PAOE FOUR THE DAILY CAPITA!. JOURNAL, SALEM. OBEOON. TUESDAY, JUNE 1914. Editorial Page of The Daily; Capital Journal TUESDAY JUNE 2, 1914 THE DAILY ffltuWl, JOURNAL PT7BLI33ED BY CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc. CHAELES H. nSHEE.. IDITOB AND MANAOEB PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY. 8ALEM, OREQON StBSCRIPTION BATES: Daily, by Carrier, per year 3.20 Per month.-... Daily, by Mall, per jear , 0 Per month-. Weekly, by Mail, per year -C0 Bis months FULL LEASED WIBE TELEGRAPH REPORT 43o Sj 50c The Capital Journal carrier boyi are instructed to put the papers on the porch. If the carrier does not do this, mine you. or neglect getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this U the only way we can determine whether or not the cullers are following Instructions. Phone Main 82. WILL END ALL WARFARE, x HE dawn of universal peace is in sight and without (help from either Mr. Carnegie or secretary iiyau. If it materializes, it will be due to the discovery of an Italian, Guilio Ulvili, that explosives can be exploded by use of the violet rays at long distances. In an experi ment at Florence, Italy, a few days ago, Ulvili succeeded in exploding mines placed under the water in the river Arno, his machine being located 10 miles away, and with, a big hill between it and the mines. Within half an hour of receiving the signal that all was ready he succeeded in exploding each of the several mines. To make the test still more difficult, Admiral Fornari, who was conducting the tests, sank several corded metal bombs containing explosives, which he prepared himself, and the young inventor within a quarter of an hour locat ed and exploded each of these bombs. Ulvili is now ex perimenting with an apparatus by which he expects to be able to explode any mine or kind of explosives at a dis tance of 80 miles. ' ' . . It will be seen that with this invention war is impossible since no nation could keep a supply of ammunition, for if it did so, the larger the supply the greater danger it would be In. Battleships will be worthless when an enemy out of sight beyond the horizon could explode all the ammuni tion and sink the strongest warship with its own maga zine. Land fortifications would be useless when an enemy, ,without approaching the shore or letting anyone know of its presence, could explode all the ammunition and destroy the forts. ' It seems rather paradoxical, but war is by the discovery of this deadly mejthod made impossible. The weapon is so sure arid so annihilating that both combatants could be disarmed and knocked out before they could get within fighting distance of each other. If the discovery proves to be all that is claimed for it, and there seems to be no possibility for doubt, not only is war at an end, but the gentlemen who have so persistently robbed the government in making armor plate will also have their ammunition exploded. The building of battleships and dreadnaughts will be come a lost art, and the manufacturers of steel will liter ally have to beat their weapons into pruning hooks or some other instruments or tools that can be used in rais ing food for humanity, instead of boosting the coffin trust. It is a discovery by the side of which all the inventions of man pale into nothingness, for it means enforced peace among all nations of the earth. England can stop her ruinous navy policy, and all other nations can follow her move, for Mars gets his in the solar plexus and is down and out for all time. The immense standing armies can be discharged and the overburdened people of the old world relieved of that grevious load. It means that might can no longer rule and that right will pcnorce take its place in the management of national intercourses. It means that universal peace which is promised before the millennium, and will be a great boon to those who are so anxiously awaiting the end of the world. However, to most of humanity the end of war will be enough, and they are not worrying about the other event, so often staged and so far never keeping its dates. ailment known to the veterinary. It was the difference in the point of view. The botanist or the geologist thinks he has an old violin; the expert inspects it and finds that the ancient appear ance is a deliberate fraud, and the instrument, is a con glomeration of parts from the hands of several modern makers. There are many startling coincidences of repetition of the thing once seen. That is to say, we meet a new proper name or a new phrase in our reading, and thereafter it fairly obtrudes itself on our attention. It crops up in every lecture, sermon, book or newspaper. "Strive to be one of those upon whom nothing is lost," said a wise teacher. There is just as much for the un trained eye to see as there is for the schooled powers of observation. But a John Burroughs has his enjoyment of the earth a thousand-fold intensified, because its" natural history is clear print to him, and with the birds and the flowers he is like Melampus, who "loving them all, : ' " Among them moved as a scholar who readeth a book." Another freak law is proposed to be placed on the Ore gon statute books by initiative. It is