"V1 Stomal Page of Tike Salem Capital J WEDNESDDY DEC. 3, 19 Jo otjimal The Capital Journal PUBLISHED BT The Barnes -Taber Company GRAHAM P. TABES, Editor and Manager. . Aji Independent Newapaper Devoted toAmerican Principle and the Progress and Development of Salem in Particular and All Oregon in General. Fibllsbed Every Ovmlng Except BunSar, Salem, Oregon SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Invariably In Advises) Dally, ny Carrier, per jeer ...5.2 Per month. .4Ge Daily, by Mali, per year ...... 4.00 Per month. ,83c Weekly, by Mall, per yer .... 1.00 Bl months .BOc rOLL Lff.AHKD WIBU TKLMORAl'H REPORT ADVERTISING KATES. Advertising ratei will be furnished on application. "Vew Today", ada strictly cash In advance. 'Want" ada and The Capital Journal carrier boy are instructed to put the papers on the torch. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or neglects getting the yaptf to yen on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this Is the only way w eat determine whether i not the carriers are following Instructions. Phone Main 82. ! ' . i . WASTES MONET IN IMPEOVINO "GOOSE RUNS.' E' ST1MATES for the running expenses of the general government for the year 1915 have boon completed, and show that it will take $1,108,000,000, or a little more than j,ooo,000 a day for each day in tho year, Sundays and all. Of this vast sum, 308,953,117 is for running the poetoffices, and this will be raid by the receipts of the department. Bivers and har- bors take 41,400,000 and this is $10,000,000 loss than for 1914. While there must necessarily be money expended for the Improvement of rivers and har bors, this item of the national expense Is the most abused of any. Money is appropriated for harbors that, no matter how much is expended on them, will never be harbors, and the money is practically wasted. Mark Twain described' this in one of his inimitable stories wherein be told of the improvement of "Goose Bun." Ho showed how by widening, deepening, lengthening and put ting more water in it, it could be made one of the finest navigable streams in the whole country. The river and harbor bill is the big vongreaaional lottery In which evory congressman draws a prise. The space-filler sent back to Washington by trust' ing, but misguided constituents, who draws his salary and sends th. Congres iional Record to his deluded followers free, and supplements this with a choice selection of garden seeds bought for the purposo at somo closing out sales of dolunct seed stores, that will not germinate and that aro suited to some other country, rsu always draw a prize or two from this bill. It is a gift horse, anil like the ri vers whose outlets to the ocean tho nionoy is to be used for, no one looks In Its mouth. Kaeh congressman feels that his follow members are enti tled to "point, with priilo" to something thoy have gotten from the great na tional grabhag, for their district, and the river and harbor bill gives them the opportunity to furnish tho material. Most of the minor improvements aro sim ply a matter of bargain and trado, where each congressman gives tho other : somo boot, for hi jack-knife and so each gets his appropriation, and the harbor is measured for a new set of tooth for its month. This condition prevails on both the Atlantic and Taeific coasts, and for that matter, throughout the country wherever there aro Oooso Runs that can be made to stand for an ajpropriaUoii. Hero on tho Oregon coast is one splen did harbor, worthy of tho namo, and that is tho Columbia river. At Coos Bay there is also a fairly good harbor, and it has a country back of it that wsrrants, tho expending of money in Us Improvement.'' At Humboldt Bay is anothow much like it. Out side cf these two places, there is not a minor harbor on tho coast, thnt is really worthy of Miy great expenditure in trying to opon them. To tho immediate surrounding country tho Improvement of those little harbors is an aid, a welcome ono to them, but all of them aro simply of local and small Importance, and would not be recommended for improvement by any intelli gent engineer, it the policy of tho department and tho insistence of tho hungry Congressmen did not compel It, for thoy can nuvor bo real harbors. The Columbia is the great harbor, the commercial highway of Oregon and a largo portion of Washington, in fact for Idaho end the great Inland Empire, and money spent on it is money well spent. There should bo no niggardliness tliore, and if there is to be a curtailing of expense in this department, It should be In cutting off for a while at least tho smaller and local improvements or thoso that benefit only a very small section. A PRETTY CUSTOM, BUT NOW A TASK. LL KA( E N KAUT11 AND Q00,) Wlr'L T0 MAN," was at ono time a mtlmen always conspicuous at Christmas time, It is so no longer, V and this because the "Society for the Prevention of Useless Giving" or "Bpugs," as It is called for lack of somo better name, has not yet made its ideas common and available. Christmas has bocomo a bugbear, a day of dnvd to most, and all because of the useless and foolish prac tice of making presents. From a pretty custom It has grown into a yearly bugbear. Originally it was confined to