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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1915)
77 Editorial Page of "The Capital --Journal" jig WKDXKSDAY KVF.XINi! April 21, !!!.-. j. a a . . . , - i 'TTTTttTTTI TtttttM!11 . . . I PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXO EPT SUNDAY, SATEM, OREGON, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. B. BARNES, President CHAS. H. FISHIiB, Vice-President DOB A C. ANDKESEN, Bee. and Trens. Daily by carrier, por year. Daily by mail, per your... Weokly by mail, per year. SUBSCRIPTION BATES 15.00 3.00 1.00 Per month 5c Per month 33 Six monthi 50c 1'ULL LEASED WIBK TELEGEAPH BEPOBT The Capital Journal carrier boys aw taitructed to put the papers on the orch. IX the carrier does not do this, misses you, or 8ettln 8 taper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager as this Is the only way we can dotermlne whether or not the carriers are following instructions, f bono Main 81. - NEUTRAL NATIONS HAVE FEW RIGHTS ' STATE NEWS far-off great things, but neglect to do the little things that lie right close at hand. j Some clay we are going to acnieve some great success and become very rich, v think. Uut we neglect to culti vate tVe little habits of careful study, industry and frugality, and so remain inefficient and unsuccessful. The richest men and the richest corporations are not above taking care of the pennies. The greatest scientists are not above study of the smallest insects and seemingly insignificant things. The Panama canal was dug a shovelful at a time. Finished, it is the greatest work of civil engineering in iidjuminir tins place, inter miviiasinK the world, but it has been accomplshed only by a series ?;:l."(-r!:hos;:V;: y";l,:o 1" 1!-! of little things. 'd '"to forest, drove, mid since, then The greatest buildings are laid up a single stone at a fZ. "itX fitJS time. It is of no avail to us that we dream of mighty mo.-, to io, Mr. Shipley and ins son structures, if we have not the patience and humility to do !' "'"ZXXr&ml pin oh mill tlie hay was purchased anil baled here within - the time limit, set by the (government. Mr. Shipley has one son, Silas M. Shipley, an nttcurney in Seattle, and one daughter, Mrs. Haines. His wife .died six years ago. M'liile.v H. Shipley, the oldest resi-; ilont of Forest Uiovo, celebrated hisj Sloth birthday Tuesday. He was born in ('(('.entry, Broom county, N. Y., and as n child was taken to Ohio by his, pa re n is. When 21 years old he remov ed to Wisconsin and in 1873 came to Oregon, locating near this city. for I t vears he fanned n (140-a'ero tract of land owned by the late A. T. Smith, so little a thing as the laying up of a single stone. It is the little things that make up our lives. PRESIDENT'S VIEWS ON NEWS Rumor Governor West and bis nttoi'-, ney, Frnnlt H. Collier, left Baker Sat urday niuht, and Claude Me('ullo h, his The position of a neutral nation in such a war as the one now raging is very uncertain and unsatisfactory, because warring nations make international law fit their necessities. The rules of the war game are very unjust as it is being played now, but so is everything connected with war. As a neutral nation we may protest but that counts little unless we want to get into the fight our selves, and that is the one thing we are devoutly trying to avoid. J Most, of the corner-ETOcerv and newspaper talk about the current war is from the standpoint of one or the other of the contending parties. The neutral angle is over looked. Yet it is wholly from that standpoint that we as Americans are directly interested in the struggle now going on. Wnv is an nhrn ration of law and an appeal to brute " . . . " . . . .. ! i i i rr ii i rru : i.i.t i, I AVPP Jinr . in trie aSl anaiVSlS. lilt1 DOWtT VI tilt; Wiuuns, uavm nasc at iuhk uav, iuc iJicoiueiii-B vvuuia "J-1 oils victory which vindicates vonr ac horn if .vlmr innv nv m.'lV rplmk'P nn this SllhlPPt.flVP wnrt.hv nf VPnr.ntiTIO" Itioii in the ('olipei.'ield troubles and TiOt 1)0 done. In Other WOl'dS, the basic laW Of War IS tO "Sv, T eovot for America this splendid coiinigo of reserve mni.il force, crush the enemy, and the means to that end change from i.n.i i wn.ii.;.i t.. point out to you gentlemen simply this: viiion wnv. Ji " i "There is what is called news from Turtle Bay, that turns out to be ilge tO age. I he 01(1 three-mile neiltral limit, 101 example, r.,1.,,.1,,,,,1, at any rate in what it is said to sonify, und which, if von ruiild get V,ns JlPTPrH to 1)V the nations When that WaS