Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, June 10, 1914, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE P0T7B
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOUBNAU SAWJM. UttUUUIi. w-iuw-iauA ., junti u, mn.
Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal
WEDNESDAY
JUNE lO, 1914
THE DAILY ftpfiL JOURNAL
PCBLl3iI ED BY
CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc.
EDITOR AND MANAGER
CHAELES H. FISHES ...:......
form and which provides each party with a minority can-
Ldidate. If it is any improvement on the old convention
methods, no one has yet discovered wherein it is so.
The weather clerk has not been treating Portland just
right, but the whole state, and for that matter the whole
coast, hopes this may change, and that Good Queen Thel
ma and her host of admirers and subjects may have for
the balance of the week those bright sunshiny Spring days
that make it so hard for an Oregonian to reconcile him
self to the idea of going to heaven.
The real estate dealer who traded a lot for a horse, buer-
I gy and harness, and then discovered the horse was a "saw
The Capital Journal carrier toys are Instructed to pat the papert on the ' hoi'Se," the Wagon a toy and the hameSS Old and WOH1 OUt,
PUBLISHED EVEBY EVE KINO EXCEPT SaKDAY. SALEM. OREGON
SUBSCRIPTION BATES:
Daily, by Carrier, per year
Daily, by Mail, per year ..
Weekly, by Mail, per year .
5.20
4.00
1.C0
-Per month.-.
Per month. ....
Si i months..-
4Se
3."e
50c
FULL LEASED WIRE TELEORAPII REPORT
porta. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or neglect geiung rne
paper to you on time, kindly phono th circulation manager, aa thia la the only
way we can dotennlna whether or not the cutters are following instruction,
phone Main 82.
! THE YOUNG MAN'S CHANCE.
CROM factory and office up to college and church the
orv is fnr tho vount? man. The world is his to do with
1' as he sees fit." k .
The young man of today is master of a business at j TH R0UND.UP
an age when his grandfather had scarce finished an ap-(
prenticeship. Universal education and quick and cheap; .
rrTnmnnir.ntion brinff to the VOLing llian nOW a practical! The Marconi Wireless ronipnny has
grasp of affairs which only long years of experience could
give to our fathers 50 years ago.
This is very well to know, if the young man will also
keep in mind the fact that he will not always be a young
can console himself with the reflection that he made 50
per cent profit on the lot, anyway.
The reason some folks object to laying up treasures in
heaven, and prefer to gather them here on earth, is per
haps that they do not want to put them where they will
never have a chance to see them again. "
unliasoil Hi ihtos near Astoria and
will orort tho most powerful wireless
station on the const.
man
The last of tiie young salmon were
released from the retaining pond at
Astoria Monday. This inak".s 2,500,000
young Cliinooks released from the Chi
nook hatchery this Honson.
United States
Mau Become
. Nation of Clerks
By LAURENCE CHAMBERLAIN, New
York Banker
II K great evil of tho ntlministra-
t ion program is tho great evil
of inueh recent American leg
islation. IT IS PATERNALIS
TIC, and in the long run it will
prive us instead of n new or an en-
I caused suspicion at the time, ami this lrtrrol freedom tho BONDAl.h 01'
The trial of C K. Potts for the mur.
der fo his wife beunu at Canyon City
Tn'thP snmfi decree that he has opportunities when he is
young, he will be deprived of them when youth is gone.
Tr hnVmnvps him. therefore, to provide against the en
forced retirement that awaits him just at a time when he Monday, ins wife's death was sup
may begin to feel that his experience fits him for the best ; JtVu'w
unvlf caused suspicion at the time, ami this
WUItt. ..... .. , 1 ,,i;i t'i.M.IK. 1WI.IV tVtW U.
If he is past 20, he must get rid oi the notion tnat ne is j1uiicJ liml it .UH- (lis,ovm,,i tha hyoid
"preparing" himself for life. It matters not who he is i-om. was lken and the arrest or
nor what he is, he is living his life more tensely, perhaps, !''"t,s ""', . .
and more decisively in all probability than he will ever be j itumion is to have a city election in
1 f lofoi. navinrl i.lulv. (I. I'. Tupping anil O. .1. Arm-
UOing at a laid peilOU. , i strong are in the rni'o for mayor.
If the young man is waiting for some rich relative toj ...
die and leave him capital with which to start into business ! ".a. Harrison, a resident of Union
" . : .. , , , , . i.u i. 4.1 1,, ,,, f i.i.U'ountv since ISt., and who was eouuty
"right," he had better realize that the only way to stait,,,-wh(.- thl ,,0llIltv HHt wna II10veJ
into business right is with his two hands, and that the from union to u .u,,d. died at m
"lku . , . , . , . . i, ,!... iiome. in the latter eitv Monday. He
best capital nowadays is a combination of industry, sense, 7:, ywn oU1.
l)luck and application. -k,,v.0 m ii o,tre .,,,,,,. the edu-
The young man who has this capital needs nobody s ,.ntiomil 10lini of nnntmn county has
rhonev. He who has it not would not succeed it ne nad a i voted to (i.seoat.niie one or the t
iiiunvjr. -v i .. - school siipervisorsliips. J. A. eagi
dozen tortunes as a lounuauon.
