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About Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1892)
?WT tT- (nrwwt w1 wflf Wi--." "IK I r CAPITAL JOURNAL. y VOL. 5. "THE PEOPLE'S PAPER." 8AL.ETM, OKEGON, SATURDAY, APBIL 16 1892. "TO-DAY'S JSTEWS TO-DAY." HO. 91. fr "x""nHnr EVENING S PHTTON'S M mm in Special Sale No. 9. DIARIES, 1892, THE CAPITAL JODRHL. HOFER BROTHERS, Editors. t UIHJ8IIKDDAILY.EXCKPT8UNDAY. BY THJ5 Caoital Journal Publishing Company. (Incorporated.) Oflloo, Commercial Street, In P. O. Building Kntered at the postofflce at Salem, Or., as second-class matter. ; JSL,"JC COST PATTON'S State Street Book Store. k 38. THE RACKET STORE GRAND SHOE SALS! Men's Rubber Boots ?2 00 worth $2 75 Plow Shoes 90 " 125 Better " " 1 15 " 1 50 Oil Grain Plow Shoes - 1 45 " 1 75 Men1 Congress ' 1 45 and up Boy's School Shoes - $1 10, 1 30 and 1 45 " Dress Shoes 1 40 "1 80 Children's Flue Shoes 35. 55e, B5 " Heavy " . 80, $1 00, 1 10 The above list oners some of the greatest bargains ever known west of the Rocky mountains. To bo convinced call and"examine. No trouble to show goods. Ladles' GlovoCalf Shoes $1 15 wotth $1 40 " Oil Grain " 1 45 " 1 75 " Calf Shoes 145 " 175 " Dongola Shoes 145 " 175 ' " Tipped Shoes 1 80 2 25 " Flexible Dongola " 2 15, $2 40, 2 75 " Fine Dongola Kid " t 2 GO, 3 00, 8 25 " Oxford Ties 1 25, 1 45, 1 65 Children's Rubbers only 25 . 261 Commercial Street. E F. mKrfcn;wii aninn .ui in t9iuwmrmfi OSBURN. PLEASANT- Home Addition You can buy property in this most popular Addition on any terms. It is high and dry and has the advantage of street cars and city water. Remember it is within ten minutes walk of the Postoffice or Court House. Over thirty lots sold this spring. Call on wm B eU-E LUIIIlL.1 One-half block south of Bush's bank, up stairs. Harritt -SUCCESSORS TO Hiclntire, WELLER BROS. HEAD QUARTERS FOR RED STAR "SSJSlS.. staple m m mm At the old Stand, next door to Post Office. You can get the latest MUSIC, Finest Line of Pianos, Organs, Banjos, Violins, Guitars and Mandolins, LOWEST PRICES AT EASTON'S, 8IO Commerolal Street. Send for Ootcilogue PREB KAILS 1 LOCKS ! HINGES ! BUILDER'S HARDWARE i AT Bar. t Petzel j Plumbers and Tinners, 214 & 210 Commercial St., Salem. Garden Hose and Lawn Sprinklers. A complete linn of Stoves and Tinware, Tin roofing and plumbing a specialty. Estimates for Tinning and Vlumbtug Furnished. SNOW THE YEAR-ROUND At 100 Chumeketa Street, HOUSE - and - SIGN - PAINTING, Paper Hanging, Kalsomluiug, Wall Tinting, etc. Varnishing- and Natural Wood Finish. Only Firat-elusH Work. E. E. SNOW. Salem Truck $ Dray Co. fi DRAYS AND TRUCKS 'a uluTKua r-i.i1v fiir firilirfl Sell and deliver wood. ' hay, coal and lumlcr. Of fliu) Suite St.. omioslre Ha le m Iron works. Drays and tniofc niy be found .throughout tiie dv at the cornwf ef BUUs arm 1 4uiiitereii.i airrew. ZEISS, J&. 3E2j&: Sasli and Door Factory Front Street, Salem, Oregon, The best class of work in our line at prices to c nu o c with the lowest Only tho bent material used GETTHEUM.LAWNMOWER In Three Sizes. ALSO AN IMMENSE STOCK OF BUILDER'S HAR1K WARE AND FARMING IMPLEMENTS 1,1 - ATl -,.. w. GRAY BROTHERS, N. W. CORNER STATE AND LIBERTY STd., SALEM, OREGON t New Line Walkinff Sticks, DC CO -z: nmn oftoro nu ao c-m -- DinSJ OMULO, lHNVHO CD D) rf oJ and w Leather Goods, Ilunting Cases, Shell Cases and Bells. CD CC en i 0 0 VMM JSsMM for Infants and Children. "Castorlafa so well adapted to children that I recommend it as inperlor to any prescription known to me." II. A. Aacins, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T. "The um of 'Castorta U so universal and lta merits so well known that It seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the Intelligent families who do not keep Ca&toria within easy reach." CUblos IUrttw, D.D . New York City. Late Pastor Bloomlngdalo Eef ormed Church. Castorta enres Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, Kills Worms, elves sleep, and promoted it gestion. 'Without injurious medication. " For several years I hare rocommendoo your ' Castorta, and shall always continue to do so as it haa Invariably produced beneficial resuiu." Edwin 7. Pabdzi, M. D., The Wlnthrop," 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City OUIt SATURDAY NIGHT. If you know but ono thing but aro thoroughly master of that your life has not been a failure. The man who understands shoeing a horse is a monopolist and enjoys a sinecure. All who know enough to wish their steed well shod must come to him. He may not employ his time well, or make good uso of his earnings, but nevertheless so far as he is master of bis trade he is king among men. The lawyer best worth employing Is the one who bos so mastered the law that ho knows the smallest dotail of the way the law is made and knows how Juries aro made up and how they live and what they think and judges too for that matter. They must be master of their profession if they would scale tho highest round of success. That is a law of life. It is only mastery that wins mastership. Many a servant