Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1913)
EAJLT CAPITAL JOTOHAIs lAXM, OEEOOH, THUESPAT. JTOT 24, 1913. rxat torn Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind Ton Have Alwaya Bonght, and which has been fa im for OTcr 30 Tear, faaa borne the aljrnature of i ana naa oeen mtuie nnaer ma per sonal aripervlalon aince lta Infancy. Allow no one to deceive you In thia. All Counterfeit, Imitation and "Juat-aa-good " are bnt Experlmenta that trifle with and endanger the health of Infanta and Children Experience against Experiment. ' What is CASTORIA , ' Caatorla ia a hnrmlcn anbstltnte for Cantor OU, Pare gorlc, Drop and Boothlns; Syrups. It la pleasant. It contnln neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karcotio anbatance. It aire la lta guarantee. It dextroya Worm and allay Feverixbnem. For more than thirty year it baa been In constant use for the relict of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trouble and Diarrhoea. It regnlatea the Stomach and Bowels, aRRimllatca the Food, giving healthy and natural Bleep. The Chlldren'a Panacea The Mother's Friend. GBIUIME CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years I THE OPEN FORUM The Capital Journal Invite pub lic discussion In this department Let both aide ot all matter be fully) brought out It Is not the purpose ot this newspaper to do the thinking for It readers. 4 IN BIXBY CASE GONE WANTS PUMTS BEPAIF.ED. Kditor ( ii ital' Joun.al: The purpose of thii communication Is to ascertain if possible, who i re sponsible for the unfortunate, I may say diKraeef ill, itato of 8ffair at the (Mil Follows1 remotery. There ban been no water obtainable ou account of im pairnient of the pumps for several weeks. Some have hauled water one. and two miles for the purpose, of trying to keep their lots anything liko pre nentable. Tho grass and woods will , soon become so dry as to create a risk of fire which would destroy much high ly valued shrubbery. Another wantoL nuisance is tho habit of dumping anl and gravel in the center of driveways, Hindering thorn well nigh impassable in places. The proper care of these grounds should be the sacred duty of some oiio. Who ia the delinquent! Lot ut hear from him. By all means repair the pumps without dolay. INQUIRE1?. .T-NITKO I-REK8 LKASE0 WIRE.) Los Angeles, Cal., July 24. Cleo Hel en Barker, witness against George H. BUby, the Long Beach multi-millionaire, who is charged with contributing to her delinquency has dropped from night. This was tlio admission today of probation officers, who have set in mo tion the machinery of the detective de partment of tho district attorney's of fice, to locate the girl before Bixby's trial is called September 1. Alius Barker was paroled by the ju venile eourt into the custody of her par ents, and taken te a ranch near Clare moot. Lato yesterday tho girl 's mother telegraphed the juvenile court authori ties that her daughter had disappeared, presumably boarding a train for Los Angeles. Probation Officor Mrs. Chalmers, with three officers, met the train, but the girl was sot aboard. It is believed she left tho train in the suburbs of Los Angeles. A dozon detectives were as signed today to the chase. To many people it is no pleasure to see wild animals caged up in a 'zoo." No need to ask what has become of the Virginian; he has a federal job. B g Clean-up Sale Children's pump and Ox ford J, button or lace. This sea son's newest styles. Your choice of any size or style, 5 lo 8, 8 1-2 to 12, 12 1-2 to 2; values up lo $2.50 for 95c Women's black, brown and gray buck shoes, new broad B toe lasts; extra values at $5.00, now $3.75 ' Women's patent colt, cloth and glove kid tops, new last, extra value at $5.00, now $3.75 fUXLUWIL BET ENCOURAGE Enthusiastic Business lien Take Action Toward Making This Center of Great Industry. MANUFACTUBINO PLANT IS ONE OF THINGS PLANNED Another Meeting Will Be Held Satur day Night to Farther Discuss Development of Plan. For the fourth time an attempt will now be made to establish the flax in dustry in Salem, according to the con clusions arrived at yesterday afternoon when several enthusiastic business men and promoters of that most valuable in dustry met in the old Board of Trade quarters to disenss the matter, and al though nothing absolutely definite was arrived" at, the members of the meeting voted as one in favoring plans whereby the Capital City will be the headquar ters of a flax plant.. For years this popular industry has been wanted in Marion