ffri FOUR DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEtl, OHEN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1303 2ZZft IIHIIHIIII II) 1 1 H-rrwrrf rfriWl-H I I 8 1 1 1 I I it I i I I i I i i 1 1 t i I 1 1 HilW HIII1HI 111,11 1 HI 1 1 1 1 1 I I lit i I H I 8 1 I I I 1 I I I I It 1 9 1 I I I I i II 1 II I I 1 1 1 I i I I II I t-HH SB WE CAN SAVE YOU 50 CENTS A PAIR ON YOUR SHOES AT OUR SPECIAL HOLIDAY SALE jH jM K. jKff bbbH Sk B H .Rr ri H Bl flv ' ""j i Misses' and children's red felt Uppers $.40 Children's red felt, fur-trimmed Juliets 65 Children's ced felt, fur-trimmed Juliets 1.00 Misses red felt Juliets 1.25 Bargains In children's ami misses' red felt slipper, 6 to 8 .85 ey2 t 1'a -90 11 to 12 ) 1.15 Infants' soft shoe, shoe for the i....e dears . .50 Ladles' red felt slippers, a bar gain .50 Ladles' black felt Juliets, fur trimmed 1.50 Ladles' brown felt Juliet, black, furtrlmmed 1.50 La velvet Juliet, fur-trimmed, silk bow 1.75 La kid Juliet, velvet top, fur trlmmed 2.00 Men's pat. kid blucher, seal top, Elk toe 4.00 Ladles' blue felt ' slippers, a snap .50 Ladles' red felt Daniel Green make .., 1.50 La wine colored felt Juliet, black furtrlmmed 1.50 La kid JJullet, black quilted top fur-trimmed .2.00 La green felt Juliet, gray fox trjmming 2.00 Men's Walkover shoes, exclusive agents for Salem 3,50 Men's black dongota everett slippers 1.25 Men's black dongola Hamlet white stitched 1.50 Men's black Columbia, pat Inlaid 1.75 1 Men's black opera, kid lined.... 1.75 T 1 Men's tan opera, white stitched leather lined 1,75 Men's red seal, white kid lined 2.00 X Men's tan seal, white kid lined. patent leather Inlaldi 2.00 I 1 OREGON SHOE COMPANY, 275 Commercial St. hi.; n 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 n 1 n h 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 u 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 a m.i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 b i i i i i i i i i 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ruliuuiuuiiuuiauuiiuiiuiiiuamiuauuuiiiiiaauuuiauiuiiiuuiuuaiuuiauaiuiauiauiaiuiuiuuiiiuuuuuuiuia CHILD LABOR AND ECONOMIC WASTE y A. B. larquahor, of York. Pa., In Chi cago' News. Wo have hoard much discussion of tho question of "child labor," both In opposition and in advocacy, with gen eral agreomont that Industries making uso of It derive therefrom Important economic advantage. To tho apolo gists tho Importance of this advantage appears reason enough for tho con tinuing the system; while tho op- ponents Insist that It Is moro tlmn aountorbalancod by arrested develop ment of the race and ovlls of othor "kinds on which they lay stress. But It sooms at loast worth while to give somo serious attention to the question whother this confldont claim on the ono sldo, and concession on tho othor, ato qulto Justified. I should decidedly say that they arc not. If It wore any roal advantage to of low-grade laborers fnstoad of a of yow-grade laborers Instead of a jpmallor forco of tho high-grade sort, costing him as much In his weekly pay roil, ho would, as a rule, seek the former rather than the latter, Uut as a matter of fact ho does not As a .matter of fact, tho most successful manufacturers arc tho very ones most ready to employ highly skilled work men at a higher cost. At tho head of tho list there would bo no hesitation In plaalng tho world's most successful business man and greatost philan thropist. Andrew Carneglo; and no ono was ever moro alert than he In 1 nis active Dusiness careor to discover appropriate, advauco and handsomely compensate artisans of peculiar talent. It Is truu, to tho groat body of his em ployes this eminent exemplar of manu facturing success did pay more than tho market rates, but he has always regarded his highest-paid men as those who most fully earned what ho paid them, and as