Editorial Page of "The Capital-Journal" MONDAY' EVENING, December 13, . 1915. CHARLES H. FISHES, Editor and Manager . PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY, SALEM, OREGON, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. . . w t a rt a ' nnrcr XT I,. S. BAHNES. President CHAS. H. FISHEB. Vice-President DORA C. ANDRESEN. See. and Trcas. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bt.ilv htr rnrrier. nar Tear t5.00 Per month. Daily by mail, per year 3.00 Per month. .45c .35e FULL LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT EASTERN REPRESENTATIVES Now York Chicago Ward-Lewis-Williams Special Agency Hnrry R. Fisher Co. Tribune Building 3 N. Dearborn St. The Capital Journal carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the poreh. If the carrier docs not do this, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation managor, as this is the only way we can dotermino whetier or not tho carriers are following instructions. Phone Main 81. THE NEWSPAPER AND THE COMMUNITY The circulation of the Daily Capital Journal Saturday evening was 4200. Of these in round numbers 2200 were circulated in Salem and 2000 to mail subscribers. This was not an unusual run, no orders for sample or extra copies were filled, and it was only a normal day in these resnects. The Capital Journal is proud of its steadily-growing circulation, which it believes is the largest in the .state outside of the city of Portland. The people of Salem, too, should take a pride in the fact their newspapers are at last taking their place in keeping with the standing of the Capital City of the state, the second in size and com mercial importance of Oregon. They have not always had this position, perhaps never before since the old pioneer days. The press of this country is its greatest influence, and towns and cities are coming to be judged by the news papers they maintain. They reflect the political and moral character of a community and are the truest index of its business activity. A dead town cannot boast of live newspapers. And besides daily newspapers give more than they receive from the city in which they are published. They are payroll businesses which gather up their cash receipts from a large area of country as they grow and expand and disburse them in the city of their publication. As their circulation extends further from the central point they interest the readers in the business houses, the stores, shops and industries of the city, its markets and its ad vantages. It is natural for the regular readers of Salem newspapers to feel that Salem is the business center of the territory in which they live. That means trade in a constantly growing volume for the advertising merchants of the city. It even helps the non-advertiser indirectly, but the advertisers have the satisfaction, not only of promoting their own business directly but also of con tributing to the general prosperity by assisting to broaden the usefulness of the newspaper which is the publicity agent of the community. Salem's trade area would have been larger had its newspapers been stronger and bet ter in the past. A circulation of 4200 daily means a family of 21000 regular readers. This, too, is only the beginning if the business interests of Salem come to realize the advantages of a strong, clean newspaper advocate as they, should. The people generally appreciate a newspaper worthy of the name, and their subscriptions is the best evidence of their loyalty, but subscriptions alone are not sufficient to meet the heavy expense of newspaper publication. The Capital Journal is a good newspaper in many respects, but it should be bigger and better and have a(much wider circulation. This will be its future if the cupport of Salem justifies it if the business interests come to realize, as a majority of wide-awake communities has, the value to them of such an institution. But a large number of Salem business men,-professional men and manufacturers do not seem to care whether this city has newspapers or not. They never patronize them and their loyalty to home institutions is a minus quantity except when their own income is con cerned. "Try Salem First" is the Commercial Club slogan, but as long as Salem people and the people of the sur rounding country read Portland newspapers, filled with the advertisements of Portland stores, such a slogan will have little effect. To make Salem grow there must be civic pride and a united interest in the things that belong to Salem unswerving loyalty to its business and indus trial interests and a positive faith in its future. The Capital Journal has shown, under adverse condi tions due to business depression, that a newspaper can be built up here which the people will read. Its success up to the present time is, however, only indicative of the still