little gifts to ImmediAto friends or relatives and was inexpensive and within the means of all. It Is different now. The custom has spread like an epidemic, and Is in fact just that, What was first , pretty custom has grown Into a dreaded task. It has done this because wo have let tho custom become our master. Wo feel now that wo must remember all our friends with something, and though tho expense may not bo great, tho choosing and gathering of the littlo gifts hss become to many a disagreeable task. It Is the moro so from tho fact that it is expected of us! For this vory reason the custom la hard to break away from, and so each - and all of us follow It blindly, and beenuso we receive presents, wo feel in duty bound to make them. This feature of tho matter takes all the charm that accompanied the old-time giving, that came frotn tho heart and was tho niors delightful because It was not practically compulsory. None of us like to bo considered tight-wads, and so the custom grows lu size and costliness and we all fall for it and do our part toward adding power to what has become a genuine task. Will tho world ever become sensible and natural again! Tho answer Is np to all of us, and none of us can answer It. WHAT TUB MEXICAN WANTS, tKKHKBT yi'K'K, who Is writing syndicate editorials for ninny newspa J lers, soya the great evil in Mexico is land monoHy, and he suggests that the cure fur It Is the single tax, which he ssys would put the lands Jj In the hands of the common people. At the samo time h says the Mex icans "are not provided with enough Intelligent discontent to make them capable of accepting outside help." It is strange that after tolling of their Ignorance he suggests the single tax, while we with all our boasted Intel llnei.ee refuse to adopt that system of "putting the- lands back In the hands of the people." With due deference to tho opinion of tho loomed writer, It strikes us that he misses by several rows of appletreea the true situation In Mexico. It is neither the tingle tai nor the land the average Mexican wants. Bis most ardent desire la to own a gun with plenty of ammunition and to be allowed to earn an honest living by murdering his fellow countryman. To as slst him iu this praiseworthy pursuit he would also like to have plenty of dnu Modlstillwl tarantula juice, the kind that would make a jack rabbit fight a LADD & BUSH, Bankers rSANaUCTa A OINTftAt sUTKJNd RrjniNfllK tAFUTY POSIT BOXEA, TEA V KLAUS' CUBCXa. coyote, and an entire absence of all law, except that of bis guerilla leader. Missionaries and pink teas are not just now quite the popular thing in the land of the cactus and mescal. It is not single tax the Mexicans need, but militant suffragettes. That was a wise man who said: '.'So long as the other nations of the earth keep more men behind the gun and a less number behind" the plow than does Canada, just so long will Canada have surplus of food to sell to the hungry people who still go on seeking to delude themselves into thinking that they can keep fat on gunpowder." The Daily Ontario. Let us all congratulate ourselves that tho elections are over, so far as the voting is concerned, and that the rest of the troubles, whatever they may be, will be passed up to the courts and lawyers. It is their business to settle troubles or make them, or something, for they are never happy or busy unless some one is in trouble. The balance of us can get down to our regular business ngain, and accommodate ourselves with as little friction as possible to the new order of things, if that is what we are to have. LAFKY IS CHOICE FOR Salem Man, Former Councilman, Will Be Chief of Government of City of . La Grande. F. J. Lafky, a well-known business man and real estate and timber dealer of Salem, will be made business man agor of the city of La Grande tonight, says a dispatch from that place. The contract has not been signed, but ap parently there is nothing to prevent it. The commissioners held an Informal session yesterday at the city hall, where they and Mr. Lafky were in at tendance. Mr. Lafky arrived at La Grande Mon day, and has been ' looking oiver the field, consulting with some of tie de partment heads, and In a general way acquainting himself with cqnditions. THE ROUND-UP. WOMAN IS ELECTED TO , ; BE MAYOR OF TROUTDALE ttmiTiD raise lsised wibs.1 Troutdalo, Ore., Dee. 3. Oregon and me west won another woman mavor Plans for the federation of the wo man's club of tho country have been arranged at Corvallis. Albany elected I M. Curl as its may or Tuesday by a big majority. Tho "wets" carried all the offices at the election at Newport Tuesday. 