itorial Page of "The Capita Journa Monday kvkmm; A f i U 21, I'.'UJ. CHARLES H. FISHEB, Editor and Manager. 1 FCB1.ISUED EVEBY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY, SALEM, OREGON, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. L. B. BARNES, C1IAS. H. EISUER, UuBA C. ANDHKSEN, President Vine -1'rraiUt'nt fcec. und Treaa. SCBSCKI1TIOX BATE3 Dsily bv carrier, per voar Ifi.OO Per month... Daily by mail, per year 3.00 Per month. .: ...45o ...35c FULL LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH KEPOUT Kew York EASTERN KEPRESEXTATIVE3 Wtrd-Lewis-Williams Special Agency Tribune Building The Capital Journal carrier buys nre instructed to put the paper on the porih. If the carrier dues nut do this, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the circulation liiunuger, ut this is the only way ve can determine whether or not the carriers are following instructions. Phone Main 81. JUGGLING FIGURES TO DECEIVE THE PUBLIC Dor' I'Cll' l II II li'l 111 H-- II'" M'liii' i'l ,1'tr imi w i- - reVH.ii i t n li: IMU.'"' I I'lT'ili'llill' ..11,1, Co three 'iV.!l I . rs r nitlier eive.l : CI ,1 I,' .i.-l.e.l i ,1 for I'Slil Mi! nmiitln prei-e-lin Apiil I Jie M:itfiii'n i'i:i ii.-hiii' tn llie Salem pn-,,,.1 :'ii e fir u 'v..-j 'i er tnc. -' i inte.l in Salem on'sicl.' f the il:u,i of 'I'lie Stnlesman preteiitiiius iicv-ii:i t..". Tiie tni ! of the uewspn it t In' sah'iii piKf.lt ii'i- for Lie ouster named above aM- !!'-.!'- us the iiino.int ot rnl.ilie paid by the teu niit-i le ul' llie pl'i'it of -!'h" Stali'-i'iiiii, or an average mouth fur the ler. The nl-me 'li i-s not inclinle the iio.t:i''e "stainpK. I'i'ti.i' t.iat i;ii:,te:, the St iteMim n eil .7v7 lor io-l:ij!i' m;iIh I. Salem Statesman, This editorial statement of the morning paper is a plain attempt to deceive the public by juggling figures; an attempt to secure business from advertisers by mis representing its circulation. The Statesman Publishing Co. prints and circulates the Daily Statesman, the Twice-a-Week Statesman, the Pacific Homestead, the Oregon Poultry Journal, the Teachers' Monthly, and possibly other publications. The principal part of this $('SS.50 postage bill it claims to have paid was no doubt incurred by the Pacific Homestead, the Poultry Journal and Teachers' Monthly. .Will the Statesman, now that it has raised this issue, be honest enough to tell how much the postage bills of the Daily Statesman amount to for the three months re ferred to? Of course it will not. Has it told the truth about its total postage even? It did not tell the truth when it intimated that the other newspapers of Salem paid but $( a month postage. The Daily Capital Journal holds receipts for postage paid during those three months as follows: January, $ IS.:1,:!. February, $30.51. March, $74.19. Total, $17;!.0:i. This means that the Daily Capital Journal sent by mail 17::(T pounds of papersnearly all on the rural routes of Marion and Polk counties. In addition to this the Capital Journal delivered by carrier (on which no postage is paid) an average of 2:'00 copies daily over twicers many as the Statesman delivered by carrier. The Capital Journal also sends out many packages of papers by express every evening to other towns. Then "here is another circulation fact. On April first the publisher of the Daily Capital Journal filed with the postmaster of Salem his swotn statement that the circu lation of the Capital Journal had averaged 1111 copies daily for six months. TVm tiiililisbor of the Dailv Statesman made a similar statement that his paper had sent out on an average of ,'U79 papers daily lor six monins. These sworn statements gave tne capital journal an average daily lead over the Statesman of 2. It is, as a matter of fact, exceeding the Statesman's present circula tion by a much larger figure. The Capital Journal has never made any secret of its circulation figures. It does not believe in juggling. It is not going to ask advertisers to take the publishers word or oath for it. It has become a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, an organization formed by na tional advertisers to protect their interests. Its auditors are on the way here now to check up the Capital Journal's lists, its postage receipts, its paper bills and all its books and records relating to circulation. Their report will be accepted as final and official by all national advertisers. It will then be a newspaper with .a known, guaranteed circulation. Will the Statesman take similar action, or will it con tinue to juggle and misrepresent figures, in the attempt to obtain money by false pretenses from both local and national advertisers? Why not do business open and above board? FAILURE DUE TO MISFITS been great as a journalist and many of us, of the news paper fraternity might have done better at almost any thing else. Many an actor who knew not the word "en core" would have risen higher in the world as a hod car rier, and poets who let their pencils spoil good paper would have fitted their surroundings better if they had done something besides, as Saxe puts it, "Harangue the land scape they were born to till." The larger portion of mankind is at work at jobs in which they are misfits. What is tine of men is also true of communities and localities. In old times before electric ity brought power to any place that needed it, the location of manufacturing industries was naturally where there was water power ayailable. Such communities had the jobs for which they were suited picked out for them. Now this is changed and manufacturing centers de pend not so much on nearness to water power as on con venience to raw materials and transportation to markets. . The Willamette valley, one of the richest in the world, has not been the success it should have been, and for the reason that it has not yet discovered the crop to which it mainly should be devoted, unless flax solves the matter. It has been a great hop producer, is yet, but the demand for that product is decreasing, and naturally the whole valley cannot be devoted to it. It is also a great prune center, and while the returns from this source have been generally good it is not, in many respe' ts, an ideal crop for the whole valley; one rea son being the same as that that makes hops no longer so desirable a crop, that is, the limited demand. Hood River has made a country wide reputation for its apples; and the Yakima valley in Washington, has achieved fame along the same lines. Roseburg, long fam ous for its turkeys, has developed another crop that prom ises to add to its reputation and bring it an abundance of coin, the growing of broccoli. The beaver dam lands of the valley have found their natural use in the growing of onions and vegetables. The question confronting the biggest of Oregon's val leys is not one of growing a bushel or two more wheat or some other product to the acre; but the finding of a dis tinctive crop which will bring fair returns on land held at the present prices of valley lands. Wheat cannot be successfully grown on lands costing $150 or $200 an acre. Even with good crops it will not,, one year with another, more than pay small interest and taxes on the amount invested. It is time every farmer do a little experimenting along the- line of new and untried crops. If this is done intelli gently it will not be long until someone strikes something that will bring results. Flax gives promise of doing much for', the valley, and may go a long way toward solving the problem ; but the farmer should not be content with that but keep everlast ingly experimenting until not only one revenue producer is discovered, but several. When the valley discovers what it is best adapted for ,it will be the greatest farming sec tion in the northwest and one of the best in the world. 5 STATE NEWS ; Bilker. Ore.: Bits of the skeleton of a prehistoric niiimal have been' dug up in the Virtue Ehits district by iluuriie C. Weaver, a prospector, v.ha brought one of them to the city and sought if have a hardware dealer repair the loose purts. The bones were found in gravel beds, and are the first ever found in that vicinity. The fossil brough' in was ti lower jawbone which is largely decayed, but wherever the bone iins giv en away, a 'silacious -leposit has renew ed the strength of the honey combed os seous tissue. A disu,guis-'ifi,x feature is the presence of two pa'-iiih-l tii-l-s, six inches in length, protrudin strailit from "the bone, revealing that only llie outside of the ivory h-is nicii injured by weathering. Medford .Mail: Phials of gold .lust and fuicksilver and packagc-i of -ihccl-ite and tungsten ore tire bein.7 exhibit ed in the hotel conidors and on the streets very frequently these day.