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

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    !-14.
FOtTR
Editorial Page of The Daily" Capital Journal
THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER! pt l9u
THE DAILY ffiiffj&l JOUIML
PUBLISHED EY
CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO- Inc.
CHAELE3 H. nSHZE ....EDITOB AND MANAGER
JTJ2IJ3H2D EVEBT EVENING EXCEPT EXTNDAT, SALEM, OaEQON
SUBSCBIPTION BATES:
Idiily. by Corrior. per ?" '
Jmil'v, by Mail, per yenr ...
Weeklv, ny Mail, per year .
...".0O
. . 3 MO
.. 1
lVr month.,
'Vr nvmli.,
i.T month''.
....-
.....15c
. ...50f
FULL LEASED WIBE TELEGBAPII BEPOBT
Thi Capital Journal carrier tooyi are Instructed to put the paper on toe
rrclL IX toe carrier doe not do tola, mlwea you, or neglects getting the
.aper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, aa thla U the only
vay we can determine whether or not the carrier are following instructions.
'bone Main 82.
MEXICO ON THE WAR PATH AGAIN.
There are increasing indications that Mexico will have
to endure another civil war. Villa and Carranza are like
ly to fail in reaching an agreement and if they get to
gether there are scores of lesser chieftains who are ready
to revolt against the regular government, no matter who
should head it. The trouble with the Latin-American
countries is that they are incapable of self-government be
cause the population consists of only two classes, one com
prising the property owners and educated people and the
other the peons, poverty stricken, ignorant and shiftless.
The former class is the ruling element and their idea of
government is graft and exploitation for the benefit ol
themselves. When one faction gets in, another tries tc
oust it for the purpose of securing the loot only, and not
because of any patriotic concern. The peons will fight
on either side, if too much exertion is not required, for a
little money or the promise of loot. Endless revolution
4s the consequence? these deplorable conditions, Former
President Diaz, with his rule of iron, having been the only
leader in the history of the nation capable of maintaining
a semblance of real , government for any considerable
time.
President Wilson is using much patience and every
possible means of a peaceful nature to straighten out the
tangle, and the people of this country hope he will suc
ceed. We fear, however, that he will find that there is no
real foundation en which to build a stable government in
Mexico at this time, and in due course of events sterner
measures may be necessary.
At the present time little attention is being paid to tlw
trend ot events in the southern republic because of the
greater troubles ot the world, busy just now with bigger
Those who are watching the ik
Naturally when the Oregonian got to discussing eggs
recently it became slightly addled, and just at present
could not get on the market as of the "candled" variety.
As a sample of its addled condition, attention is called to
an editorial under the heading, "Producer and Consumer,
in Wednesday's issue, in which it says it is "pleased to en
lighten the puzzled Oregon City correspondent, who wants
to know the exact influence of the tariff on eggs on his
own prosperity." In trying to let the light of wisdom
shine into the dark recesses of its correspondent's think
tank, the editor proceeds to scramble his eggs, arguments
and gray matter and to place in type the most meaning
less and senseless string of words ever permitted to dis
port themselves on the editorial page of any paper in
Christendom. If the Oregon City correspondent ever un
tangles that lot, he will never ask another question, or at
least he will not ask an answer from the Oregonian.
The weather prognostications of Father Ricard of Cal
ifornia, who by the way is one of the world's greatest
mathematicians, have proved unusually correct. He call
ed especial attention to September 8, and the evening of
the Seventh the first rain storm of the season broke with
heavy precipitation and strong winds that lasted all the t" "m,
next day. In this connection attention is called to the out- py runs, d
burst of Mount Lassen on the 8th, which was far the
greatest of its thirty-odd eruptions. The storm along the
coast on that date was one of unusual severity for the
time of year.
The returns from Washington's primaries are very
meager owing to the length of the ballots which contain
some hundreds of names in some counties. In the matter
of the justices of the supreme court, however, so far as
counted, they show the candidates who are new are run
ning ahead of the incumbents seeking re-election. This
indicates the "Clam Diggers" are not familiar with the
proverb that "it is better to bear the ills we have than to
lly to those we know not ot.
The new revenue laws will also hit the bubble wagons.
:is pasoline will be forced to contribute to make up defi
ciencies in the custom revenues. However, it will only be
a cent: or perhaps two cents a gallon, which will mean only
the 'steenth part of a cent a mile to the autoists. Incomes
will also have to stand a portion of the deficiency, but they
can do it more easily than anything else.
CHARLEY HINGES
WRITES FROM LONDON
Telling of tie hardship of Americans
in the war zone, anJ of his own terrible
heart-remliug experience. Charts Hin
ges, the well-known alem jeweler,
write Hal l'atton from London. The
letter was dated August 2. It follow:
"Well, I am tliia far, but, oh! my,
what a terrible exeneuce to get ncre.
