-.. -Of v r-. -:.Waa;'V .1 .rt Ni." PAGH TOUB THE DAILY CAPITAL JOUBNAX SALEM, OREGON. THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1914. Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal THURSDAY APRIL 16, 1914 ! TI IE DAILY &fiL JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc. r CHARLES H. FISHES, EDITOR PUBLISHED EVERY EVESINQ EXCEPT SUNDAY. SALEM, OREOOM SUBSCRIPTION' RATES: Daily, by Carrier, per year Daily, by Mail, per year ..... Weekly, by Mail, per year FULL LEASED WIRE The Capital Journal carrier boys art instrarted to put the papers on tha porch. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or neglects getting too paper to you on time, kindly pbont tl circulation manager, as this is th only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following instructions. Phono Main 82. ' - , "MAN CANNOT LIVE BY BREAD ALONE." AT the prohibition meeting at the armory Monday night, Mr. Baker told the audience, as one of the reasons for ask ing financial aid that on December 7th, when congress assembled again, the party would get out the first num ber of a daily newspaper devoted entirely to prohibition. He al so said that two young men had advanced $50,000 to aid in this work. It may be this will be done, but when it is, it will be the big gest mistake the prohibitionists ever made. A newspaper de voted to one thing, confined practically to one subject, as this one ould bo, is condemned to premature decay and a painful and not too lingering death. Experience shows that no daily paper devoted to any one subject can live. Industrial papers, farm papers, make a success as weeklies, sometimes, but it is because the readers can absorb a feed of the kind once a week, if it is not too large, but as a daily diet it gets on one's nerves and be comes nauseating. On Sundays it is soothing and pleasing to hear the good old hymns. They are enjoyed and appreciated, because the mind is not surcharged with them. But make ev ery day Sunday, so arrange that all the music that is heard is the same dozen or two hymns sung over and over day after day and the desire to hear hymns will not be irresistable. It i3 so with farm papers, with industrial papers, and it will be so with prohibition or any other newspapers devoted to one subject. The human mind demands change, just as does the human stomach. The latter cannot get along with all proteins or all starch or sugar. The body would become anaemic and the digestive apparatus disorganized. It is so with the mind. It must have change. It . will tire of a steady diet of pro hibition? just as it will tire o an 'overdose of farm or chicken literature. Inside of a" month any newspaper devoted to any one subject is no longer ' palatable.and this regardless of the subject. Bryan's Commoner is an exam ple. It stuck longer than most, such weekly sheets, but it had to confess judgment at last, admit that its dope was administered too frequently and change to a semi-monthly. Without mean ing any slam at either Mr. Bryan or the Commoner, it will be still further appreciated when it becomes a monthly; The proposed prohibition "newspaper" will have a big run for a few months, and then it will die of inanition, unless it is dif ferent from hundreds of others of like character that have pre ceded it, and are now "At rest." OREGON IS AGAIN . HE news is filtering out unofficially from railroad circles that Oregon's development is to be sidetracked again in favor of California and Washington. It is announced that some $70,000,000 is to be expended in California by the Southern Pacific, while the Hill lines will return to their first love and devote nil their energies to the development of the state of Washington. By a tentative agreement between these two monopolistic railroad systems, so it is asserte d on good authority, nbthing will be done in Oregon for at least two years, except to complete the unfinished Coos Ray line from Eugene, and establish Hill terminals and docks at Flavel, near Astoria, for the purpose of handling exposition business next year a plan which will in jure the bulk of the travel taking the water road instead of passing through Oregon overland. It is a dirty deal for Oregon all around, and yet some mis guided boosters are helping the program along by doing the bidding of the railroad monopoly whenever they are asked to get busy. For instance, they are fighting the unmerging suits brought by the government, in an effort to smash the combine and insure some real competition