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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1904)
DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1W4. peoften refer to the doctors. Why? cause we mase medicines or tnem. we give them the ..t fnr Aver's Cherrv Pectoral, nnd thev nrseHhr it tnr Pehs,coIds,bronchitis,consumption. Wetrustthcm; they trust A-t irniif nwn dnefnr nhmif tnVlntt h?c mcHlntn 4y"Co.. rtSIW " ..JimIimmIIIMMIIIIJII .- ...ww...,.,w JjWMI. Hui HVIPROMISE AS AN ESSENTIAL OF LIPE Ben for The Saturday Journal.) Ibis human experience called re nnl it Is a succession of lomises. Everything Is In a J of compromises with every- else Battlo3hlps are a high aent In this plan of conces- They are a perfect Etate of ar- nent between the elements in- The most successful things le, and the most agreeable ex- tees, crlBO from a perfect com- Ise. Tlie nearer puneci me uei- be results. The mechanical nents arising from a demand ifflclcncy, constitute naval bu- macy, wlilcn, in uirn uepenus the discrimination shown in the ite arrangement of the princl- of mechanical creations. Wo he armament is made les3 for- le to allow for navigating pow- r engine capacity. We wave that a certain limit must be fced upon engine and boiler pow- order that a battering power ibo had. Ono character ot this ired efficiency Is thus made to sto and share with another. Tho it equal Interdependence is iht about tho closer we reach Bhlghest point in effectiveness. our ships of war are compro- between engine and battery er. witnout itus an practical re- : would Instantly come to an end. femotlves must bo built vith care- attention to the compromise ssarlly existing between the mat- Bf speed and tho question of haul- capacity By properly adjusting (several mechanical relations in- fed we secure a very efficient on for ttado and commerce. ir trials and diiiicuiucs in 1110 from an imperfect adjustment, you please, a want of practical bromlso between all relations. Irtheless, with all its unques- M Importance, a compromise Is only another word for Imperfection. Perfection needs, nor demands no such condition. Imperfection In tho part gives rise to Imperfection In the whole, necessitating a general com promise or agreement among the ma terials to bo considered. We per colve this Imperfect condition In all the plans and designs known to tho human family. Tho man of money who has made no compromise with learning U as bad off as the man of learning who never made a cent. Both conditions are wrong. A man should have both learning and wealth, but should have neither to excess, nor bo dequalntltated. A practical compromise Is needed to .in sure the highest degree of harmony. Wo arc ready to accept the state ment that poverty is a wrong and un desirable condition, but few are, at nrst tnougnt, willing to concede a condition of over-learning, carrying deleterious effects. Yet, we have to day men ruined for every practical purpose by over book-learning. Menj who have narrowed themselves Into ono or two Intellectual ruts, thus de-, prlvlng thomselves of tho general field of knowledge, have destroyed their practical use and tho very.' foundation plan of all learning. Knowledgo of any sort not accom panied by its practical use. Is equiva lent to being poverty stricken on ac count of tho lack of money. Book learning Is a commodity for practical purposes, as well as dollars and cent9. 1 To let your knowledge rust( becauso It Isn't practical) Is like letting your money He Idle becauso you have no use for It. Inhnrmony, that subtle serpent which creeps unperceived Into tho chnnnels of thought nnd expres sion, Is a common exhibition of an uncompromising race of people. It tells us that to compromise Is to Jeopardize. Upon sober thought wo know that harmony doesn't depend upon who can hold out the longest, but who can give in the quickest. Scores of our acquaintances, and, othors falling under our casual ob servation, appear to be working might and main to keep from effect ing any compromise whatever. They neither give, nor do they ask. What they have, they take. They prefer their unstable stand, and beliove their stand stood better than reliev ing tho distress sure to follow their position. In .commercial, national and social relations do wo find these conditions everywhere prevalent. Wo hear tho grumbjer asking, at this late day, why on earth didn't tho colonial army take Canada when It successfully de clared for Independence? Why didn't it Include Canada when It organized tho thirteen original Btates7 You had as well try to choke a bear to death by pinching his tail as to endeavor to convince these grumblers that It was all the army could to to capture what it did. That tho hungry, naked and shattered army of Washington didn't capture all tho rest of tho Western hemisphere was duo tojust a little, slmplo thing called a com promise, nnd ono which was vctry satisfactory to Washington. When Benjamin Franklin went to Franco with his boots shlned and his hair cut he traded off his polish and win ning ways for enough money to carry the war to Its successful termina tion. This Is called statesmanship, diplomacy, strategy, nnd several other things, still It was, after all, only a compromise. In our school vork we nrrango a suitable compromise among all tho books wo find expedlont to loam nnd poruse, nnd thus we create what is termed a gonoral or a liberal educa tion. A successful, happy man is not ono who knows only ino thing, but who knows something of many things. Contact with the