4 e Two women were elected to the city council in Sweet Home Tuesday. Three ran and two were successful, see W. A. Ewing was elected mayor of Sclo, Tuesday, winning by the close margin of four votes. - At Independence 500 votos were cast at Tuesday election. Two hundred of these were cast by women. see' The "wets" won at Lafayette, though tho liquor questirtn was not vot ed on. At Tillamook there was little interest in the election, but the wet element elected its council. see Clackamas county's school suporin- or Great Sale! Lasts for This Week The slaughter on prices is still continued upon all odds and ends XMAS OPENING before our GRAND -Mr $ 4-50 $ 7.50 ff $ 9.9ft fjf $12.50 Clean-up Prices For up to hour styles in ladies' coats and suits. Values up to $12, $15, $18 and $25. No such values offered elsewhere in Salem. Out they must go before Xmas. yesterday, when Mrs. Clnra Latourello ; ten1lnt ' advocating tho fumigation of Larson, daughter of the late Joseph ' a11 s',hao in the dainty once a month Latourolle, one of the pioneers of Ore gon, was elected head of the Troutdale city government with only five votes to spare, Her ' opponent wns S. A. Ed mundson, who received 40 votes, The cloctioiri was a victory for tho citizens' ticket. Jean Larson was chosen recorder by 57 votes and Louis Kummer became treasurer by a vote of 91. Georgo Richardson became marshal with fiO votes In his favor, and for conn cilmen Ira Dodson secured 50, Alex ander Foot 54 and L. Russell 50, and wero elected. Tho liquor quostion did not enter into the contest today, the eloetion turning Inrgcly on whother Troutdale should spend 5000 or $2500 on a town hall. Tho s)2y500 city hall advocates won. PUMPKIN PIE PRINCIPLES ARE HERE DISCUSSED to prevent diseases. the spread of contagious Io says that his mother always used to have a dor.cn pumpkin pies on the pantry shelf and that sho (meaning his wife this time) never makes moro than one immpkin at a time, and prob ably gets that out of a can. She savs that his mother never paid 45 centB a dozen for eggs, and that a dozen pump kin pies would tako all her $(1 a week grocery allowance, and that such a thing as a dozen pumpkin pics is inqiossiblo, anyway, because pumpkin pies will not stay on pantry shelves. . She denies that she makes pies out of nans and says that sho has made as many as four at a time, but that it did no Hood, becauso thoy lusted only ono day, just the same as one pie. Ho says that a doren would last three days at least, but she has become con vinced that the law of supply and de mand works backward as far as food in general, and pumpkin pica in par ticular, aro concornod. Sho savs that tho more eoplo have to eat the more they want. If sho rooks four pumpkin I pies, four aro eaten, and if she rooks only one It is eaten. Iu that way she saves the expense of the other three. She has discovered that the easiest way to combat that old enemy, tho high cost of living, ls to stop cooking a lot of unnecessary things that the family will eat tf it finds them around loose, He says that his mother used to bake bread and wash and iron, and still have time to bake thnt dozen pumpkin pies, all In ono day. Sho says she does not believe him, but that if it Is the tnith, his mother was a very foolish as well as a much abused woman, She declares that the law of diminishing returns works overtime when It comes to pump kin pies A pumpkin pie require not only pumpkin, but egg and milk and spices and a whole day's work, to say nothing of the gas, and It is not worth it, A pumpkin pie is one of tho most fleeting of joys and the moro time that is spent In Its creation, the sooner It Is eaten and the more quickly comes the demand for another. One ls gone almost as quickly as two, the third given place to the fourth, and so on, until a whole theoretical dor.en are torgottan leaving the demand Increased propor tionately. That Is why he rnts his lunch down town, while her pantry helves remain scivutiflcatly and econ- nomirally bare. The school sonsus of Ashland bIiows tho city has 1250 children botwoen 4 and 20 years of ago. There aro three school buildings and the city employs 33 teachers. The Routhtrn Pacific has notified tho officials of Grants Pass that it will grant a reduced rate on material to bi used in constructing tho Willnmetto Tacific, building from thnt point to the coast, see Sweek's nomination. for tho position of minister to Sinm failed to get action during tho last session and his name is before tho presout session of con gress. It is understood thnt ho Is to be given a chance to defend himself against charges preferred against him. e All tho defendants in tho Astoria vice enses have pleaded not guilty, and their trials will bo proceeded with this week. Therp are 18 under Indictment. see The town pump at Wasco, Shermnn county, went broko last week and the city went dry unnnimously and has re mained that way for a week. J. H. Clayton, a pioiiof-r of 1S53, aged n,1, died In Arizona, November 21. He was tho owner of the storo In Silver Lako in which 40 lives were lost Bt a Christmas celebration some years ago REMARKABLY WARM SPELL PREVAILS IN NORTH DAKOTA Icsitsd raise lsasso wisa.l Minneapolis, Dec, 3. Reports today from different parts of Minnesota, North Dakota and 8uth Dakota, indi cats the three Northwestern states are experiencing the mildest early winter weather in many years. Plowing for spring crops is apparently the chief oc cupation for farmers in all districts at present. At Grand Forks, N. D., dispatches said, lilacs are In hud and near the bursting point, trees are budding and panslcs In blossom. More than 10,000 acres have been plowed In the vicinity of that city within the past two weeks. I'nofflclal thermometers at Aber deen, 8. D., registered at 70 degrees above sero, Fergus Falls and Manka to, Minn., also report extremely mild weather, v -. . 