Joum FKIDAY EVK.MXO, October 29, 1111.'). oria itor and u Edit 1 Page of "The Capital al 1'L-BI.lslIKl) EVKRY EVENING KXCKl'T (SUNDAY, KALKM, OKEOOX, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. I, S BARNES, ('HAS. II. FISIlfcK, WKAl. Auiitnw, resident Vice-President Hoc. and Treas. laily by carrier, per yet Daily by mail, per year . .sniSCHll'TION KATES $5.00 1'er month. 3.00 l'er monlU. .45e .35c FCI.E LEASED VVIKE TEEEORAI'H KEl'OKT E AST E K N HEl'KESE NT AT IVES New York Chicago Ward-Lett U-William Hpoeinl Agency Tritmne Building Harry K.'l'isher Co. 30 N. Dearborn St. The Capital Journal farrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the jiori'h. If tlie earrier does not do thin, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation manager, as this is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following instructions. I'Imne .Main HI. LET US FIND THE CAUSE AND REMEDY A few days ago the Capital Journal suggested that the Commercial Club would do- well to appoint a commit tee to examine into the situation as to farming in the Willamette valley. It reiterates that suggestion. Salem is the center of a large and very rich agricultural section. The lands mostly are of the very best, the climate per mits the successful cultivation of almost anything that will grow in the temperate zone, the farmers are intelli gent and progressive as those anywhere, and yet it is conceded that the farmers are not as prosperous as they should be, and their investment in land is not yielding such returns as it should. For this condition there are as many explanations as there are persons trying to explain. There is but one cause upon which there is a general consensus of opinion, and that is lack of markets. If it is. just lack of markets, is not the explanation rather that we do not grow the right products? Is not this phase of the matter well worth examining into? The trouble with the wheat grower is understood. The ship ping trust has simply raised the charter rates enough to absorb all the extra price caused by the war. While wheat is worth from a half to two thirds more than usual in Europe, the price here is advanced but a trifle above normal. We know the cause there, but the remedy seems to be beyond us. This may be the case, that, is we may not be able to prescribe the remedy, even though we should get fully informed as to the disease, but it is certain that we can do nothing at all until we do know the cause. It may hurt some to discover this, but whatever it is, it will not hurt half so bad as the present uncertainty. The Capital Journal would like to hear from the farmers on this subject and invites them to express their opinions on the subject,, briefly as possible and without bitterness or sarcasm. Anger and harsh words butter no parsnips and get one nowhere. If lands are too high let us demonstrate that fact. If we are growing crops for which the market is limited, let us find that out and tackle some other. Let us find out, if we can the nature of our trouble, and then remedy it, i f we can. when it was crowded, that many lives would be lost. In the meanwhile if there are anv other public build' ings in the city whose doors open inward they should be reported and the building inspector should see that they are made to swing the other way. The cries of those little ones trapped behind an inswinging door, against which they beat their tiny hands in vain, should ring in the ears of those guilty of .their death, so long as life remains to them. Another case of American fad comes to light in the University of Pennsylvania where a young woman is ex perimenting with a polony of white rats, for the purpose of demonstrating that the marriage of blood relations, even of .brother and sister, instead of being harmful may be actually beneficial. She is also trying to demonstrate that sex can be controlled before birth. The amount of intelligence the woman has is shown by her statement that if this sex control can be demonstrated, she will pre scribe it for the warring nations of Europe, so that it may take the place of suggested polygamy. She does not seem to realize that this remedy for polygamy, if one is needed at all, is needed by the present generation that has already reached puberty. Nature will take care of the sex of the generations to come. IC EVIDENCE OF PITIFUL TRAGEDY Row of Burned and Twisted Bodies of Little Victims in City Morgue ! Clrtmtl Prize. Pnrtnmn.Pni-SAA C-..- n - j - "-"iiiw a uvtui. j i rt ! : 1 1 v r. . ' .