wider influence and circulation it should obtain, if those who will be benefitted by it directly and indirect ly will do their duty in loyal support of a home institu tion. A better slogan for the Commercial Club would be "Read Salem Papers: become interested in Salem people and Salem institutions." When that idea is generally ac cepted by the people it will not be necessary to urge them to "try Salem first." There is no accounting for or explaining the operation of the mind. It does things that apparently it would not do and it refuses to reach conclusions that apparently it would arrive at intutitively. In discussing Trichinae in Portland Doctor Cobold stated that the eating of one pound of trichinous flesh would give rise to as many as 400,000,000 young trichinae, and Leuckart thinks the num ber would be greater. Taken into the stomach it is stated the gastric juices soon free the larvae which become ma ture in two days and the female then gives birth to about 2.000 voung. It will be seen from this that once these little fellows get located inside of a fellow they would soon become so numerous as to make mm, uncomfortable. One of the svmptoms of their presence these doctors state is "a total indifference to surroundings, but a great fear of death." This is why we remarked that the operations of the human mind are unaccountable, for with some bil lions of these bugs in a fellow he should naturally be reconciled to death. The English press commenting on the Chancellor Von Hollweg's speech in the reichstag expressed considerable contempt for his opinions. Some of them, however, made it up by the profound admiration they showed for Eng land. The star with becoming modesty this alludes to Eng land's position in the war. "We have no delusions left. We accept proudly the foremost place in this war of liber ation. We have counted the cost and weighed the sacri fice. We have endured much but we will endure to the end." Considering how England has been willing to fight until the last of her allies' soldier were dead upon the battle field, this sounds rather egotistical on the part of "the mistress of the seas," the main part of whose armies are still bravely guarding the tight little isle, and staying at home. ' ': i LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 18GS CAPITAL $500,000.00 Transact a General Banking Business Safety Di'pesit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Now another gang of faddists is in the field with the intention of forcing still another ireak idea into the school rooms. This time it is thrift; "not," as the repre sentative faddist in Portland explained, "penunousness, but thrift as it has to do with the conservation of the body, of health, of mind." There are so many fads in the schools now that the pupils have no time for reading, spelling, arithmetic, geography, history, or'any thing else really worth while in the way of education, and with each of these new tads the cost oi their maintenance is in creased. There is some hope of the end being in sight for the matter has arrived at a stage where the ability to pay the bills has been reached. ' When the faddists can no longer saddle the cost of their phantasmagoria on the public they will cease to mention their dope dreams. Here are some reminders that might be useful in the direction of making us more satisfied with present condi: tions, since a proneness to forget is one of the weaknesses of mankind: Remember when you used to sell hogs at four cents per pound? Thirty cents was a right good price for corn" in those days, wasn't it? Now, actually, are things as far out of plumb as the kind of men who-ran the recent equalization conference would have it appear Sioux City Live Stock Record. And we also wonder if it is remembered here in the Northwest when hogs were from two and a half to three cents per pound? Port land Live Stock Reporter. The warring nations are all anxious for peace and we believe their statements in this respect sincere, lhey value peace no doubt far more highly than do the neutral nations because, they are having an object lesson on the horrors of war. RippHngRhi)mos n;1 r s OF Asks That Immediate Truce Be Declared We Wait ing For Him New York, Dec. 13. The wireless aboard Henry Ford's peace ship today clicked out a peace appeal to all the crowned heads of Europe, according to a wireless inessuge received by the Uni ted Press direct from Ford. Tho message was an urgent appeal to tho rulers to halt tho slaughter and to prevent wives and mothers from being further bereaved. It suggested an im mediate truce, after which, through me diation and discussion in the Ford peace court, the war might be ended and soldiers instead of "facing anoth er bitter winter in the trenches" may be sent back to their "labors and fire sides." Settlement, Ford