 8 demand for cash it runs out. "The Right to Love Carries With It The Right to Jilt, British Writer Asseverates By Newton C. Parke races and the Am"TT is now considered that i chances 0 winDln " Hen honeloat, cap CsJ M. C. A Tank I At least 15(1 mBmiL '1 1 T. M. C. A . . 11 tank daily durine th. . - Ut - GOT , is a very proper according in m . uul at I "Where a man has seduced London, Aug. 9- Has a u ,)rl tne action is a the i-lcht to jilt a girl whom he thing." writes this judge. "But; a. Kells, local ".V"' of is engaged to marry? that a man can be sued fi class of boys about i2 Th m.estion has been raised by: because, naving genuinely naa 50 members. t.7 0 01 tt i London newspapers following ala love he genuinely falls out emptied and disinfected '? 1 . . Justice I c- aeain. is nunuiuiu. '" i "cuk aun three rn. . " . . ,.. .,.. nt more serious features, a nut In rtr.ii,, ...v refia Cardie in a ureacn oi " " . . ' t ""'e a rotarv . turmino-ham woman should not be able to get operated about in m it in mv conclusion." said the' damages merely because a man; keeps the water l . ,a T 4.... ..., mnr than halt the changes his mind. I Mrs. Kells hone.-, . .""M ,, ' ,i h.!.ii. the "I have known cases where the filtering svstem -1.1-1 . 11 parties were not' really in loveJ proposed suit got so far as the is-1 connection with the waieSl In many cases they discovered suing of the writ when the fiance In many modern tank, J? JzA ..... .... marria took has said; 'I would rather marry, country. " 0Ter H LliUl lUUt uciuio iut o- , ,. . , . . . . .11. thnn f:fa .-fllirlu lltfl ThtS place. A girl has a right to jm j I : i, . nfipn roes ahead! Yes, and I have known cases . , . i i.roach ' where the eirl has accepted the! wnn tue uiariiuge, icanua - r.f i-fa nrnceedinas." offer. A good start for connubial Ti,n i i 1 . 1 1 , 1 1 1 -: Tow iisliand . bliss ! ...vi !,., i,i,. av honest man "I do not want to convey the ... .!,. i, hari ' Imnresslon. however, that there WOU1U tell UlS uauce iuai u - - r- . . nr.A y,r regardless of are not thoroughly serious and the risk of a breach of promise ! justified eases. In addition to the suit I class to which I have referred n Mn u that there Is that in which a man so many girls fall to realize that i heartlessly keeps a girl hanging the men to whom they are en- eae-ed no loneer love them," she; 1 It is one of the laws of the trade hat, many must fc,o down in order 41 I ' - P ' v i-nax a tew may o HE2 HECK SAYS: A other whiskers always seem to w6o njicroi?c5 about for vears ten, fifteen, or maybe more until she loses all chance of marrying anyone else. When a man behaves as badly as that It Is clearly right the he should have to make compensa tlon." added. Miss Genevieve Ward, English actress, said that an engaged girl should be glad to get rid of a man who has transferred his affections to another without thinking of breach of promise suits. The Daily Mail, canvassing a number of "practical business girls," reports that they prefer to have their fiances tell the truth before the trip to the coming paper chase altar. Thev are erenerallv opposed morning for members to breach of promise actions, but years of age believe that a girl who has spent C. A Boys Await Big Y. M. Paper Chase Interest Is high among the them boys of the Y. M. C. A. over t&e Thursday up to 1 4 Leaving the Y. M. at 10 o'clock the party win a lot of money for a wedding out-1 follow the trail of the leaders fit should be reimbursed by a whieh will lead, it Is understood, jilting fiance. i to a spot about three miles away Schools May Win Nature Study Boy's Strong Piej; k - ' iSfaai If the study of nature h r ...... ...... ! aj J , , . 7 -l.. I ,111, .v A -.it will Ko iu mt DCUOOlS 01 WaUlU. " i'6". i" " .ow.o wukic a "fF"""""' ton D n this Pill it in i.T . ' .h ,i,h In Hit" announces .rfr.rAA rnr a cwlm A wnonlfl lOU' . 