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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1914)
Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal THURSDAY AUGUST 13, 1914 - . II ! the i) Aiiv iWjoimvi: PUBLISHED BY CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc. OHAHLE3 H. FISHXK EDITOR AND MANAGES tUBUSriED EVERT EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY, BALEM. OREGON SUBSCRIPTION BATES: Daily, by Carrier, per year $5.20 Per month 4!c Daily, by Mail, per year 4.00 Per month 35c Weekly, by Mail, per year 1.00 Six months GOe FULL "LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT The Capital Journal carrier boys art Instructed to put the papers on the porch. If the carrier does not do this, nils.os you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation mnnager, as this is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following Instructions. Fbone Main 82. EVADING THE CONSTITUTION. AMERICANS generally and Oregonians especially spend some printer's ink and spoil much innocent white paper changing and amending the state con stitution every election or two, in order to do some thing which it is discovered that sacred instrument pro hibits. In most cases this is a waste of time, as a shrewd lawyer can find a way of getting around almost any con stitutional inhibition. For instance, the constitution pro hibits the voting by a city of bonds for a subsidy for any corporation. This was intended as a protection of the people from themselves, and to prevent their being sad dled with bonds through an idea, mistaken or otherwise, that they were doing a good thing for themselves. How ever, in the hands of the lawyers this provision is made of no effect, at least in the matter of voting bonds for aid ing in the construction of a railroad. The city cannot vote to give the bonds or the proceeds thereof to a rail road company, but it can vote bonds to build a certain piece of railroad, at the same time having a contract with a company to build the balance, arid then the road it has built can be turned over to the company. The same re sult is reached in each case only one violates the sacred constitution, and the other puts its fingers to its nose and scornfully wiggles them at the venerable but variously patched document. BRIEF VIEW OF BELGIUM. BELGIUM is the most densely populated and one of the most prosperous countries in Europe. She has an area of 11,373 square miles, a little less than one eighth of that of Oregon, but sustains a population of something more than 7,000,000. The last census gave her 7,423,000. This would make her population about 615 to the square mile or one to each acre of land within her borders. The army has a peace strength of 45,000 and a war strength of 75,000. She exports manufactured goods yearly valued at $750,000,000, and her imports are said to Ihj about $900,000,000. She has 5401 miles of railroad, or a mile for every two square miles of her territory. She has no navy. Liege, where the fiercest fighting has been going on, has a pop ulation of about 170,000 and one of its important indus tries is the making of embroidery thread. The Duchy of Luxemburg lies between her find Cor. many, near the southern line, and the province or state of Limburg, a part of the Netherlands, forms a buffer be tween her and Germany on the northern part. This leaves her with a frontier bordering on Germany of only about 25 miles, and Liege lies about a dozen miles from the line 1 A i 1 Detween mem. The democrats claim Mint Dr. Withvoombo lias mudc n iiolitieul blunder i (. 4ieel-ri nr bin Olmnwit inn in tin, utmrln it., ,...-. 1M. ....... .1.1:....... i .. - n II - - --' I" ...in him. .iic i ,-iiiuiirnii9 Hint" IIUI objected to Dr. Withycombe taking thin view, but since it is onu of the pet . i liobliies of Dr. Smith, the democratic candidate for governor, the democrat. ? will naturally Uol on Dr. Withvoomb e's opposition us a blunder Albnnr j' Herald (Rep.) 1 j We pass this up to the Oregonian. Before the primary ': f election, it demanded pledges in favor of the single item ' J. - J.1 1 ! . LI. i . . veio irom me repuDiican candidates, ana ur. Withycombe, w the onlv one in favor of the nlrl-fashinnpd nnrlr hntwl m. .... propriation bill, was nominated. If the Oregonian was ; j sincere before the primaries, then it must feel that Dr. ! Withvcombe has made worse than n hlnnrW in Vila ctmA i V -. w ivvtvav KJ VVW - against this honest, common-sense idea but then you can .1 j !