FOUR THE SALEM CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1914. Editorial Page of The Daily Capital Journal TUESDAY NOVEMBER 3, 1914 the daily .mmi journal PUBLISHED BY CAPITAL JOURNAL PRINTING CO., Inc. WSAItLES H. HSHER EDITOR AND MANAGER rtJBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY, SALEM, OREGON Doily, by Cnrrier, per year Daily, by II nil, per year . Weekly, ey Mail, per y.;ar SUBSCRIPTION BATES: $5.00 Per month., 3.00 Per mouth., 1.00 Six month. .45c ..35c .00c FULL LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT The Capital Journal carrier hoys are Instructed to put the papers on the isreh. If the carrier does' not do this, misses you, or neglects getting the iper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, at this Is the only way ire can determine whether or not the carriers are following instructions, ruoae Main 82. THE COST OF DRESSING. A New York costume creator has taken exception in dignantly to a Chicago dressmaker's assertion that a so ciety girl can dress on $2500 a year. Come to think about it, $2500 a year for a girl's clothes is rather small, and the wonder is that more modistes have not arisen in righteous wrath. The Chicago dressmaker mere dressmaker, mind you who thus seeks to snatch the bread from the mouths of her professional sisters ought to be severely dealt with. The New York costume creator makes it delightfully clear that a real Manhattan belle, warranted genuine and equal to any marriageable title in the world, represents approximately an expenditure of $10,000 annually on gowns and other feminine fixings. Note the cautious word "approximately," This amount, of course, does not include all expenses. Soda water, chew ing gum and a speck of sticking plaster for the chin come extra. This is as good a time as any to remark that nobody knows, ever did know or ever will know what it costs a girl to dress herself. The cash cost, as measured in money, may be estimated, possibly. That is what the New York and Chicago dressmakers are trying to do, with a striking lack of unanimity in their estimates. But there are girls whose expenditures for dress are not measured by fashionable dressmakers girls who spend little money on their dress because they have little to spend, but who devote a world of careful thought and wise economy and patient labor upon the thin'gs they wear. The swell modiste does not live who can tell what Molly Ann's new pongee actually cost her, or what she has ac tually given for her stunning new. hat. The amount of money she paid for the materials may easily be estimated, but the work she has put on them, the sacrifices she has made for them, the bright hopes she has sewed into them who can tell all that? Who but Molly Ann? There are millions of Molly Anns in the world, but not one of them has offered to tell. It is not all of life to have fine clothes. To know how to wear them is quite a different thing. With all their art, the swell modistes cannot give with a $1 100 evening gown the faculty of wearing it with the easy grace displayed by some maiden of humble degree in taffeta from a marked-down counter. A $1000 dress may give no more satisfaction to a sur feited daughter of wealth than it would to a doll. And Molly Ann in the dress she has bought herself, made her self and put on herself may feel as pretty and as dignified as a princess, and look it every inch. The dispatches Sunday announced that the immense resources of the Rockefeller Foundation would be used for the relief of non-combatants in the countries afflicted by war. The announcement was made yesterday by John I). Rockefeller, jr., head of the foundation, that "millions would be used if necessary." That it will be necessary goes without saying, and, as the money is in the fund, the outlook for relief for the distressed is brightened. Rocke feller has been about the most roundly abused man in America and therefore in the world, but if his vast wealth, or so much of it as is necessary, is used for the purpose mentioned, the American people will have a much more kindly feeling toward him ana his. The directors of the New Haven and Hartford rail road, some twenty-one in number, have been indicted for "conspiracy to monopolize the common carrier business." It is the largest bunch of millionaires ever indicted in this country. The punishment for the offense is $5,000 fine or one year's imprisonment, or both. If found guilty, the one year's imprisonment clause and the "or both" penalty will be overlooked, ami as a fine