among the railway lines in the West. Oregon suffers because its people lack the courage to fight for their rights, like the people of California and Wash ington do. In both states they have more stringent railroad laws and regulations, and more active railroad commissions. The result is that easy-going Oregonians see their interests ne glected and are forced to wait until their sister states get all they want before the slightest attention is paid to their needs. Well, Oregon has waited fifty years for proper railroad de velopment almost as long as Salem has waited for a new Southern Pacific depot and we presume a few years more may be endured with the usual patient equnamity. Lapp & Bush, Bankers Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes ... jTraveler's Checks GRAHAM P. TABEB, MANAGER .. $5.20 Per mouth.. Per month.. ... 45a . 35c ..... 4.00 1.00 Six months .- 50c TELEGRAPH REPORT NEGLECTED. Annpuncement is made that the president's youngest daugh ter, Eleanor, will be married to Secretary McAdoo .May 8.. This is not official, but is said to be correct. It is said the af fair will be private with the secretary's colleagues in the cabinet the only guests, outside of the immediate family. Considering that the president has had the tariff, currency and regional bank bills, the canal tolls and two weddings on his hands in the last few months, it is fair to presume that he has been rea sonably busy.. Klaw & Erlinger fling their defi at Considine, and declare that they are ready to have a real theatrical war. It will be well staged and fought to a finish in . the newspapers, so long as the latter will allow themselves to be worked by the limelighters.- Colonel Roosevelt having assassinated a curculio, or something of that kind, whatever it i3, is now hurrying home. Maybe it is to take charge of the row seemingly imminent in Mexico. The Capital Journal receives some communications which are not accompanied by the name of the author. For obvious rea sons such letters are not printed. Four Year Term Too Short For The President By WU TING FANC, Forme Chinese Minister to Washington, In His Book, "America Through Oriental Spectacles" TJ OWKVER intelligent and capn-! bio a new president of the United States may be, several months must elapso before ho can thoroughly understand all tho de tails incidcntul to his exalted posi tion, involving, in addition to un avoidahlc social functions, tho daily reception of callers and other mul tifarious duties. BY THE TIME HE HAS BECOME FAMILIAR WITH THESE MATTERS AND THE WORK OF THE OFFICE 13 RUNNING SMOOTHLY HALF OF HIS TERM HAS GONE, AND SHOULD HE A8PIRE TO A SECOND TERM, WHICH IS QUJTE NATU RAL, HE MUST DEVOTE A GREAT DEAL OF TIME AND ATTENTION TO ELECTIONEERING. FOUR YEARS IS PLAINLY TOO 8HORT A TERM. THE ROUND UP. Portland's eity liealth officer in sists on all dogs being muzzled. There- have been several cases of rabiee in that city, and lie says tbo ouly way to stptnp it out entirely is to muzzle all dogs for six or eight months. w Claud T). Pofoed, a brakeman on the Campbell Logging Company's road at Deep Kiver, nenr Astoria while load ing logs on a car Tuesday was hurt by, ono of them getting away and rolling) nn him. Hit. left loir wn. broken in I two places. K V w Kov. I. O. Knotts, who lost his eye sight while helping build a church was chosen moderator Tuesday night at Kugouio by tho Willamette rresbytery of ilio Prosbyterinu church, which is holding a three- davj session nt that citv. Kev. W. O. Fisher, of C'orvallii was elected permanent clerk, and W. I u. Mintn, or won i recK reporting clerk. I?. A. Hooth, candidate for U. H. somite tolls tho pool le of Eugene that the (oast is to have such a growth iu pop-Million and wealth in tho next few yearn, ns would make Alnddiu and his lump look like a .10 cent dream. As a w-jrd painter K. A. is all right. All the II councils of the Roval Arcanum in Oregon were represented! ut the first annual meeting of thii Grand Council of Oregon, at Orego I City, Tuesday. The coroner's jury inquiring into the death of tho men kilTed by a powder explosion at the Cclilo canal, fouud that the accident was duo to the criminal carelessness of the contrac tors, who employed men ignorant of j handling powder 'iccauso they could hire them more cheaply, h Two sanitary fountiiins for quench ing the public thirst are to be iustallc l at Condon. Nineteen sturdy sons of Erin, not ono ot whom is over 30 years of age, and but four of whom are over SI. recently arrived at J.akeview and ex pert to settle in Oregon. Coquille Sentinel: As showing the way the valuation of our timber lands has been creeping up, one of our citi Eons states that on a good quarter sec tion in township SS, section 13 the I soction in which this city is located ho paid 3.76 in taxes in 1!KS; 118 iu 1H1U; us in 1911; I2 in UU2, and 59.1a in 1913. 