4 r :.vs iiorial Page of The Capital Joumal CHaBLES H. FISHES Editor aal Publicter id 9 SATUTEDAY EVENING June 29, 1913 JJ ( HI IM! HM'I ' ' Hi!!'!!:!!- i I ! , i i I published evert etesiso kxcept scNDAT, oEKooN, bt j office under'the niilitaiusts during these last four years, i Capital Journal Ptg. Co., Inc. A. B. BARNES. 1'rtatdent. CHA8. B. FISHER. Vice-l'rwldMit DORA C. ANDHESEN. Sm. aid Tma. BIBiJCKIPTION RATES Dally by carrier, prr yr i...t3.00 Per Month Dally bjr mall, per fear 3.01) l"er Mouth .43c .85c FULL LEASED W1KU TEI.BURAPII REPORT BiSTKUN REl'UESKKTATIVEa D. Ward, New Turk, Tribune Biilldln. " Chicago. W. n. Btockwclt, Pcapia'a Gai Building Che Capital Journal carrier boja ara tntrncted to put the papers oa tha porch. If tk carrier doea not do tbia. uiUwa you, or ncsleeU getting tha paper to you oo time, kindly phone the circulation malinger, aa tbla la the only ay we caa determine whether ar not the carriers are following Instruct lone Phone iiulo 81 before T:30 o'clock and a paser will be sent yoa by epojint meaeenger If the carrier baa mined you TltlC DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL It tho only newipaper In Salem whone circulation la guaranteed by tie Audit Bureau of Circulations, WAR SAVINGS STAMPS CAMPAIGN " The war savings stamps campaign workers dispair of raising their quota in Salem. Many other interior towns of the coast are meeting with similar dscouragement. While it is true that there may be some pro-Germans and some tight-wads who never do their share in any public cause in this community and in every other community we believe that most of the people are responding to the best of their ability. The drives' for the third liberty loarv Red Cross and war savings stamps succeeded each other in quick succession. And all the time thousands of dollars worth of thrift stamps were being sold by the tchool children. Such towns as Salem have no war in come, it is all outgo, and many people who are paying their various subscriptions in installments feel that they have all the payments coming along they will be able" to meet with the incomes they possess., That is the hardest ileal the campaigners are up against now. They find not so much unwillingness but inability to subscribe and make good when pay day comes. This situation in all interior points of western Oregon calls for due consideration on part of the state managers when future drives and future quotas are considered. , We would like to see Salem raise its full quota every good, patriotic citizen , will be disappointed if failure marks the campaign. Every real American is working liard for success, because the war savings idea is a splen did one. It helps provide money for the war and at the same time inculcates the principle of saving in time of prosperity. This was the plan worked out by Secretary McAdoo and his assistants all the way through in finan cing the war. People are working for higher wages and gelling everything they produce higher than ever before. Money is plentiful and changing hands rapidly but some time the war will end and an era of readjustment, lower wages and lower prices will come. The plan of selling j liberty bonds in small denominations and thrift and war savings stamps was to induce the people of all classes to lay up some of the money they were making against the) inevitable re-action that is bound to ensue. It was a scheme or preparing for peace in the midst of war and it has proven a splendid success. The government is rais- ing the money promptly with which to carry on the war, and the. people saving in bonds and stamps many times more than they ever did beiore. We hope Salem will raise its quota because the more f tamps our people buy the better they will be prepared for future developments, whatever they may be, and because the government needs the money, and so far as our people have the power to do so they ought to subscribe it willingly. JUST FOUR YEARS AGO has declined to.conceal any longer from the German peo' pie the fatal defect of the machine which is so relentless in its futile sacrifice of German manpower. The four years from Franz Ferdinand to Von Kuehl mann mark the shattering of the Hoheuzollern ambition to rule the world by force of arms. . There probably will be further painful efforts by Von Hindenburg to re habilitate the reputation of the German army. They will be in vain. Von Kuehlmann's words are ringing throughout Ger many not to be forgotten. They soon will be ringing in the ears of the soldiers, who will then know that in every future German offensive they are dying in vain for