suggested, is not impossible in view of the fact that all of the war nations are fighting from a love of country, mid for the best of their national traditions, and in such circumstances have a common ground on' which to meet in mediation and dis cussion. The Ford Message. The message to the rulers said: "Sirs: We come in this time of trou ble, not to add to your burdens, but to help lift them, not to consider which nations are most to blnme for the dis aster thnt has befallen Europe but to end tho struggle, not to intrude our selves upon your national life and ideas, but rather with earnest desire to understand them and with a heartfelt desire to aid in realizing them. "The love of country for which ev ery day tens of thousnnds of lives are sacrificed in tho same in every land. Your nation, like the peoplo of the oth er belligerents, is fighting for nation al existence, for the best national tra ditions, so there can be no irreconcil able difference. Such common ideals surely must afford a basis upon which to establish a magnanimous and honor ablo peace. "Enough blood lies been shed, enough agony endured, enough destruction wrought. The time has come 'to stop the bloodshed and save the people from further slaughter, and civilizations from anarchy and ruin. "Has not war been tried for lfi months? Is it not proven that war cannot solve tho problem, but leads only to loss and misery? "Must more wives and mothers' be bereaved? Wo come because we recog nize that Europe is bleeding to death and that tho wound must be stuunchedf Will Perfect Peace Terms. "The rising desire -of the peoplo of neutral nations to convert barren dis interestedness into active good will has promised us of America to sail to Eu ropo on the steamer Oscar with the se rious purpose of joining European neu trals in an organized effort to help re store pence upon an honorablo and just basis; to facilitate direct negotiations between you and other warring nations. We neutrals aro about to join in a con ference which will without delay from and submit to you and tho other bel ligerents, proposals as a basis for a dis cussion leading to a final settlement. "Therefore, wo earnestly entreat you and the rulers of other warring nntions to declnro au immediate truce. Let the armies stand where they aro. Then let negotiations proceed that tho soldiers may bn delivered from another bitter winter in the trenches, and be Bent back to their lnbors and firesides. As there is no other way to end the war, except by medintion und discussion, why waste another precious human lifo for the sake of 1'umunityf "HENRY FORD." RAILROAD CHANGES. OUT OF THE WRECK I built me a handsome shack, and painted it out and in, the color scheme green and black; 'twas roofed with the best of tin. My heart swelled with honest pride; my cottage was smooth and hne; I laughed as I stood beside my hgtree and pumpkin vine. Then came a tornado wild, and juggled that house around, and on me its fragments piled, and flattened me to the ground. I 5 crawled from the ruins then, my hair full V. C 1 J i.' .1 . , . . vi giass anu un, aim sprung, in ine view oi men, my patented duplex grin. I said to the scowling skies, "You've taken a fall from me, but out of the wreck I rise I'm still in the ring, you see." While others indulged in screams, and wept in the cyclone's track, I gathered my joists and beams, and built me another shack. While others deplored their loss, and put up a line of wails, I searched for my household joss, and gathered my rusty nails. Again by my figtree tall, again by my pumpkin vine, I look from my cottage wall, and the prospects's strictly fine. No man on the dump heap lies, who says, when misfortunes frown, "Oh, out of the wreck I rise there's nothing can hold me down !" Ily a railroad change which took effect this week, Junction City loses its popular Southern Pacific agent, Mark Montgomery, who has served the local public in that capacity for the past fourteen vears, says the Junction City Times. Mr. Montgomery has been imnslerred to Albany, wliero ho will have entire charge of that important division point. A. A. Mickel, who 1ms been station agent at Albany, is now located at Salem. Mr. Montgomery is a man of thor ough railroad experience, and his trns I'er, which means a considerable pro motion with an increase of snlnry, is well merited, He has been in tho cm ploy of the. Southern Pacific company for twenty five years, having been sta tioned at Aunisville, Drain, Albany nnd Snlcni prior to his appointment here. Mr. Montgomery took up his new du ties the first, of the week. He will be joined shortly by Mrs. Montgomery. The local vacancy will be filled for tho present by William M. Knott, who is next in ine at the Junction City sta tion. NEW BOOKS AT THE PUBLIC LIBRARY for cold and dampness -rjrr fill J41 