e Capita! J S.UTRHAY KVKNIMi M:iy 27, I UK.. mm. CHARLES H FISHER, Kditur and Manager. Edit I Fage ot I h ureal PUBLISHED EVERY EVEXIXCi KXcF.PT SCXD.VY, SALEM, oKKflOX, BY Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. L. 8. BABXF.S, CHAS. IL FISHER. DOliA C. AXDHESE.V, President Vice President See. and Treas. Sl'P.St RII'TIOX KATES Ciilr bv carrier, per year $-'.0o For month 4"e Daily by mail, jer year 3.01) Per tnuutli ..33c FULL LEASED WIRE TELEGRAPH REPORT EASTERN' REPRESENTATIVES New York, Ward Lewis-Williams Special Agency, Tribune Building The Capital Journal carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the rch. If the carrier due not do this, misses you, or neglects gottitiig the paper to you on time, kindly phono the circulation manager, us this is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers urn following instructions. Phone Main SI. THE HERD AT CHICAGE "MILLING" According to the Oregonian some democratic paper in this state has asked "who is William Grant Webster?" The Oregonian does not answer, and the Capital Journal admits it does not know. At the same time it calls atten tion to the fact stated in political history, that when James K. Polk was nominated for the presidency, some one dis gustedly asked: "Who in h 1 is James K.. Polk?" Yet that gentleman was elected president in spite of the fact that he was not known by the inquirer. It is not at all probable the same fate will befall Mr. Webster, but we are taught to believe in this great and glorious country of which George Washington is the father, England the mother and Roosevelt the incorrigible boy, that anyone may be president or vice-president either if he can get the consent of the people, and the nomination on the right ticket. Maybe Mr. Webster thought the time was ripe for his try at it. According to the dispatches yesterday a pool has been formed among the favorite sons at Chicago that will hold the balance of power, and see that some one of this group, composed of Root, Weeks, Burton, Sherman and Fairbanks will be the nominee. They will join forces as against Hughes and Roosevelt, according to the informa tion handed out, and will fight anyone else outside of the pool. This leaves Cummins, who is really one of the strongest candidates, outside of Hughes and Roosevelt, so far mentioned out of it. The combination looks to an outsider like a strong one, but its members do not want to overlook the fact that in the Colonel they have one of the most resourceful politicians that ever tackled a con vention. Another fact the pool does not want to overlook is, that if things do not suit Teddy, and he thinks an unfair advantage is taken of him, which he will certainly do if he is not nominated, he will jump the fence again, and in that case the nomination may not be worth as much as it cost. It is only ten days until the convention meets, buf that does not alter the fact that "it's a long way to Tip perary." Besides there are many impediments in the road. What matters it if a man gain the republican nom ination and lose the Roosevelt support? Another feature of the coming match is the entrance of the "German-American" element into it, with the slogan, "Anyone to beat Roosevelt or Wilson." Which of the "Fighting Five" has the lead is an open guess. The lead in each case being different as the source from which the estimates issue are different. Each is in the lead according to the reports from the head quarters of the especial one. Before such an appalling, yet so pitiful a tragedy as that which shocked this city yesterday morning, inends, acquaintances and the whole community can only stand silent and sorrowful, mute from the utter pathos of it. There is nothing to be said, nothing to be done. It is not for us to iudce. for that is the hands of a higher court. It is not ours to iudce for we have only, before us the bare facts of the pitiful tragedy, and the causes that led up to it. the battle that was iought in the mind ot the nusiruut and father before he blotted out the lives of those nearest and dearest to him and ended his own, we know nothing of nor will we ever know. So with tender and sympa thetic hands we can only lay them away as he would have them, together in death; cover them with flowers and keep green the memory ot them be tore