Money today does less for a young man who will not
also do for himself than it ever did before in world his
tory. ' Money, lands, property, and all that, form a smaller
part in human life today than ever before. Time was when
these things comprehended almost all that men knew
about or strove for. But the field of aspiration, of effort
and of accomplishment has immeasurably broadened and
will continue to broaden as men develop.
There is no man on this earth so poor, so afflicted, so
narrowed by environment but that there is a field of suc
cess for him. And the time to find and fill it is in youth.
T'
be retained in service.
two
gor
Continued war weather in Wallowa
county has recalled to oldtiiners the
recollection that Memorial iluy, 10
years ago, lour inches of snow fell
and ait inch ami a half of ice formed.
Kditor Shepherd of tho Sherwood
N'ews Kiy'et for recreation purposes
takes towns with rural mail carriers,
which he writes up in detail in his
(paper, lie enjoys these outings keen
i ly, nad in his travelogues passes them
on very nicely to his readers.
The dispatches Tuesday brought the satisfying news
that sixteen deputy sheriffs are guarding John D. Rock
efeller at his home in the Pontico Hills, New York, fearing
the strike situation and the disclosures being made as to
the murderous methods used there would cause someone Declaring that iiend is ti.e gateway
4- r t-iffnnl.' f Villi fA 1 11 On Tr Is nnnrlifv pviilnnr"i nf his thrift a territory remarkably rich ia recih-
.u -uai i". V ""jation opportunities nud that no other
that the Oltl millionaire IS WOI KIIIU Hie l-UlUliy lU pay LUf! town in the northwest has within a
wages of these sixteen guards; v hy the county should
maintain a small army to guard him or anyone else is one
of the things no one can answer. Just imagine the howl
of derision that would go up if some poor man should ask
for a guard of that kind against imaginary enemies.
Hermiston Herald: With the (joverii
meut erew on the west extension, the
diversion dam under way and the New
port contract of the cut-off, employ
ment will be jjiven for not less than
Kill men ami -M head of horses. All
of this work will continue Well into
the fall before crews will be reduced
to anv extent.
like number of miles so many placet
of beauty ami so many sportsmen's at
tractions, the llnlletiu predicts that the
time will come "when Bend's fame In
this field will rival that of the tourist
centers of the west."
The Republican County Central Committee at Hood Ri
ver has whereased several times, all in a calamitous way, j
and has leit the country so badly ruined by Democratic
rule that it sees no hope for the future only in voting for
the entire Republican state ticket, and this in spite of the
fact that no state officer has anything to do with national
poliics, or for that matter with any other except taking
the necessary steps to get elected. However, it is pleasing
to learn that national prosperity can be made or marred
by the selection of a justice of the peace for Hood River
or a constable at Lost Lake. -We now know how to fix
things.
The recent primary, the child of U'Ren and an unknown
dam, is an expensive bantling. It cost the state probably
$75,000, and the candidates more than twice that. It is a
system under which every candidate writes his own plat-
Buy at Home
Lapp & Bush, Bankers
Transact a General Banking Business
Safety Deposit Boxes
Traveler's Checks
Kersmith & Kickshaw deal in w
and Chinese cuss nud earpet tacks.
lliey are good sports in every wav;
they coukIi up money every day to make
the. town a better place in which to
live and push your face. They hire a
uo.en clerks or more, who wait on
patrons in their store. Our cross roads
burg they would upbuild, and see it
with n'"1' People filled, nud to that
end thev blow their
s e o ds I i ke truly
patriotic lads. But
when we need of
eggs a few, we send
away to Tiinbuetoo;
and when a earpet
tack we wish, it s
flipped from Ypsi
Innti, Mich. Each
has the notion in his
dome that thiugs are
b s t away t r om
home, and so we
order hods and hats,
a u d hummingbirds
ami Maltese eats.
ironi strangers in some town remote,
who would not know us trom a goat
We ship away our hard-earned kale, and
act our fourth rate junk hv mail. tav
are we seers, or are we fools f Those
strangers don't support our schools, or
keep the peeler on his bent, or help to
pave ( oiumerciiu street. They do not
paint the village pump or build a fence
around the dump, if our old burg were
blown sway they wouldn't eart) a bale
of hay. Kersmith & Kickshaw ought to
get the local trade, already yet.
