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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1914)
Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal FRIDAY AUGUST 21, 1914 THE WILY ($ffL JOIMVL- PUBLISHED BY CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO- Inc. OHAELZ3 H. TI3BXB EDITOB AND MANAQEB PUBLISHED EVEET ETENINO EXCEPT SUNDAY, SALEM, 02E00N SUBSCBIPTION BATES: Daily, by Currier, per year $5.20 Per month. . Daily, by Mail, per year 4.00 Per month. . Weokly, by Mail, per year 1.00 SU monthi. .43c .33c .50c FULL LEASED WIBE TELEGBAPH BEPOBT The Capital Journal carrier boys art Instructed to put the papers on the lorch. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this la the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following Instructions. Phone Main 82. CAPITAL JOURNAL AFFAIRS SETTLED. HAS. H. FISHER and L. S. BARNES yesterda.v purchased the stock in The Capital Journal Print ing Co. held by Graham P. Taber, and now are the sole owners of the stock in the publishing cor poration. The arrangement was made harmoniously and all parties to the transaction were satisfied with the successful termination of the negotiations. Mr. Taber's remuneration was satisfactoiy and mutual good will and good wishes accompanied the consummation which will in all respects be beneficial to the conduct of the paper. Attention is called to Mr. Taber's statement printed on this page of today's issue. CAPITAL JOURNAL PTG. CO. DECISION ON WATER RATES. THE Capital Journal yesterday gave to its readers the first news of the conclusion of the Salem water case before the Railroad Commission and the findings and order of that body. That the news will be of the variety known as "good" is assured, for Salem folk have waited long and patiently for this announcement. The reduction to the average householder is about 22 per cent, and the saving in the city is in round numbers about $17,000 yearly. The average householder paid about $2.00 per month, with a rebate of 20 cents if the bill was paid before the 10th of the month. The same person will pay now about $1.40 to $1.50 and the saving in the year will be about six dollars. The case has been long pending but those who waited so patiently the action of the railroad commission cannot understand the tremendous amount of work the examina tion and investigation of the plant required. Sifting the jinass of matter supplied by the company and making 'its own examination to arrive at the physical value of the plant was not a labor of love, and while the final settlement seemed to be long delayed, it would seem the commission has done conscientious work. Ihe only demand made by the city was that the matter be investi gated and that equal and exact justice be done as between the company and tlie citizens of Salem. This paper took the position that the water company was entitled to a fair and just return on its investment and that when that was given it, the city had no fault to find with whatever price the commission found it was entitled to The reduction is perhaps not so much as many desired or thought right, but the commission examined into it minutely and its judgment must be taken as better than that of the citizen who has not the mass of information the commission dug up. The reduction is material, nearly one-fourth, and the grand total is about $17,000. That the price is still higher than citizens should pay cannot be denied, but that the company cannot furnish it any more cheaply under present conditions must be accepted as a fact, since the commission has so found. "VERBOMANIA": A DISEASE. VERBOMANIA is a newly-named malady, and means too much talk. The word is taken from verbosity, of course, but it is only recently that scientists have made claims that too much talking without thinking is in reality a disease. M. Ossip Lourie, a Russian-Jewish writer, claims the credit of classifying verbosity as a disease and has named it "verbomania." M. Lourie is a noted psychologist and he has made it plain that words are possible without the presence of ideas, just as ideas are possible without words. He does not mean that society folk alone have this disease. People in all walks of life have the habit of talking too much, without any reason other than to say something to take up time or to make themselves at ease. The main point to notice in verbomania, according to this psychologist, is the fact that words are possible without thought behind them. Through long practice a pianist is able to render a difficult composition without LADD & BUSH, Bankers Capita Established 1S6S $500,000.00 Transact a general banking business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT thinking about it; he plays it automatically, just as people' . si .! jej.li.Al meet ana say many tnmgs wimoui giving mougnc 10 what they are saying. Our rapid mode of living is held to be the cause of this. In olden times we did not talk so much; we did not feel bound to be on the go every minute. But today we! must be constantly active, or if idle physically we feel as though we must be talking. All this forced talk, M. Lourie says, is unnatural and the result of disease. The man who delights in playing the changes on the