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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1914)
THE DAILY CAPITAt. JOTTRNAT BAT.EM. OWEOOW. SATTRDAY. JUNE 13. 1014. Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal SATURDAY JUNE 13, 1914 t 1 - J TOXTB. - t . ! i i 5 i : J ': f v i 1 r. J : the daily g&jgL journal: rtTrt.I8itED DT CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc. CHARLES H. riSHER PUBLISHED EVERT EVENINO EtCEPT BUND AY, BALEM. OBEQON SlUkKRirTlON RATES: Dally, by Carrier, ? ;5 "l) r" month 4!ic Dally, by Mail, per jear CB,n 3:,e Weekly, by Mall, per year 1-00 ' "oath 80c FULL I.EASKD WIRE TKLKORAl'U REPORT Ths Capital Jourul carrier boyi art Instructed to put ths pipwi on the porch. If the carrier does not do this, mlsiei yon, or neglects getting tho paper to yon on time, kindly phono tho circulation managar, aa thli la tho only way wo can detennino whether or not tho cullers art following instruction. Phono Main 8X WOMAN IN rOLITICS-AND OUT. w OMEN voting and holding office brings up some new questions every day. In California one of the nominees for the legislature is, or was at the time she was nominated, unmarried. Since that time she has been led to the altar, or, to be exact, she being a politician, has led the other fellow to the altar, and thus had her name changed. She was nominated for office as, say, Mary Smith, but now she is, as it were, Mary Jones. The question passed up to the secretary of state is: "Un der which name shall she run for office?" If she runs and is elected as Mary Smith, how can she legislate as Mary Jones? If she runs as Mary Jones, by what authority shall she do it, since no Mary Jones was nominated? It is ever thus since 'the first female put in an appear ance upon the globe. They are always stirring up some thing new, putting before unthought-of things in fudge, new shapes in clothes, new ingredients in the family mul ligan, and all kinds of novel things into the political pot. As liyron so graphically expressed it, "What she's said or done is naught to what she'll say or do, the oldest thing on record, and yet new." Hod bless her, anyway, indi vidually and collectively. She is the salt in the soup, the flavoring in the pudding, the perfume of the flower, the leaven in the dough, the electricity in the great engine ot civilization, that though invisible furnishes tho motive and the motive power for all human endeavor. God's last and most variegated and versatile gift to man, sharer of his joys and income, and comforter of his sorrows and his troubles. Solomon in all his glory was never arrayed like unto one of them, at least not like those of recent years, and his wisdom alongside of their's was as the prattle of adolescence, to the dissertations of an editor or the les sons in the primer to Webster's unabridged. As a child she is the musical brook dancing down the mountain can yon. As a Miss, a river, vine-wivathed, blossom-bordered, dimpling under the caresses of the vagrant zephyrs, and mirroring back all the beautiful things that pass before her. As a wife and mother, the billowing ocean that washes the shores of humanity and boat's all its burdens upon her bosom. As a new feature in the political world, well, come to think of it, she was always there, only now she is out in the open and visible, where before she was not in evidence, but she' got .there just the same. j A HIGH-TONED COMPANY. THE Pullman company is having a session-with the California railroad commission, and yesterday Com missioner Eshleman asked Richmond Dean, general manager of the Pullman company, it appearing that the company paid its porters $25 per month: "Can a man live on $-5 a month?" Mr. Dean, speaking for the company, replied: "Our pay rate is based on the assumption that the traveling public is willing to contribute something toward the sup port of those who serve its comforts." If Mr. Dean's ideas of the "public being willing to con tribute something toward the support of those who serve its comforts" is correct, and they probably are, what has that to do with the case in point? His answer discloses that the inordinately wealthy Pullman company, and not the humble porters, is the object of this public charity, the real recipient of the tips given the porters. It is an open admission that, not content with its unholy charges that pass the point where profits cease and larceny begins, it deliberately refuses to pay its porters, turning that task over to a generous public whom it has already plun dered to the utmost limit the law will permit, and takes this underhanded way of collecting the wages of the por ters from the public in addition to its other charges. If the company would say. "we have charged you a certain price for the service we render you, but in addition you must furnish us the money to pay our porters," the public would send up a roar and the piratical company would not be given a cent