of $5,000 is no punish ment at all to a millionaire, the gang is not losing sleep or missing meals. The official Belgian newspaper, L'Indepondcnce lielge, has in the past three months been printed in Brussels, (!hent and Ostend, and is now being issued in London. Mining camp journals with the office on wheels can claim nothing over this in the way of itinerant journalism. LADD & BUSH, Bankers Capital Established 1SG3 $500,000.00 Transact a general banking business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT THE TIME OF TEST. The shrewd business man, during trade dullness or hard times, when he is in sore straits, will bring his affairs into the greatest possible economy and system, improve the discipline of his employes, redouble his energy, give extra care to his advertising, cover all evidences of weak ness, and keep up appearances and his credit in every way possible. For the moment he is suspected of weakness, or his credit is questioned, if he really is weak, he is in immi nent danger of going to pieces. When everybody is talking "hard times," the shrewd man closes his ears and turns his attention strictly to bus iness, to work, to keener study of his conditions, to sane' and substantial pushing, to everything which will keep him from succumbing to the theory of hard times. Persistency of purpose is a power at all times, and par ticularly in times of distress and doubt. It generates con fidence in the man himself and creates it in others. Everybody believes in the determined, undaunted man. When he undertakes anything his battle is half won, be cause not only he himself but everyone who knows him believe that he will accomplish what he sets out to do. People know it is useless to oppose a man who uses his very stumbling-blocks as stepping-stones; who is not afraid of defeat; who never, in spite of disaster, obstacles, calumny or criticism, shirks from his task, but always keeps his compass pointed to the north star of his pur pose. ' Napoleon was much more brilliant than Wellington, but was not a match for him in dogged persistence when things were going against him. The iron duke could stick to a losing campaign with as much determination as to a winning one. He didn't know how to beat a retreat. So soon as those New Haven indictments were made public yesterday it was announced that William Rocke feller's "condition was precarious." The same eminent authority for this statement, Hoffman Miller, son of one of the indicted millionaires, stated the whole matter was a "frame-up" and was a job put up by the government to injure poor, innocent men. This argument sounds like some heard recently here in Oregon. Denouncing Andrew Carnegie as a defender of the kai ser, a crowd at Dunferline, Scotland, pelted the iron mas ter's statue with mud Monday. The dispatches from Washington the same day tell of the indicting of ex-President Tuft's son along with twenty others, among them William Rockefeller, who is always, when court is men tioned, too sick to tell the truth. It was evidently an off day for millionaires. ' One of the paradoxes of war is the strenuous efforts to kill or cripple everybody, and the equally strenuous ef forts to succor the wounded and care for the sick soldiers. Why take such active measures to kill and at the same time have an ambulance corps to save? None of the warring nations have yet called out the kindergarten reserves. This will be the next move, but the trouble will be in keeping these warriors supplied with fresh milk. It being some weeks yet before Thanksgiving, it is possible that European Turkey may be served up with the stuffing removed. Everything else in Europe being in eruption, Vesuvius got busy and joined in Monday, pouring out lava freely. The Daily Capital Journal will tell you about the elec tion results in the morning. Watch for it. It's all over but the shouting. THE ROUND-UP .kikikikiltiliiiiiti Tin' Mllwniihlo council tu iiii'.l .In An tin' franchise mi Inn I H i'l by the Clack mini Onx Cnmpituy, Hntiinlnv night nn.l KuliHt.it uti'il imiithcr containing Part land into iiml I'linilitlniiH, Tin' company nn nt nil tl.'