1 11118 al1 " ' b bfr ; craved and It was unattainable. "Whatever I am, Allx, I do not' your face, Allx, that you think I am riwlnval Vnn unvlnw tn think I am a coward, for I then ' yourself that only a cad would went to my wife and told her all; talk this way, "but I sometimes this, all this and more, that I have think that those whom we call just told you and I begged her to: 'cads' are perhaps more honest let me go. than those who pride themselves "She only said: 'As you love upon doing that thing and say thls other woman, so I love you. ing that thing which the world I cannot give you up. I calls right as though It were easy "I could not shame her before for them, the world, but aside from this II "I am not disloyal, foj to be have given my wife every oppor-1 disloyal means to be dishonest and tunity to divorce me and she only 'surely you must see that I have It the right to jilt," announces afforded for a swim. A weenie one writer. "If a man or woman roast will be featured at noon, finds that the early attraction is leaving time for a full afternoon passing, it is therefore their boun- 0f games. Boys are expected to den duty to break off. The day bring their lunch. may arrive when damages will be awarded, not for correcting a very human mistake on the tres- Yacht Race Tie Cowes, Isle of Wight, Aug. 8. hold of disaster, but for failing; Tne fifth international yacht to correct It. There ought to be race between American and Bri a way of avoiding these disasters tisn 0f the six meter class without undue penalty. For there today endea in a tie, each team Is nothing quite so hideous, or gcorinff ls noint. Tne British ALICIA HAMMERSLEY A Woman Who Wouldn't Remarry By IDAH McGLONE GIBSON The Noted Writer 20,248 WANT ADS Not including real estate and classified, totalling 103,026 Lines Carried in the CanitI Journal in the dx month, !J ."J? tnoing June 30, 1921. Double the number in any other paper A gain of 1369 ada and 9.256 line over the same per iod a year ago. Roland Early's Confession "But you have really told me nothing, Allx," said noland Early. "Tell me what she said to you, all of it, every word. My poor girl!" I am not your poor girl, Mr. Early. 1 do not want to bo your poor girl. I am Allx Hammersly, belonging at the present only to mvself. What your wife said to . . . . .. r. me i nave just toia you. w course she amplified It in many ways, She told me of the long years she had been devoted to you how you had come to be not only a part of her life, but her whole Interest, her whole thought In fact, her whole existence. "She told me that she had known that from time to time you had been interested In other wo men, but while you might have walked occasionally a little way along the primrose path yet you had always grown tired and come back to her for rest. I think you had better transfer that girl' to her. Mr. Early. If I had not heard this from her own lips I would never have believed that you have been to her." "You do not understand. Allx I do not think I have ever been cruel to her. I have always been extremely polite to her and In sisted lhat others should show her all deference. 1 have tried to save ber from all annoyances. 1 do not love her; surely you know that. I never have loved her. If loving be the passion 1 feel for you a passion that makes all my waking hours a great oy that I jam in the same world with you, and an unbearable torture that to me. ays had a jealousy or me is concerned. In fact, she is everything that I am not, but I do not love her. That is the answer. I have tried to love her more than I have tried to do anything else in this world. God knows that I would be hap pier loving her than in caring for any one else under the circum stances. I am not trying to ex onerate myself In any way. 1 am only stating facta. "Honestly I have tried to be more or less decent as men go. 1 have never been' Intentionally cruel to my wife," he protested as I held up my hand to slay his torrent of worda. "But, Allx. no human being can endure the del uge of personal disgust that comes from hypocritically pretending, hourly and dally, to be what one Is not. 1 have never been my self with my wife. I have pre- not only been wife, but hv you. Tomorrow Roland Strange Suggestion. said: 'What God has joined to gether, let no man put asunder.' "Meantime I writhed under chains that bound two totally un congenial people to -a place called home a place where two dead hearts could not even be decently Safety First muoi ire nupi peipe- tually on a hypocritical parade be fore the world. "Alix, surely you find it with in your heart to give me a little pity. If my wife is not happy, neither am I. Honest with my with myself and Early's Enthusiast Is Caught Speeding H. J. Ottenhimer, 94 North 21st street, Portland, who told police officials that he presided at safety tended to be Interested when was bored to extinction. I have pre tended to be virtuous when I wai poor bugging a sudden passion to mv heart. I have pretended that I wanted to stay with her when I felt that I would gladly give 11 that I possess to get away. 1 pretended to look Into her eye, to listen to her rolce when all the time another face was before my eyes and another voice filled my ears. "I mas able to bear It until I,' .u n. . k . 