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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1916)
itorial Page of "The Capita THCn.-OAY f.VKXI.Vli, MY,v 4. Ill If!. CHARLES H. FIiHEB, Editor tad Manager. Ed 1 Journal it: ITBUMIKU i:VEl:V KVKMVi. F..V. F.PT SC.VOAY, SALEM, ORK0X, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. s. barnfs. Pre-Mont chas. if fishi:i:. Vice-president DwRA C AXDRKSF-.V. Sec. and Trea- sll; Iaily by carri. r. ir year Iaily by mail, per year s( IMITIUN' JiATEr i'i.') Per ni"rtth IVr iimnth FILL LEASED VII;E TKI.F.GRAPIl RKI'URT T"ew EAST Efi I: EI' It ES K N'T AT I V i'.S York, WanMwi-Vi:liaii.n Special Agency, Tribune ItuilJiug The Capital Journal carrier !( arc in-t rm-t.-il to put the papers on the porch, if the (airier .? n..t ib. tl.is, wise you. cr neglects g-Hitn the paper to you da time, kindly phone t Ii circulation manager, as tlii is tin- only nay we 'aa dctei mint wlo-thcr or not tin- curriers arc l-dluwing in"tru. tii-ns. llioue Main 81. THE SENSELESS SEASON OF STRIKES BEGINS Representative Keating, of Colorado, has introduced a resolution in congress asking that the Secretary of the Treasury make public all income tax returns. Recently Basil M. Manly, chief investigator of the industrial rela tions committee, declared in a published statement that more han $400,000,000 should be received from the income tax annually instead of the $80,000,000 that the tax yields. This indicates general tax dodging by those with incomes. Manly's report also shows that fifteen billion dollars are paid in this country annually in salaries and wages. With Seattle courts trying to make judicial record of any peccadillas the immortal Washington may have had, and the Chicago courts overhauling Shakespeare and Bacon to settle an unsettleable dispute as to authorship, it would seem the judiciary of the country will have to be enlarged. However it suggests a means by which many old and endless contentions might be put at rest. The authorship of some of the books of the Bible are in dis pute. Why not get the matter before a Seattle or Chicago judge and having the matter settled right. CAN YOU BLAME HIM? HENRY KIMMEL WHO JUST CAME BACK FROM NEW YORK SAYS IF YOV WANT TO KEEP UP WITH THE 400 YOU VE GOT TO BE CAfcEFULWHM YOVi SMOKE. HE'S SO PARTICULAR. NOW THAT HE TURNS HIS BACK ON EVERYTHING BUT A The usual May strikes are on and accompanied by the same old attempt to win by brute force. Breaking win- .1 , .1 ,1...,.,,,-. n A Vn,iiMn irrA.-c r nKnnf nc 4YkflieV O ,.mnhi,. ,ir,m,m(ir,v w n Hnim n rnnl.l i The W in Seattle having under oath asserted that! v...,v . . . 7" ",.- Washington did not use profanity, and so found Haffer be devised in an asylum lor the leeble minded. A stiiwe , . .. ... 1 . . J . . , r , LitiL.tf L-in-i.f .vont u .Ir.nmod to defeat ! the young socialist, guilty of slander in saying he did. untrviii iJt luui uiiiit vi u wuixov ' ' - ii . mi . t y' from the start In the first place it arraigns public sentiment the most! powerful force extant, against the strikers; and in trie j second place it puts the government, state and national, which are also some powers, on the other side of the dispute. This is what has happened in all strikes of that char acter, and what has already been accomplished in Pennsyl vania, although the strike is but a few days old. Troops are on the ground to protect property and enforce the law, and it will be enforced, without bloodshed if possible, with it in such quantities as may be necessary, if strikers compel it. When Uncle Sam or the state takes a hand the strikers are no longer fighting their recent employers, but the government. There can be but one result. True the strikers are mostly foreigners, and the com panies employing them are not blameless as to the results, for they are hired because they work cheaper than Amer ican labor. Corporate greed is at the foundation of most strikes; but misguided labor is responsible for a pretty good sized minority of them. ' It is hard to understand why strikes occur, for in nine out of ten of them each side, win or lose, really loses more than it gains. Capital loses in ruined business, and labor in lost time. The former can get more business, but the laborer's time once lost can never be recovered. It is that much taken out of his life. opens up another case. Thomas Jefferson having stated in writing, that Washington used profanity pretty freely, should not those twelve jurymen be arrested and punished for slandering Jefferson in their implied declaration that he lied? THEY BEAT THE INHERITANCE TAX LAW TO IT Colonel Roosevelt after receiving a great ovation in Chicago, returned to New York and at once made public his