The trip from Switzerland alone took
me three days. In ordinary time it
would take nine hour. 1 passed through
thousand and thousand of ranks of
soldier. While I have not yet been
close to a battle, we could hear the
roar of the cannon an.1 see smoke and
dust in the distance, rolling over the
mountain.
This war i a terrible thing. Beau
tiful place which I sa- ix week ago
are in complete ruin now. Families,
who two months aco were rich, are des
titute now. On lav way here we passed
truin loads of woundea soldier, saw
the trenches and breastworks in the
field. Hue pluce the rrold and hill!
were covered with twenry to thirty
thousand sol-Jiers preparing for the last
advance into Paris.
I'oor Paris. Never saw such a dead
lace. Everything closed up: stores
1 not a single sign of old
on't even hear a piano
being played. But they arc certainly
sure now of victory. Of course you
know more of the doings of the war on
both sides than we. a we only get such
news as they want u to know, and
while in .Switzerland neurd absolutely
nothing.
Some Americans ruuureu terrible
hardships. I thought myself sometimes
I would drop in mv tracks. Wc'had to
carrv our own water and food, besides
lug our linkage ns best we could. nnJ
so terrible warm, too. If everything
goes lucky with me, I'll probably sail
the lust of this week, i'll be miehtv
glad to get on dear old I". fS. soil.
Mv reeards to all.
CIIAS. HIXGKS.
The Departing
Soldier
Farewell, dear wife,' ' the soldiers
said, "my country calls, and I must go,
to wear a helmet on mv head, an.l shoot
at folKs I do not
11(1
more serious inmgs.
vclopemcnts down there, however, are only nopmg tor
the best, and really expecting a continuation of turmoil
and bloodshed.
OUR UNEASY CONSCIENCES.
There is nothing more unreasonable than an over
weening conscience. The sense of "ought" which no ac
tivity appeases; the sense of shame for one's "shortcom
ings," no matter how "long" we come in reality; this is an
element in life which often tends to evil results.
Nactrinir is disagreeable and generally useless, who
ever does it; and to have a perennial nagger incorporated
in one's system is worse than an outside one. Is it not
possible to have it out with one's conscience, settle on a
level of virtue one may consider attainable, and pursue
the even tenor of one s wav ;
Here is a woman, a good deal of an invalid, fretting
because she cannot write letters to deserving friends;
feeling daily remorse at neglecting them. Now this is
f imnle matter to decide. She can or cannot write a tetter
a day or two or three. If she CAN, there is no power
that can prevent her. If she CANNOT, she is not to
llame.
One can ascertain one's powers by a little careful ex
periment, live easily up to them, and experience a pro
found sense of piety and peace in the fulfillment.
Either one can or one cannot. How is one to know?
liy trying. Try hard, try nobly, test your outside limit;
then walk easily within it.
We are not to blame for not doing what we cannot.
There is no great difficulty in doing what we can.
The lest method of settling one's conscience is to drag
it into the open, carefully define its demands, fulfill what
is in one's power, and then refuse to be disturbed by any
required impossibility. An undisciplined, exorbitant, ir
rational conscience is more distressful than a scolding
mother and a teasing child.
ThU kicking about Russian names is all wrong. Any
printer will tell you they are the handiest buncn to hanuk
he ever ran across. Generally in dividing a word at the
end of a line the division is made after a consonant. This
permits cutting a Russian name in two any old place when
the line is lull.
Probably the next feature of the European unpleasant
ness will be a series of revolts of the provinces and a state
of civil war. With half its population Slavs, Austria is
having a hard time getting them to fight their own people,
and revolts are a necessary sequence to conditions.
know. And
whose names
never heard
go for me
men
I've
will
with
gun an.l sword:
the whole blamed
business is absurd.
an 1 I am sad, an
sliyhtlv bored. 1
know not what the
war's about, if
wie or just I do
not know; I only
know 1 m goini!
out to make a tar
get for the foe.
But keep a cheerful heart I beg, for I'll
return to home and farm; perhaps 1
will be shv a leg, and niavbe 1 'II be
short an arm, but I'll come back, though
battered sore, come back in flesh, or as
a ghost: I mav be brought upon a door.
1 mav be shipped bv parcels post; some
way. some time. I shall return, my soul,
as ever, fond and true, to watch you
The nnestion of fnshinns in wnmpn's dress shnnlrl Tint trying hard to earn a living for our
c , T-i , , . . i lunusneii crew, i uu u &e to mi our
UK lire ureuuy ill nairuueau countries lor Some lime 10 barren fields, and reao the scanty crops
come. Anyway, whatever the style, it is pretty certain that -vo" raise- while am PanR fHOrflf
most ot the material will be mourning goods of some kind, unknown jiv. Vou'ii have to thrash
the meagre grain, and voke the oxen to
In England it is urged that golf links be devoted to the plain! a large brass helmet oirmv brow.