1
ft, ;
GOVERNMENTAL OWNERSHIP
OR CONTROL.
It X
I CAN CONCEIVE OF NO GREAT
ER CALAMITY TO SUCCEEDING
GENERATIONS THAN THE NE
CESSITY OF INDUSTRIAL SERV
ICE UNDER GOVERNMENTAL
SUPERVISION SUCH AS THAT OF
FERED YOUNG MEN NOW IN THE
POSTAL SYSTEM. SAY WHAT
YOU MAY OF THE NECESSITY,
MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP AND
GOVERNMENT "OWNERSHIP
THROTTLE INITIATIVE AND
SMOTHER AMBITION. IT 18 NO
DISGRACE TO BE A NATION OF
SHOPKEEPERS, BUT IT WOULD
BE A CALAMITY TO BECOME A
NATION OF CLERKS.
CREST OF TLOOn PASSES
NEEDLES, RELIEVING DANGER
T.os Angeles, Cnl., June 10. Dis
patches from Needles today indicated
that tho crest of the Colorado river
flood, which has endangered property
on both sides of the river, has passed
that town. Several small buildings on
the Arizona side were demolished, but
little damage was done nt Needles.
Many levees in the imperial valley
are menaced bv the waters, but engi
neers who are directing work there say
that only possible damage will be an
interruption of the irrigation water
supply.
A levee protecting the Moinve In
dian reservation went out during the
night, and the Indians were forced to
tlee tor their lives. Jinny head of
horses and cattlo were reported lost.
mi... i." t-
in uign wnier was caused oy ine
melting snows in tho Arizona mountains.
ADVICE GIVEN FOR
CARE OF CRACKED CHERRIES
Oregon Agricultural College, Corval
lis, June 10. Cherries that crack on
the trees may, if otherwise ia good con
dition, safely v put into cans. If they
remain on the trees long enough for
brown rot or other disease to attack
them, they are valueless for canning.
Hence the cracked fruit should be
picked as soon as possible after the
rain stops falling, and worked up at
once to insure keeping. A good degree
of heat is required to destroy all germs
of decay that may have entered, the
main thing being to have the fruit
heated as evenly as possible.
A great deal of fruit crack has oc
curred this spring with the cherries,
and it will be of great advantage to
growers to learn that this misfortune
does not entirely destroy the value of
this luscious fruit. According to Pro
fessor Lewis, horticulturist at the Agri
cultural College, these cracked cherries
make aa excellent' canned product if
handled promptly in the right way.
Since pollination was not in many cases
as effective in forming a good set as is
desirable, and since birds have taken
heavy toll in blossom and in fruit this
message of Professor Iewis' that the
cracked fruit may still be utilized
should prove most welcome to cherry
growers.
QUESTION CLEARED UP.
mm
Absolutely Pure
NO ALUM, HO LIME PHOSPHATE
Salem Readers Can No Longer Doubt
the Evidence.
Again and again we have rend of
strangers in distaDt towns who have
been cured by this or that medicine.
But Salem's pertinent question has al
ways been "Has anyone hero in a
lein been cured f" The word of a
stranger living n hundred miles away
may be true, but it cannot have the
same weight with us as tho word of our
own citizens, whom we know and re
spect, and whose evidence we can so
easily prove.
C. W. Hill, wagonmaker, 19:31) N.
Front St., Salem Ore., say3: "I had
more or less backache and my kidney
were disordered. Bonn's Kidney rills
have always relieved me in a short
time. I know of several other people
who havo taken Doan 's Kidney 1'ilh
with good results. You may continue
publishing the statement I have given
before, recommending them."
Price 50c at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy get
Donn's Kidney Pills the same that
Mr. Hill had. I'oster-ililburn Co.,
Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
BALLOONS READY TO RACE.
TOM LAWSON, BOSTON FINAN
CIER, RUSTICATES IN OREGON
Hood River, Ore., June 9. Thomns
V. I.nwson .the Bostou financier and
writer, his sister, Hiss JInry I.awson,
his son-in-law and daughter, Jlr. and
Mrs. Harvey McOall, are spending a
week at a summer resort here. Next
week the party wiU go to Prineville,
Ore., where McCall has a largo ranch,
i.awson expects to remain in Oregon
until fall.
Portland, Ore., June 10. Four world
famed balloons were straining at nu
ciiorage . here today in readiness for
tho signal to ascend in the race to be
gin here at i o'clock tomorrow after
noon ill connection with the annual rose
festival. The huge gas bags are the
"United States," Pilot 11. Eugene
Honeywell, of St. Louis, hero, of lOr
races in all parts of the world; "The
Million Population Club," Pilot John
Berry, of St. Louis, winner of the firs;
national .race in Indianapolis in 1909;
the "Kansas City HI," Pilot Captain
Johir Watts, of Kansas City, member
of America's international team in
1912 and 1913, and the "Springfield,"
Pilot lioy Donaldson, of SpTiugf'ield,
111., a young but intrepid aerouautis.
