Editorial Page of "The Capital Journal" TIILIiSHAV i:KMNt: .fnniiaiy i:t, 111 111. CHARLES II. riMIER, Editor and Manager. PDBLISHED EVERY EVENING EXCEIT PL'XDAT, SAI.EM, OREC-OX, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. LB.BABXE9, CHAS. H. FISHER, DOHA C. AXDRESEN, President Vice-President Sec. and Treas. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily Ijv carrier, per year $o.00 Per month. Daily by mail, per year 3.1)0 Per mouth. ,45c FULL I-EASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT EASTERN REPRESENTATIVES New York - Chicago Ward-Lewis-Williams Hpecial Agency Ilarry R. I'isher Co, Tribune Building 30 H. Dearborn St. The Capital Journal carrier buys are instructed to put the papers on the porch. If the. carrier dues not do this, misses you, or neglects (jetting the paper to you on time, kindly phono the circulation manager, as this is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following instructions. Phone Main SI. RISING POWER OF NEW WORLD Frankly speaking we do not believe that this country ever has had a "Mexican policy," because neither Taft nor Wilson has seemed to comprehend the situation below the Rio Grande. Both have tried to pursue a hands-off policy, leaving the republic to work out its own salvation something it will not do in a hundred years. The ruling class there has just the condition it desires, and the mass of the people does not count. Our interest in the affair lies in the protection of American property interests, and the lives of our citizens invited there under the Diaz regime, and the further fact that life and property on the American side of the border is constantly threatened by the lawless rebel bands on the other side, causing the employment of our entire regular army for their protec tion. We should have ended the anarchy in Mexico by armed intervention immediately following the overthrow of Madero, and if the cold-blooded murder of sixteen Americans a few days ago arouses the government to a sense of its duty and responsibility, their lives will not have been sacrificed in vain. While prosperity has not to any great extent sub merged the Pacific Coast, since the beginning of the de pression which seems to have set in three or four years ago, there is no doubt but a large part of the country is enjoying splendid prosperity. In some places the volume of business has even reached the proportions of a verit able boom. That the coast will soon be able to share in this era of good times seems the universal opinion of business observers, and there is no doubt accumulating evidence to bear out this view. Since this is the case, it is a good time to take stock and see how we stand with the world and how as a nation we have been getting along financially. You perhaps recall how now and then some fellow here and there on the street corner and elsewhere when ever he could get a hearing delighted in shouting that this j country was in debt to Europe and was under the domina tion of the foreign kings of finance. In a year and a half about since the war in Europe broke out American securities estimated at a billion and a half in value have floated back here ; and in six months the transfer of railroad stocks and bonds from foreign to home ownership amounted to nearly half a billion par value. Steamers for the past year have been floating over with from ten to twenty million a month. Gold has come to America in astonishing quantities. Today New York is a money center for the world, and this country is loaning where before it borrowed in for eign lands. And above all there are good reasons to believe that the dominant position of the United States will be main tained in the financial and commercial world after the war is over, and many of the scars have disappeared. The great upheaval in the old world will mark an epoch, we verily believe, from which will be dated the rising power of the new world nations and the steady decline of the old in many lines of competition. INVESTING CHANCES The attorneys in the case of the defunct American Bank & Trust Company, of Portland, want one-third of all the money they succeeded in collecting from the as sets of the institution. Of course, depositors, who will receive but a few cents on the dollar of their money, are objecting but it is likely to do them little good. As a rule attorney fees and court costs eat up all the assets in such cases, and it would generally be as good an idea for creditors to wipe their claims off the slate and forget them as to attempt to collect any reasonable part of them. In fact bankrupt and receivership laws and court customs make it easy now for the debtor who wants to wipe out his honest obligations without paying them and mighty hard on the people he owes. The lawyers and the courts, however, are quite liberally provided for in most instances. A Galley o Fun I . 