trie eXtl'eme; the milion to believe it true, might disturb our eiiiiilibiiuni and our soil-no rantre of artillery. Great Britain and Germany, by. establishing "war zones" in the open sea adjacent to the, its energy u mniign; i other's coasts, have virtually repudiated this worn-out j 11 lIZ?XL Mgreement, and have recognized the present-day tact that, an enemy's shores begin where the lines of shipping con verge toward his ports. Neutrals, forced by these new rules to take added precautions, may protest, but they must remember that war and not peace establishes the working rules of warfare, and of the privileges of neu-trals-vvithin the war area. In all probability the end of the war will bo followed by an international convention accepting the British-German view of neutral waters, discarding that hitherto held. liy common agreement what is or is not contraband of war is for the nations at war and not for neutrals to determine. The United States is clear on this point. During the Civil war, northern fleets blockaded the south ern coast, confiscated cotton on its way to England, stopped food of all kinds from entering the Confederacy, in short, hermetically sealed the bouth, and paid no at The address of President Wilson to the newspaper men of New York yesterday was a splendid plea for truth and reliability in the publication of news. Sensationalism: partner ami associate attorney, iott last is to be deplored at any time and in this period of stress ;;;;f , li:.;rrlpperneM in the world's hstory the need for conservatism in the: case' and just before the ex-g-emor handling of news reports ft greater than ever before.; The president called attention to some instances where inscription: "To Mr. West, from your deliberate attempts had evidently been made to manu-!'',i,'"lis lu' .t,,"i't',':! (W""H'" 1' , .i ... ..... J . . . n . . ker .oiiiitv, in appreciation ol the ex- tacture a sensation with little or no foundation lor ltJeeik nt. work done in Copperfield, We as in the published report that Japan had established a '! i"tai by you in your trial ami 11 i. m i.1 i rru i n i c m v congratulate you on your glor rnvnl Iwcp nt Tnvt p hnv hp nrpsirlonre wnrrls nt.r . . t . - . . "... ! shows to the world that ' decency still prevails in Baker county, Oregon." Pendleton East Oregouinn: More than :K"0t) has been paid out by I'mii tilln county within the. past two days as bounty on coyotes. Yesterday a total of iij."i2 was paid by Clerk Suling and ioday up until 2 o'clock L'TO had been paid out. Elmer Ciininiings, of Toiichct, Wash., alone received $I-H this iiiiiiiiiiig for 4:t scalps; Tom Joe, of McKay, brought in I; William Kldridge, of Helix, ;i; ('. A. Michael, of Pilot Uock, 7; Thos. liuliburg, of Milton, and .Sherman Cravn, of ( 'ivy use, 1 each; .1, W. Noble, of Pendleton, II; .1. L, Mc Cullough, of Kiho, Kl, and Frank Kil linn, (.f Helix, 1'J. session. e nugiit not to ueai in mutt or that Kind, we ongiit not tn per mit things of that sort to use up the electrical energy of the wires, because lis energy is not ot the truth; its energy is ot imscltiet. truth. some things to go out on the wires as true when there win only one ninii or one group of the men who could have told the originators of the report whether it was true or not, for fear it might not be true. That sort of report ought not to go out over the wires. "There is generally, if not alwaVs, somebody who knows whether that thfhg is so or not, and in these days, above nil other dnys, r ought to take particular pains to resort to the one man, if there be but one, who knows wheiher those things are true or not. The world ought to know tne truth, but the world ought not. at this period of unstable equilibrium, to be disturbed by minor, ought not to be disturbed by imaginative combinations of ciicunistunc es or rather by circumstances stated in combination which uu not belong in combination. For we are holding, not I, but you and gentlemen engaged like you, the balance in your hands. This unstable equilibrium rests upon scales that are in your hands. " For the food of opinion, as I began by saying, is the news of today. I have known ninny a man go off ut li tangent on iuformativii that was not re liable. Indeed, that describes the majority of men. The world is held stable by thi man who nails for the next day to find out whether the report is true or not." Portland Telegrnni: Cnght in tho act of passing children's shoes to his wife standing behind him in the Phil adelphiu Shoe company's store, lit U-l Second street, last, night, Carl