ErrOWinff Of Wheat. If this is aceomnlishpd the war will I to leave these humble, walls; our
not have been utterly in vain
lives, dear wife, are made a wreck, bnt
I must go where honor calls, and get
bullet in mv neck."
THE ROUND-UP
Kzrs t'ro, nn old soldier and vet
eran of the civil war, wa found dead
under a trestle at Vancouver, Wash.,
Tuesday. He as an inmate of the old
.ler home at ltoscburg and was out
on a 1 " (lavs' furlough, lie had evi-
j Scully fsilen from tne trestle, which
1st that p.): it is nearly 70 feet hih. and
h, bead si. completely buried in the
gr-Hiiiw.
Whatever else may be said of beer, it is always a re
liable product to fall back on for raising revenue, as it can
always be depended on for satisfactory results. It in some
respects resembles the tariff laws, which, it is said, are the
Ix'st revenue laws ever invented because under them "you
ran tret the lanrest amount of feathers with the least
amount of squawking from the goose."
LADD & BUSH, Bankers
Established 1SCS
Capital -. - - - - $300,000.00
A
iav
dibnd public schools
with a corps of 31
opened Moll-
teachers.
Avlmer Hunter. V) had suffered
from dropsy for a nn oer of yeirs, com
mitted suicide at ottage urove Nmdav
Kht following a week of terrible suf
feriug. He pljced the niutzlo of a re
volvrr in his mouth and discharged it
lcath resulting instantly.
ng tnday at 3 p. ru. t the Central
:i ... r ... . .
ii.mr, . .nr. Uf. wno has nw r-
itrned from the ('hiensro convention.
win speaK.
Aim I. lit. t Vi 4
Transact a general banking business
Safety Deposit Boxes
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
Moimiouta reports the prune yield
lighter than la!t svnson but consider
ably heavier than was estimated a few
weeks ago.
m
l.iun countv reports more than twice
as manv births as .lent lis during Aug
ust. There were 30 births evenly ii
idcil as to dcs and H deaths also even
in that wav.
Joe Kellers, the 17-year-old son of a
well-to-do rancher, is urder arrest at
rendleton on a statutory charge on the
complaint of the father of two young
girl, his alleged victim.
Toe record price- wa paid recently
for wheat lands uear I'endletoti, thev
I itoinir it SI '2.1 an acre.
i.. Jiurd, who recently sold out
is weekly paper in Stanfield to en-
!jr m exieusive nocraisini:. came
into 1 endleton with the carcass of
can with two heads. The sninml
srrrai uavs. Bottl Heals war
omplete workius order. It w
with Tour eyes, breathed with four
nostrils and bleated with two mouths.
notii heads were alike. This show the
or a liewsnaner man trv,n to
. . . -m,
ise nogs.
.Meaning the lira ad Ronde. the T.
Oraude Observer savs: "If vou want
to see the prettiest sight in the na
tion orive through tue vallev at the
present time. '
"Nr.. 1 1 Ar.-i ..
-"an-inoune: There is a
'iivi'UM, but as yet, uucrystallized sen
timent among farmers and fruitgrow
ers of the vallev for irrigation. Thn
who scoffed at irrigation when it was
uneven now see its value.
The news that an ample supply of
cold water is likely to be found ia the
well across the river is very iiearlv as
interesting to hugene people, the Reg
i.-11-r rrpuns, as tnat which is appear
ing u tne ouiictin Doauts.
peciftcatious hav been prepared
ior street improvement at Carlton.
oncrete will be used for the hard stir
racing an.l the pavement will b sin
ilar to that recently completed at Day-
ion. mamma also has some eon
ctete streets.
EYES TROUBLE YOU ?
TEY THIS SIMPLE RECEIPT.
The general stor of Xlilo Picron at
Ten Mile, near Marshfield, was roMl
Tuesday aiijht of about one hundred
dollars worth of clothing.
i len-'leton is to semi a siwiai ear
. to the Spokane fair, September 13-13.
i The ear ill hav at least CO proiui-
ueut business men and they will take
taking Rita them the Roundup baud.
We all know some home remedy for
our minor troubles, and by the use of
these remedies many a doctor's bill is
saved and doubtless many a life.