opinion that he hoped "the convention would nom inate a man upon whom the republicans and progressives can combine." Then the colonel smiled and posed for the camera men to take the picture of the "ideal" candidate he had in mind when the heartfelt hope was expressed. There should be a large attendance at the Commercial Club tonight to discuss the coming Cherry Fair. The date is to be fixed and other general matters settled. Salem is widely known because of this fair which has be come a fixed institution and interest in it should be more general than ever before. Another industry ruined by free trade! Three hun dred and fifty paper mill employes at Oregon City have f Packed , for 10c V VALUABLE EACH PACKAGE Hayesville Happenings (Capital Journal Special Service. 'i Huyesvillc, Ore., May (The Liter- been granted a voluntary raise in wages of 10 per cent.jSr ;;;;;:;!',:;,,;;:,,"' i lo-viiiji Miifnini was carried out: lU- Dallal California expected to get $1:55,000 in inheritance taxes from the Spreckels family, but it forgot apparently that it was dealing with the Spreckels family. Some time ago! Mrs. Anna C. Spreckels, realizing she had about reached the end of her earthly pilgrimage, and the further fact il . 1 1 ... I ll ..ii. I mat sne owned some rive minions nonars worm oi sugar i and other stocks that she could not well take with her, thoughtfully made a gift of these to Claus A. and Rudolph Spreckels and Mrs. Emma C. Ferris. The great state of California whose laws protected the Spreckels family inj the accumulating and retaining possession ot a big bunch of milloons of which the sum mentioned above was a part, felt that it was entitled under its laws to a rake off when the owner no longer needed the plunder, it having pro vided laws covering uist such cases. Good crops and good prices will make good times in the Willamette valley next Fall. And it begins to look as if that combination will be in working order this year. To an impartial observer it begins to look as if both sides were whipped to a standstill in that little fracas over in Europe. General Obregon has concluded not to expel the Amer- ! ican troops from Mexico for the present at least. fjiiota ippiingicnijmQS irWoit.rravcn AFTER DEATH I do not know just what may hap, when I go tumbling Tin iwinmrli c nf off the map, into the outer void; I hope to draw a pair of Mrs. Spreckels' bounty! though they had other millions j wings, and crown and ! robe, and kindred things, and harp nt Co, it t w wnv nmi th d-do l,m,rht Rnit to' of celluloid, but little do I walk the floor, ii did not see it that way, and, so the state brought suit to recover what the law said, it should have. Did it get it : You can gamble that it did. and that right square in the neck. The judge who wrote the decision, held there was nothing to show that the gifts were made in order to beat the state out of inheritance tax, although that was what they did; and as Mrs. Spreckels was beyond the jurisdic tion of the court and could not be examined as to her in tentions, the state lost its case, and the $1:55.000 it ex- i.l i. i. 1 !i 1 1 ..i . ...I,.. TT.. pecien 10 gei, uecaue a rmuu mu print uui j., ... Spreckels' intentions were. A wise judge loaded with w tiiAJU technicalities and a sugar king are a combination too much for a trifle like a great state that cannot enforce its own laws in its own favor by its own judge. Sugar is mighty, and growing more so every day. or lose a chance to sleep and snore, by wor rying my head about the things that may befall when I step off this whirling ball, and line up with the dead. I think I've all a man should need, in this, the simple little creed, that's pasted in my lid: "With all your fellowmen be square; be kind and just to all, nor care a cent what others did." If one is square and just and kind, I don't be merica Koll full mus rofponJcd to lv Ii"i,s troni MiaKesic;ire. A tale from Shakespeare. T.. T IIOI.IS. A few ill t.-r-t i iiy items aliout til? Sixty-fourth congress. Kutiy. V. Rot zien. Stnrv of a present dav hero. 0, K. McAfee. Hmv Ka.iter is celebrated in different lands. Joe Fitts. Selected reading Sonic Timelv Topic lilsie Wikoff. Hecitatiou Olive Kiser. Ilavesville liappentny Tecl.' ('host story Frank Fitts. I Sour; Swiss Vodlers on Their Return j Trip. Double quartette. Kccitation Janette Ingersol. Taper Ford jukes. Albert Wulf-j mover. A spelling match followed by the school. The Ladies' Missionary society will meet on Wednesday. May 1(1. with Mrs. J. Voder. All ladies are welcome. Ida nemiii cuine home for a short slay Saturday, returning to her school Sunday p. m. , Verne Wikoff went to Portland Oil' Monday to wurk for tiie express com- pany. V. C. Privott is the possessor of a' new Fold automobile. ' licv. Lawrence will preach here next She had a yomijj lady dressed in native ; India costume, showed idols tnry wor-' Gey- i ship, etc. She also ?poke at .'