county. Thou sands of dollars have been expended by private parties to Mart it. Many fail ures have been met with by the pro moters, duo to what is still believed to be the hand of incendiaries. Eugene Bosse has worked diligently to for ward the flax industry in this vicinity and at three different times when he was on the very verge of success, fire caused tho utter defeat of his' efforts. Receives Co-Operation. With the co-operation of the Salem Commercial Club and every citizen in the city, those backing the flax indus try are now on a fair road to success. They were assured last night that the members of the promotion department of the commercial club will give their unstinted support to fhe cause and pre liminary steps were taken last night toward placing Salem on the map as not only a hop, fruit and dairy center, but as a flax growing metropolis. It is purposed by the flax experts, composed of Mr. Bosse, Mrs. Lord and others, including Fred S. Bynon, secre tary of the commercial club, Theo. Both Hal D. Fatton, T. B. Key, F. G. Deekc bach and Hans McKeown, that a stock company be organized with a capitaliz ation of not less than $100,000 and that tho industry be established at the ear liest possible date. These people are enthusiastic, over the proposition and that things will be moving in regard to tho flax business in Salem within a comparatively short time, remains with out saying. Will Decide Soon. Another meeting will be held as week from next Saturday night, at which it is hoped that those interested in the new movement will come to some defi nite conclusion in regard to launching the latest manufacturing industry in the city. As said before, there has been no def inite plans arranged for the perfecting of plans pending the establishment of a flax factory, but it is the purpose of those interested to develop the industry hore, establish a linen mill and arrange for extensive flax fields throughout the county. It is purposed to engage Hans McKeown, a flax export, as manager of tho linen plant and Eugene Bosse will be chosen to arrange for the land and growing of the valuable product. Both of these gentlemen are thoroughly ac quainted with the flax business and the making of it into linen and with these men behind the gun, Salem citizens will '"on be blessed with one of the finot find most valuable industries on thta i-na-t, and possibly the only one of the kind. The Career of Marriage By Dorothy Dix. In speaking, to 300 women gradu ates who had trained themselves for different professions President Ed ward James of the University of Il linois said; "The woman who chooses the ca reer of marriage when the opportunity offers itself or when she makes it for herself, as every woman can, is choos ing a highway to social service which is far ahead of all teaching or legal or medical service she can possibly ren der to society." That is as may be, Mr. College Pres ident. If you were a woman- you would know that the opportunity to marry the kind of a man you would like to have for a husband and for the father of your children doesn 't always present itself. Likewise that there are tens of thousands of women who have not been able to capture a husband of I .... . i anv sort, although they have done their level best. et, yon must admit that there are many, many women married, and whose marriages are a crime against society. It is the custom to get maudlin drunk on sentimentality when you talk to girls, and to advise them to marry, and to maunder on about the beauty and glory of wifehood and mother hood; but all of us in our sober senses know that whether wifehood or moth erhood is beautiful and glorious de pends altogether on how a woman is fitted for the job and how she pulls it off. Vndonbtedly a good wife and mother is the noblest work of God, and such a one performs a great service to soci ety. On the other hand, a mean wife and mother is the devil's first lieu tenant, and .the harm that such a one does to the world is incalculable. If we have had mothers who have given us a George 'Washington and an Abraham Lincoln, let ns also re fect that we have mothers who give us' our Gyp the Bloods . and Lefty Louies, so there's no use in raising any monuments to motherhood until making him happy, undoubtedly fills the highest and happiest career fate can allot to a woman. She makes a home that adds to the sweetness and light of the world. But what of the young girl who marries an old man for his money; who sells herself for the finery he can give