victory. Four years after Ferdinand's death disquiet has grip ped Germany. Demoralization is the next condition the kaiser must face unless he publicly abandons the worship of militarism. t The Woman Who Changed t SPIRIT OF UNITY AND SACRIFICE ' Many incidents are happening to prove to the nation that the people of America are willing to forego personal pleasures for .the success of the war. This fact was illus trated the other day, when the central war auxiliary com mittees of the women of Portland representing about twenty-five organizations, passed resolutions that they would put a ban on kid gloves as long as the government needed leather to use in the ,war. Such a spirit as this can only be commended. It is the result of a vision that many far-sighted and imaginative people have grasped, and which should be a lesson to those puny souls- who can not look beyond the fence of their own personal desires. In any group or class the success or attainment of the aims of that group or class always depends upon the ex tent the individual members forget their individuality in the bigger and broader idea of the whole. They must think of the group as a unit and must conserve and apply their energy not for any small part, but for the good of all. The nation is a typical group which must follow the general sociological rules of any group in order fo ad vance to the highest step of the ladder of civilization. If we want our nation to succeed in her present struggle we must, each not only be willing when forced by some, compulsory rule to eliminate personal and selfish pleas ures, but we must be keen and alert enough to anticipate these needs and to initiate means to supplythem before forced to do so. .j.': : Four years ago yesterday Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-llungarian throne' was assassinated liy Servian fanatics. In revenge for this crime, Austro Hungary tried to make a vassal state of Servia, and thus gave to the German militarists an opportunity to bring about the world conflict which they had long been plan ning for the time when they could be sure of the dual monarchy's support as an active and willing ally, says J. W. T. Mason, United Press European expert. This was the cause of the war. On the fourth anni versary of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand's murder, the German militarists are gathering together in anxious con clave because the German government has" been compelled to declare to the reichstag that peace cannot be won on the battlefield. It 1ms required three years and eleven months of fighting to extort this confession from Ger many. The vast dreams of Pan-German ambitions that made international outlaws of the Hohenzollern warriors cannot be realized by force of amis. The German military machine that was ready for in stant brigandage on assassination of Franz Ferdinnand is no longer able to keep up its bold front of assured victory. The machine has failed. Von Kuehlmann, the third foreign minister whom Germany, has called'to subservient LADD & BUSH, Bankers ALL TIIE THIRD LIBERTY BONDS ARE NOW HERE. TOOSE INTERESTED PLEASE CALL AT TIIE BANK Father Arthur Lane, Catholic priest at Albany, has taken off his robes and is preparing to don the Uniform of a soldier. He is well over the service age limit but has entered the University of Oregon training school to fit himself for an officer in the army.' He says the most im portant christian duty just now is that of killing Huns and that he is going to do his share if given the oppor tunity. Rev. Arthur Lane is a grandson of General Joseph Lane, Oregon's first -governor and senator and a famous cavalry leader in the Mexican war. He was a cousin of the late Senator Harry Lane. One uncle, Colonel John Lane, fought through the Civil war on the Confed erate side. The Lanes have always been full-blooded Americans' although in the Civil war some of them were en the Southern side. German newspapers say Hindenburg is going to strike the allies a surprise bloww. To advertise an intended sur prise is a new idea and the news should be taken with several grains of salt. The allies are all taking a swat at the Hun nowadays. No sooner did the Italian and Americans let up a little than the French and British got busy. They give him a hard, swift one yesterday morning. , -- - I Rippling Rhymes ij by Walt Mason . THE "HARVEST The wheat will soon be ready, throughout, the golden west- for workers strong and steady to come and do their best; the long green fields are turning to yellow, in the sun, and, viewing them, we're learning how we shall can the Hun. The