The balloon remaining aloft the long
est coutinuous period and covering the
greatest distance will be declared' the
winner.
The pilots were of the opinion tlm:
the balloons would either be swept
northeast toward Idaho and Montana
or southeast.
SURPRISES MANY IN SALEM.
The (Ji'lCK action of simple buck
thorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in
Adlcr i-ka, the remedy which beccme
famous by curing appendicitis, is sur
prising Salem people. Many have found
that this simple remedy drains so much
foul matter from the system that rt
SINOLK DOSE relieves constipation
sour stomach and gas on the stomach
almost IMMEDIATELY. Adleri-ka is
the most thorough bowel cleanser ever
sold. J. C. Perry.
BANISH SCROFULA
Hood's Sarsaparilla Cleanses the
Blood, Skin Troubles Vanish.
Scrofula eruptions on the face
and body are bolh annoying and
disOgnrinr. The complexion would
be perfect if they were not present!
This disease shows itself in other
ways, as bunches in the neck, in
flamed eyelids, sore cars, wasting of
the muscles, a form of dyspepsia,
and general debility.
Ask your druggist for Hood's
Sarsaparilla. This great medicine
completely eradicates scrofula. It
purities and enriches the blood, re
moves humors, and builds up the
whole system.
Scrofula is either inherited or ae
quired. Better be sure you are
quite free from it. Get Hood's Sar
saparilla and beiu takiug it today.
THE INITIATIVE.
The initiative and referendum are no
only devices useful in public affairs,
but aro necessary in business matters
amll thev aro most efficiently applied
through the medium of the Journal
Want Ads.
When you have a Want to be sup
plied, or something to offer, use the
' ' initiative ' ' by stating tho facts to the
largest possible audience and you will
find this to be a form of " referendum
as well.
State your offering or your require
ment accurately and concisely in
little Want Ad it will pay.
AMERICANS To" BE GIVEN
MAGNIFICENT RECEPTION
Taris, June 10. A magnificent recep
tion will be tendered by the Paris mil
nicipnl officials at the city hall this
evening to the American and other del
egates at tho international congress of
chambers of commerce. The congress'
fourth session was held this forenoon
and its fifth and last in the afternoon.
Salem
V i
Chautauqua
Six
mg
Days
June 29, 30, July 1, 2, 3, 4
Program Full of Features
REMEMBER THE DATE
The best guanatee against
idleness and wastefulness is the
Want Ad.
WHEN YOU GO AWAY
Have The Journal sent to your
Summer address
SalemFence
Works
B. B. FLEMING, Prop.
Headquarters American Wire
Fence, Morley's Patent Hop Bas
ket Send your orders In now.
Big stock of hop and loganbery
wire. Rubber roofing, 1.50 op
per square. Elastic roof paint,
cant' be beat. Stock of paint
and Tarnishes at 20 per cent
duction, three brands. Cedar
fence posts and wood and Iron
wallc and drive gate.
250 Court St. Phone 124
P. O. Box 355.
Back of ciucas Bin a
MtMtt
GOLD DUST FLOUR
Made by the
SYDNEY POWER COMPANY
Sydney, Oregon
Made for Family Cse.
t Ask your grocer for it. Bran
I and shorts always on hand. X
P. B. WALLACE, Agent. t
Household Worry
Is 99 Per Cent
Wash Day
s ,
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 Drift
But a woman seldom realizes how
many opportunities she had to get
married until she finds herself left at
the yost.
'THE OLO RELIABLE"
REM E DYFoa M EN
AT Dmja3ISTii.OH THIAl BOX BV MAILSCk
FROM PlANTtN 93 HENRYSr. BROOKIYN.KY.
i o n r - pt i t riL-N
THE MAN WHO USES THE
WANT AD ONCE
NEEDS NO FURTHER
ARGUMENT.
House of Half a Million Bargains
Come and see the biggest wonder in the history of Salem. We bay as.
sell everything from a needle to a piece of gold. We pay the highest
cash price for everything. Monstor stock ot all kinds of (jrain sacks.
H. Steinbock Junk Co.
233 State Street. Salem, Oregoa.
Phone Main 22.
I
l Marion Second Hand Store ?
New location. Enlarged space. Greater yariety of new and second-
hand goods. We buy, sell and exchange elothing, shoes, musical ia- 2
struments, all kiads of tools, household furnishings, trunks, snit eases, X
stoves, ranges, men's furnishings, garden tools, etc. We alo sell all
kinds of goods on commission. T
Marion Second Hand Store
FerTy and Liberty streets. PLone Mala 2329. i