- . " never icii auoui me uregonian. Since the war broke loose in Eurone the Cznr hni and. denly discovered the Jews are a pretty fine people. "Jew baiting" will stop in consequence until the war is over, for two reasons one. that the Russians nwl tJi W money, the other that they are in danger of being pretty inorougniy Daitea tnemseives by the Germans and Aus trians. The fact is stated in many newspapers of a hopeful dis position, that "many lifelong democrats will this fall vote the republican ticket." This has a familiar sound and amuses the aforesaid lifelong democrats. LADD & BUSH, Bankers Capital Established 18G3 $500,000.00 Transact a general banking business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT . TOO MANY CHURCHES. LET somebody propose a schoolhouse for every street corner with geography a specialty in one, arithme tic in another, history in a third, reading in a fourth, and so through the curriculum. The vote would be unanimous to send the proposer to an insane asylum. The difference between the creed of Episcopalians and Evangelicals, Methodists, Baptists, Lutherans and Pres byterians is far less radical than the difference between history and penmanship, or arithmetic and geography. If children do not become confused, but may readily acquire knowledge of all these things under one roof, why does each slight shade of a religious belief require a costly ' individual plant for its dissemination? Having a church at almost every corner is one way to f'l'nnto rVii1 vpVi rclfe tn ri)T-i liffla onnm-orvofmri! fn nilo up huge operating expenses and generally divert the fire ; oi religious endeavor. A Canadian genteleman, a member of parliament, drew a picture of European condition as follows: "Should Eu ropean war come, it would mean a new story in the his tory of civilization a kind of death grapple in the dark ness, a cosmic catastrophe." Too bad the kinglets in the old country did not know this. Had they realized that this cosmic catastrophe would follow war, they might well have hesitated betore venturing their all on the hazard of doubtful battle, even though they were in no personal danger in the aforesaid scrimmage. The Prodigal Son 'S-A Pa-.' No doubt the Kaiser was deceived as to the course Eng land would take when he declared he would back up Aus tria, i ou see the Kaiser had no means of knowing, and of course never suspected the suffragettes would quit and thus leave England tree to join his enemies. Foraker. who thought he could "come back" in Ohio. was only an "also ran." He should have been warned by the fate of Jeffries and Corbett, but, come to think of it, Foraker was not in the heavyweight class. THE ROUND-UP Coos county will soon take steps to encourage the building of the railroa 1 from Roseburg to that city, and will give substantial aid besides. ! i Jack Hurlburt and Bill Looney, pal-v living at (,'orvallis, got an extra dose of "saints' delight" aboard Saturday night and as they were about to sepa rata for the night got in a quarrel. Jake is in the hospital with 13 knifd wounds presented him by his handy menus. A barn, three mowers and about $1,000 worth of iiny were burned in I'pper Langille valley, Sunday, The barn belonged to tieorge McDonald, ot Klamath Kails, but the other property to George Noble, who has the place reuted. The council of Klamath Falls has in structed the oity attorney to order the United States to build a bridge across a reclamation canal at that placo or "take the consequence." Dallas has sold the $.",000 bond issue for purchasing a fair site to u loci! bank at par. Editor Young, of the Coquille Sentin el, is still registering former Kansaus for uis Sunflower club, ami his field lias now broadened to include all ot them in Coos county, ft II m A postoffice has been established at Otter Jtock, in Lincoln county, with mail daily for July, August and Sep tember and tri weekly the remainder of the year. The Port Orford Trioune reports tli" forests of Curry county swarming with deer hunters, estimating that there are twice as many as last year. Twcutv one men were camped on Bald moun tain the night before the season's open ing day. Med ford Mail Tribune: Though th" woods are full of hunters, and the deer are reported plentiful, the reports of deer killed are small. Old hunters at tribute this to the inability of the first rush of hunters to hit anything, anl not being acQiiainteil with the habits of the deer. Sumpter American: The Sumpter Valley-Burnt Kiver fair promises ti become a permanent Institution, and no state or county aid has been asked for. Last year the Sumpter exhibit at the comity fair took second prise as a community exhibit, but this year -are will be satisfied with nothing less that) first. The Trineville News has just cele brated its thirtieth birthday. It was founded by Horace Oillard." Its pres ent editor, Charles O. Pollard, says or it: "The paper has had its ups and downs; has met courageausly the vi cissitudes of the frontier and' has first and last stood by the interests o' central Oregon thr'ongh thick and thin as any of our old timers w.U verify.'' THE TRANCO PRUSSIAN WAR. (New York World.) It was in 1870. Bulletins had been issued by both governments to the ef fect that iance and Oermany were on perfectly harmonious and brotherly terms. A few davs later their armie clashed. Napoleon Bonaparte, 60 years earlier, had orerrun Oermany, and had espe cially humiliated lTusnis and grossly insulted Louise, Prussia's adored queen. Prussia