wide, wide fields are golden, as grateful to the eyes, as in the ages olden was manna from the skies. For wheat means more than giving a pampered people bread; it's triumph for the Hying, and vengeance for the dead. uJ The wheat from all these regions where reapers soon will sing, will feed our fighting legions, and balk the kulturking. Oh, worker- come rejoicing, and bind the golden sheaves, a song of gladness voicing, and not as one who grieves. Oh, toiler, tread the stubble, like victor proud and strong, nor think the task a trouble because the hours are long. As much as men with sabres, you fight the Teuton knaves, so blithely face your labors, and not like gallery slaves. So to the wheat fields journey as gay as knights of bid, who hastened to the tourney on fields of cloth of gold.' With courage of the stoic, into the harvest prance; there's noth ing more heroic on all the fields of France. - By JANE PHELPS THE CHRISTENING. CHAPTEB CXYIL - Little Helen was to- bo christened. I j t Open Forum Si . ; GERMAN BAKERIES, STEEPLE UNDRUM While shooting hyattises in the Gim jax forests, Norman Bumpstead acident ally discovered the healing properties of the root of the sterple tree its mar- Gates, Or., Jane ST, 1918. To the Daily Capital Journal: . A few davs aim retnrniur from Port land via S. P. B. B. lookine out of iveloua curative effects, when applied te wa mmt ewitprt than vu Evelva. I Tn? winnow JUSt SBOTt aistance nortni"' "'"" Baya, was exerted than was Evelja. I- Balem a t j Mw , ply red noses, creaking joints, colicx had instated upon giving her the cBnst-1 iRa .Gernl8BT Bakery." on the babies, etc. ening robe and cap. What an exciting w'hole front of building. I thought to I "At last I shall ha a rich man!" time I had buying it. I am sura I wore'. . .f "am I traveling in Germany or thought Norman Bumpstead (he was out the natience nf mom than one shon' an I draining!" Is this sign still there! 0S years old, going on 103) the same name in Salcia" or Marion town Evelyn, went into ecstasies over it; and r,?ally it was lovely. George was out of town the day the baby was christened. I was so sorry because to my surprise he had consent ed to go to the christening. But noth ing could dampen my excited happiness. It was almost like having a baby of my t Bone We n cents for a five own j. mmu i.veiya. 10 nave one nam- i v,.qj j ct,i i j , it thia cirrn ia lint wli ituwti (then not with a hatchet but '"ith Pt of black tar. One more grievance: The German bakeries are allowed 60 per eent wheat flour and th.9 good mothers at home Evely ed after me, to be god-mother. The baby behaved beautifully, she never made a sound; just squirmed a little and puckered up her nose in funny uttle wrinkles when the eleigyman put save and buy W. S. S. The bakeries don't nave to save but take a long pro fit and buy bonds. - By permission-of W. B. Ayers of Port- laiial T am Qtrnin anllTnrv flnn and hnm the water on her litle head. 1 almost j tlmt thp fits of th(Jsbakeric8 may g0 laughed to see how cute she looked mak- to jjU -v g g I am yours sincere! r, M. KEEVE. A CORRECTION ing a face at the clergyman, Wo had refreshments afterward. Just the families and me. . Mrs. Beeves, Kurtz's mother, was lov.ely. She seem ed to forget all her coldness, and just mothered Evelyn and the baby as if sho were Evelyn's own. mother. . I said something of the sort to Eve lyn when we were alone and she replied: "I am sorry I ev,r said tha things about her I did- Yet I always tried to do nothing to displease her. But I did n't know her, I guess. I don't TBY to know her. She is simply wonderful, and so lovely to me. It was only that I wasn't usel to her dignified ways so different from the women, in the littw town I came from." "I guess that's the way with a lot of people, we don '.t try to know them" I said slowly, thinking that perhaps I didn 't know George evea yet. . A Good Influence Talking with Evelyn about her moth' er-iu-law, had been a good" thing for me. I mean it helped me. I thought of how stiff and formal I had thought her, how unapproachable. Here she wai acting just like any other mother, yet always the delicately refined woman; tha dignified society woman, but the mother; the woman with a. heart as well. Perhaps in a sort of man-fasliion George was something like her. I had not found my way down, whore ho lived. I only judged him by his outsido, as I aonrplained hi judged me. What a tangle life was. No matter how hard we tried, thero seemed always misun derstandings and heartaches. Upon his return George seemed pleas ed to hear all about the christoningi Whon I confessed