-. A very large percentage of the local popu lation is much interested in sei.ivs of claims, old mid new, situated in till parts of this district, and much develop ment work is being planned. Prospec tors ore becoming more numerous' every day and an old-time mining excitement appeals to be forming. The annual looses of livestock on the National forest ranges of the west, due to predatory animals, are over $jiH.UH0. An organized campaign is now on to exterminate these animals. "Wolves are responsible for about 70 per cent ol the cattle losses, while beat's cause most of the remainder. Approximately 75 per cent of the sheep losses nre due to coyotes, 20 per cent to bears, and five per cent to lynxes and wild cats. Moun tain lion-s nre charged with killing only a few head of cattle and sheep. No matter what happens in the way of changed con ditions, political or other, the fanner gets a jolt some where before the matter is settled. The situation as to Germany caused a decline in wheat in Chicago, of two cents a bushel. Why should it? This country is not send ing and has not sent any wheat to Germany for nearly two "years. No matter what the result of the present strained relations, no market now available will be inter fered with. If the affair is settled peaceably, which all hope it may be, there will be no change in markets, and if unfortunately we sever our relations with Germany, (he fact should add to rather than reduce prices for bread- stuffs. On top of this the government reports show there is a shortage in winter wheat, and that the crop at the best will be two or three hundred million bushels short of that of 1915. The dredging that is to be done on Haynes inlet by the l'ort of Coos Bay will be started soon by the Larson Dredging company, probably within the next week. The inlet has shoaled, and the people living on it desire to have it deepened so gasoline launches can ply at any stage of the tide. sj sj: ; sj J & TABLOIDS Purse Strings That Reach Across a Continent To open your heart, or close your deal, the safest, surest, swiftest way to send money is by WESTERN UNION The cost is small, the convenience great. To know how ask any Western Union Office. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. Vdit Mason . Boston. While eating raw oysters. F. J. Barker, of New York, opened one MMt nf ,,,,1,,.,., I 111 ....nrli TV, v.... ........ I'.'l-l" " .' .....7. of them were of considerable size and value. New York. After trying to train his neighbor's .'IU pigs to make their grind chorus musical, Ueorge M. Cohan de cided it couldn 't be done and is in court to have the sipialers "abated." Xew York. Seven Hundred and seventy-one scarf pins of values ranging from a dime to several hundred dollars are parts of the million dollar estate of Joseph K. (iay being probated here. Chicago. Short skirts for men and no skirts nt nil for women have been approved by Chicago's beach censors as the official bathing costumes at the municipal beaches this summer The mens costumes, to be furnished by the city, will include a brief shirt-like skirt, nbout the length of a cannibal's grass apron. The women will wear bloomers and 110 stm-kings. WHIRLWIND OR ZEPHYR? It is undoubtedly true that the great majority of fail ures in life are due to the fact that men choose pursuits, or have them thrust on them for which they are unfitted. The man who fails as a carpenter might have been a de cided success as a blacksmith and the blacksmith not suc cessful, might have been pre-eminently so as an architect. . The lawyer, plodding along in a medoicre way might have As a result of "Democratic free trade that has ruined the sheep and wool industries", the price of both sheep and wool have reached a higher price than since the civil war, and sheepmen generally are ardently hoping for a continuance of the same kind of free trade. On top of this comes the report from Lebanon that the 17,000 pound pool of mohair was sold there Saturday for 48 3-8 cents a pound, the highest price ever paid in the county for a pool of mohair. This sale topped the market this year by about two cents, and was nearly 15 cents a pound above the price paid in former years. rortland. Ore., April 21. After con ducting a whirlwind cnmpaigii in .' gou cities and tow ns. Theodore E. Bar ton, candidate for the republican nomi nation for president is today on his way to California. Burton's campaign manager express ed himself as thoroughly satisfied with the reception tendered the Ohioun ii. this state. THE SINGER I sing my song the whole day long, and keep my harp a-going, to try to