1'uildiug for present needa and ac cording to present means the Metho dist Kpiscopal people of Mohler bnvc just dedicated a church which, the Whevlor Reporter says, "is quite invit ing, with its papered walls, paint! ceiling and comfortable pews. The I building will seat about 120 people and cost a little more than $900. Four Klamath Falls anglers, Conn cilman O. W. Mathews, Harrv Pelts, i a Peyton and Le Bean, fishing in j Spencer creok, have mad the record Poor Work You can't afford tn An nifl. wnrlr mn I therefore, always "Jr'- 1 iihun it; for no ex f -- It II tune or quip or quirk will square ,i .. I ono hired a fy,y k man to paint my cow irom nornups to the udder, and she 'g all blotched and spotted now, and. people view and shudder. "Who did the jobf" they always ask; and when I say, "Jim, Yellow," they cry, "When we have auch a task we'll hire aome other fellow.1' And so Jim idly stands and swows bad luck has made him nervous, for when the people paint their cows they do not ask his service. And thus one's reputation flows, a-skit-ing, here and yonder; anu wheresoe'er the workman goesj his bum renown will wander. 'Twill fnea him like an evil ghost when he his best is doing, and jolt him where it hurts the most, and till keep on pursuing. A good re nown will travel, too, from (lot ham to Kmpory, and make you friends, in places new, and bring you cash and glory. So always do your . best, old hunks; let nothing be neglected, and you will gather in the plunks, and live ana die respected. OnprruM. 1 by of limit catchea'of trout in a few hours' continuous fishing. They rode back to town with 200 pounds of fish in their auto, or festooued upon thu outside. A suit to compel the Deschutes rail road to raise its' tracks from a point 00 feet above tho waters of the Deschutes river )o a point 105 feet above, is beiug tried in the TJ. S. district court at Portland. The East ern Oregon Land Company has brought tho suit for the reason that the present location of the track prevents it build ing its dam high enough to supply th lands in its project with water. ft m Two thousand Portland road en thusiasts will bo taken to Bridal Veil April "a to work on the Columbia Highway. Tho fare for the round trip will be 75 cents and as the crowd will be taken to see tho road now built and take their lunches and fishing poles along a real pleasant outing is expect ed. Sheriff Thompson of Columbia coun- Children Cry The Kind You nave Always Bortght, and which has been la me for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made tinder his per 'L jCJ&JrJ?it-fl , ' Bonal supervision since Its Infancy. Yiuxf?, Uc4K, Allow no one to deceive you i this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Jnst-as-good " are but 12xcriincnts that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Pare gorlc, lrops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It , contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Xarcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nnd allays Feverlstaness. For more than thirty years It -lias been In constant use for. the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, "Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving1 healthy and natural sleep, The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Si ) Bears the The Kind You Dave Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years I Late Yesterday J At New York: It was announced that Vincent Astor, a pneumonia vic tim, was much, better. At Mexico City: The Palacio de Hierro, the city's biggest department store, burned with (2,000,000 loss. , At New York: A thief threw brick through the window of a Broad way jewelry store, grabbed $15,000 worth of gems, jumped into a auto mobile and escaped. " At San Francisco: Trying to stop a burglar who was getting away from a Victoria avenue residence with a quantity of plunder, Detective Louis Lal'lace was shot and dangerously wounded. At Pan Francisco. Assistant Secre tary of the Navy Roosevelt said Presi dent Wilson's own flagship will lead the American and foreign armada through the Panama canal when it is opened next year. See Us Before You Buy We give