6,4' ?, iv, )d (. j, b t, .. '(((..', IV i ''(3 ) t ;il ill ' "HOLDING HIS OWN." Curuso, the tenor, is said to eat prunes for his voice. Should all aspiring tenors follow his example it would sure mean a boom in the prune market. - The warmest spot in Montana yesterday registered :!5 degrees below zero and yet some persons persist in living there. The horrors of prohibition are not so much after all. Just now it is easier than ever to go on a skate. RipplfngRhumGS BALMY PEACE : One of the staunchest backers of the submarine through its experimental stages had been reduced to pov erty before the war began. His submarine shares, to which he stoutly held, were reduced to almost nothing in value. The war sent those shares kiting, and he sold out for more than $5,000,000. Had he held them three months longer he would have got $16,000,000. It is but one of the many instances, since the war be gan, of immense fortunes being made in sudden increased values of stocks of various kinds. So many great fortunes seem to be made in specula tion that men are apt to jump to the conclusion that this is the surest way to get rich, and it is all the more seduc tive because it seems to require no work, either physical or mental. But the fact is that the apparent speculations by which many men are accumulating immense fortunes through the war conditions are not speculations at all. The element of chance is almost entirely eliminated by masterful information and carefully cultivated judgment. There is just this much of "luck" in it the war sud denly brought about unexpected conditions and oppor tunities. But these conditions were opportunities only to the men who were prepared to meet them and master them. Great enterprises as well as smaller ones dopend for their success upon the knowledge and energy put into them. The true "captain of industry" takes few chances. He is generally fitted in advance for every turn and de tail of his enterprise from beginning to end. His specula tion is a sure thing under favoring conditions. The world is cursed with many misleading maxims, one of the most injurious of which is, "nothing risked, nothing gained." Inexperienced men are apt to take this literally and to shut their, eyes and throw their money away. Oh, I believe in Balmy Peace; I wish to see War's hor rors cease ; I wish to see the sabre made into the farmer's pruning blade, and every gun that thunders now, I tain would change into a plow. I d like to see the kings embrace, with rapture glowing in each face, and swear by Heck and Halidome, to keep their warlike hosts at home. And all my days I shall devote to robbing warfare of its goat; I hope to see nations stand like loving brothers, hand in hand, remote from bitterness and strife ri Vy J and to that end I pledge my life. I now am iJ&iJjSJ ready to orate in any town, in any state, I which will put up a hundred wheels, and I guarantee me bed and meals. I ask the money in advance, i because I cannot take a chance on being stung by hayseed i grads which hate to jar loose from the scads. Blest be ' the day when warfare ends' If you believe in peace, my I friends, and hope to see the whole world free, arrange a ! lecture date for me, and I from war will take a fall, in I schoolhouse, church or village hall, in tabernacle, tent or i manse the money strictly in advance. UNDER THE NEW REGI.vIa Entered one of the gold plated, cut glass caravansaries known as a mod em hair cutting; emporium. It was i pleasantly located on a good sunken farm land, occupying en acre or so un derneath one of our first class hotels. A boy in the costume of a Swiss Im perial Guard came forward and tool; my hat. The proprietor asked me what I wanted done. "I should like to get my hair cut." I was ushered Into an antiseptic chair, while an antiseptic individual with a sinister aspect threw over me a Woodlawn cemetery shroud. Then he took from a glass instrument case R pair of shears, a clipping machine and a tortoise shell comb. lieing in a communicative mood, I said pleasantly: "It's a nice day for this time o! year." it it ' "It looked like rain yesterday, and thought perhaps it would." ii it "The reservoirs need It, anyway Can't have too much rain for them " u "If there wasn't so much graft about tve would have our reservoirs mrd'' long before they were needed." i:Vr 'i At this point I was