the dawning ot yesterday. The land grant bill as passed by the house Thursday, among other things after providing for selling the timber from the lands, provided logged off lands shall bo open to homestead, without charge. No doubt those down east erners thought they were being generous with the public domain. If one of them could be staked out in a bunch of young firs, and among the stumps on a piece of this land and told to get busy and make a home for himself, lie would realize that life was far from being one glad1 sweet song, if that life had to maintain itself from the land. The only thing that can exist on these lands is a goat and he has to have a few days start of the under growth. Giving that land to the homesteader is about as generous as the old butcher, who, when he killed a polled angus ox, gave most of the horns to the poor. The "How to Keep Well" column in the Oregonian is real good reading and is full of amusing things as a want ail column. Yesterday, replying to someone who asked about a young lady who is thin and also troubled witV anemia, the doctor advises that "she eat more cream, milk, bread, rice and candy as a means of increasing her flesh, and for her anemia "to eat more spinach, lettuce, salads, greens, meat and eggs." The young lady is to be congratulated that she has no other troubles, or she might have to eat what the country boy said he lived on at home, which was: "A pretty much, of a good deal of most anything." The Waite trial is ended so far as actual evidence is concerned, the defendant admitting the crimes he is charged with committing, and this brings it up to the stage where the expert alienist takes a hand. Dr. Morris Kasper, the first of these to be called, says Waite is men tally unsound, or was at the time of the Peck murder. He called the disease "moral idiocy" or "moral imbecility," saying that a sufferer from such afflictions did not know the nature of his acts. It may be moral imbecility, but it certainly is no more so than the acts of the courts in ad mitting and harkening to the silly twaddle of hired alien ists whose best source of income is the "moral idiocy" of the courts. The postal department has changed its rules to meet alleged demands. Heretofore no one could have a deposit in the postal savings banks larger than $500, and not more than $100 could be deposited in any month. This has been changed so that the total deposit can now be $1,000, and as much of this as desired can be deposited at one time. This helps things from the department side of the matter, but the. hustling of the deposit is just as dif ficult as ever. A French paper takes President Wilson to task, and says he is not qualified as a mediator in any settlement that may be proposed between the warring nations be cause "he tolerated the violation of the neutrality of Belgium." In spite of the terrible conditions by which they are surrounded, those Parisian papers cannot help a bit of humor occasionally. It is in the blood. When that Montana woman chopped off her husband's head because he took a drink she "certainly cured him of 'he habit. As she used an axe for the job, why not abolish axes? They were in .this case at least more dangerous and deadly than booze, bad as that is. With Kilauea the big Hawaiian volcanoe in active erup tion, Mt. Lassen becoming active again and Roosevelt due in a few clays at Chicago the old world should begin to feel relieved of its stomach troubles. Mrs. Pankhurst says English women are fighting for the ballot. Maybe this war at home is what makes it so hard to recruit troops for the front. Those who have sampled some of the drink peddled by I bootleggers say that bad as the booze habit is, it is nothing compared to the booze itself. LADD & BUSH, Bankers Established 18G8 CAPITAL $300,000.00 Transact a General Banking Business Safety Depesit Boxes SAYINGS DEPARTMENT Mr. Charles W. Pepper will manage the Root cam paign at Chicago. There should be plenty of "Pep" in that fight. S1H Wu Rippling RfiijmQ BIGGEST AND BEST My friends come back from the babbling brooks, and talk of the things they've done, with their poles and reels, and their lines and hooks, till the setting of the sun. And eacn at tne end remarks, "1 wish I had had good luck today; but the biggest fish, and the finest fish, was the