you the right goods at the right prices all the time, LOOK!: Five Star Flour (hard wheat) $1.25 50-lb sack. Perfection Flour sl.10 50-lb sack. Bran, 70c 551b sack. Bran, per ton, $25.00. Shorts $1.15 80-lb sack. ' Hhorta, per ton, $7.00. Middlings, $1.55 90-lb sack. Rolled Oats, 80c 601b sack. .Rolled Oats, $26.00 per ton. Rolled Barley, $1.20 per 751b sack. Rolled Barley, $29.00 per ton. Alfalfa Meal $1.25 100-ib. sack. Alfalfa and Molasses $1.35 1001b. sck Calf Meal, $1.10 25-lb sock. , Culf Meal, $4.40 100-lb. sack. " Linseed Meal, $2.50 120 1b sack. Soy Bean Meal, $2.50 100-lb sack. Egg Food, $2.00 00-lb sack. Scratch Feed $2.15 100-lb sack. Grit $1.00 100-lb sack. Eastern Shells, $1.25 100-lb sack. Meat Scraps $3.90 100-lb sack. MICA AXLE GREASE. KOBINEK'S RLjijSDIES. DAIRY SALT STOCK SALT Complete new stock of field and garden seed. t. ; . . , . L A. Westacott & Co. 170 S. Commercial St., Salem, Or. Phone Main 2475 Warehouse, Dorry, Oregon. 4t..itMMft4MM ty is missing and his accounts are said to be short $1634. The county court has directed the prosecuting attorney to make demand on the sheriff and his sureties for the amount. ft The Umatilla grand jury is inves tigating the moral condition at Milton, which are said to bo womn thAn ar Copperfield in its prime. Freewater! is also being looked alter. Both towns have been dry for years. I ft I ' Judgo Cleeton, of Portland suddenly uiscovers mat ine go to-enurch Sunda is a great moral uplift. Maybe it is also and aid to place and position. Go m me pons is wnat ne means. for Fletcher's Signature of Your Husband Should Wear STRIPES ' That is the pattern of his shirt Bhould be Btripes.. Wide stripes, narrow stripes, medium striprs, just so it's stripes, because they are undoubtedly going to be the most popular things in the shirt line this season. Now i.you want the prettiest Btripes that a popular price can buy, see Barnes' Cash Store Shirts. A broken lot of Military Collar, Soft Shirts, slightly soiled, values from $1.25 to $1.75, marked down to ,....76c Standard Boy Scout Shirt A real outdoor shirt for the BOY SCOUT, with just the right military finish and appearance for the OUTDOOR BOY 60c We carry a full line of military collar shirts for boys. J. D. Rockefeller, Jr., is in favor of arbitration of labor contests, " gen erally," but not of the one in which he is a party. But many men are just lik ehim in thij respect. SalemFence Works . &. B. FLEMING, Prop. Headquarters American Wire Fence, Morley'a Patent Hon Bas ket. Send your orders In now. Big stock of hop and loganbery wire. Rubber rooQng, $1.50 up per square. Elastic roof paint, cant' be beat Stock of paint and varnishes at 20 per cent -e-duction, .three brands. ' Cedar fence posts and . wood and iron walk and drive gates. 250 Court St. " Phone 124 P. O. Box 355. Back of Coital. SUia. -MM ! NO NEED FOB WORRY. f That satisfactory cook of yours is going to get married is shet Well, let her. Give her your blessing and whatever gift her faithful work has deserved and engage a successor who will com fortably fill her place. This sounds like a large order, but it isn 't really. No tiresome, nerve-racking search of the city is necessary. Just announce what you want in the place where it will be read by household helpers who are capable and trustworthy The Journal Want Ad Columns. . Write your Want Ad at once and there will be no further need for worry. uiviii AU Come an! m ih. i ....... -n everything f m TZf "t cash price for everything ' gld' We igbes. H. Steinbock Junk Cn 233 Stat. Stre. Salem, OragolT W rVla C. str.o,.V all k,VwtLT.T t?' "h0M' tovw, rana. -, tJ2t2Tl.Vf "g, tranka, soil eases, kinds .fjdi o oWSSSf ,"U' etc- W "11 alj i Marion Second Hand Store t X rry i Liberty sts, P, v, t I....... . Fiona Main 2329. NORWICH. UNION FIRE INSURANCE SOCIETY BUBGHABDT ft MEREDITH Resident Agents. 385 State S trout. ! GOLD DUST FLOUR I ; ; SYDNEY POWEB COMPANY Sydney, Oregon '. T Made for Family use. - Ask your grocer for it Bran and Bhorta always on hand, - - P. B. WALLACE, Agent READY Our April number is now off the press. You who are looking for something in tho real estate line can call at our ofice and get a fieo copy of "OUT OF THE RUT" and pave the comniisiscn. Room 11 Bush Bank Bldg. Household Worry Is 99 Per Cent Wash Day Good Riddance by the Laundry Remedy. Linen, blankets, curtains ap parel all come back beautiful when we do your work. Salem Steam Laundry 136 South Liberty Street Phone 25 Dry Cleaning. Ask the Driver 1 T - M r