cheer the people near, while ' dodging bricks they're throwing. I sing of hope and all such dope, of gay and bright tomorrows, of can ning care and black despair, and putting lids on sorrows. Year after year this sort of cheer, I'm tirelessly providing, and ray winged steed keeps up his speed, though galled by too much riding. Throughout this land the folks will stand a lot of misfit sing ing, if but the bard, when whooping hard, a gladsome note is springing. Though cracked his voice, if he'll rejoice, and laugh at woe and wailing, men will remark, "Long may his bark on smiling seas be sailing! Yet poets write of starless night, and ghouls and women weep ing, of lovers dead and vampires dread that batten on the sleeping. The dismal pote oft finds his goat has from his keeping wandered; his odes won't bring enough, by jing, to have his nightie laundered. For in this vale the rhythmic wail will never tempt sane buyers, who'll blow their piles for cheerful smiles and lays by lilting liars. AS The Council of Portland Tarent Teachers' Associations went on record Saturday as favoring a law making unlaw ful the sale of cigarettes and the papers that go with them. They will have a bill providing for this introduced in the next legislature if present plans are carried out. Thus step by step do we climb toward perfection or something. LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 18G8 CAPITAL $300,000.00 Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Women generally do not agree with that Chicago judge who held that Bacon wrote Shakespeare's plays. The reason advanced is rather convincing, and that is that no person as dry and didactic as an English lord could ever have written such delightful and true-to-life love scenes. However they overlook the fact that in anything pertaining to bacon Chicago is authority. The weather clerk was good natured yesterday and the Easter bonnet, hat, headgear or what ever Dame Fashin calls the lid feminine this year, flaunted itself gaily and unafraid. It was also quite frequent and numerous, and some of it really good to look at while at work. "SPEAR HEAD" Ail OLD TIME FAV0RlTE The I'rA Popular Chew for a Third of a Century PURE, RICH, FRUITY-SWEET The man who chews gets by far the most wholesome enjoyment and satis faction out of tobacco, especially if he chews plug tobacco. The rich juices of the leaf are retained in good plugs better than in any other form. For more than a generation Spear Head has held first place as the favor ite high-grade plug chewing tobacco. This unique distinction is due sole! to the wonderful quality and flavor of Spear Head the richest, mellowest, tastiest chew in the whole world. Spear Head is the choicest of all red Burlcy, hand-stemmed and made into mellow-sweet plugs in a perfectly clean,, most sanitary factory. You can't chew the flavor out of Spear Head, because it's a part of the tobacco. That rich, ripe, red Burley taste keeps on pleasing you as long as you keep on chewing. Chew Spear Head and you'll be chewing the purest and most satisfying tobacco that it's possible to make. Ia 10c cuts, wrapped in wax paper. m Ynn H aiuauic f,-:v. v" Papers; PERHAPS a deed to property, your will, papers representing your investments, notes held against other parties, correspondence of a confidential nature, contracts, the loss of which would cause you inconvenience, fire and life insurance policies Where are they now? Are they safe from fire and meddlers? Suppose fire should occur in your absence. Have others access to them so that they could be rescued-1 Have you one safe place in which to gather all your papers of value? In case of your death would these documents be easily located by authorized persons? Serious questions, are they not? They can be easily solved by having a safe deposit box in the fire and burglar proof vaults of this bank. The moderate rental is low-cost insurance against ex pensive loss. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK Member Federal Reserve Banks, Salem, Oregon Always Watch This Ad Changes Often Strictly correct weight, iquare Seal and highest prices for all kinds of junk, metal, rubber, hide and furs. I pay 2JAc per pound for old pigv Big itock of all eizei second hand incubators. AIT kinds corrugated iron for both roofs and buildings. Eoofing paper and aecond hand linoleum. H. Steinback Junk Co. The Eousa of Half a Million Bargains. S02 North Commercial St Piona 109 -