being, for that reason, the kind that ho could most economi cally employ. The oxperlence of other manufacturers Is largely of the same character. In my own works I have always sought for the Intelligent operatives, and many that wore not so intelligent, It Is only because tho latter alone wore to bo had. My conviction is that Intolllgont lnbor Is economically better, and It would seem a logical conclusion that tho labor of vory young children can not as a rulo bo economically advan tageous. Many young children aro om ployed In tho cotton mills of our Southorn statos, but the majority of tho mlllownors, so far from being to btamo for this, have dono nil In tholr power to stop the evil In somo In stances building schoohouscs and em ploying teachers nt tholr own ox penso: but tho shiftless parents in sist upon living off the proceeds of tholr children's labor, refusing to work thomselves unless the little onos aro employed. Our work must bo among the parents and tho framers of the statutes; wo nlroady liavo tho mlll ownors with us. Thos parts of tho country In which the labor of young children Is employ ed In factories are the parts In which manufacturing generally Is In Its In fancy, Where there Is a longer es tablishment of Industrial production nnn iHtHH hhihi iiihhi mmi m ihiihiw Don't II Foraet our 1876 1903 mm. Branch Oon't foroet that the largest and oldest music house In Oregon is f t represented in 8alem, and that tho 8alem 'representatives can do Just T as well by you as though you come to, headquarters, as far as prices X and terms are concerned. However, If you are In Portland, drop i around and see our new store. It Is the finest building occupied by X I any music house in the Northwest, a befitting home for the oldest and most reliable house. HOW ABOUT THE XMAS PIANO? there such labor Is statute, and there are would not dream of seeking to have the statute repealed. The agitation for statutes of this kind was more pro longed and more Intense in England than ever in this country. Loss than a hundred years ago a child there was expected to bo self-sustaining at the ago of 7.boys and girls of 10 years wero kept at the bobbins for U hours a day til ready to drop from exhaustion, and permanently stunted in metal and bodily growth as by an epidemic blight Legislation regulating child labor encountered and overcame more opposition there than could bo muster ed against it in any of our states. Dut England will not return to the practice of n half a century ago any more than our Northorn states will. And yet I cannot but believe that were there forbidden bylnomlc qucsMon fully treated when ! bor Sacajawca and her services to the manufacturers ethical considerations are neglected, ; cxplorors. Lewis and Clark found her or any moral question when no atten-jin their winter camp among the Men tion Is paid In Its treatment to ma- dans. Sho woo a captive Shoshone girl terlal well-being. Plainly, to my think-'or 16, and tho slave wlfo of a French Ing, a thing cannot be at tho same ; half-breed Interpreter. She would time morally wrong and economically have died In child birth had it not right. Wo recognize this truth when-! been for tho aid of tho explorers. In ever we afiirm that "Honesty is the tho spring oho and her husband and best policy," and we have only to give baby wont West with tho explorers. It a wider application to decide the! When tho explorers had abandoned question under discussion. tholr canoos and wore approaching tho Boliovlng as I do that the labor of Gates of tho Mountains they stood young children in factorlos Is unsound faco to face with falluro, because- of in morals. I cannot bolieve It to be the lack of horses. It was Sacajawca sound In economics. who pacified the Shoshones, obtained horsi anr smoothed tho way through Heroine's Long-Delayed Reward. the Flathoads and tho Nez Porccs, (Chicago Inter-Ocean.) Passing over her many services dur- Upon tho publication of Mrs. Eva lng tho winer spent aj. tho mouth of Emory Dye's graphic narrative of the the Columbia, It wa Sacajawca who expedition of Lewis and Clark to tho guided tho party on the return trip. truly an economic advantage for Eng-' Pacific Coast tho Inter-Ocean editor!