--""' oan tranche i l.rnnH hr;, P Oi., . "'luma-atijornia Ex nan utego, 1915 DEAD THROUGH CRIMINAL CARELESSNESS The salmon run in Grays Harbor, Washington, is a remarkably heavy one, the canneries being fairly swamped. Another indication of better times if some old combine or trust does not step in and take all the profits. There being a strong export demand the fellows with the ships will probably get their work in on the deal. Just as a side issue let it be remarked that President Wilson's mother-in-law-to-be is Mrs. W. H. Boiling. By the way that is to say you understand that mighf also be the name of the grand mother of course, that is, providing there is any occasion for a grand mother. Lord Lansdowne, a day or two ago, gravely informed the British Peers that "the plight of the Serbian army is serious." He must have gotten hold of a week-old paper from this side of the Atlantic. . , The Oregonian says ".it has long been the true ex ponent of sound democratic doctrine." "Shades of Pope and Dry den! has it come to this?" , It is evident from his testimony -;' in the New Haven railroad case, that that road lost out as a dividend payer by cutting the wrong Mellen. , i The burning to death of half a hundred children at IVabody yesterday sent a thrill of horror through the whole country. Caught in the terrible death trap of a building whose doors opened inward, with only an inch of wood between them and life, their poor little lives went out smothered in strangling smoke, or trampled beneath the feet of their frenzied fellow victims. The heroic women, their teachers, risked their lives to pave them, but in vain. And why was this terrible holocaust? There is but one answer and that is the criminal carelessness of those who built or owned the house and the worst than criminal negligence of those whose duty it was to enforce the law requiring that all doors in public buildings open outward, and that firej escapes he provided. The terrible loss of life in the Iroquois theatre at Chicago was from a similar cause, and one would think that since that no sane person would permit such a fire trap. It can only be accounted for on the ground that those in charge of the building believed there was no danger. Yet there is always danger from fire., Here in Salem we have a building of that kind now, and owned by no less a personage than the government of the United States, the Salem post office. True, there is little danger of it burning, yet its big south doors are very heavy and hard to open. The west door is of the turn style kind, that could easily be blocked should there 1k a panic, as then those inside would try to go out on each side of the gates. It might easily happen in case of fire in that building HUMILITY Don't let your head swell up too greatly; don't let your stride be too blamed stately. For, though you rank with high class peaches, some other pebbles line the beaches. If into fame vou think Vou're butting, be modest still, and do no strut ting; whatever line of work you follow, some other chaps can . beat you hollow. Perhaps you're writing fine romances, whose sale to figures huge advances; but when the pride within you quickens, re member Bulwer, Scott and Dickens; their fnmP will livo till vvnvlrlc irmm linow nrA H'W' J perished is your jimcrow glory. Perhaps tA Q you're painting classy pictures, which have received more praise than strictures, and you bulge out your chest and chortle, and think you're surely an immortal. But all your works are mere disasters, compared with chromos by the masters. What ever graft you are-pursuing, whatever fancy stunt you're uoing, it is uecoming to be modest, for when your lame is at its broadest, it still looks cheap to men surrounding, beside great names, down ages sounding. No human being should envelope himself with majesty, and swell up, as tnougn ne nau a nalo o er him for greater men have I rv U Poabody, Mass., Oct. 29. The dim light in Peabody's gloomy morgue shone today on a ghastly sight the half burned, twisted corpses of 19 child victims of the holocaust iu St. John's parochial school yesterday. Two other little bodies lay in St. Thomas' hospital morgue, the victims of burns and shock in the pupils' mad flight for safety. The ashes of yet another are believed to be mingled with the debris inside the fireswept walls of the school. Though firemen yesterday reported that 27 bodies had been recovered, n checking up process today showed that the total casualties were 22, including the body of a child believed incinerated inside the building. Crepe decorated doors and silee groups of children completed the most pitiful child tragedy ever known in Massachusetts. A dozen Hallowe'en parties at which many of the parochin' school children were to havo been the g,uests, have been cancelled. The children instead will be trudging home from funerals of their little play mates on hallowe 'en. State investigators poked through the ruins of the fire trap to discover the crigin of the fire. They believe it started in a closet underneath the base ment stairs, and curled upward in an awful blast which shut off the exit of many. The state authorities laid the blame on local officials for the fact that there were no fire escapes by which, the near ly 700 children could make rapid; safe egress, and further for the fact thnt the doors behind which several tiny forms were crushed and trampled open ed in;vnid. For Flavor and QUiJi Baker s Co CO; ma. u.. PAT. off. IS JUST RIP.ht It has the delicious taste and natural ' I beans; itis skilfully prepared by a petl Without the nsr r.t r-U.L:.