mother-in-law joke is overlooking an opportunity in notf placing the blame lor the European war on that much maligned woman. It would be no great stretch of the imagination to have the big fellow fighting because some one of the other fellows is responsible for his having a mother-in-law. "GETS-IT." 2 Drops Corn Vanishes! The Only Sure Ender of All Corns. Desperate, are you, over trying to get rid of eornst Quit using old formu las under new names,' bandages, winding-tapes and cotton rings that make a fat little package out of your too. Early this week the thrifty hop man began to get his baskets ready and then the clouds began to gather. Thursday several lots of these baskets were taken out to the fields and the sky at once assumed a laden hue. All other signs may prove deceptive, but the state fair and hop picking never were known to miss bringing a shower or two. This censoring of the news would not be so bad if the censors would be content with cutting something out and did not put something else in. Just a little of the cor respondent's real story would prove interesting, and so far as it went probably reliable. Mr. Bailey told the Texas democrats that if the.' defeated his resolution he would run for the United States senate, and they were so anxious to get a real solid whack at Mr. Bailey that they defeated said resolu tions 645 to 107. The cost of living, so far as bread and water is con cerned at least, is holding even in Salem. Bread is higher but water has been reduced in price. Switzerland must feel a trifle sore as when the ulti matums were being passed around it did not get any. VALEDICTORY The dio hns been cast and cast satis factorily the Rubicon ha9 been crossed and the forces which crossed forgot not their purses, and today I have sold the stock representing my one-third in terest in the Capital Journal to L. S. Bniues nnil Charles H. Fisher. While both tiie snle and the price received are satisfactory to me, there is intermingled with my personal sat isfaction n feeling of regret a feeling which will not dowu. 1 must now seek a new field, and while the new may beckon me onwnrd with the promise of good things, yet I cannot leave tho old without o fueling of reluctance of re gret. I came here a stranger and Sa lem people were kind the business men were generous and my stay in this city has been most pleasant and profit able. During the time 1 was editor ami manager of tho Capital Journal I en deavored to conduct the paper in tho iuterests of the people. 1 tried at all times to fight for what was right. And now, no matter where I may cast my lot, 1 shall always look back wi.ii pleasure upon the days spent in this city. I shall always bear the most grateful andl.iiully feeling toward good old iSalem and her people. Sincerely, OH AH AM T. TA1.EK. No Progress I have a sort of notion that David Daniel Duke will never get promotion unless it's by n fluke. He's selling traps and cngesnt .Timpson's jimcrack store, and draws the same old wages he drew five years be fore. He 's never known to study or rend a helpful book, his mind is like a muddy and dark nnd turgid brook. The fellow who ad vances, who rises from the groove, will never sidestep chances his know ledge to improve; he'll burn the mid night candle, and to himself he'll say, " 'Twould be a burning scandal to fool my time away." But David never ponders o'er books that brace the mind, but through tho streets he wanders when's done the daily grind. A quiet game of poker now holds young David down; again, with crimson ochre he paints the sleeping town. An evening at the movies to David seems sublime; while other lads improve he's just blow ing in his time. And often in the morn ing when he shows up for work, his head 's a horrid warning, nnd in his mouth there lurk those tastes of pink and yellow, the consequence of cups, which tastes inform a fellow he's going to the pups. The waste of time is fate ful, bad habits are a snare; the dump is dark and hateful, and David's head ed there. It j ffnfrrtfM. ttHTif -..kiC)c.C-C-.-C-C9t)CK( THE ROUND-UP ft The Misses Anna and Marie Teus, sisters who have until this week been waitresses in the Osburn hotel at Ku gene, have left for their old home, Ber lin, where they expect to become nurses in the German army. Allen K. Stephens, aged 74, a veteran of the civil war, died at his home at Maple Lane near Oregon City, Tuesday, after an illness of but a few days. Forest fires are coming dangerously nenr farm houses in Columbia county, and were barely warded off Sherman brothers' mill at Vest St. Helens. 