proposed to compel all employers to give their employes 24 hours consecutive ly each week, as the bill reads, "to improve his or her physical, mental or moral condition." The originator of the bill should have seven 24-hour days each week for say 50 years to take advantage of this proposed law, and should be compelled to devote the entire waking hours of the period to improving his or her mental condition. The other two sections might be taken up profitably later. William Rockefeller is reported as too sick to testify be fore the Interstate Commerce Commission. It is probable it is a recurrence of that dangerous attack he had that made his giving testimony before the Pujo Money Trust Commission impossible. Almost any testimony that Wil liam could give would be dangerous to himself, or some of his relatives. Talk may be cheap, but the kind used by Senator La Follette does not come under that head. His speech, part of which was made in the senate' recently, filled nearly four hundred pages of the congressional record and it cost $12,386.12 to print it. Congressman Hobson should get a position as private secretary to Colonel Roosevelt. What a magnificent team that would make. Roosevelt could furnish the ideas and Hobson the electrical display and the calcium lights. John D. Rockefeller, like Huerta, has "nothing to medi ate." Perhaps a few hours given to the Colorado strike murders might make him put a "t" in the word, and medi South on Threshold of Great Development THE ROUND-UP. By HENRY S. CRAVES. Chlel Forester, Department of Agriculture 4 Four and one-half tons of groceries were shipped from The Dalles to Burns by parcels post Saturday. The ship, nietit was made from Portland to The Italics iy boat, which brouit the mail service within the second zone instead of tho third, thus greatly re ducing the rate. When The Dalles concluded In celn- nrilE south todliy 13 standing on brnto the iourth in grand style the I the threshold of a vast indus- ',a,"ne,e C0I0"' t"er subscribed $130, 1 trial development. The cs- j w,,bout ,to.bo. aske'1 fo' lent of this development and con- j Thursday was good roads day iii Ben seiiently the advancement and ; ton county and more than, 500 worked prosperity of the south itself de- : 8,1 day " ho roads. penu very large ly on two fac torsthe PUO- WE DO NOT ALL SEE THE SEEING THINGS. THERE are countless instances in point in our own lives to prove that "the eye sees what it brings the means of seeing." An artist waxed eloquent in ad miration of an equestrian figure engraved by Al- brecht Duerer. His friend, who was a connoisseur of horses, pointed out that the horse was afflicted with every LADD& Bush, Bankers Transact a General Banking Business ' .... Safety Deposit Boxes Traveler's Checks DIXH'IOX OF RAW MATE RIAL FROM TUB FA 'MS, FORESTS AND MINES and tho riiO T E C T 1 0 N AND DEVEL OPMENT OF WATER -RE SOURCES. The south is pre-eminently favored in both these re spects. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE GREATEST USEFULNESS OF THESE WATER POWERS 13 MOST INTIMATELY BOUND UP WITH THE" PRESERVATION AND PRO TECTION OF THE FORESTS AT THE HEADWATERS OF THE STREAMS. OP THE. TOTAL ESTI. MATEO POTENTIAL WATER POW ER IN THE UNITED STATES (36,900, 000 HORSEPOWER) 11 PER CENT IS FOUND IN THE SOUTHERN APPA LACHIANS. IN NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA AND GEORGIA ALONE THERE ARE ABOUT 1,321, 000 POTENTIAL HORSEPOWER, OF WHICH SO FAR ONLY 32 PER CENT. OR 429.000, ARE ACTUALLY DEVELOPED AND ARE BEING UTILIZED. C'orvallis formally opened her citv library Thursday with more than 12(H) books on the shclvos, most of which were donated by public- spirited citizens. A Moose carnival, three days of racing, and a home-eoming celebration will make tho eighth annual Spring race meet at Independence Juuo 4, 5 ana u tne finest ever held there. Folk county is already arranging to send a monster exhibit to the exposi tioa at San Francisco next year. Mrs. Sarah Barber, a pioneer of S."2, iVied at her home in Junction City tramway, sno was aged 82 years. Jackson county is preparing an ex mint for the Panama exposition in the i way or processed frmts, and will per- ec i tne exhibit as crop ripen. It will include a fine mineral and tim ber showing. m ' A hen reported to have beaten the world's record as an egg producer is owned by Mrs. Frank Fox. of Glenada Mrs. Fox got the hen July 1, 1913, and since that time the hen his laid 303 ejrgs. About twice a week these eggs are double yolked. The hen is buff colored, of mongrel stock and has a remarkable large comb. Mrs. Cicero Hunt Lewis, widow of the founder of the firm of Allen & Lewis, of Portland, died at the family home in Portland Saturday. She was 76 years old and came to Oregon in 1852 by way of the Isthmus. Carlton has tote, to pave about one mile and a half of streets at a cost of ol),000. , Estimates nlai th trr in mn nf At San Francisco. -Willard Metcalf Umatilla countr at 3.000.000 bushels Ream, nephew of forrtier Secretary of or perhaps somewhat above that. Ba the Nary Wtor Metcalf, was arrestee' ports of damage by frost were un i iu eonamtten with his recent tliroree j warraated. - - - - ;suit from Adele Case