! p. m. I Flowers are in bloom, fruit trees are blossoming and all nature iudicates spline is here, and there is promise of mi abundant harvest. After a 10 (lavs' vacation Leo GroiUie ami S. Mover left Sundav cvenini; fori is. reported as retting along nicely. .week. Dallas Local News . (Capital Journal Special Service. Ha lias, Or., May 4. A suit for di vorce was filled Tuesday in the circuit couit by Mary K. Sax against her hus band John P. Sax. the plaintiff chart!- Weak Women 1 An Oregon Woman Testifies, Lent. Oregon. " Wlinn I wni frying tlinmgb the critical time of middle life, I took several bottles of Ir. Pierce's Favorite Prescription nud it helped me Princess Chimay, formerly Clara Ward, is having trouble over her very last fiance, Albino Chachabato, an orchestra leader, who is under arrest at the Italian con sulate in Chambery, France, for failure to respond to his country's call to the colors. Hard hearted officials do not take into consideration the much louder call, to join the princess, the lovelorn Chachabato had to contend with. The Princess Chimay should leave him in solitary confine ment until his name was fully recovered, at least. i (ii i i i i i ii v i "l. i woiiuernuiv. l vnoiiui, toiv rniuigu m neve hell be behind, when thev distribute faVor of tins miicim. u'v iw med crowns: he'll be a credit to this globe, and,;'11;'1'11'11 r?' DLTveryii" in! he will swap for snowy robe, his workworn hanumeaowns.. ailment." -miw. Ella Harold. Religion's tangled, teased and vext, with dogma and con-J u'nta Kzn- At the first grnuitoniB of any de- flirtincr tfvr hv cirrps enlittinfj- Tin irsr nnd fill thnt fellows ...n.. i : iui :,.0U K(-fl n,.A i;,K u, ' raiigoiiient of the leiiiiiiiiie organism really lieeu IS just, uiul snuiie uiuc titt-u, iu tiiiuu mt,at any period golden stairs. I (Cmtinued from rfle Una.) of lite, the one sate. reallv helpful remedy is Or. Pierce's ; Favorite Prescription. , i Tens of thousands of women have ja handy nail at homo, ready to take taken it with unfailing success for down and inarch off with, if the call J diseases of a womanly nature. to aims was sounded. pr PiProe's Favorite Prescription is lie's u better man than you are. Mr.1, tnie fria t women in times of Ameiicnn Citiren and you'd admit it if trial and at times of paiu when the you walked the streets of these Swiss I organs are not performing their func toH iis. You'd know how to die. in n ; timw. For headache, backache, hot pin. u; nut any muu Knows inai. i ins nasliPS, catarrhal condition, bearing- iouow snows now to ligui. LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 18G3 CAPITAL $300,000.00 Transact a General Banking Business Safety Deposit Boxes SAVINGS DEPARTMENT (Article Xo. i points out that physi cally (i ii. I as a soldier, the average Swiss, thanks to his military system, appears to be a better man, man for mini, than the average male American.) FRANK GOTCII ILL. or a farm hand; he'll go to jiiil if your job isn't open for vou wheu von tome ba.k. What's more, if he has tiny pride nt all, he'll pay you your nusvn while you're i;ouo. Let his neighbors find out hv didn't and they'll out him dead. The next year, when you're twenty one, you'll troop off in the summer to a military I'ump where you'll spend eleven (lavs ami eotv mincer after that, for ten summers, vou'll spend eleven ihivs ' i , ,'unp. I ( hica.iio, Muy 4. Frank Ootch. the Hv this time you're thirtvtno veal's ."rentier, ill and but a shadow of his 1 uud. at that ime, vou pass out of I tormer felt, is throunh vntli the mat pame loday. no qiut me circus wuu which he mu travcliuir and retired to his farm. Hut eh naid that lie" now weighs ).". whereas when in sood health hi heft was He will not meet doe Steelier for the world's cham pionship, lioti'h does uot know the cause of hi illness, which is apparently the regular iirmv into the laudwehr. You'll do eleven days every four years, until you have served an addi tional twenty two (lays. So you've served in all loll days. All this tune, from the day you left the military school when you were twentv, you ve had vour ritle, iiiiilorin clown sensation, mental depression, dizziness, fainting spells, lassitude and exhaustion, women should never fail ' to take this tried and true medicine. I I'reparod from nature's roots and herbs, it contains no alcohol or nar- cotic, nor anv harmful hipredient. c..i 1 : ..:i,., ' .,i, i. . i: Ti f If your dealer does not keep the sugar Coaid tablets, send fifty cents ( in Etamps ) for