-1 She scorned to havo tho instinct of land or for us in repealing prohibitive! ally directed attention to the services tho homing pigeon, and timo and statutes and resuming former practice, iof Sacajawca, tho heroine of that fa-again oho found the way out of the It might be done. Competition of pro ducers is too keen for tho settlement of such questions on other than eco nomic grounda. But tho economic question Is far, in deed, from oxhaustlon when we have considered only tho conditions of pro duction of fabrics. A nation has. as I have no rwed whatevor to remind you, more important production than that to consider; and tho economics of pro ducing fabrics aro trivial In compari son wun tno economics of producing cltizons. Is not tho most nreclous nro- duct of a nation in any generation the crop or cltizons who nro to constitute tho nation In tho next Generation? It should bo superfluous to arcuo such n question in communities that spond on common schools tho liberal sums all our statos tako pride In appropriating, or in communities -whore homo life and homo santlmont form so esson tlal a featuro as they do with us. we nave no right to make a total separation between man as a wealth- producer and man as a morn! twin. We have no right to consider any ecc- mous exploration, and suggested that sho should be enrolled among the nation's notablo women. It was fur thor suggested that tho women of the country should erect a statute to wilderness Sacajawca understood, tho Impor tanco of the expedition, and was as carnoit for its succosa as wero its lenders. Hor sorvlcee wore groat. If tho Indian woman at tho Louisiana 1 she was not tho salvation of Lewis and Furchrvso Exposition at St. Louis, tho't-iarK. let wnon nnd whoro she died starting point of tno oxpcdltlon of 1804. It now appears that tho suggestion of tho Intor-Occan hai been taken up In far-away Orogon. Portland hi to hold in 1905 a Lowls and Clark Contenninl In celebration of tho cen tenary of tho first crossing or the con tinent. Tho women or Orogon. Wash ington, Idnho, Montana, and tho Dakotns havo taken up tho project of orectlng a memorial to Sacajawca suitable to tho occasion. It Is pro poned to oroct a statute to coot about $600tX It has boon thought fitting that tho sculptor should ho u woman and a westerner, and Miss Alice Cooper, of Colorado, has boon suggested. Readers' who are familiar with that great Amerlcnn classic, tho Jour nal of Lowls and Clark or who have enjoyed 'Tbt Conqueut," will romom- Is not known, and no stono marks hor resting place. Tho Importance or tho oxpcdltlon or Lewis and Clark Is brought strik ingly to mind by the ftUjt that the wlldornees through which "Sacajawca guidod them 100 years ago 1b now thickly studded vlth tho flourishing cltlos that purposo to erect a statute to tholr guide. Wear a Belt or Corset. (Milwaukee Sentinol. ) "Hoch" the corset! Down with tho draw roformor. who usually "reforms" at an age at which ' procoss of breathing, sno hat no form to roform for sho is' From lnnulrles- mad in thlsconwt, baldheaded facts. Ho blames baldness on exclusheh abdominal or "deep" breathing iw men nffect, and In which tho cor uw uui unuw women 10 indulga Without going into a scientific & ouruiuuu ou ureaining, it may fe stated that the iowor portion of u, stomach plays- its part in tho procw ui respiration. now, mo orainary man, says tk Invostlgator, allows tho lower portta 01 me Biomocn 10 may too m part in the process or hrevtM., whore.13 tho