How few know what to do when their
eves become tired and ache, or feel drv
and inflamed from abuse and overuse T
In the morning your eyes feel rough
or sticky, or they trouble you when you
read, w hat do vou dot .Most ot u;
rush off and get glasses (perhaps at
some cheap store where no skill is used
in fitting our eyes), which we verv of
ten do not neevl at all. Thousands are
wearing misfit or unnecessary glasses
which thev might better discard, aud
other thousands can. with a little care,
probably o strengthen their eyes that
glasses might never bo necessary. Here
is a free receipt that may be relied up
on to give comfort and to help the eyes
of some people; it is harmless and has
tho enthusiastic endorsement of thou
sands who have used it:
5 Grains Optona (1 tablet).
2 Ounces Water.
Vse as an eye wash night and morn
mg. or oftener if possible. It makes
most eyes feel fine, quickly allays ir
ritation, brightens the eves and sharp
ens the vision. Many who have used
it no longer feel the need or glasses
many others have ceased to fear that
they will soon be obliged to wear them,
Oct the Optona tablets -from Tour near
est druggist and prepare the solution
at your own home.
The
rai.'B
TortUn l C.ra.Ksl Sunday Svhool
mill hold its first wceUy inert-
OOOD SUGGESTION
TO SALEM PEOPLE
It is surprising the amount of old
foul matter the simple mixture of back
, . I K . . .'
i.r, Kivcrnne. etc Known
Adler i ia. draias from the system. This
remedy Became famous tT furinff ap
pendicitis, and acts oa BOTH the upper
and lower bowel so thoroughly that
OXK POSE relieves smr stomach, gss
on tor stoma.' and constipation almost
iUMl.PIATF.LY. We ar miRhtT clad
w are taiem agnts for Adler-i-ka.
J. C. TERRT,
1 AMERICA DEPENDS OK
GERMAN DTE MAKES
Children Cry f or Fletcher's
(The Wall-Street Journal.)
The reason for the world's depeud
enc upon Germany for its supply of
dyes is explained- b the remarkable
growth and expansion of such pioneer
companies as the Radisrhe-Anilia i
NMla-Fabrik of Germany, whose gross
sales are ITO ku0 annually.
The plant has a frontage of a mile
and a half on the Rhine and is the
largest or its kind ia the world. Some
idea of Us siie mav be gained from
I considering that 1"S boilers, 13 dvna-
..,....-,.xvv.v. .. .
The Kind You Ilaye Always Bought, and which has L
In use lor over 30 years, Las borne the sitm.!!
-rf and has been made under hhJt
y1 si&?,-ff, 8onal supervision 8lw u h w
WiaZTi Allow no one to deceive wmuK
All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-ns-good" are
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health t
Infants and Children Experience against Experiment,
What -is CASTORIA
Castoiia is a harmless snbstitnte for Caster OIL pa, f
goric, Drops and Soothing1 Syrups. It U pleasant, ft 1
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor otber Karwtto j
substance. Its agre if ts guarantee. It deftrovg "Wormi I
and allays Feverishcss. For more than thirty Tear, it I
lms been In constant use lor the relief of Constipation.
Flatulency, "Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles aS
Diarrlura. It regulates the Stomach and Bowela,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sW
The Children's Pwiacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS I
Bears the Signature of
iaT"ff7Ty
4M
Tiis Kind Yea Have .Always Bought
In
Use For Over 30 Years
THI C F NTAL1B COM A MY, MW.W YOWK C ITV,
tie Gasoline of Quality
Use it because it has made
good with thousands of
motorists use it because it's
the best gasoline we can make.
Standard 03 Company
IbAUFOIUuA) ft I i
. Sa
- ' )
mm
TWGreateTOreoiv
With ow building
ot Orncoo will besia itt thf1-"
ym Tular. September 1 i
Special truatof for BMine. Jofr
ntUm. Liw. MeJicine. Tecbinj.
kn Wn.h Muur. Arctutecwre.
Dl 1 T I mnA VinM AftA.
luynt end nonge deprxi
Ol likcrai etfucatroo.
Mt Ad"'0'4
tar -. . l-l . imM
Onit w nlo, tm W
BNlVERStTT Of
OREfiOl
n-n nnralino T0VI L;intf an.) in l5o n'
loal waterworks, etw work and ife - products i tUi country
tactorr are operated. There i
phone mb-sutionj, 539 fir
aad the eompanT maintains
fire department, ineludimr 25
Th anruher of workmen until r- from the ro,luotion o y g;-
tently was S00t, and besides 911 offi- from coal tar. The iTtti
cials in tha commercial department, make its rt tW
thre u a staff of 217 chemists and 1-12 which are used to
civil engineers. The coinr.any was ; materiaU into d.Tt .
y 11 1 . al
are 411 tele- ucts comprise ib- ttltrA
fire hrdrants, tif icial orianie '"'' rMTf r
its own Hn, aliaariue, Bai,6,7,tie 3- .
25 steam en- lie acid ! 5,u ... BtH
If
W
J Cart
t 0BC.
,J rw'
jjsais
tM'
T0OD
UrjiOi
I culou
aia
J flUtO
etr
Onions .