-). a r '"'-t mcchani-ti . aigtoilli,, and Kt, P; V" j I r 'c'TOnI"lgto.l,L f Caution: Get the genuine with our trademark on tK. , I WAT TV D D A Prn " iiiiv JJ i i. xv Il( IV OC (JO T Established 1780 - DOHOIpqtpd f' M. HEAVY MEAT EATERS E Eat Less Meat If You Feel Backachy or Have Blad der Trouble Take Glass of Salts gone before him. . HOW TO LOOK LESS ' THAN YOUR AGE ft RIDDLE PRAISES G0AT3 LADD & BUSH, Bankers Capital Established 1SC8 $300,000.00 Transact a general banking1 business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT There are three gulden rules that ev-1 erv woman who woulii ward off sig.isj if uilvuui'ing age, HiiouUl follow; i 1. Cultivite eheerfnlnewi. Thoso who1 understand the physiological effect of worrying, know this advice should be' taken more lu'riously than it usually is.! -'. Wherever tin" complexion liegi'is to look worn or withered, us ordinary, uiereolied wax tr n week or two. Ap ply nightly tike cold cream, erasing it nioniiug n-ittrwrrin trnter. Thin grad ually uImmIs the I hin film of am-fuce skin, revealiiu' the fresher and young er skin underneath. An ounce of the. wax, obtainable at any dru store, is enough to rejmiiinte mfv complexion. ;l. When the t.-ll tale wrinkles ap pear, or cheek and chin imivle beuinl to sag, bailie the face once a day for awhile in a solulicr-i of powdered saxo lite, 1 or., ,iohed In 12 pint of witch hael. This haa a remarltalile ' effect in "finning up" and nmoothiug' out thv skiii. (Polk County Observer.) William Riddle and sons of Mon mouth have had excjuUeut results in Angora goat rnising on their large ranches. According to Mr. Ridde'1 the gouts will require hay and grain throughout this winter as a result of the prolonged dry weather through the nutnnicr, but all this considered, the goats ar profitable as land clear er and an money earners. Most of the bucks raised in the Riddell hold ings were shipped to Texas this year, where there is a continued demand for good stock. Tho kids are an ex ceptionally healthy lot and Mr. Rid dell expects a fino herd next spring. "People will begin to realize general ly the need of goats on the ranch," he says, one can hardly realise how the brush gains headway without them. To get the best results in clear ing brush off land they should be pas tured with some other stock, such .as hcep or cattle." rLEW THOUSANDS OF FEET HIGH Mo people undergo. M per cent of the trouble In this world, and the other1 "i per .cent lards on men who lend! double live'.:. New York, Oi l. 2.J. Kendrick, en rout, ' ap llatteras, flew over the ciiy thousands of feet tip this after noon, lie psseed the New Jersey point where be was supposed to te.he fuel. No man or woman who eat3 msat regularly can miiko a mistake by flush ing the kid'.eya occasionally, "says a well known authority. Meat forms" nrie r-eid which excites tho kidneys, they be i'oiiio overworked from the strain, g.t sluggbh nnd fajl to filter the waste and poisons from tiie blood, then we get sick. Nearly nl! rheumatism, head aches, liver trouble, nervousness, ' diz ziness, sleepUv.S',C88 nnd urinary dis orders come from sluggish kidneys. The niomei t you feel a dull ai'he in the kidneys or your back hirts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ment, irreguh'.r of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about tour ounces of Jnd SSalts from r.ny phrrmacy; tako a ta blespoonful it n glr-33 of water before I breakfast a.-.d in a few davs your kid-j ueys will act fi-.e. This famous salts is made from tho acid of grapaos and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neu- j tinlize t.ho r.cids in urine so it no longer cnuses irritation, thus ending bladder weuk::e:u. j Jnd HnltB is inexpensive and cannot I injur:1; makes a delightful effervescent1 should take now and then to keep t'.ie! Mdneys clea-i and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kid'.iev complications. STAYTONNEWS Miss ZoHji Kmith r,f Tl,.. TX.1I..J y i" I'Riivs, nao la town this week on business. Mrs. Kred Mclntyre, of Salem, was u guest at the Melntyro home west of .vnu uu' iitm oi me weea. Jos. Kipp, of Sublimity, was a caller last week, securing some pedigree lihinks forliis Itelginn hnres. Mrs. ,1. P. lVory ami (Vita went to Salem Friday for a visit with frieads