fish that got away." I have heard that yarn for a hundred years, and I'll hear it till I die, and when a fisher man bold appears, I heave me a sob and sigh; for I know full well he will stand and dish the story that' sold and gray, of the biggest fish, and the finest fish, and the fish that got away. It's the freckled boy with the old time bait, and the fish-line coarse and stout, who sits him down hv the brook to wait for a bite from the monster trout; he gets the bite, and his pole goes, "Swish !" Eureka and boom-de-ay ! He has caught the fish, the world-famous fish that so often got away ! THE REASON U TAKES 50 LONG ETHELBFI2TA SCOLDS BECAUSE BREAKFAST, GETS COLD EVERY MORNING WHILE AM GIVING THE LAWN ITS MORNNG SHAVE: TOO BAD1. BUT I CAN'T THROW AWAY THIS VALUABLE LM IJ COUPON IN M I fc"1', EACH PACKAGE .? - I vTHE CICARETTO... Democracy's Official Publicity Promoter V I . I V yy yfh l If:1 TURNERNEWS (Capital Journal Speelnl Service.) Turner. Ore.. Max- 27. Mrs. ,T, F. l.yle spout Friday afternoon in Sn loin, Mrs. 11. I.. Karl spout Tuesday oalliujj on her ninny fiends. j Miss Alma Pakor has finished a very suevessf ul school your at Battle Oroek. Richard Waggoner of Portland, spoilt i Sunday at tlic homo of Mr. Itarr. Mm. Bert Wagner was cnlli'd to Ore-1 Ron City Thursday ;o the bedside of her mother, Mrs. Woodaul, who. is se riously ill. Mrs. K. (). Tlioni: a entortinc.l Wed nesday afternoon in oonor of Mrs. Hel en Hull. Mr mid Mi-. Hail wir. go to Tort iM'.d to 'ive. Mrs. T. K. 1'errou pax-, th li.dies of Surprise grunge a thicken dinner Tuesday. Arthur Kdwnrd. IT. R. Crawford. F. A. Wood, Art Koine and A. I.. Rones made a Imsinrss irip into Portland Thursdav. rffEomicK w. s techm'an) Frederick V. Steekman, lor the past twelve years a Washington newspaper correspondent, iwis been selected as rector of publicity for ue Democr uic national committee. He is n native of Princeton, Mo., uniuurried and thirty six years old. He was in ciinrye of the Chicago hoadcpiarters nt the committee in the 1!H- campaign and originated the idea o nolii-iting small contribu tions for the campaign. This plin net ted the committer more than lti0,0O0. Mr. Steekman 's newspaper affiliations date from the time he was less than ten years old, r.nd he has been "in t.ie iimnes" ever since. .e repre sented the St. Louis Kepublic when he first caine to the capital in HUM. He is now a political writer for the Wash ington Post ind corerspondent for the New Orleans Uiilv States. Election Returns of Polk Canvassed (Capital Journal Special Service) Pallas, Or., May L'7. K. U I hap man, the undertaker, Inst week re ceived from l'etroit a new six cylin der Cadillac hearse for use in his bus-! ines in this vicinity. The c.ir was! made especially to Mr. Chapman's or- der and represents an expenditure of: about .'!0(lll, it being eleetricallv lisht-l ed and hand enrved with a lining of iuhIioiiiv. Official Count Is Made The official count of the ballots cast at the primary nominating elec tion held last Fridav wns made Wed nesday and shows that several candi dates "had a close race for the office they coveted. For representative, Con rad Stafrin's plurality was rlii. W. L. Tooze, Jr., for district attorney had a majority of .":!. For county clerk, Fred J. llolnmn's plurality was 319. A. V. R. Snyder received a plurality of 12 votes for the office of county treasurer. For school superintendent. Miss Amelia Fuller had i plurality of OS. Homer A. Robb for the office of county surveyor has a plurality of 4! and for the office of countv commis sioner, the most contested office on the republican ticket, ilose Mansion' receixeu a plurality or mi votes, un the Hemociatic ticket Carl Kenton re ceived a plurality of II votes over Frank Meyer his opponent for the of fice of county assessor. County to Oil Roads Again Tinou;h the efforts of the Dallas Comiiieieial club the county court has consented to have the main road ofj the county treated to a coaling of oil this year as in former years. It is the; opinion of the court and also the club; that the amount of oil used this yean will be less than in former years jS the mads are in fair condition owing! to the oil placed on them the past few years. The court is sonu-xvimt cramped' for money this year but roali.ad tlint1 by passing up one year the good roads ; that we now have-would be ruined. 