So it shows not only that this great com- Lapp & Bush, Bankers Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes Traveler's Checks ..ED1T0B A.ND MANAOER pany is willing to accept tips like a lowly servant, but it is so anxious to xlo so that it resorts to subterfuge and does so surreptitiously. It not only accepts tips, but it asks for and gets them fraudulently and by false pre tenses. It lets the porters take them from the passengers and then it appropriates them. Its officials should be sentenced to work as porters on their own trains for a few years and thus for once really earn the tips which they now steal. PROVING HIS INNOCENCE. HII. RIDDELL, a Portland attorney, being charged with using the mails with intent to defraud in t connection with the operations of the Oregon In v land Development Company, sets up in his defense and to prove his innocence that there were irregularities in the filling of the box containing the names for which the grand jury was drawn. He also shows how improb able it is that he could have committed the offense, by" pointing out that two of the members of the jury are not entitled to sit as jurymen, not possessing the necessary Qualifications. Besides, as another evidence nf bis inno cence, he shows that instead of the names of the grand jury being put in a box and handed to the jury commis sioner, they were handed him without this formality, which should be conclusive evidence that Riddell did no wrong. Two of the officers of the company were con victed in the federal court on a similar charge last fall, and this is what makes Riddell so anxious to prove his purity without going to trial. Of course he is within his rights in taking these steps, but the fact that he takes them makes one somehow suspicious of his defense. When Mrs. Percy V. Pennybacker, president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, at Chicago Thurs day, in a glowing peroration to a tribute to the American husband, said, "What a wonderful blessing' to us is the American man," there was long and continuous applause. However, realizing the cute ways and cunning guile of the dear, delightful ladies, who, God bless 'em, are worthy of all that an American or any other, husband can ascribe to them, the statement of Mrs. Pennybacker must be taken with soma mental reservations, for that is no doubt the way she expressed the idea. Then, too, there is something suggestive in the name of this wise lady who, in backing the American husband, may be only showing true to name. Penny-backer is suggestive. According to the assessor's returns, St. Louis, Missouri, has only five millionaires, and these among them have but a measly $!),000.000. From a financial viewpoint, St. Louis is a back-woods village. That New York woman who thinks and says children should be washed at school and not at home, adds another valid reason to the many already known to the schoolboy for playing hookey. The New York Sun says that many a man now shouting 'on to Mexico' will conceal his assets when the collector comes around for the war taxes. Plenty of truth in that small wad. tl Kin.ff George can now realize how Pharaoh felt when the different plagues were being tried on him. THE ROUND UP. Hrooks Harlan. . years old died from ; strangulation at Klam.Mh' Vails Mon day hi lo rtvox friii from the influence of other administered for a slight oper at ion. llo became su-k at the stomach ami in omitiiix. 50:110 of tho ejected j matter passed into tho windpipe enus- ' inu atiaiijiilation and death. I , Forty member of tho tVst Artillery I reserve, of Ashland, took part in the parade at Cortland and then went oa to Fort Stevens for teu Jay practice with the big (iiin. ... , The IVilas College, formerly 1.1 Cre ole Academy, ha., closed it itoors for oxer. H was closely associated with tfie early history of the coast and has hundreds of alumni throughout the state. The law repiirirs standardisa tion of such schools put it out of busi ness. ... While working on the jetty at the mouth of the Siuslaw. Mouday, l.vun Tonne was knocked into the riter an.l drowned. He was working as brakeman System of Treating Prisoners Serves to Elm bitter Them Against All Society " By Mr. MAUD BALLINGTON BOOTH THE churches, the school? and society hT failed in their w-ork, other wise the men and vomeu in prisons would cot be there, -There is bo such thing as a criminal etiss. 