I Perfection Oil Heaier A sure remedy for the cold, damp days. Inexpensive to op erate easily carried from room to room. Smokeless and odorless. Dealers everywhere. For best results use Pearl Oil Standard Oil Company i (California) Salem AAAAAAAAAAAA 10 GO 10 ST. PAUL Marion county will havo 210 ears of the finest coin it ever raisod on ex hibit at tho First National Corn show, to be held at St. Paul, Minnesota, De cember 15 to ill. The prize winning coin from tho Ma rion County second annual corn show was selected tor tho exhibit. The ex hibits were packed and selected Satur day evening by L. J. Chapin and for warded to St. Paul. In making tho shipment, each ear was carefully . i im, i ..!, vi,;i.;t on, I with the name of the grower. Twenty-four entries of ten ears were shipped, fifteen of yellow dent corn and nino of white dent. Thoso whose corn will be sent to St. Paul aro as follows: Yellow dent Kenneth Coomler, Mt. Angel; W. C. Kinyon, Aurora; Clair Honker, Aumsville; Alen Bros, 8t. Paul; S. Merten, St. Paul; Frank Bor gelt, Salem; D. C. Minto, Salem; Wil liam make, Jr., Salem; August Hil fiker, Saem; Oust Hoyden, Salem; F. W. Peterson, St. Paul; L. L. Ernst, St. Paul; Conrad Winnoll, Woodburn; A. T. Cline, Mt. Angel; S. II. Van Trump, Mt. Angel; J. B. Hawthorne, Salem. White dent .T. Vf. Kav, Aumsville; I. Hurle; St. Paul; Peter' Stcffem, Sil vcrton; 0. A. Dahl, Silvorton; Elmer Smacker, Aurora; A. E, Hughes, Wood burn. For tho first time since it has been demonstrated that corn can bo raised in this state, the Oregon product will be on exhibit beforo the growers of the corn producing belt of the country. The exhibits will do much to dispel the old ilea that Oregon could raise everything excepting corn. Manv of the furmors who hnve lived in the contral states, feel that this Hisnlnv of Mnrlnn ennntv corn will do much from nn educational at,..ii.n;..f .i...n..u,.n:.. i (T.uin ii i, ui iiiuuni tit i ii Hint I'lfKUIl may uow be considered among the corn growing states. j Police Arrest Three In Lincoln Inn On Disorderly Charge The Salem polico arrested Hellen Little and W. A. Showaltcr and James Sweeney at the Lincoln Inn at Cli.'t Ferry street Saturday night and charged that all three were occupying tho same bed. All pleaded guilty to tho charge of disorderly conduct in po lice court this morning and the Littla woman was given 20 days and the men each a fine of $25 or 12 days in jail. The woman came to Salem from Al bany lust week end and told the police that she expected her husband to come yesterday. She was unable to meet him at tho train. ANXIOUS TO LEARN A TRADE .Toliet, 111., Dec. 13. James Foley, deaf mute, is willing to serve two years in Joliet prison, for no crime at all, if he can learn a trade. ft WAR ODDITIES. London Families who have gained their livlihood on tho Eastcoast by ''shrimping" for 180 years have hnd their in- dustry cut off for the first time by tho war and aro in poverty. London A recruiting incident is told from a large recruiting station where a man anxious to join the army was quizzed about his religion. He had none but was anxious to oblige, promptly asking the recruiting officer whnt particular religion he was short of. He was enlisted with- out religion. Amsterdam Dutch customs officials at Bcek seized enorm- ous quantities of fats and oils about to be smuggled into 'tiennnny disguised as rolls of paper. Cnnfield, ilnrothy,' Ilillsboro people. Dickens, Charles, Christinas stories. Fillmore, P. II., The rosie world. Haddock, F. C Power of will. James, (t. W., In and out of the old mission of California. Mackenzie, A. S Laws of gravitation; Memoirs by Newton Bonguer & Caven dish, Merwin, Pnnincl, The honey bee. Paine, H. !., Greater America, lfnli'h, Julian, Our great west. Singleton, . Esther, Historic build ings. Sinpleton, Esther, Historic buildings of America. Smith, E. 8., Christmas in legend and story. Stunrt, R. M., Solomon Crow'i Christmas pockets. ' IT. S. Civil Service Commission Man ual of examinations Ifll.t. Venuble, E. C, Pierre Vinton. Wells, II, O., Futuro la Anlerica. To Mr. Husband: Financial mismanagement is Amer ica's besetting sin. We are a hurry ing, hustling, spendthrift race, eager . ly grasping the Almighty Dollar, but once we have it, carelessly throwing it away. Start thriftiness in your home today. Give your wife a check ing account in this strong National Bank; it will help her to economize in the household expenses. With the small savings she thus affects, give her a Savings Account in our Sav ings Department. It will earn inter est and can be withdrawn any time without any notice. Your money is under United States Government Supervision here, be cause this is a National Bank and a member of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. United States National Bank Salem, Oregon