500 PAIRS WARNER'S, NEMO and KABO CORSETS on sale at clean-up prices 45c 75c and 98c jji'- PS I Winter Hosiery For man, woman and child now piled out out on our counters at selling will be lively. prices so low that Fine Dress Goods and Silks The latest novelties in all the new fabrics specially purchased SELLING. Classy novelties that will make swift selling. for OUR CHRISTMAS Price per yd 19c 25c 35c 49c 65c and up Ig il'wiMS'yiiniwyw w pupil imiiii"!Piinnnii mmm iiiiiiiij.iiiM'I"iM". iiiii iiihiiJWiimi mm v2 (M)SV(&M: p!r $160 J!LeSTOPE Tt1ATSAVES YOU MONEY I IN DESPERATE BATTLE Final Vote on Proposition to Increase Rates Will Come at Annual Con clave Next June. FIGHT HAS BEEN WAGED DURING PAST TWO TEARS Charges, by One Faction Is That Plan Is to Transfer Insurance From Fraternal to Old Line, According to some of his pictures, Pon-in-Law Pay re much resembles Fath-er-ln-Law Wilson In looks. Hut he may not have quite as good brains Inside, . T Minn - . - . , ...,. ... ..... wui srraunu) madras 4 Arrow COLLARS It 31 t. ('Infit, PmiSmmIv (CNITSD riKSS LEASKD W1RS. Hock Island, ill., Dec 3. The final desperate battlo botwoon tho head camp officers and the making members of tho Modern Woodmen of America over the question of an increase in the rates of insurance in tho order, which during the past two years has been marked as the bitterest strugglo In the history of f internal orders jn America, will be fought out In the seventeenth triennial mooting of the order at Toledo, O., June 1(1, llOt, according to announcement of the executive council from the head camp officers here today. The council, having set the date is today making preparations for the biggest meeting in the history of the order. Fully 170, 000 members will attend, dnawn by the struggle which they claim Involves the vory life of the organization. The rate question was first raised in Its present form at the triennial meeting at Buffalo in 1011. Action was postponed until the winter, wheo a speeW meeting of the head camp was held In Chicago, and a readjustment of rate voted. All the rates are high er than those hitherto prevailing, and those for the older members of the order are three to nine times higher. Throughout the country and especially in the state of Illinois, Iowa. Kansas and Missouri, the rates were strongly resisted. Several tet ease were takes j in circuit courts, resulting In injunctions against enforcement of the new rates on the ground that they were not im perative to the financial safety of the order, that since the benefits of the organisation are mutual and reciprocal the rates cannot be enforced without the consent of the majority of the membership. The head ramp In the summer of 1913 proposed referendum, submitting' the sevea different rate plans for the se lection of tho membership, impression gained currency that the referendum was a ruse, and tho result was a voto of less than one percent of tho members. Tho executive council hail been expected to take some action on the question at its meeting here, but deferroil it to tho triennian meet ing. Opponents of tho plan declare the whole proposal was a move to trans form the insurance plan of the order from f internal to "old line." They con tend that tho quostion will never be settled until this movement' has been downed, and that this can be done only by removing the present head camp of ficers and "electing others who repre sent tho views of the membership." This thoy will attempt to do at the To ledo meeting. Though the city of Toledo will be filled with Woodmen, the voting dele gation will not be large. Five hundred and fifty members of tho head camps, five hundred members of the local camp rlorks association, and dolegates But tho j from the Forresters make up the con vention proper. Second in importance to, the executive sessions of the dole gates will be the Foresters drills, which, head camp officials here estimate will include five thousand uniformed men. These, composed of drill squads of six teen to twenty men from each camp, will live in tented city and maintain military discipline. Before Toledo was awarded tho mooting she was required to cuiter obligations to furnish a largo parking place for the camp. Six thousand dollars aro to be given as prizes to the winning teams in the drill. United Statos army officers are to judgo tho competition. Tho executive) council, which with the Toledo author ities will have charge of the .immense assembly, consists of K. W. Parsons, of Ashland, Wis; John C. Naglo, of De troit; Martin Cogwin, of Minneapolis and A. L. Armstrong, of Clinton, Mo. Now Juarer. is ready to be capture! by the Huertaistas again. Low Round Trip Fares to the Oregon Development League at Roseburg, Thursday, Dec. 4 via the (0 SUNSET I (0GDEN&SHASTA I 1 V ROUTES f I The Exposition Line, 1915." Sale Dates and Limits Tickets will be sold from all main line and branch points between Portland and Ashland to Roseburg December 3 and 4. Final return limit December 5. Eveorone Should Be There Further particulars, fares, train schedules, etc, from any S. P. agent. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Pasenf er Agent, Portland.