S. Har mon, formerly a professional hypnotist, residing at (i.'H Thurinnii street, was arrested by Patrolmen Ford mid Ab bott, and charged with shn;ilifting. The officers were put on the trail by a woman detective of the Olds, Wortinan . King store, who had followed him from 1 1 in t store. Mrs. Illinium was ar rested lor investigation, llaruuni faint ed twice after being arrested as the rcsuil of an ailment ami was unable tn o into the court, room today. The police found the two small children of ll ouple at the home ami llaruuni said he was stealing the shoes for (hem. Other small articles, which Mrs. liar- Goodwin's Weekly is responsible for the following and there is a good deal of sense in it, too: "We hope that President Wilson will be able to make an extended visit Ion! inn wh:itov(M' to tV distress such action caused either; in the west before congress meets. He would have been the civilian population of the South or the weavers of: a wiser president had he spent a year in the far west England. Because wo had the sea power to do it, we did, thirty years ago for the most essential qualification of a fiftv vears a lo. exact lv what both Eneland and Germanv chief magistrate of a nation like ours is to know the are today attempting to do. The tools with which thov; people. All the country west of Kansas Cty was prac-i;.1""1 Sll.i'1 "'' , work are somewhat ditl'erent, that is all. The siege of, tically a closed book to President Cleveland and he lived! mi entire nation is right and proper if the investment of! and died under the impression that the nation would be'R.,.:,,,, I- l?atfa- a city, as Paris in 1871, is right and proper. And on that greater and stronger could it be rid of the western half ! 1 n point force. -and not diplomacy, says the last word. 1 ho, oL its area, and wrapping that provincialism around him "culral nation may in behalf of humanity protest against he held the west in thought very much as though it was the exclusion of noiicoiubatants, but it can go no farther1 a reservation peopled by crafty half-savages. If Presi than protest unless it wishes to enter the war itself. I dent Wilson will come west he will be met by a hospitality Tho modern state, as organized, is virtually all under! such as ho never saw in New Jersey, and will be made to anus in time of war. Tho lives of its citizens are ordered take on new and enlarged ideas of the great republic." to the end of crushing the enemy. Factories, working-! . men and women, farms, all the 'industries may be and jluige Gary, president and manager of the steel trust are being made use of in a military way. I rom a military says lhat the reason dividends were" not paid on the com' vorkers, and future international law will undoubtedly recognize this point of view. in ouier woids. au co. .mem; to or ii oni a ua ion ai stock is held by the common poople-those who bourht',,""'";h "'' "csl-w,.; n,, war is subject to seizure, due notice of such action having jt for an investment Im-mOv in cm.ii 1,1 .., :!"",,k" ami Illinois. That is where thev been muli' Whore ihU seimro is made iiul the nvinnor !,. . , , i mupmcnc.l.ai in small blocks, while the ind big crops n.i ,i,nuged t sell the,, . Dion ni.uu. iuu uus stizuu i mau , .mu uu "unnci preferred stock on which regular d v donds was naid isi1 f"uml -ti.nti..i.s. very good there." iF .nivbitifV 1 i.i r,t nnn .-. . ..Witt ti a i . 1 iiiiMinil nil. nn i .1 .... " 11 "vw " MO l'l.tv o - iuum ij.; it, i. iui mm- 'o h! iv iii 1 1 1 1 1 n i , .-in i .i i , U10 property ot the steel macnates thomp1vp5 Thi nations nave no rights whatever, save in the protection, inoans that Jluice Carv is ,..::.. . nnv ,.' " long as somebody else foots the bills and his own dividends come along as usual. Declares Banker Mills Portland, Or.. April 2(1. " Husiness is no longer uniformly bad-hel'e mid there it is so good as to be almost booming," This wns the ilcrlnrntion today of A. I.. Mills, president of the First National Hank, followed an extended trip through the eastern stales. "Hut one should 'not make the mis take of believing the business revival is already here," continued Mills. .,i,m-i .1,.., -,.- I , . . '" not strictly true. It is true. """"""V11"" Uilf wciul It WOUUl nave neCCSSl-l however, that Indications all over the ; tatetl a reduction of wages of employes something that'',',"",l'v n,' ,,riuli,,,r l,,i,r evo jiromiso he was loath to do. That sounds irood. 