that I had been hor ribly extravagant in buying the robe he smiled and said: 'I guess I can stand thj strain," He was always like that about money mat ters. He indulged me In anything I wanted to do. Now as I look back across the years, I renlisw that I was not a' all extravagant. That my ideas of the small town girl whose parents were in moderate circumstances. That had 1 spent far more than I did it would not hav,9 been at all out of place because Georgo expected me to spend enough money to keep up ms social position evory way. But often I apologized for my bills, although he n,ever had criticiz ed them. A Gay Winter. We wcro very gay at this time. But I scarcely let a day 'pass that I did not see mv iitle namesake. It was usually in tho morning. My afternoons wero all occupied. Dressmakers, receptions, "din ners, balls, kept me too busy to think. Then there wus my music, that I would not neglect. It was the ons thing in which I absolutely pleased George. He never had done anything but praise me, and was, I knew, proud of my talent. Had I not loved music as I did, I still should have kept up my practice for his sake; for the happiness I had because I could interest and pleafe him. Sometimes when we were going out to dinner he would come home early and before we dressed we would go into the music room and without any light I would piny for him for an hour. He said it rested him more than anything else to sit in the dark and listen to mv music. At all the affairs wo attended Julia .Collins and Madgo Loring were always in evidence. Julia grew more daring in her remarks to George, took less pains to disemble before mo. He seemed abso lutely obvious that she was doing any thing at all out of the way; anything to which I could object. After a particularly obnoxiouB remark I snid to him: "I wonder what Mrs, Collins would think if her husband were alive and I said such a thing to her 1" "What has her husband being alive got to do with it!" "Nothing much! Only it seems rather more we'll say impolite to insult a wife when a husband is with her." "Nonsense. Yon are always imagining things, Julia didn't mean a thing. She knows me so well she thinks she can st what she pleases." "But she doesn't know me so well, and the remark was to im."1; "For heaven's sake, Helen, do stop your faultfinding. It is a most disagree able habit," George exclaimed impa tiently, then went directly back to Mrs. Collins and commenced to chat and laugh with her. (Monday Tho Ways of Society) JOURNAL WANT ADS SELL JOURNAL WANT ADS SELL To the editor: In reporting the sale of war saving stamps in school district No. 131, Quinaby was given the credit. When it should have read Buena Crest school district No. 134. Ag district No. 134 extends 1 mile north of Hopmere and 1 mile south of Quinaby and in cludes. Iboth plaices. In justice to resi dents of Hopmero we wish to state that they showed their loyalty and liberal ity in purchasing W. S. S. as much as any other part-of the district. Buena Crest's quota was $5060, but it's citizens subscribed $7085 going over the 'tap $025 and we wish vo state further, our quota was subscribed before 10- o'clocik Monday morning, June 21th. J. C. M'FARLANE, Chairman W S. S. Cam., Buena Crest S. D. No. 134. Gales News (Capital Journal Special Service.) Gates, Ore., June 29. Haying ia on for early hay. Strawberry crop about all harvested; cherries Coming on with an abundant crop. Gardens dry, a good rain would help all truck just now. Tho Harab Grange is planning On a Fourth of July titanic. Mr. and Mrs. E. Johnson returned t their home at Redne after a few days visit in Gates. ' Mrs. M. Morsey went to Portland this week, for a few days. Mrs. Hunt is packing her goods to ship to Colorado where she expects to go in a short time. Floyd Random has been on the sick At.J he tok home carloads of sterple tvo toots and concocted a medicine which he called sterpleundrum. Leading medical men and scientists all over the world, to whom he sent samples, were ur.rcs'raiiird in their prais, and gava Bumpstead full permission to use their iiucomiuins as advertising matter. With in three mouths a million billboards bbitd with announcements like tha followiia;: ' ' Sterpleundrum is nature 's own rem edy. It is infallible." Dr. Rufus Open er, president of the Bockemorgan Be search College. ")f Sterpleundrum won't cur8 you, it is vour own fault." Prof. Bostock Hides, TPaidont of the Amalgamatod. Seieuiific Bodies of the World. Norman Bumpstead sat back and waited for orders to pour in. But they didn't pour, i'our months passed with out an older Bumpstead was just