Beam and was j released on ball, Josephine county" will 'Celebrate The Apple Boom is Dead And the coroner has gone home, but the apple industry is very much alive. The wisest of the growers are working together, instead of "every man for himself," as was the case two or three years ago. The losses attending the record-breaking crop in 1912 will not cannot happen again. At last the topheavy apple industry is being sup ported by the strong base of diversified farming. If your business or interests touch the apple industry in the slightest way, you should read the searchingly frank article, Apples of the Northwest By WALTER V. WOEHLKE . In This Week's Issue of "TTTe COUNTRY GENTLEMAN Five Cents the Copy, of All News Agents On SaleWednesday. Or $1.50 a Year by Mail Direct, or Through Any Authorized Subscription Agent Our Distributing Agent is C. G. BRANDHORST, 136 South High St Salem, Oregon THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY I Independence Square, Philadelphia Pennsylvania cave day'' June 15. Autos will carry visitors to the end of the road and there guides will take charge and pilot them through the caves. . The annual Clntskaine rose show wiH be given, under the auspices of the Presbyterian Ladies' Aid, on Sat urday, June 12. t Bnndon'a Commercial club is distrib uting 5000 copies of a 12 page folder illustrative of Bandon and the sur rounding country. ' The Fort Roek correspondent of the Silver Lake Leader says settlers are rapidly taking up the lands recently opened in that district. a,nd in a short time very little of any kind will be left. Investigation of Condon hotels hay ing shown inadequate fire protection, District Attorney Weinke has ordered the proprietors to equip each room vith a half inch inanil rope with knots a foot apart, and that it must reach from the room to the ground. The Speed Maniac Where 'r he hies he simply flies, the dust behind him thickens; post my abode he burns the road, and kills my pup and chickens. He toots his horn as though in scorn of folks who travel slowly; like falling star his noisy car attains a speed un holy. He does not care for your des pair nor heeds your angry feelings; he scoots and rips and tears and tips, with drunken leaps and reelings. For poor galoot who' toils afoot, he does not eare a stiver; he scares the mules farmer tools bolt and kill the driver. Alone his track, for meters back, his dead and maimed are lying; he merely sniffs at mangled stiffs, and still he goes a flying. When brought to court this measly sport is taxed a few piasters, when he should wail for years in jail for causing such disasters. Throughout the land this thing we stand we stand it - 'cause we've got to and all our kicks don't seTve to fix the saphead with the auto. Ferhaps some time 'twill eount as crime to run amuck, doggone it, along the pike, and chase and strike and maim the people on it I'l ST-TF3 the JCAfiWjR they Is J .iiTii r-" " Adam. Xmtupw StntM A Liberal Offer. The undersigned druggist is anthor iied by the American Drng k Press association, of which he is a member, to guarantee Meritol Hair Tonic to give satisfaction or the purchase price will be refunded. This indicates the confi dence they have in thia preparation. Capital Drug Store, Salem, Oregon, lo- cal agency. ' When in doubt," tell the truth. " r? 2 ih ftftli letter of. ZE ROLEN E It cuts down repair bills, and niam--tenance charges. SalemFence Works R. B. FLEMING, Prop. Headquarters Americas Wire Fence, Morley's Patent Hop Bas ket Sond you orders In now. Big stock of hop and logaubery wire. Bubber roofing, $1.50 np per square. Elastic roof paint, ant' be heat. Stock of paints and Tarnish ea at 20 pet cent dnction, three brands. Oedsi fence posts and wood and Iron walk and drive gates. 250 Court St. phono 124 P. O. Box 555. ' Back of Cnicaii Stsia The Journal TV"aht-Sffltedps""yo"tt ' right in the line of promotion, for it is a big part of the daily nows that is reaa Dy tnousanus. HHtMM tt ! GOLD DUST FLOUR I Mads by tho t SYDNEY POWEB COMPANY I Byaney, Oregon Made for Family ttso. f Ask your grocer for It Bran f and shorts always on hand. 1 P. B. WALLACE, Agent ......... i Address a postal sard to OUT OF THE BUT. Salem. Ore.. get itfo codv nf th mioi,;.. T that brings tie buyer and seller J of real estate together without T buiuiuiumuu. O Household Worry Is 99 Per Cent Wash Day Good Riddance by the Laundry Remedy. Linen, blankets, curtains ap parelall come back beautiful when we do your work. Salem Steam Laundry 136 South Liberty Street Phone 25 Dry Cleaning. Ask the Driver House of Half a Million Bargains CT" K& aer in the history of 8alem. We bny and sell everything from a needle to a piece of gold. We pay the hirtAt cash price for everything. 'Monster stock of all kinds ot 'grain ssSS H. Steinbock Junk rv HIS t i rti a. r i . -v - 11 w zoo owns oirwt. oaiexa, vregon. Phone if sin 224 'tttftlMlllt ,M)( i Marion Second Hand Store : ; ; struments, all ki.d, of tool, honaehofd t&n&kfS&Z stores, ranges, men's furnishings, gardes tools, et; Wo ahw selTlff . kinds of goods on commission. . seu oa -r . Marion Second Hand Store - ; ; Perry sad liberty streets. Pko MaW ; : " tl H I I M I t ill