9 OF COURSE IT IS RIGHT THAT THE WRONGDOERS SHOULD BE PUT IN PRISON. BUT SOCIETY OWES IT TO ITSELF TO SEE THAT THOSE IT IMPRISONS ARE TREATED LIKE HUMAN BEINGS. IT IS NOT AT ALL IMPOSSIBLE TO REDEEM MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE COME UNDER THK PENALTY OF THE LAW. BUT THEY CANNOT BE REDEEMED BY BRUTALITY. OUR SYSTEM OF TREATING PRISON ERS SERVES ONLY TO EMBITTER THEM AGAINST ALL SOCIETY. AND IT CANNOT BE CHANGED WHILE WARDENS ARE SELECTED FROM AMCNG POLITICIANS. on the train, ami in uuloadinjr a pilj,,,. one of the cars upset earn ing him with it into the river. - ... R.seliirK has taken advaueod ground 111 the cleanup movement, with an ordi nance to enforce weed cvttiujf tinder peualty of a city lien on neglevtej property. ... Oresham'a hard surface street im provements are op in the air. accord ing to the Outlook, which sayn there is a strong probability that nothing will be done this year toward improving them. ftaker IVnuvrat: There" was no nee.1 for a !aker county wool sale date this year. Producer and bnver got to gether earlier tht.n the date and the product was sold at a top notch price. In complimentary mood, the Kogen (liar,) say Portland with it rose "is this week the cynosure of all loval tregon eyes,- and that only th flag itse.f "will be more conspicuous at the Sa Kranciseo fair than that piece of Oregon fir." V "The new rule a.lotted bv three of ( the four banks in this city to close at noon ?aturdav." the Astorian. "i an excellent one; it brings the business here to a modern level with the sys tem throughout the country and is a sound biisiuess step in the progressive march Astoria has started." ... I. K. Sheldon was arrested at Grisley Mountain, Crook county, Thursday, and taken to I'rineville for trial on a charge of nmrderinfg his uew-bom child. The baby was horn in the morning aud was alive, anil thn neighbors after giving what assistance they could to the mother weut home. Returning htfer they were told the baby had died and the father had buried it. Asked to show the grave he said he could not find it. The sheriff was called and searched for the body finding the charred bones in the heating stove. tt w Coquille, owing to the action of the eity council in refusing to grant licenses will go into the dry Jist .Inly first. The council refused to grant licenses by a vote of five to one, The loss by tho fire at Baniion, Thursday, will' total at least ;!0),000 and may go above that sum, The l.vmonths old child of Mr. and Mr. Carl Miukler of Shermnu County, wandered away from the house Thurs day and falling in the Deschutes river was drowned. ' The militia companies of Kugene are to be inoculated with typhoid t;prms. prepared to render them immune from the fever. Oeorge Pierce, n prominent catt'e man of La Crnnde has been sued by Alice Moore for brench of promise. The lady wants ;ti.'H)0 to ahe her wound ed affections. . A suit to nullify a paving contract at l.a Grande resulted Thursday in the contract being set aside. About a quar ter of a mile of streets have been paved under the contract and the War ren Construction company is holding the sack. The Brides I see the blushing biide go by, nil sweet and blooming, to the ihurih; :!-. '. nothing t a i r e r greets the eye, how ever far a man may search. As nearer to the church they draw, the bliss they feel is all unfeign ed, for they obey a noly law, and lead tlio life that God or dained. The old maids stand around outside, and think upon the yesteryear: each had a chance to be a bride, aud passed it up for some career. Kach was ambitions to be known as lawyer, doctor or the like, and dismally each Mauds alone, and sees the brides go up the pike. From 'ueath the churches spires and. domes the brides go fort'.i to normal lives, to make and manage happy homes and join the ranks of gracious wives. The old maids leave the wedding scene, with henrts that feel as though they'd burst; they fill their stoves with gaso line, and cook their meals of Wiener wurst. They chose the dross and left the gold, t'neir lives are bjit a dreary blank; they have no men around to scold, 110 kids to cuddle or to spank. Their eyes are full of tears Hushed, their hearts of griefs that ever gnaw; their hair is gray, their noses red, their temper like a tress cut saw. Imagine then, how tough they feel, as by the churchyard gate they stray, and hear the wedding music peal, aud see the brides in brave array! CLASS TREE PLANTED. At the closing exercises of the eighth grade of Kast school, a fine black wal nut tree, planted and raised by one of the members of the class, was planted on the school campus and dedicated to the memory of the late J. S. Graham. At the roots of the tree was placed a metal box containing a short history of the class, names of its members and the following aiemorial: "This tree, at whose roots these data are placet!, is lovingly and most respectfully dedi cated to the nlemory of J. S. Graham, a former principal of our school, By Mr. Graham's death, each pupil and teacher lost a personal friend and coun sellor. Hrow. VI : true, and by your sturdy growth and fruitfulness exem plify the life and fruits of him to whose memory you are dedicated." The tree was finingly planted near the walk on the campus which Mr. Gra ham used ia entering the grounds of East school, and it is bequeathed by this year's class of the school to each succeeding class as a charge to be. tend ed with loving care. "RUSSIAN PEKn." TO CAUSE AN