rudely as 1 thought interrupted by a tap on the shoulder. The barber suspended op erations. A tall grave man stood over me. I recognized him as the I proprietor of the emporium. "Pardon me, sir!" he said sternly, "but you Rre disturbing the artist at his work. No talking please!" ... THIS WILL IN1EREST ncys and thus proiiinte a free flow of pure digestive juices. .1 ii 1 1 Sails is inexpensive and is made from the neid of ginnes and lemon juice, combiner with lithin nrtd sodium phosphate. This harmless salts is used j by thousands of people for stomach trouble with excellent results. WITHOUT APOLOGIES. To the average woman a bird In th hat is worth two In the bush. Teeth are stronger than fiction. Why expect excellence In your wife, when even the cook is far from per fect? Gall Is greater than godliness. The Burest passport for admittance Into the Smart Set Is a dull mind. Say little, but do everybody, A thing of beauty Is an expense to somebody. A good cont may hide a creased shirt, bat a clove betrays Its secret every time. The pen may be mlghter than the sword, but the typewriter Is awarded the damages. Nothing is so sacred to a woman as the obligation to find out some thing about someone else's business. More Limited Trains ox Ogden Route San Francisco Chicago thsu unv other transcontinental route From points in Western and Southern Oregon the logical way to go east is via !San Francisco or Sacramento and Ogden. The time is fast, the connections good for all eastern cities. Dining cars, observation cars, standard and tourist sleeping cars. .Equipment to fit the purse of every traveler, Overland Limited Train de Luxe Pacific Limited San Francisco Limited Atlantic Express Our local agent will be plensed to answer any questions SOUTHERN PACIHC UNION PACIFIC John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Or. u STATE NEWS ; ! $ s $ I During the year just closed 124!l ves sels with a tonnage of 3,71 1,280 tons entered the Astoria, Oregon, custom house, with vessels with a total tonnage of I,THJ,9(W tons cleared for domestic and foreign ports. According to the records in the Astoria custom house Mi) vessels loaded at the mills in the loner Columbia Hiver district during Ii)13,.nml their aggregate car goes amounted to 2i.'.'i,41.'ti,7f 7 feet of lumber. In addition to these, four rafts containing LM,tlO0,0U0 feet of logs and piling were towed to California, mak ing the total lumber shipments by water from the mills in this district 2i7,4Jli, 7!)7 feet. In the same 12 months '20.) vessels loaded fi.",27(j,!)l(i feet of lum ber at the upper river mills, giving a grand total of ol2,70.'l,"4:i feet as the amount of lumber shipped from the Columbia River in cargoes and rafts during the year just closed. Heavy snow in the mountains has driven numbers of deer to the valley in Southern Oregon. Ravages of the ani mals are reported in a broccoli field two miles from Koseburg, and rabbit hunters saw the animals two days ago within half a mile of the city limits. Truck gardens with cabbage, winter lettuce and similar crops are the delight of the animals. The richest person in Oregon has an annual income of from $300,000 to $400,000; ono other individual has an income of from $1,:j(IO,0UO to $200,000 five have incomes between $75,000 and $100,000, 10 with incomes from $50,000 t 7",00() and 10 between $40,000 and $.10,000. The department of the interior, in a recent decision, held that Alkali Lake was not a navigable body of water and was therefore open to entry under the mining laws of the United States. Suit was brought by the Oregon Borax com pany some time ago to prove that the lakes were not uuvigable. Their reason for taking this action was that the bed of the lake is said to contain valuable deposits of soda. Brownsville Times; While engaged in hunting, Fred Malone and Allen Jlc (Jueen were suddenly attracted by the sharp barking of one of their dogs; up on Hearing the spot, where the dogs were stationed, they found a large deer whih had just been killed by a wild animal. They put tho dogs on the trail and soon treed and killed the cougar which measured seven feet eight inches. Med ford Muil; Jt. is not probable that the dairy output of Jackson coun ty will increase much, if any, this year. Feed is too scarce, and thereforo too high in price, to begin with, and th prospect of another year of drouth, with no irrigation in a large area of the; valley to overcome it, is too great to risk enlarging the dairy herds any. John Beynolds, of the Antelope coun try, killed a large black bear on Tues day in a small pasture near his hut. H had three young liogs, one of which mysteriously disappeared a few day prior to that day. The appearance of the benr early Tuesday morning ex plained tho mystery. REAL ESTATE TRANSTEBS IT. 11. Craig et ux to rtebreca .T. Baker X 1-2 lot 1 blk. II. University add Salem. R I.. Worden to Joseph Schmitt pt lot 7 blk. Hi -Noli Hill annex. (has. Johnson to ,T. S. Uhoades lot 1-2-.'