corset confines tho bra' thing or tho rnir sex more larp! to tho upper portion or tho chat and woman retains her crown M giory. In tho pursuit or his Invostlgatk mo cnemisc soiccteu various U mals which brcatho properly, audi tea tnom with an apparatus vbjul iorcou wnat is caned exclusively il domlnal breathing. Dogs, cats w! ovoa birds, fitted with tho3o un!p nnd wrongly constructed corral actually loso their hair or featnes artor a few month3 of wear. On tho othor hand, It is argued th millions or men who do not wcarttvi navo an nuununnco of hair. It has beon set forth on compete authority that at least 50 per cent a tho men or tho present day are am or loss amicled with baldness, and tk tho porcentago Is Increasing tknnlnt ly. This fact alono rathor upsets their- gument that has Just born et Ion and to It must bo added the fui fact that thousands of men h&bltmll; wear a belt, not necessarily of leitli or worn outsido tho waistcoat, l although they nro unaware of It id as a pair of stays with regard to KwaBMalll the frlcml or the baldhcad microbe, For the corset has found n friend. It Is declared to be a c?rtnln cure for baldness by a sclontlcst who will not be denied, but come-j forward with tlon, tha weight or evidence Is In hm or a good head or hair in the : Ion or men who wear these which ara sometimes mere otrlpje llnnnol. 1111111111 H4444K 4IIII1III I I W-h-H-H--m-I 4 I i 1 I H 5 1 I 1 1 I I I I Hll I I I I t I I I I II Ml I II 1 Neglected Teeth Inexcusable Yet thousands of people are allowing the winter to approach without having necessary dental work attended - ---. 1 wui iik,uiiii uui us 1111. uuljiiuii. is s l v 1 1 v nri 1111 iiiiiu 111 hwilt i c ivrniint nisoiui k.ki. - w . ... 1 '' fhSh S' and perhai? th ?lsVS are seen V !" s condition is allowed to continue mostly .. through indifference or a fear of beintr hurt. We ruanntee Dain ess HntUtrv anri nn'r if i,. k..muM ,: bn :: you away. ' J "l ",w UMsayu" " f"" n do k Gibert-Rama ker la The Oldest, Largest, Strongest Sixth and Morrison Sts. Portland, Oregoi I nit mm 1 11 111 u nun 11 1 ihhiii mm i n i ittieisjloiiaioipniiaia .. ..... .... 9 micy- naving reatt ur. Wright's advertisement, I concluded to try him, as I had been almost killed by having teth pulled by other dentists. He pulled my tooth and I can honestly say that it did not hurt a bit MR. A. C. KEENE, Qervals, Ore. 0 'l-frKH 8 1 ft I I CqHhftee-HM-fti t ! i &&&&t9i9MH&i&&-m Salem, Or., Dec. 10, 1903 Dr. B. . WrlQht, Dear Sir: A bsruini can iruin- X X fully recommend von- Hnl 6 work, both extraction and A crown work, which was high ly satlafactor and thorough- ly firct-class. A 4. A C C. WILSOr, T T ' Salem, Ore. S i As Oar Practice Is Condtt ctect on a with firstclass work. BsBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsVBETflSl?' H IOI la IOf lf !! SCIENTIFIC AND PRAC TICAL DENTI8TRY (D I t 1 ii Only Is practiced at this i i -,-. ... ...... . 1 1 1 uiiicc, vyc nanaie a great , .i - ... ii. i. ui u'.i wi wvrK, ana aro amc w ( quote tho lowest prices, and ' liuaranteo the highest grade j ; tj 01 BKIII. giaia8qgaiciaft6aaH HtB8M4T I had seven badly ulcerat ; erf tAth mwwaa l-u Tr. . . Wright's painless method, nuu can certainly say inai n ( Is the best, safest and quick est m.ll of ovtraotlnn t.fth ' ' S that I havo ever experienced. 1 1 2 Slncerly yours, 2 MR. I. H. TfiNRUE. " $ Cor. of Capital and Unlver- i 1 j a .W V.BV.., -.,, W.. ( .... 1 " ! 1 rv-rr 1 I I 1 I I I 1 1 I I I I I 1 ! so-sjheyc be made consistent !! DR. B. E. WRIGHT Stetaloff Boildine. : : Office Hoets: 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. : : Evenings, 7:30 to 8:30; Stmdays DENTAL OFFICE Liberty and Catttt Streets. to a. m. to 2 m. Telephone Main 259 1 wwiiHiniiniiiiintitiKiiiiiuimmiiiiiH' n n h 1 1 1 n t ai n 1 1 n n 1 1 1 n i a n WW"" WIMH.M.I.i.l.lllllHWrH ssMMsMI