EUROPEAN FEDERATION Copenhagen. June 13. That a quiet undercurrent of sentiment in all three cocntries is making steadily for the federation of Denmark, Sweden and Norway was the confidential assertion here today of a foreign diplomat long resident ia Copenhagen and ia close touch with Scaadanaviaa politics. He attributed the origin of the move Best he professed to discern to the "Bassiaa peril'' but gave it as his opiaioa that "those behind it are begin aiag to see ecoaoinie aad industrial ad vantage it would have, at least as im portant as- its defensive advantage. At the outset, he admitted it prob ably would art be muck mere thaa a defensive alltaaee, but ia the end. aad perhaps ia the not dijtant future, he declared, he believed the- union would be as rks as that of the German or Italian stares. W "HsMsVMBMni 0a CAN II No woman should have poor, thin, scraggy hair, and no man need become bald. . Poor hair and final baldness are due to the dandruff germ. ' Newbro'a Herpicide will destroy dandruff and stop the hair from fall ing. Further evidence of this ia found in a letter from Mrs. F. Neilson, of To mnh, Wis. She says: "I fought the worst kind of dandruff for nine years. I have been using Herpicide now one week and my scalp is healthy, the dan druff has gone and the itching has stoppedv It is the best remedy for scalp diseases I have ever saw, and I have seen manr." Just 13 heavy as it looks "V7"OU don't buy a range by the pound, but that's 'a mighty good way to judge of its soundness. For all raises l.oi more cr less alike, as you see them stand tng in a hardware store cr pictured in the catalog of a mail-order house, but they don't ail cook alike or wear alike by any means Let the scales tell the story. They'll show you quickly enough where full value lies they'll show up the shoddy stuff that is built of cheap, thin materials, and with flimsy and faulty construction throughout. TKe 4tate S;teel Range is a rial steel range) handsome, solid, substantial built of the heaviest materials) extremely economical in operation) made to lasf a lifttimt, and to save strength, time and money ior you every day of its use. Get one into your home, and you'll take a new delight in the duties of the kitchen; for there's no drudgery in this kind of cooking baking becomes the best of fun. ! i Have a look at thi Estate Steel Ranges in our store see how strong they are, how heavy, how well made and convenient, and you won't feel satisfied until you "Own an Estate." . 'Witere sines. v JOSSE UvIOORE, BotsSuSSSU We Guarantee to Save You Money COMMERCIAL DELEGATES VISIT EPERNAY AND RHEIMS Taris. June 13. Today was an "un official" day in the program of the sixth International Congress of the Chambers of Commerce iu session here since Monday. The American delegates joined with other visitors in a trip to Kpemay and Rheims. They were to re tnru to Paris this evening. Household Worry Is 99 Per Cent Wash Day Good Riddance by the Laundry Remedy. Linen, blankets, curtains ap parel 11 come back beautiful when we do your work. Salem Steam Laundry 136 South Liberty Street Phone 25 Dry Cleaning'. Ask the Drive House of Half a Come and see tne biggest wonder eel! everything from a needle to a tiu price 1 or everyrning. .Monster H. Steinbock Junk Co. 33 State Street. Salem, Oregon New location. Enlarged ; ipa.. Greater variety of new and seeoaj kaad d. buy, aril and exchanga elothing. .hoe, sausieal in struments, all kinds of tool, household faraishinga, trunks, snit eaaea. tore, ranees, men furnishlnja, tardea toola, etc. We al oTaOl kind of goods on commission. Marion Second Hand Store" Ferry aad liberty streets. tk. t.. SAVE HERPICIDE Don't subject yourself to disappoint ment and expense by accepting some thing claimed to be "just aa good" as Newbro'a Herpicide. These off brands may possibly be good, but why take chances? The genuine snd original dandruff germ destroyer can always be obtained. It stops itcaing of the scalp almost instantly. Newbro's Herpicide in 50c and 11.00 sizes is sold by nil dealers who guaran tee it to do all that is claimed. If yon are not satisfied, your money will be refunded. Bend 10c in postage or silver for sample and booklet to The Herpicide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich. Applications at good barber shops. taieV are old" WHEN YOU GO AWAY Have The Journal sent to your Summer address SalemFence Works B. B. FLEMXNO, Prop. Headquarters American Wtr Fenca, Morley'i Patent Hop Bas ket. Bend your orders In now. Big stock of hop and loganbary wire. Rubber roofing, 11.50 tip per square. Elastic roof paint, cant' ba beat. Stock of painta and Tarnish ea at 20 per east dnctlon, three brand. Cedar fence posts and wood and Iron walk and drive gataa. 250 Court St Phone 121 P. O. Box 335. Back of caicajt Stia Million Bargains In the history of Salem We bnv aad piece of fold. We par the highest all kind of train sack. old. stock o rhone Main 234