1 'Favor Sunday Loop A meeting xvas held in the county court room Wednesday evening in which the MeMinnville Automobile: (dub and the Dallas Commercial club' discussed the proposition of perfecting1 a road from Dallas to 'MeMinnville i through Perrydale nnd Amity for the; purpose of advertising an automobile' route from Portland throng the valley and back to Portland. The idea of, the meeting was to enll the proposed! route the Sunday loop. The said loopj to run from Portland to Dallas, across to Salem and thence on to Portland. The route is about 1G." miles long and will make nn ideal trip for motorist?! of Portland and will also be a means of advertising the Willamette valley! towns. ! V. V. Fuller, fire warden fur Polk county wns a Capital city business visitor Wednesday. A large number of people of this city attended the Robinson circus in! Salem Thursday afternoon. H. ,T. F.lliott, manager of the Fer- rydale flouring mills was a business! visitor in the county seat Wednesday.! Mrs. Nancy Brown and daughter,! Mrs. H. H. Ounkelbemer and children! are visiting xvith relatives in Drowns-1 ville this week. Rev. C. P. Gates of Dayton is a I guest this week at the home of his , mother, Mrs. Klla J. Metzger. I Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Chapin and fam-i il of Salem were in Dallas the first-' of the week the guests of relatives. A. D. Braun left the first of the week for Tacnloma, California, where he has purchased a bakerv. Mrs. Eraun and little sou will leave for that place! in a lew wcoks. The Star transfer company of this city has secured the contract to build five miles of new state road in Tilla mook county and A. P. Starr and L.I C. Muscott will leave next week with a force of men to get things in shape for the beginning of the work. Mrs. s. Taylor Jones and little son of Portland were Dallas visitors the nfirst of the week. Mrs. Oeorge Fiddema has returned I to her home .it Albnu? after a visit at the home of her p.irents, Mr. and Mrs. !ol Blessing. Mrs. Ora Cosper of this city wa elected secretary of the Oregon Re- Jbekah Assembly for the twentieth successive time at a meeting of ths grand lodge held at Roseburg thif week. Fred S. Crawley, principal of tha Rickrenll schools was a Dallas visitot Monday, Mr. Crowley is the Demo cratic nominee for school superintend ent of Polk county. REV. J. J. O'REARDON DEAD. Portland, Or., May 27. Rev. J. J. O'Keardon, a;'e li". a member of thai faculty 0f Mount Angel College,' died at St. Vincent's hospital Thursday night after an operation. He was an native of Ireland and a graduate of the semin ary at Maynooth l-diind. He fMighb geology, philosophy and higher English, at Mount Angel College. If you enjoy reading the Journal oc casionally you will be pleased to get it regularly only 4a cents psr month at your door. E Don't Stay Gray! Here's a Simple Recipe That Any body Can Apply with a Hair Brush The use of Sage and Sulphur for re storing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked apiearance. this simplo mix ture was applied with wonderful effex't. Put brewing at home is mu-ssy and out of date. .Xowadavs: bv askiu? at any drug store for a 50 cent bottle of "Wyeta's Sage and Surphur Com pound,'' you will get this famous old preparation, improved by the addition, of other ingredients, which can be de pended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist says it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it ha been applied. You simplv dampen a sponge or soft brush wittTit and draw mis tnrougn your hair, taking on strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap plication or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. Wyeth's, Sage and Sulphur Compounl is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance. It is not iutoudorl for the cure, mitiga tion of prevention of disease. Always Watch This Ad Changes Often 444 4tt Mtttttttt 7 Dtnouy coriocs weignt, iquara deal and nigheet price for all kind of junk, metal, rubber, hide and furs. I pay 2o per pound for old nst, Big rtock of all sizes second aand Incubators. All kind eorrngatad Iron for both roofs and building. Hoofing paper and second aand linoleum. H. SteinbackMunk Co. X j 08 North. Commercial St noB, , t ;