various abstract ions teach him tho character of the concrete, and bronJen his perceptivo faculties until he comes to men-ure wtlh a s'eaJy eye and contemplate with an unbiased mind. He learns that the groat universal law of com promise, In which ho Is completed submerged, nnl. upon which ho de pends, will accept no favors, nor bond In leniency to human plntltudei, will or wish. Ho flndi himself under lu canopy, and suffers when ho steps outsldo Its domains. He no longer feeds upon and secretly believes and footers his pet Idea of forcing all things to fal at his feet, but, realiz ing tho external state of progress, or tho process of evolution, ho makes al lowances for the fermentation natur ally accruing to such a condition, nnd becomes thereby anxious for tho al leviation his slnglo purpose has failed to award him. Thus wo find no student of one book nny moro than we expect to find that man stops after learning the first letters of tho al phabet, claiming too many letters will result In a smattering of them all, thoroughness In none. Liberal education depends solely upon tho CARDUI BABIES n "vy with wtl'h wit fundaD-eTsl Many homes are mere lonely abodes because no children are there. Barrenness ex ists in almost etery case because female diseases htivd tvtpnltvf th n?t.na rT wnTnAnilfKHl. Wine of Cardui imparts health and strength to the diseased parts and makes motherhood possible in thousands of cases where barrenness is supposed to be incurable. Wine of Cardui regulates the menstrual flow and also prevents miscarriage nnd cures bearing down rains. Wine of Cardui removes the cause of barrenness by making tho female organism strong and healthy. , ... . ,rr! n -j i Go to your druggist and secure a $1,00 bottle of Wine of Cardui. The use ot Wine of Cardui will bring happiness to your home. pi-'rcipie rausi oo firigeu me j.i fiulf of compromise. Lmerson rn el.Abuately dIscuH !& Idea in his e ay on "Compel t'U'nn" Oology is aujij-f vcrd for ( m promise. It Is tho sclenco of tho relation of all things to each other Even astronomy, In Its varied phe nomena, does not escape this univer sal condition. What is popularly teimed tho precession of the equi noxes will forever destroy any fixed and continuous state In terrcstlal phenomena, and charge Its changes to the lnpse of time. It might not be, entirely out of place to hero di gress to observe that wo are, astro nomically, under a bare possibility of mistaking some of the observations of ancient nstronomcrs, for tho rea son that tho earth may havo pre sented such conditions at that time. Wo therefore find certain princi ples Involved in our every need, in our every accomplishment, and In every good re-u't. Our hasty sur- armored cruisor Colorado gathered in Duncan Kennody, U. S. A, voy or tho nelu in general leads us nono tho less quickly to discern thnt any Infraction crossing tho path of Jf In cases requiring special directions, address, citing symptoms. "The Ladies' Advisory Department, Tho Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tennessee. AMKTnTST, C01.0., Feb. 24, 1002. Wino of Cardui is worth its weight In gold, it does moro than vou claim. It has saved my life and caused me to become a mother when everything else failed. MRS. DOHA I. E. LoPEVRE. BnvANT, Va., Feb. 18, 1002. My daughter-in-law, Liuie Giles, found great benefit in Wine of Cardui. She had a miscarriage in March 1001, before using joui ' med icine. She was in very bad health, so I persuaded her to try Wino of Cardui. Since then she has had a fine baby boy. Soon ho will bo three weeks old. She highly recommends Wine of Cardui. My (laughter, r annio iiuuson. niso nns a mie vauj uuj uj jum ucnt. Sho highly appreciates Wine of Cardui. . XUIIO. WVIOA UIUl.O. treatment. WINE CARDUI Colorado's Trial Trtp. . Boston, Mass., Oct. 22. Tho board of naval officers appointed to con duct tho government trial of tho now Boston today In preparation for tho trial trip of tho vossol. Tho trial will tnko plnco over tho Capo Ann courso next Wednesday. Tho Colo rado will bo commamlpd by Captnln that law of compromise with which we nro associated by natural endow ment, leads to failure In our commer-1 j clal life, stagnation in mechanical lines, and distress In our social func' tlons wherein the wnrp nnd tho woof nro lost to their respective and proper ( places, and tho fnbrlc of human llfo becomes woven with defective gov ernment FRED R. WATERS. Salem, Octcber 19, 1904. o Greatest of Efficiency. See tho Jumbo two-horho stump and grub machine, with teloscope sweep. Four times the power, twice tho weight, and one-half the money asked for any other machine. Something new. Cal land see It at Salem branch Mltcholl, Lewis & Staver Co. 10-19-tf MttWIWIIMIMIHIMMMIHmMHmIMllMillt Do What We Claim yt guarantee sufficient proof that Dr. J. F. Cook the Dotanlcal Doctor cures all kind of diseases after all other schools and doctors havo failed, such as cancer, tumors, (external and Internal) Gravel kidney, bono diseases. Consumption, nail stones, rheumatla'm, dropsy, and dlabets, appendicitis have never yot failed, and femalo diseases, all the foregoing wlthuot tho knife, or plaster or poisons, and with no pain to the patient whatever. Testimonials of prominent people. Consultation free. .. D. J F. Cook 301 Liberty St., Salem, Oregon. Formerly of Omaha, Neb. w NEED LIGHT AT NIGHT? i '4 w -'t$ M o ", . a- ' V t '-' k & - ! V 4 - '-" ' , . We Will Relieve Yo Of All Yot Troubles i 1 I V 4' .v ' r t a t , ITIZENS LIGHT & TRACTION CO. .. WELCH MANAGER in KM