'hot. t.ho ronin1onl,,,..,"i:r,!:::riI',"; , , t. Minn i i tli'll I 'MUrMMl ACT OF DEMENTED MAN. of life and of property not contraband, but they have no i , i ! I e i ii i voice in determining wnat articles 01 commerce snau oe designated as contraband. THE LITTLE THINGS Many think that opportunity must be something great and unusual and that it never comes near them; but the fact is that the stepping-stone for anyone to a higher place lies in doing better the very thing ho is doing. The obstacles to our success usually are not big things but little things so little that we do not notice them or, noting, despise them. The work! contains so much failure and pessimisism largely because so many of us dream all our days of doing l.os Angeles, Oil.. April 2. Said to hnve been laboring under the belief that he had been bested in n business tiniH.icted, William Hunter, nged 411, early today shot and seriouslv wnuude.l in, ami the aged :HI, mi l shooting Hunter M- believe the statement because Clews can see about twice1 S'v A"ti",," fl'0'" Nature leaves n lot of work for the lies.Miiaker to finish, LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 1SGS Capital $500,000.00 Transact a genera! banking business Safety Deposit Coxci SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Henry Clews, the big New York banker in his weeklv ,"'.''."''."r r". fmanehv letter, printedin today's CapSXr X hat he can see the end of the war. We are inclined to':;;"! """'' oeneve me statement because Clews can see about twice as far as the next one into anything that has a bearing on the hnanctal situation. w ir lloi. ju?f ditHl f r nn8ylvania, leaving an estate worth $i.),000, after publishing a country newspaper for a quarter of a century. That was one o greatest achievement sage-not his dying-but the accumulation of so much money by a newspaperman. In submitting the commission fm '111 of r.n..n.....-.nl. 4- the voters of Salem again the advoc SeV oi hat sv, em are showing that they believe in the old aSS 'If a ! t lirst you don't succeed," etc. Sometime t v TrtUn ?J Ms. I. llmui, Unnsirrr snd I .cZtcnt"! -. 1 r m . ...... V ju nLnr.i ST. ol. 3ullrmlBu.b w I lilt: win out SAN FRANCISCO ! I I A moJet. fire-prool , up.to.d.1, M,-l ! Sometime they are going to in i r.x Whispers of peace arc coming from Eurone niriin I ' ' Si'"!1 '1 50, 2.C0 t!nKr. J this time from Rome. It would not be i rn.S i ,S I d"bl' -M MM'" I that all concerned in the war arc K lnV llg i " I p'',- I struggle and willing to qui! if on y th gh s & in ?hS SPS direction could be made. 3 m stalt ln thatJ ZZK t 1 I Special Offering SILK HOSIERY 75c Phoenix Silk Hose. 28 rtiffpvo ' to select from. Sold under a broad guarantee to wear. Stock up with stocli, for the summer for 75c. 1 . . , , , ( G.W. Johnson & Co. "111 MMOIMIwi TRY SALEM FIRST "Salem's Best Market Place" Bring your Coupons for Puffed Rice, Free. Puffed Wheat, Free Corn Puffs, Free Coal Oil, your can, 5 gallons 65c Bluing, 16 oz. bottle 10c Ammonia, 12 oz. bot tle 10c Matches, 3 boxes . . .10c Fresh Peanut Butter, pound 20c The best water sprayed Vegetables all Me WESTACOTT-THIELSEN C(IM Fresh Ripe Olives . P"it ft Keg Pickles in 73c kef ruret'ider Vinegar gallon Arm & Hammer Soda 2 packages li Cottolene, large 1,S0 small On Yeloban Milk,3cans25c 5 lb. boxes Macaroni etc., & 25c 161 N&rth HlgU Street . Grocery Phone $30; Mat Ptont to -- . f A Message to the Sufferers! You need not bo diHcournRed nljout your licalth, clietr up, tli( ii I liolp for you. Our Oliinoso Herb tens trentmcnt have been 4 cent u rii'M, niul nro highly rccomm mled for ilisensen, bb Both of the loogs, t Htomiicli, heiirt, liver, kidneys, rlicumutism. Wood poiicn. 7e,k" ' nei vouiiies9, rntnrrli, bladder trouble, constipation, arpcnilinti. w' J diseimeH, feuiule trouble. j.-' x,-' ,t To those who it mny concern; Cull nt once. Don't give up t 11 ...1 fiM.:.. :.. .i. ..i:..i.i .i ..n.:.:,.A ln.ln far ton. Ibfi If . inline iiiii. mm i( uie one roiiuuiu Him puaivnu r suit i jileiiMinp to nil who try it. t n A "ITT A .T "1, 1.. - TT--lo flrtrt Tr.U l'lionetm 103 South High Street Stil.'io. Orecon. tESBBKBBMBM GOOD FOR FIVE VOTES For Route No This coupon may be exchanged for votes in Jjj nn.M-tni Tnnvnoi Porvira' rnntest. at me wpi" To, ni -,fp;-n Mot o-nnr. nfter May l. uuuinai uiiivvi iiub b Dr. w. a. cox (SI Notethe Opening PAINLESS DENTIST PyiceS 303 State Street SALEM, ORE. In order that the public may know ho work and become familiar with the lse M pf office, we are going to make our regu ar . fa nJ $7.50. No extracting at this price. May lSth roX, Painless Dentist iAii.nA.m. All Work Guaranteed PHOINk i