small box, or $1.00 iu currency for a large box. Writ rootor Tierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, X. Y., to-day. l.W page book on woman's diseases sent free. field kit and ammunirron banging upon I stomach trouble, Pr. Tierce's Tleasant Tellots are the original little Liver Tills. Theee tiny, sugar-coated, anti-bilions (rranules the smallest and the easiest to take. One little Pellet for It huaiive three for cathartic, Independence Man Insane. Charles Richardson of Independence was committed to the insane asylum at Salem, Monday. Richardson has been acting queer for the past week and a his mind was weakening rapidly he was biou'ht to Dallas Monday and up on the reccuiinendatii.il of Dr. V. (.'. Slants the examining physician, was sent to the asylum. It is thought that hard work is responsible for the man lo-ing his mind. tire week. Roseburg Eevi The Dallas Kigli School base ball team will meet the team from the YVoodhum High school on the local grounds Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Snndberg and Mrs. E. K. 1'iasecki drove to Portland, Tuesday, in Mr. Snndberg 's machine. Dr. nud Mrs. A. B. Starluuk spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Star buck's mother, Mrs. Mary Beaver at West Salem. W. V. Fuller, fire warden for Tolls county, was a Sheridan business visitor Tuesday morning. I'arl Graves of Ballston, republican candidate for county assessor was in ! the city this week. j Charles Mann has severed his eon- neotion with the Hotel Gail and with j Mrs. Mann left Monday for Albany where they will make their future1 home. " Jack Fjikin, a student at the Ore OUR PRICES Until Further Notice Xo. f sack white cornmeal S0O No fi yellow cornmeal 30c Five pounds box Macaroni.. ..30c No. ft ( ream Cereal 30c No. ! sack Graham 30c No. 9 sack Pancake Hour.... 30c No. ti'Self Rising Flour 30c Five pounds best cream rolled t 25c Large package Liberty Oats 30c Large pkg. Liberty wheat.... 30c .'! cans Libby 's Solid Pack Tomatoes .... 5c Creamery Butter, pound S5c " cans choice Iowa Corn 25c Fie Delivery. Phone 1467 R. N. MORRIS Sunday. May both morning and even-! gnn. Agricultural college, spent Satur ing. The contest in the Sunday school j day and Sunday w ith relatives and closed last Sunday vvirh a large attend- friends in this citv. ance. there being 21.- present. The Mrs. Fred Rich' of .Summit. Oregoa, Pinks were in the lead by 12s points. j is 8 BUPSt at the uome pf ner f0n ilrs. . K. Hopkins, a returned mis- j Rj.-h. sionary trorn lelugu. India, gave an in-1 foresting addreis here Sunday a. m., il-t , lustrated by different things used there. I F. Slade of Salem, was a visitor the first of the week. O. Hubbard of Salem was a r.illaJ visitor with relatives and friends Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. f. L. ( rider are io Portland this week on a short businea trip. T. A. F.'iggs of Portland visited with, Dallas relatives 'the first of the week. Miss Josephine Luebke and Mis Portland to resume their school duties inO"' Hayes, student at the Oregoa there. i Normal at Monmouth spent Saturday Walter Fuhrur has an attack of. the ' a"d Sunday with relatives in Dallas. measles. i L. V. Mackin of Monmouth, republi- 1 Mrs. Win. Fitts underwent an opera- can candidate for County Clerk was a Theodore tion for appendicitis Monday a. m. She j county scat visitor the first Of th is ronnrteil AS (rettillrr lllnnir nir.i.lr ....... i BROWNING AMUSEMENT ! POVTPiKV AT TrCTTTTAT. A contract was executed here late hist night whereby the Brownin? Amusement company, of Salem will furnish street attractions for tlie an nual Strawberry carnival to be held ia iug him with cruel and inhuman treat-' Roseburg late iu the present montn. ir.ent. In her complaint the plaintiff'; The Browning attractions include a also charges that her husband continu- i merry-go-round. Ferris w heel, three ally abused her with violent language.' street shows and a push ball. The corn that w hile sick he pulled her and her j pany will also conduct a number of baby from the bed and that he has stands and amusement .concessions. The failed to support her. The couple were Browning shows will arrive in Roseburg married in October, 1014. j " Sunday preceding the I. (. O. F. con- 1 vention. and will remain here for an en- Always Watch This Ad Changes Often Strictly correct weight, iquar deal and highest price for all kind of junk, metal, rubber, hide and fnr. I pay 2Vj(5 per pound for old rig. Big stock of all siies second hand incubators. All kind corrugated iron for both roofs and buddings. Eoofing paper and wcond kand linoleum. H. Steinback Junk Co. Tho House of Half a Million Bargain. S02 Xorth Commercial St Pion MS .1