! unit 4 blk. 11 Highland udd Srt lem. Almost, and Katie Hilfieker to Al bert. J. Hilfieker lots ," and ti, Spring er's Fruit Tracts No. t. Try Capital Journal Want Ads. Says Indigestion Comes From An Excess of Hydro chloric Acid LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 1868 CAPITAL $500,000.00 Transact a General Banking: Business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT A well known authority stales (hut stomach trouble and indigestion is near ly always due to acidity add stomach nni) not, as most folks believe, from n lack of digestive juices. He states that an excess of hydrochloric neid In the stomnch retards digestion and starts food fermentation, then our meal sour like gnibnge in a rnn, forming neid fluids and gases which inflate the fluids and gases which inflate the get that heavy, lumpy feeling In the chest, we eructate sour food, belch gas, or have heartburn, flatulence, water brish, or nausea. lie tells us to lay aside nil digestive aids nnd instead, get from any phar macy four ounces of dad Salt d take a tablesponnfnl in a glass of water be fore breakfast while It Is effervescing, and furthermore, to continue thin for one week. While relief follows the first dose, It is important to neutralize the acidity, remove the giis nmkiiig mass, start the liver, stimulate the kid- , BATTLE CREEK NEWS (Capital Journal Special Service.) The parent teacher association of Battle Creek school had the pleasure of hearing I'rofessor Kilpntrick, Friday, January 7. Tho organization is get ting a very good stmt under the able leadership of Mrs. W. 8. Lehman, Mr. Kilpntrick is connected with the exten sion work of tho University of Oregon and gave the organization a great many excellent suggestions which will aid them in their work in the district. The at tendance In school has been very good this year nnd everyone is showing interest in the school work. RABIES AND COYOTES Salt Lake City, Utah, Jan. IS. Rab ies and methods of exterminating coy otes aud other predatory animals prey- ling on their flocks were discussed at the opening session of the I'tsh Wool I (I rower' association here tody. Three hundred delegate are in attendance. with t'resiitvnt Oeorgo Austin presid ing. i . No deeisiou was reached as tn the policy to be pursued in (hi connection. It is declared that the livestock in terests of Utah sustain a loss of 1)00,000 annually through the open tioiis of predatory animals one half of which is sustained by sheep men. his position r Llkelilm?" snorted the Old Codger, nferrlns to, a neighbor whom he did notln nny wise appreciate. "I have t.n ninrA iiqa fni htm thnn a min with ' dyed whiskers has for another man with dyed whiskers! That's bow I feel toward Henry J. Swank con found him!" , s - A CRYING EVIL '. Mrs. Sparenotrod. MarJotU, It was (or your own good that I punished you. l hore are some things that a mother knows best. Marjorle (between sobs). I don't ?ee I don't see why mothers couldn't all be grandmothers I AN INTERESTING POINT First Chlni-nan. I don't under stand the difference between the Christian sects. Second Chinaman. Neither do I. I ronder which on controls the most Sims. ) FORETHOUGHT. Sportsman I notice that you keep tornlciM cattle entirely, Instead of tho liorned variety. Native Yes; hunters from the city hain't quite so likely to think a horn less cow I a vtately buck with beau tiful eight-pronged antler. And sometimes a llltlo learning laves a nvm from Jury duty. Dr. W. A. COX Pi W PAINLESS DENTIST 303 State Street SALEM, ORE. 50? Reductions on all Dental Work during January 1916 CLEANING FREE Plates as low as $7 Gold Crowns .WW." $3.50 Painless Extraction ' $50 Guaranteed Work. Lady Attendant Modern and Sanitary Office. PHONE 926 303 STATE ST. Dr. W. A. Cox Always Watch This Ad Changes Often mHmtt HmmwHMnmwmu. rUK ll-lf. Wf 11 II lkIVT A rI a We bar all kind of Aim Hl.diru W .),... o . . for the woods. " ' "" """" "a -WS All kind flf CnmrrmtmA Trn k.iL f . .... good 300.00 Laundry MaDg.l, slightly used for wifourt? original 4 15 AND 130 NTTW OVr.RnoiTB at km I v7 1 1-3 cents per pound for old ragi, I pay highest pries for hides and for. H. Steinbock Junk Co. in. w .v n Th'. ?1UM of HlU 1 MimB Bargains. 80! North Cnmninr Utr.f a "m 4