8. G. Richardson, 72 years old and a former councilman of Portland dropped (lead at Kast Seventh ami Sherman streets, Portland, Wednesday morning. Stella Williams, a handsome Indian girl was arrested in Pendleton for the thirty fifth timo Wednesday. She rides in from the reservation and in variably manages to get tho white man's fire water, nnd also drunk. Tho sportsmen of Riddle are making elaborate preparations for the venison barbecue and shoot to be held there on Monday, September 7. . Invitations have been extended to all gun clubs in Doug Ins county. A barbecue at noon will be one of tho features. Ounliner Courier: We have heard of no one leaving this section of the conn try for Europe for the purpose of tak ing part in the war. It is making no difference in construction camps of the railroad, all tho men seeming perfectly satisfied to remain where they are and let them fight it out in the old country. Pendleton East Oregonian: A man by the name of Otto Hell and who in variably signs his name as O. Hell, will leave Pendleton in a few days to join the troops of the kaiser in the fight (.erniany is making against the other European powers. He has been working tor the -Newport Land & Con struction company iu the west end of tno county. Item in Medl'ord Mail Tribune bear ing on the question of safety first for hunters: "T.- K. Daniels has a photo he is using to prove a red shirt is the best insurance on a deer hunt. Two men are wearing red shirts, one a white one. A deer lies at their feet, The white shirt in the picture bears a strong similarity to the deer hide. The picture is pasted on the show window and started several arguments this morning.' SOMEBODY MUDDLED! There is here a federal commission to lenrn what is tho matter with Ore gon. That is easy work. There is nothing the matter with Oregon. Ore gon is all right. Oregonian, August -0, "The people of Oregon who believe in the democratic party anil what it stands for and wliat it has done and is doing for Oregon and the nntion, will vote for Chamberlain. " -"The people of Oregon who are in different to the empty dinner bucket will vote for Chamberlain. "The people of Oregou who believe iu opening up the Oregon markets to foreign products lumber, butter, cheese, eggs, shingles, wool and the rest will vote for Chamberlain. "The people of Oregon who are con tent with prostrated industry, business stagnation, non-employment of labor, declining wages, unprofitable invest ment, will vote for Cnamberlain. "Tho people of Oregon who have not yet been convinced, when they inspect empty pockets and pitched trousers, that nonpartisanship of the Chamber lain type is a false pretense, and the costly inefficiency of the democratic party a disastrous reality, will vote for ( hamberlaiu. " Oregonian, August lo. This U Am Cri of h HW . Cm" FMUntty at "CET34T." Quit punishing your feet by using toe eating salves and ointments. To use knives, files, scissors and ra zors, slicing and hacking at a corn, only mnko it grow faster nnd bigger. It also brings danger of bleeding and blood poison. The new way, the new principle never known before in corn history, is "GETS-IT." It's a liquid 2 drops on a corn does the work. Pain goes, the corn begins to shrivel and out it comesl You apply it in two seconds. Nothing to stick, nothing to hurt, and it never fuils. Try "GETS-IT" tonight on corns, calluses, warts or bunions. "GETS-IT" is sold by druggists everywhere, 25c a bottle, or sent direct by E. Lawrence & Co., Ihuago. WHAT SHALL WE SAY? David Starr Jordan in Harper's Weekly. (The following article was written by David Starr Jordan, in London, on July 17, before the acute internntionnl situation came to a point of war be tween Austria and Servia. As an in terpretation of evonts which were to follow its writing, this article by the great peace advocnte assumes an ad ded and unique importance. The Ed itors.) What shall we say .of those who claim thnt the depression of business la America is due to tariff reduction and to President Wilson's activity ir financitl reform! We shall say that theso people are very partisan or else very ignorant of world affairs. To say that the present administration's "legislative and executive program has brought about grave industrial depression and suffering to business man and wage worker alike, though perhaps most of all to the wage worker," is to talk mischevious nonsense. This depression extends all over the world, a load on every form of enter prise, and the t'nited States apparent ly suffers from it less than any other civilized nation. It is the result of the overstraining of credit. Already pushed to the utmost, the Bulknn war furnished the Inst straw which would break its back. Ia the Loudon Chronicle of this morning (July 17) I read that while the London stock exchange "watch with gladness the flight of Huerta, thankful that one long endured source of suspense has gone, it does not in suro an immediate and general revival of business." There have been mo ments when their fears have vorged upon panic." .but .Mexico tnougn a great cause of anxiety has not been the solo menace brooding over the markets. Serious troubles and constant sources of anxiety have sprung up in ninny directions. . . A gloom has overspread markets and deepened the depression there. . . As the bank re turn clearly shows, there is no great abundance of credit at this moment in Lombard street." The credit of the world is shaken. The demand for coin is abnormally great because the nations have wasted money as they never did before. The rate of interest is so high as to for bid enterprise. And this rnte of in terest is due not to excess of good op portunities for investment but to dis trust of the future, and above all to the inordinate waste of capital and labor in Europe The waste of labor shows itself in the enormous standing armies, millions of men supported nt public