never forgot. Bismarck for years strengthened Prussia, not ouly to prepare for a revenge on France, but to sei-io the whip hiiud of Germany. He persuaded Austria to help Prussia in seizing the Schleawig-Holxtein duch ies an act of international highway robbery and then in IStiH thrashed Austria and seized the stolen duchies for Prussia. This made Prussia the strongest kingdom in Oermany, Next he made ready to whip France. Napoleon III., pudgy charlatan and nephew of the great Napoleon, was em peror of France. His lovely wife, Ku genie, ruled him, even as he ruled France, and she in turn was ruled by hot advisers. These advisers (prompted or bribed, it is said, by Bismarck) urged a war against Russia. And war was accordingly ordained. A relntive of Prussia's king was named ns a candidate for Spuin's va cant throne. France protested. The king of Prussia withdrew the candi dacy. Still bent on picking a quarrel, Fnince demanded pledges that the can didacy should never be renewed. The king of Prussia refused to grant this absurd mandate, and within a few days war was declared. Prussia had been preparing herself for years. All Germany joined her. in three mighty armies (each a perfect fighting machine) the German forces invaded France just as now three Ger man armies are reported to have done, 41 years later. France was about as well prepraed for war as an ex-pugilist who has been drunk every night for a year is prepared to put up the ring fight of his life. Her troops were ill trained, ill offi cered, ill equipped. Her commanders were incompetent. They did not have correct maps of their own land, to say nothing of the enemy's country. Graft, incompetence, general crookedness were rampant in government circles. The best racehorse cannot win if the jockey is worthless. Nor could the heroic French soldiers make headway under the burden of bad leadership. 'Yet all Fiance was confident of quick triumph. "On to Berlin!" was the universal cry. The French and German armies met near the frontier. The French won the first fighta small engagement at the Snar river. It was their only real vic tory. Steadily the Germans hammered them back across France, winning bat tle after battle, driving the bravely fighting but doomed Frenchmen ahead of them ns a star football team rushes its lighter and weaker rival across the field. Paris was the French goal, Ber lin the German. In barely a month France's armies were whipped, France's armies over powered, France's empire had fallen and Napoleon III. was a prisoner. Then Pans was besieged aud after a gallant resistance, wss captured. France lav at Germany's mercy. The conqueror's demanded and received from the bro ken foes a war indemnity of one billion dollars. Bismarck seized the psveho-b-gical moment to weld the victorious German states into an empire, with irussia s king (grandfather of the present German emperor) as its em peror, or kaiser. CONSULATE UNDER FIRE. Washington 7" n.-Secretary Brjan was informed today by American that ho ( hillock) had received fae followmg message from the American consulate at Liege: "The consulate here has been ex- u!t 4 -re iooe hostil'ie started. my nnd it n At m.i,i:.l v.. i quarters tlsewhre," Get a better position by reading the chances offered each day in the Journal Want Columns. " t lat I'm wise, 1 will arise, and .eek'mv fathers shack;" thus mut tered low the am ient bo, ami then he hit the track. From dwellings rude he'd oft been shnoe I, been chased by farmers' dogs this poor eld scout, all down and out, had fft 'i herded with the itr"Sv. I h"1-"'-' liis heart I was wrong; it took him long to recog nize the truth, that there's a glad and smiling dad for each repentant y out h. "I will arise, doggone niy eyes, the prodigal observed, "and try to strike the old straight pike from which I idlv swerv ed." The father saw, while baling sore and lamed; he whooped with iov; " niv swavbacked buy, you're welcome:'' he exclaimed. Midst glee and mirth two dollars' worth of fireworks then were burned; "we'll kill a cow, ' cried father, "now tlmt Reuben has returned!" His sis ters sang, the farmhouse rang with glee till ratters split, his mother sighed with hope ii n,l pride, his granny had a fit. And it's today the same old way, the lamp d.ith nightly burn, to ;zti le you home, O. boys who roam, if you will but return. straw, the truant, rnirrlitit. .! hr Atl.'in: t .t.vsps.,r Km Tic a G. O. P. SHOWS ITS COLORS (Mcdford, Or., Daily Sun (Pro. Hep.) ) Senator Kristnw was one of the re publican nnliticinns of houiiiI nroi'i-ps- sivc principles who lacked the courage to join the progressive party. Mta llailley, ( iimmins and- otner embers nf tlin Mtrllililln anllm) ttri.t.ll- declared the place for reform was with- it, not witnout, inc u. u. J . So he 1:111 Airninst px-Kemitor f'nrtis for the republican nomination in Kansas and got fairly well walloped, as most of the progressive republicans are get ting natiopen now. With the Penrose victory in Pennsyl vania, it is ns lilnin