about' tp declare hiin&elf bankrupt, when, as a Inst desperate chance, ha inserted the fo'.towing ad in 1000 newspapers: "I use Sterpleundrum to brighten my teeth and. polish my shoes, and I give it to my little dog to iuak.9 him happy, iris just darling. " Flossie Aosscurls, star of t .housaad moving pictures. In two weeks Norman Bumpstead wai to the papers protesting against the in so rieh that ho started writing letterf come tax. list for a week. Miss Edith French returned to her home at San Francisco after visiting at her mother's home for a short time. Mr. and Mrs. Hoflich motored t Stayton, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy McDonald motored to Scio Saturday, returning Sunday, evening. & LET US ESTIMATE ON All your Printing an Up-to-Now office to meet your print ing demands. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL PHONE. 81 YOUR HEALTH By ANDRKW F. CURRIER, M. D. Falling Of The Stomach. I have been asked to write an article on gastroptosis, or falling of the stomach what It means, and what are soma of Its symp. toras. i The stomach Is very movable, being In the upper part of the ab "domlnal cavity, extending from right to left and held lit place 'by tho food tubo or gullet, and by loose bands or ligaments attached to the diaphragm, to the liver oa the right, and the spleen on the left. Though so loosely held, U is la motion most of the time, particu larly when food Is churned abont In It, and undergoing digestion. The tissues of the stomach and Its ligaments stretch easily and, lacking the resiliency of an elastio tissue, they do not return to their normal boundaries' after a certain number of stretchings. The stomach of a full grown adult holds one to three- pints, and you can Imagine how much It is) distended and overtaxed by thos who eat and drink to excess. It 1b not unusual for guzzlers of beer, wine, Whiskey, gin, etc, to drink several quarts at & sitting, and for those who are Intpmperatei in eating, to eat far mor than the proper capacity of the stomach. The kidneys and Intestines do their best ti relieve such sinners, but all these organs are sooner or later Involved In ths penalties of over-eating and drinking. Continued abuse- of the stomach, must ultimately result in persist ent dilatation, the organ loses Its natural shape, constant ferments Hon and gas formation balloon It into a great bag, and It en croaches npon neighboring organs and causes unlimited discomfort. From dilatation, to relaxation- of the loose supporting bands of the stomach. Is Jmt s step. When the bands begin to give way, there Is- nothing to bring them back to their normal state. The more they are pulled, the more they stretch, and the less able they become to sustain the ever-distended and over-weighted stomach. Then the latter drops, some times horizontally .and sometimes bow or stern first, the Intestines can. olfer little resistance, and In time the stomach distends and drops until it reaches the pelvis. Others who- suffer with falling of the stomach- are the people of lax fiber, who have Uttle muscu lar strength to begin with, and who have been overpowered by, hard work or Improper food. Included In this group, are hard working women burdened with tha care of families among the poor and neglected. Only recently has this condition been accurately recognized, only recently have the stomach and its disorders formed a group of di seases for careful Investigation. The X-ray, and abdominal sur ery, have Illuminated the subject and though, we are far from get ting Ideal results In the treatment, of many stomach diseases, we have Oertalnly made great gjadns ancV will gain much more. Some of the symptoms of falling , of the stomach are general discom fort, want of ambition for ordinary duties, constipation and poor nutri tion. The treatment may be medical, surgical, or instrumental. If the abdomen is opened, a re paratlve operation caa. sometimes be successfully done. Many cases, however, are much relieved by a properly adjusted, belt, and this should be tried Intf preference to an operation, when, possible. j Questions and Answers 7. K. Am weak and not able M do mv houtewiork well. Get verj thort of breath and my heart beat rapidly. I feel better- when 1 cam lie down and takt a rest. Tleatt tell me what U wrong; with me. Answer My opinion would be' that you are trying to carry a big ger load than you are able to carry. If yon could get a rest for a few weeks, having somebody da your work for you, and Just plaj and sleep for a time, I think yotf will pet; a new start. I should be glad to Bear U you are able to d -this. i