.'H n thniimii fi'i't, llii' Port Inn. I iiitu being if t .1 M i. S At tin' iniiiilrt'iil priimiilcs ill Marsh flt'lil Hntiirdny, the wet name. I ni'iirly till tin' cuiulidiilo mi nil Hie I'll it v llchots, t Mayor Morton Power, oho of 1ln I'lnly settler uf Coo liny tuiil n vetoi nil ii C tlio oil II wnr, died at li In home In Kinpiro, October 31, A htihorv niul rnmly kitchen In the Inlosl csliilillshcil enterprise lit Cniibv, t Online Observer! Tim l egist rut inn In tlio nini' I'lillm precincts I ICO. A rcmnrliulilc I in' i i'ii h In mi'iiIiiIIiiii in shown by tlio figure a presented, ne Cinillng to those who know conditions, Newport I' lo bo well amused till K'lnl or, If plan under way me curried out, Tlio Newport Dramatic society, oignnlred Inst winter, anil tlio Owl i'IiiIi, a recent organisation, expect to put on several ilimnnllc entertainment during tlio "i'ii "i'ii, mill llie Newport A tin 1 1 i'i r Athletic club will liol, a num ber of smokers, The Miiehshnrg correspondent of lite Aurora observer unto a new phase of thrift In thai locality, ol'erii(V that, " Wliiit, with ho diving house niul tlie oliler pro", tlio ulil time practice of l lowing iptitulltlc of early fruit to lie. rottliiM on tlio ground seem likely to disappear," ' 1 . . . ( A inllroinl hclog alreailv In operation lo Molull.'i, ii ii' I no elctric line just null. ling thnmc'i, (lie Pioneer etnlls: SOME Or TUB TACTS IN THE CASE. (t'ortlnml livening Telegram.) Here are mum' glcnnliig from roll' nble report of tictuitl luisiucs condi tion! Orders lire plnccil for thousand of mulc, horse an. I motor truck for ime In the Kuropcini war, There In every promise tluit the order will Increase. Chicago niul other Jobbing center have Iiml order fur million of il.illnr' worth of bliinkct niul other heavy I ill' lie for military ue. The tinier lire Mill ruining, mul there I assurance Unit they will continue to come. There la strong Koropcuti ilemiinil fur heavy cotton duck, mul the cotton mill of the country nlreiuly feel the stimu lating effect of It, KntiMm City packing; house employ more men Hum at any other time during the yean mul the Chicago plant are workctl to their full I'lipncity. In thin line, fur a number of year there him been nothing like the priwnt activity. Pennsylvania tci'l ninuufnrturo'r have onlcr Hint will keep them work' tun overtime for an linlcflnlte petlotl, mul tlio umo I true of Cincinnati machine mul tool factories, In every brunch of Industry there I coursing the new lite blond of n great or ilcmiiiul. The fact la proof of It are nbun.lmit. The leaven of prosper It v I at work, To Bava Hor Troin Turks, l.oii.lou, Nov. n.-Thc torT t't Die UrHI-h steamship Fi lodoriekn wn burn i"l mul eiil He. I to picvcnt It from lull Init Into the Turk' hnuds when the lltto'iinn wnfshlps lintnbnnV.I Novor ossyskk, win coiit'iiiui'il to. lay by the foreinn office here. " Wo are no longer ' country cros ronil. Our new con lltlon make ninny demands upon ti, It I difficult to keep pace with the rapid grnnth. It look now n If nothing conlil illvert the ti.le of business advancement from u. 1 ' Cwjiyrlglit by tbtt New York K veiling Tt'li'jimiii iNew York llt'raM Comimiiyt. All rlgliU reserved. By EARL NURD. . (A v2 wr. pa r Know A BETTFB ,VMFmc THAN THffowii AT'EM 3 7..' 'iSSIfeUt timw V; 1 1 "TJ Ho', y o oV1-1 fT THIS CLOTHES MS RUNS OVER TO 6 w HZ'S RWtrH ON rami rrnn. hiix HITCH I VX INT v 'M i ' WA - VA Ti nr i 1 f C7 r m I j rViS FfltlLT.pn 1 rte heard Ma i ' ' PITCH" INTO '.V W) The Unhappy Kome GOOD FOR 25 VOTES Tircl father to his home return, all jaileil by the tre aii.l fray, to have the rest for which he yearn through out tho lung mul toibome iluy. lii supper's rcaily on the hoard, n good a meal a e 'or wa aprniiK, n meal no worker coul.l at ford i n i) 1 il o ii time, when we were youn, lie look around with frowuiuit Ii r o w, and xinli", "Ah, what a lot of junk! Thin but ter never knew a cow, the coll'ce i extremely p u n It. 1'ou know 1 like potatoes boiled anil o, of coiirm', you llh Hi. 'in fried; this poor obi lieef uteiik lin been liroiletl until it' toiifi ti wall us hide. It heat mo, Susan, where von Iiml uch ilouuhiiutN, which reiiemlile rock) these liiscuita you no doubt tlcsinncil to act n weight for vomli r clin k, Von couliln 't fraeture with n chili the kind of spouuti enke that you dish; ala, for dear old iniith or 'a nili tlirini)!hout my day I vainly wish." Then Isusaii, burdened with her care, worn out, dien'iruKeil, sad ami wink, it down lienenth the eel In r stairs, and weep In Herman, l-'rcucli mid Hreck. Alus, the poor, unhappy soul, whose toniilcu ilrcnin uro nil a wreck I Hhe ouylit to take II ten foot pole mid prod hei liusbaud In the neck, For rj Address This coupon may be exchanged for votes in the con test for a trip to San Francisco in 1915, at the Capital Journal office. Not good after November 7, 1914. House of Half a Million Bargains