ami relatives. They are expected home this evening. Mrs. I.. X. Leinberr, Mrs. N. (ieymer, mm i .. rwrscn ana daughter, Fran ces visited the Aumsville Orange last week, reporting an interesting session. Mr. and Mrs. 1,. S. Lambert attended o meeting of the Kustern Star at, Turn er Wednesday evening Inst, much en joying the visit. Karl IVters has rented the Yes Powuing place, southeast of town, and he and his son will run it the eoiuinii year. A. l Sehindler, Teter Fiedler and Andy Uauscher are home from Central Washington, where thev erected a house on a ranch belonging to Mr Rniiseiier. W. W. Klder ami nif., .1.. ... in iih wees lor tlie exposition, will be joined at Uoseburi: bv vim e, w no win accompany , Miss llerthn Klinger. daughter of the " ' "I'luiM! or rvnem. .Maurice Mmger, w,., in s,ayn Snturdav accompanied by relative who live near Aumsville. with whom the Salem voumr woman is visiting. ' . M,r- tn' 1ull'ie "lover, of Port rrnnlf. Mr Nelbe White and son rv. T-ii. o. i-aifin, (.pout Tnursday r "i ini-ir mini, .Mrs. I,. bert. Last Saturday morning Theo. Rizzo, while assisting in re-setting some poles for the local telephone company, got a fall that resulted in a dislocated ankle and a bone broken near the ankle joint. i ' ' J. B. Orier returned last week from an extended visit with relatives and friends in Linn and Washington coun ties. He took several hundred miles ride in an automobile and enjoyed him self generally, returning much improv ed in health. .. John Wolfard, of Silverton, came ov er Thursday iu "nig auto, taking G. C. Eisenhart and wife home with him for a day's visit and bringing them, back in the evening. Mr. Wolfard is an odd and valued friend of Mr. and Mrs. Kisenhart. The J. W. .Apple family, who have made their home on their farm east of town, for a number of years, have mov ed to Salem, where tlie girls will attend school. ..These are fine people, who will be greatly missed by their many friends arid neighbors. Word from Mrs. E: D. Alexander, who left the 14th for her old home in Iowa, states that her mother died the day after she left Stayton. The funer al occurred the day after her arrival. The deceased was 77 years of age, and passed away on her birthday from heart trouble. Several of Dr. G. F. Korinek's friends surprised him on Thursday ev ening in honor of his birthday. Cards! and music furnished the evening's en-J tertainment. Those present were: Theo.' Rizzo,. John Thoma, Wm. Petzel, John I Mielke, Guy Keams, Dr. Sand, E. D.j Alexander, S. h. Heltzel nd John Downing. I II. E. Bennett who has successfully! superintended the M. E. Sunday school1 of this city lor some time has returedi from that, position oil account of the! presure ol other duties. Mr. Bennett suggested to the pastor. Rev. Mr. Lock hart, that he appoint W. H. Fuson, to tho position. His suggestion was act ed upon bv the new minister at the Sunday School Board meeting held Monday night. Mr. Fuson, who lives a few miles out of the city will prob ably enter upon iiis duties next Sun day. "Double The Attendance by Christmas" is reported to be the slogan of the Methodist Sunday school go ers. Standard. Mi Grandma's hemi Tea and Sulptor Darts? io Naturally ThatHi Almost everyone knows tie Si and Sulphur, properly foJ.; brings back the natural tolo,,, tre to the hair when faded, im,. gray; also cuds dandruff, itckiui and stops falling hair. Yeanui' only way to get this mih make it at home, which Uuk troublesome. Xnwn,lnv k .i.! any drug store for " Wveth's Si;.'! Sulphur Compound," you will J large bottle of this famouiJ for about 30 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! J, eu lussujiy leu inat vim J your hair, as it does it so aatuni evenly. You dampen a sKig(i brush with it and draw tkii !! your hair taking one small stni: time; by morning the gray hair.: pears, and lifter another spplim two, your hair becomes bat: d,ark, thick and glossy. CARRANZA WHX AD). Austin, Texas, Oct. 23. Go Ferguson today received from General Carranza and Cncs ballero, both dated Torreon, pi! surance mat tney win oo-opfrili f( the Texas authorities In giipp-f lawlessness of Mexican bandits 4 tho'border. I Ferguson yesterday Bought rm ' Wilson's aid to get such co-to from Carranza. The household hiipm$. wife needs can be found r-. Iv through the Journal t.. 4J. i SATURDAY EVENING SPECIAL' Six to Eight Thirty P. M. Only 19 Pounds Onions for 25c Best Grade Winter Keepers. Now is the time to buy Potatoes, 40c per Bushel in sack lots. Plenty of big Pumpkins and Squashes. King Apples, 50c Box. Ward K. Richardson 2393 Front Street. Phone 4S!j Special prices on drugs next week. Mill They their Woo SPECIAL CE $1.75 $2.00 $2.00 PR! FIVE LOADS AT SINGLE LOADS BOX WOOD - Prompt Delivery Spaulding Logging Company t the I 6S5 S. Tn 'mil .in ulttT-