1 ; me oiner women wno bad Imbued ma with a nassiug Interest had only appe to my senses and I at last had come to believe that no woman was mora than a beautiful plaything or a bent prop on which, at times, a man might lean. I "I thought that I might never great meet s woman that could be taken "Every one who knows her calls her an angel of goodness per haps she is. But do you not know that when you women step out of the angel classes that you have occupied so long and become real human beings, with an apprecia tion of the real human character istics of man, you will have help ed more than you ever did be fore to enlarge the sum of human happiness. "I know from the expression on first and traffic betterment meet ing In the Rose City recently, was arrested this morning for driving his car at the alleged rate of 35 miles an hour on the wrong side of Commercial street. Ottenhimer was cited to appear before City Recorder Race to ans wer the charge this afternoon at 2 o 'lock. quite so hopeless as a loveless mar riage." A well-known English judge, writing in the Evening Standard upholds man's right to jilt. WATCH THE BIG 4 team previously had won three cause the appeal of fifteen-rMr. old "Jimmy" Bradley has rearM the hearts of the mambers of Ut ' Mouse committee concerned wltk the affairs of the District q! Coi- umbia, who have control of Uncle 1 bam s purse strings In the Dis trict. "Jimmy" went before tt committee and asked that the ' members make the necessary up. proprlatlon to continue natnn studies In the schools. It Is bt- '. lieved that he is the youngest per-.: son that ever addressed memben of Congress. Safe Wlk for INFANTS & INVALIDS W AOs' CW Horlick's The Orifiul Avoid Imitates and ffiffl IMP1 JMittw JmwSK Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Live Keep the irital organs healthy egularly taking the world's stand ird remedy for kidney, liver ladder and uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL The Original Food-Drink For AUAgei N CgtonaHNoitf ih The National Remedy of Holland fo enturies and endorsed by Queen Wilbel nina. At all druggists, three sizes. --V ' amm. Gold MUI m r.r ha LADD & BUSH BANKERS ESTABLISHED 1868 General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. J JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT Wife and Daughter af Fugitive ie of gratitude toward my wife 'into the vistatm nf and you csnaot know the many mind. I was eoavlnced that bo' , times that I have berated myself woman could satisfy that spirltaae j for not lovlnc her. She Is a rood need for whlck I believe meat i woman; she has been a true sad men go searchlac through life faithful wife to me: she has doae but never find. much toward making me a wordly ' "I almost went mad waea I BSSSSfcSX -V "nsk A. III! I IW III Mrs. Myrtle Sporgtn (on rlkt and her daughter, Vivian, wit, and daughter of Warren C. Spwdn. alleawd wrecker of the Michlra Anue Trust lompu; Beak of Chteajro, It ls alleed that state menu of expeits. after looktag oer the books, declare there Is s shortam mt morm tksm 11 ea eea i ,j t . . success; she has stability and found, too late, all that m ml ' n, tmnmu i ..j 7. I. " , . . poise, except perhaas where her ray body, my mind and ray spirit t aicago. F or the Safety of Advertisers The Audit Bureau of Circulations has placed the buying of space on a scientific basis. That Organization maintains a force of expert auditors whose business it is to safeguard the money you spend to deliver a message to readers of A. B. C. publications. "We keep honest records. They are open for the scrutiny of the most exacting examiners" says the publisher when he joins the A. B. C. "We are not afraid to put all the cards on the table. We want you to know where your mes sage goes. We want you to know how many people actually receive our paper how many buy it for what is in it, and not because of in ducements offered for subscriptions." These facts are contained in a report of the last exam ination of our paper by the A B. C. auditor. Come in and look them over, or let us send you a copy. Don't buy "sight unseen"! Get the fads