ns Kaiser Willintin 'tt war mustache that the rpnnblicnn nnrtv ns at present constituted is stauding as par as tno rocK ot Gibraltar. Hard times, the Kuropean war and other ca lamities are being capitalized by the old guard as a kind of Horse of Troy, in wnicn to ninac their way within the walls of congress again. But they won't get there. The peo plo in general are somewhat tired of freak and disturbing legislation, but they arc just as much opposed to crook ed and privileged legislation. They do not want to go forward quite bo fast, but they refuse to go backward. The temper of the country in the main is to take bearings, digest the leg islation on hand, temper radicalism with common sense, and, above all, put busi ness upon a sound and substantial ba sis ffcuin. The trouble with Bristow was the in evitable trouble with tho timid. He wns neither fish nor fowl. As a result, Victor Murdock, the pro gressive candidate for senator, running against a man liko Curtis, will have an excellent chance of election and the stock of tiie progressive party will go up a notch all over the country. FOR FRECKLED, TANNED, RED OR WRINKLED SKIN Just beneath that freckled, tanned or reddened complexion there's an exquis itely .beautiful skin of youthful tint and delicacy. If you could only bring this complexion to the surface, dis carding the discolored one! You can in the easiest, simplest, most natural mnnner imaginable. Just get at any drug store an ounce of ordinary mer colized wax, apply nightly like cold cream, removing it mornings with warm water. The wax assists Nature by gradually peeling off the lingering particles of scorched and half-dead sur face skin, causing no discomfort what ever. Cutaneous defects like pimples, blotches, liver spots, motii patches, freckles, of course disappear with the old skin. Nothing else will accomplish such wonderful results in so short a time. Fine lines and even deeper wrinkles often appear at this season. In such cases nothing is better than a face bath made by dissolving 1 ot. powdered sax olite in Vj pint witch hazel. This is remarkably effective. THREE REPORTED KILLED IN MINE EXPLOSION Bakersfield, Cal., Aug. 13. Three miners were reported to have been killed today and several others en tombed by an explosion in a mine near Kernvillo. Members of the Bakersfield fire de partment, with smoke helmets started for the scene in an automobile. LOS ANGELES GETS IT. Los Angeles, cal., August. 13. The International Tvnoirraiihiiial Union convention at Providence, B. I., 'se lected Los Angeles todav for it. lflin convention, according to messages re ceived by the local union. Los Angeles received 100 Votes to 113 for Washington. CRAWFORD FUNERAL TOMORROW. The funeral .ar,-;.i.. . at n " vi a uerman y,M di.ed Wedlay. Aug. . u iuriiina, -win DO Held tomorrow, rnday at 5 o'clock it tho a.i tvn . cemetery. The body will arrive tomor row anernooa at 4:30 o'clock on the Oregon Electric. Mr. Crawford, who was 44 1 years old died following an Ul nes. of heart disease, at the home of his sster, Mrs. Dora Robertson in Port land. He leave two brothers,' rrea and we Gasoline of Quality The best gasoline the Standard Oil Company can make. Dealers everywhere. Ask out nearest agency about delivery in bulk. Standard Oil Company - (California) Salem THAT SPECIAL SUNDAY EXCURSION TRAIN WILL CONTINUE EVERY SUNDAY THIS SUMMER VIA THE IUb0tNaHA5Ta ROUTES The Exposition Line 1915. TO NEWPORT AND RETURN This Special will continue every Sunday nntil the close of the Summer Excursion Season, starting from Woodburn and stopping at all intermediate points on the following SCHEDULE Lv. Woodburn 5:35 a. m. Lv. Turner.... 6:30 a. m. " Gorvais 5:42 a.m. " Marion 6:42 a.m. " Brooks 5:43 a.m. Jefferson 6:50 a.m. " Chemawa C:00 a. m. ' Albany 7:20 a. m- " SALEM 6:15 a. m. Ar. Newport 12:20 p. m- RETURNING Leave Newport 6:00 p. Arrive Salem .".'." .','.', 11:51 p- " Chemawa 12:00 night " Brooks V. .V.V.V.V. ! 12:08 a. m. " Gervais 12:17 a. " Woodburn . . . . 12:25 a. m. ROUND TRIP FARES TO NEWPORT Woodburn, Gervais, Brooks, Chemawa, Salem and Turner 2-52 Marion . .... ...35 Jefferson !.'.'..'.'!!.'.'."!.'.'!.'.'!.'..'.'!!".' .".2-25 SIX HOURS FUN AT THE BEACH Surf bathing, boating, deep-sea fishing, roller skating, warm salt plunge in the Natatorium, ete. Pull niartlnnl-i.. .V. , a T 1 -t uvuima iivui fcUV U C ( I v n . o. JT. Hgoofc JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland. Oregon. NOMINATION COUPON : GOOD FOR 1000 VOTES For Address A free trip to the Panama-Pacific Exposition in 1915. One nomination only allowed each contestant Must be used within 10 days from date, Aug. 7, 191- i . William M. Crawford of Amitv. two sistera, Mrs. Dora Kobertson, of Port land, and Miss Belle McCanaey of Am- itw , ,...;. t t. . -' - ' """"" omvage, ot tsaiem, and othr relatives in thia vicinity. He aa member of the Odd lodge t Amity nd e B. V. - at McMinaville. Friends 3t rtembeta are invited to attend eraL y 1- -r- - - (. l 9 ' ' ---. 1