expense, and pnid from half a cent to five cents a day, when they ought to be earning on tho average a dollar. Capital which should be used for enterprise and for the employment of lnbor is wasted on armor plate, sus picion and fear. Tho actual destruction in the Bal kan war, appaling as it is, and ruin ous to all the nations directly con cerned, is but a drop in the bucket compared to the waste it has indirectly caused. Austria, the nearest neighbor to the Balkans, hns lost her Danube trade, has spent millions on millions in mobilization through fear of Russia, has lost all confidence in herself, and is virtually a bankrupt nation held to gether mainly by the fear of something worse, should she actually dissolve. And tiie rule of fear, waste and demor alization in Austria, as in Japan and Italy, is marked by a rise of political corruption. The demoralization of the war wasted lands has its reflex effect on other nations. The jingoes of Ger many uso it as an excuse to pile higher and higher the military burden borne unwillingly by Germany's magnificent industrial organization. France spends more and more in the throes of her im possible condition, that of a military republic. The French banks are over loaded with bonds of derelict or ex panding nations, evidences of indebted ness they can no longer sell. Russia is borrowing on a grand scale, not to meet !! EGGS EGGS Plenty of Them 25c Doz. I Westacott-Thielsen Co., Inc. Successors to Thielson Cash Grocery L. A. Weetcott fc Company. Phone 830 I51 Nort HJg St. Mid-Summer at Newport August is essentially a beach month and the most delightful time in which to spend a vacation at Newport, to get away from the heat and dust of the Valley. Improved Train Service . Connection made at Albany and Corvallis with C. & E. trains, which leave Albany at 7:30 a. m. daily and 1:00 p.m. daily except Sunday. Special Limited Sunday Excursion Train to Newport, leaves Albany every Sunday at 6 :45 a. m., Corvallis 7 :15 a.m. Arrives Newport 11:10 a.m. Special Round Trip Season Fares and Week End Tares from all S. P. points and Sunday Excursion Fares from Albany and CorvalKs. For folders describing New port, tickets and full infor mation, call on nearest S. P. agent. John M. Scott, Gen'l Pass. Agt Portland, Oregon. I Vil SUNSET 1 I lOfiOEN&SHASTAl I J ROUTES f I House of Half a Million Bargains We carry the largest stock of Sacks and Fruit Jars. H. Steinbock Junk Co. 233 State Street. Salem, Oregon. Phone Main SM NOMINATION COUPON GOOD FOR 750 VOTES For Address A free trip to the Panama-Pacific Exposition in 1915. One nomination only allowed each contestant. t Must be used within 10 days from date, Aug. 20, '14. J MM MMMMMMM MM MMMMMMMMMMM its own needs, but rather those of its greedy aristocracy. The demands of tiie various nations for money to meet deficits, mainly caused by military waste for the cur rent year, rises to upwards of $2,000, 000,000. The only nations which find that their tax roll meet their expenses, so far as 1 know, are Denmark, Hoi lnnd, Switzerland and the United States, and even these favors of peace leave their past debts unpaid. What shall we say of those who trace our financial depression in America to a conspiracy of the "money lords" of New yorkl We shall say that this, too, is vicious nonsense. This is no matter of New York alone, powerful as are its monetary combinations. There is no possibility of such a world-wide con spiracy, no advantage in it, no money in it. The scares, the fears, the pre parations for war, the waste in sol diers, in armament, in mobilization, the withdrawal and hiding of gold, the rise in the cost of living, due to waste of labor and capital, all these matters are of world-wide significance. The year 1913 was Europe's banner year of wnste; for a parallel we must go back a hundred years to the days cf Napoleon. But in those days there was no such interlocking of commerce, of business, of human interests, as pre vails today. The ruin of one nation was of little financial consequence to its neighbors. In our days, they stand and fall together, and Europe has stood about all it can of military waste. The great safeguard against the armies and navies Europe has gathered for war is that Europe is not rich enough to use them, and is too human and humane to want to use them. The Armaged don of which some people lightly talk would make a desert of civilization, even as the little Balkan war has made a desert of Macedonia. The war of armed peace which pre vails today is not a war between na tions. It is a war between privilege and democracy. The upholders of aris tocracy, of privilege, of oppression, of armament, of the patriotism which ends in envy and hate, the upholders of war, of exploitation, of imperialism, the wona over, are one and the same. And we who are bound to them in the alli ance of common citizenship and com mon finance, must pay our part in all their orgies. SICKNESS rOKCXD THEM OUT 0- TOURNAMENT Chicago, Aug. 21. niness forced Mc Donald Smith and Kenneth Edwards t retire today from the golf tournament in progress at the Midlothian link. Francis Ouimet made the morning round today in 75. CATARRH BLADDER relieved in 24 HOURS Each Cap- nle beam the mum nmre of rrmm trrfeitt