her! What of the woman who marries because it is easier to work, a husband than to work a type marries to escape being an old maidf writer! What of the woman who What of the woman who marries a man to curse him with her extrava gance, her temper, her nagging tongue! Is anything noble in such mar riages! Anything worthy! Isn't the honest little working girl who earns her own bread and butter a million times higher type of woman than the one who marries just for a living? Isn't a home that is a place of dis- i i a iv. 1.1 ,l.n Also, if you are hon- . ' As a matter of fact there are no two other things on earth that need reforming so much as wiefhood and motherhood and instead of handing out wholesale adviee to girls to get married we should be counseling them to go slow about it, to consider whether they are fit to be wives and mothers, and if they are going to bo better wives and mothers than the present generation of women are. Our asylums are crowded with the insane and the neurotic that never should have been born. Our peniten tiaries are overflowing with criminals who are there because they had not the proper rearing. Our streets are full of hoodlum boys and wayward girls who have had no restraining home influence exercised over them. What we need is not more mothers, but better mothers; mothers who won't think it is enough just to bear children, but who feel their sacred re sponsibility to rear them into good citizens. No one is more filled with reverence fn, a rrnwl ninth. tlm., T . 1... T we imo oui wnat sun 01 a uruuuci , ...... .. . . , . . . f see too many women bringing up their it has turned out. Certainly the , .,, , Globe Theatre Friday and Saturday Great 3-reel production, "In the Toil of the Devil. A Monopol masterpiece, thrilling and senaational. ' , . I . f ..11 nt l.iml.. n.l. I WO gOOQ nelor comcuic., "unin; the program. A Alice Rooney, in new popular aong. Admission 10c. Children!, Hear the Great Pipe Organ THE GLOBE House of Refinement. Watch for dates on our big special features. mothers of the hundreds of gratfers, blackmailers, thieves and white slav ers in the world have done no service to society for which the balance of us need be gTatcful to them. As for there being anything par ticularly meritorious in a woman mar rying, that also depends upon the spirit in which she does it and the sort of a wife she makes. The woman who mar ries a man for love and because she feels that he is her real mate, and who bends her every energy of mind and body to loving service to him and to 4 Clatsop Bead Dr. J. C.Yuen children to be curses to the world to shed any tears over flub-dub senti ments over abstract motherhood Also I have seen too many men thankfully paying their wives' expenses in Heno to look upon wifehood as a grand ca reer unless a woman makes it noble by her unselfish devotion. In the meantime, while we concede the worth to society of tho good wife and mother, why ignore the service that has been done by unmarried 'women! Has any woman done more j for her fellow-creatures than Jane Addams, who has mothered a eitv in- i Stead of A hrnnft nf hpr nvrnl Aral SUPERINTENDENT WANTS I , Mi .,,.. n ..,.,. ,' ..-v -..iru iiuicii vjuiiiii s trii i mij i ii riri ut' NOTICE OF BLASTING apt to be lessened-instead of increased vj by her marriage! IF ! Had Florence Niehtinirale and Clara up of Oregon Electric trains Saturday , Barton and their old maid associates as a result of the break of power wires married and staved in their homes. by a blast at Wallace, where Chinese might not the insane still be chained hopmen were engaged in clearing a to the floors and the sick and wound small tract, 8nerintendent Davidson, ' ed be not properly cared for! of the Oregon Electric, today stated, j And iu private life is it not almost that, in the best interests of public, always the unmarried daughter who service and tne accommodation of the takes care of the old I Gearhart Seuli' .-jlP"1 Week'End- Roi I S'CSm lr!p $8 via lhe "f I v Electric Railway, CN1TIP PRESS L1ASC0 WIH1.J Portland, July 24. Following the tie- Leave Salem at 9:45 a. m., arrive Portland 1 1 :40 1. 