We carry the largest stock of Sacks and Fruit Jars. H. Steinbock Junk Co. C33 8ut titrwt. Salem, Oregon. Phon MJa 114 4ifi'iM ,NaiiiinuT K"fHn I SHARPERS TRYING TO BILK THE UNWARY Inf'iriunti.'ii luis reached the Kovernor that fraud I belli); practised upon the people by pnrtle who are representing, tlint they can locate claim In the beds of I. tike Abcrt niul Hummer, In nor thern l.ll lie enmity, which couliiln rich! deposit of suit and s."liuni, and re ipilrltiK mi ndvnuce of L'.l to cover Hie cost of location, etc, Tlint thee lake are clttsil'ictl n mluernl lit ehnracter ami not wiliject to liomeatenil or mineral entry, under the law of the (j'lvcrti ! nient, ha been widely ndvertiseil dur-' intf the past few year, peadini; ncdotl ntiou lictweea the tati Imul bunril mul ' dtver cnpitnlistie interest for the eon-! trni't for ib'velopmeut of the renroce of thee lake, mid the tnti boaril re cently nsked for bid fur the snnie. These hike lire the property of thi'. Mate ami any attempt to locate private i'lillm upon them I with view of tic j friiudiiiK the public and If the Identity! 01 me person or person wtio are porpo lrntit.it thi frnud upon the public can be nscerlnltieil. prosecution will Inline .lintelv follow. MARTIAL LAW IN EOYrT, Cairo, I'uvpl, Nov. 1. Martial law prevnilcd tieie today. Th natives were ipilot. Many Turk were srrfste.1. WEST SALEM (l)tikitt(ittktkitill Mis Alice Wood visited friend In Wooilhiirn thi week, Mr, U. A. Hunt and Mr. V)d llcrkcii have been visiting III the Lincoln neiuh horhooil, Mr. mul Mr. D. K. Uranium have re turned from their trip to Heutlle mid other Washington cltlc mid are now living; In their home III Klnnwiuul l'nrk. Mis Toipiti Cnile, who lin been visit liiK In llllnoi and other tnte, I ex pected to arrive home riiliiidny even In (t. A number of Hnlcni hih mul grnile choo student visited West Hiilcm sehiiiil thi week, taking ndviintiie,!' of . the vacation In their own school to oli-1 erve what other are doing. A force of men I hard at work push' . lug the sewer work lo completion. West Hnlem will oon be well light ed. Tlie bracket for light lire being put In place and when the light are on the dark nun! to the bridge will be a" thing of the pnt, Mr, Oeoige Tolinn returned from Kings Vnllcy neighborhood Friday ev ening. Mi Hontrlce Crnwfnrd I nt liome from the hospltul, with her lter, Mr. Vidua Wootl, cuiiviilrs.'lng from typhoid fi'""r. There will be the regular monthly mooting of the city council Monday ev ening, Went. Hnlcni citizen have most of them registered and are quietly wait ing for November ,'lril. Mr. anil Mr. Peter lliltner. of King Valley, are guet st the ,1, II, Katun Inline. Mr. Hittncr will be remembered as Mis Alice Hid. bill, one time student nt Nalem high choo1. Mi Oeorge Thompson and on, Clmrle. have gone to King Vallcr for life winter, having obtained employ ment there, Mr. Kd l.ougliend, an iirchiteet of Portland, wn a recent caller In thi nclghliorhoud. Mr. Clay llele ha I ime a partner in the West Ha lent Hupply Co, Mr, Frank l.iiwluiugh, a former resi dent of West Hiilem, wu culling on old friend here thi week. Mr, W, H, Fitt ininle a business trip to Portland recently, TURK AND SLAV AT IT. Home, Nov, II. Iliissinn ami Tnrklh troops were reported . flghtiilg today near Treliixund, on the lllnek sen cimst III Turkish territory iiliout lin mile west of the Hiikiiui frontier, WASHMifPilfl HEADFDANDRUFF Diwolv It,That Beit Way. Tlie only sure w.iy In get rlil of ttnml ritll is to ilmolvc it, thru you tlcstrny It rtilircly, In do this, get about four ounce, nf ordinary liquid nrvon ; apply It at night w lien retiring j use enough to mo strti tlie scalp and rub it in Kcntly with (lie fmger tips. Do this tonight, ntnl by morning most if nut all nf j-nur dnmliutl will lie gmie. snd three or four more aiiplirallntm will completely dissolve and entirely destroy, e-vcry single sign ami trace of It, no mut ter how inuili dandruff ymi may have, Vou will fitiil, tim, that all itching aittl digging of the sculp will step at once, and your hair will he fluffy, Imirnin, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feci a hundred times better. If you want to preserve your hair, del by all means get rid of dandruff, fof tiotliing destroys the hair more quickly. It not only starves the hair anil makes it fall out, but It makes it strltigv, strsg. Sly, dull, dry, brittle and lifeless ami everyone notices It, You can get liquid arvon at any drug store, It is lneinens iv and never tails tu Jo Die work.