1 Saturday Beach Special leaves at 2 p, m. Arrive toiv points for dinner. Choice of time for return, on Suti' or Monday Parlor Observation Car. Breakfatt it dinner served, on Oregon Electric train Above schedule allow few hours in Portland alW wy- C. E. ALBIN, General hi HHHHHttltllMlltltlUtMtttttttttttttWr si-rvHi, ami me accommodation or me, takes care of the old oarents and .1. , . traveling public, if parties who desire1 helps educate the nieces ami nephews ,b,t f s'lif"',!,s ' whether a girl a to blact near the right of way will only is it not the unmarried women in ev- mother of commonplace children? cial service to her day nmlfw take the trouble to notify the railway I ery community who are at the head I T1, trutl1 ' ,hat Aether marriage onieials, or agents along tho line, the and front of every good work! Who " a blessing or a crime depends a- proper precautions will be taken to snfej.-uard the lino and in the trans mission wires should bo disrupted acci dentally, it. can be repaired with the least possible delay to tho train service. In the case of Inst Saturday the break could not be located until crews had started out to look over the entire line. Tl;e company desires to have this pre enution observed by those living along the line so that men can bo sent to look nut for tho possible results and avoid a recurrence of stu-h trouble. canjudgo of the relative value of together upon the sort of marriage by wifehood and motherM "j; altogether on how she nefjb't in those two difficult rola I Success to Dr. Kum, the Greatest Chinese Herb Specialist. ESTABLISHED 1P87. Care Bow Wo Herb Co. 167 South High Street Remember while they last, any women' pumps or Ox ford, including Hanan's, for $2.75 AH men' Oxfords, values up to $6.00 for $2.95 We never misquote value. Buy from the store with a reliable reputation. Reinhart's Shoe Store 444 State Street Opp. Bligh Theatre Patients Speak for Themselves. Shellburn, Ore., April 31), 1P13. Dr. J. C. Yuen, Salem, Ore.: Pear Sir: I wish to offer you a testimonial in regard to your wonderful medicine, I had the advice of some of the noted physicians, .nd they told me that I had appendicitis, and would have to be derated on before could get well. Not wishing to be operated upon, 1 oousultcd Dr. J. C. Yuen, and now, at ter about three months' treatment, 1 am anaiu feeling strong and healthy. I wish to do all iu my power to cir culate the knowledge of your wonder ful medicine. Iiespoctfnllv. J. U IHiLKSIlEE, Shellburn, Oregon. Salem, July 5, HH.'I. I have been troubled with kidney t rouble and a tumor fer some time, and nfter three weeks' treatment with lr. J. O. Yuen I can fay I am perfectly cured, and since then have gained 30 Pounds, and would rconiinciid his treatment to all sufferer. MRS. W. 11. STONEHOCKl'It, Kickrvall, Ore. VERDICT FOR f 0t)0 IN MUCHMORE DAMAGE CASE After two days of legal battle in the .use of Mrs. Kebecca Miuhniore vs. the Sulem Hank and Trust Company, the .uiry last evening returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of stfiKlO. This has been one of the hard- wt-fuught cases in tho circuit court during the present session. The plain tiff was seeking damages in the sum of T.'OO on tho grounds her husband was killed as the result of a defective fur nace blowing up in the defendant's building. The jury relied upon the testimonv introduced by the plaintiff's counsel to the effect the heating plant in question was improperly installed and as the re sult thereof tho explosion occurred. It reipiiriil many counts before the jury men arrived at a verdict, however. Attorneys Carson and Ilingham repre- "Cited the plaintiff while Attorneys McNnrv and F.nduott acted for tho de fendant. The Latest Fashion Note Says: " It is a wise precaution against getting noies in delicate hosierv to powder tho shoes before putting the n. -niiny peopio sprinkle tho famous antiseptic powder, Allen's Foot-Ensa. into the shoes, and find that it saves its cot ten times over in keeping holes from hosiery, as well as lessening the friction and consequent smarting and aching of tho feet. Wild hai'kberriea re reported to be plentiful, and Oh, what delicious "ia" they make. MHBIWIM'm'WMl 9UQCC NUVOAM nuu 1 nuninuL' Mi .aosTo A noo IsuuflM 'ADIRONDACK HTS ALBANY m Your kind of a vacation awaits you at the hundreds of delight' ful Eastern Resorts Low Round Trip Fares New York or Boston 2PSS5S Unadian Resorts, Atlantic Seashore anci Jersey Coast Points. Sfop owr pmil.t , an f , NfYorlc&ntralXiiies Michigan Central-" Tlie Niagara Falls Route" Let Us Plan Your "Back East" Trip Tell us tn a general wav what mi r..i a. , . .d uV amount ot money you wanr in wLa . V "i,uuc "a numoer in your pany, . aideration, with ffiSS? P"P one or two trip, for your "u ""iu you a descriptive folder. 5i,!5n..-eeplnBwmerv, r '"'ormauon, call on or address our Viisf'Allr PortUnd Office, 109 Third Street