girl or housewife has wept bitter tears because she had not mastered bread-making. To be able to make thoroughly good bread covers n multitude of defects in the domestio economy. Even to huve learned to start a fire brightly and always make it burn well right off from the start is a source of great satisfaction. Tho boy or girl who learns to Bweep a lloor well has taken a great advance step toward success in life. It Is in failure to be thorough and conscientious In the small things that wo miss success, 'the torments and annoyances of life como from lack of order and discipline. If you aro thoroughly master even of your jack-knife, you may carvo your way to success. To bo simply a master of whistling has made moro than one person's fortune. Hut whltliug and whistling are very poor wayB to achieve distinction. Few know the full sense of mas tery. Oh ! That fathers know the full Idea of their fatherhood, and notbers of motherhood. This would bo a different world. The senee of completeness aUd thorough ness seems to bo foreign to most of our natures. Wo tinker at our trades and callings and stations in a half-hearted manner as tho' life were not to bo taken very seriously at all. We are religious and honest one day in the week when we should be seven. We play ta work, or work at play when we play at all. Aud so llfo goes on half-lived and halMost before we come to the end of it. We are told that only genius alms at perfect mastery of anything, but that is alio. There Is no field of human tabor in which the soul may not acblevo some mastery, if thero bo the will, tho courage, the high daring to attempt it nud the patience and devotion to lofty ideals necessary to conquer the result. It takes not genius. It tukts labor. Tbs Cnrmnt Comuirr, 77 Muriut Btbekt, New Yobs. B. F. DRAKE, Proprietor. T. G. PERKINS, General Superintendent SALE3VI IRON WORKS, SALEM, ...--- OREGON. Manufactures BTEAM KNG1NKH, Mill Qulflt. Water Wheel Governors, Fruit Drying Outfits, Tructlou homines, Cresting, etc. Kurm machinery made and repaired. General agents und manufacturers of tho celebrated Wahlgtrom Patent Middlings Purifier and Reels. Farm machinery made and repaired. H. GLASSFORD. CARPENTER, BUILDER AND CABINET MAKER, BANKS, STORES AND OFFICES FITTED UP IN Georg'a Pine, Walnut, Cherry, Red Wood, Eic. MANTELS, BUTCHERS' AND FAMILY ICE BOXES, WIRE SCREENS. JOBBING ATTENDED TO, Rear of 2C0 Commercial Rtreet, Salem, Oregon. J. M. Needham, HOUSE PAINTING, KALSO MININO, PAPER HANGING. NATURAL WOOD FINISHING. I.eVF ordero J. Irwin's, rear ofSmllb A Hteuier's drug- store. EX K.JAJLIv, Paper Hangnrand Decorator, Utile at Clin. Cal ert's Mllllonery store, Buleiu, Oregon. NEW DAILY MAIL STAGE lletwccn Aurora, ltuttevillc, Chumpucg, St. Piiul und Fairfield. Leaven Aurora dally at lftSO a. in. Ar rive at Fairfield 8 p. in. Iltturulng-leave Yuktacia at 4 p. in. Arrives at Chompc dp, in IveavesCharoiKH-g tf a. in. Arrives at Aurora, via lluttevlllc, atb a, in. Con nects Willi morning 8. P. Co. trains going north und mu tii. lvssengers, baggage ana freight carried at regular rates. tiarvlce begins Monday. March 17. 16V2. UVU. UOUFKU, Propr. WIIKIIK TIIEY FAIL. The editor of this paper had a conversation with Senator Veatch tho other day about the Oregon rail road commission, in which he ex pressed a favorable opinion. Ho got a bill through ono branch of the legislature to ablish tho commission. He has been its most unsparing critic in that body, both on its merits nud for political reasons. He held It to be a Republican measure, conceived In corruption and to serve the corporations and as a use less burden on the peoplo. Ho took that position for years on the stump and in the legislature. Now ho says he begins to look upon tho commis sion more favorably. When men who were as bitter in their opposition to tho commission as Senator Veatch begin to speak well of it, we may eveu look for Governor Penuoyer or the Oregonian to give it credit for being of some use to the peoplo. Yet that Js almost too much to expect. Governor Penuoyer does not even sustain the work of officials which ha has selected himself, as in the case of bis board of tax equalizure and his attorney-general, und It Is almost too much to expect that he shall aj prove a commlanion selected by some other power. Of course If the rail way commission does anything fpr the people tho Oregonian could not possibly approve it. Rut when so conservative a man as Scuator Veatch begins to discover something In the work of the com mission to favor, it Is time fur all fair citizens to lay aside prejudice. The work of the Oregon rullroud commission In condemning the rot Ion LabUh trestle, and In compell ing the B. P. Co. to overhaul and re build all its bridges in Oregon, and IU recent fight to redeem local freight rates in this state, deserves the commendation of every fair minded man. Right hero Is where the Alliance, People's party and other parties fail In not upholding the work of these men in protect lng tho people against the negli gence and unjust practices of these corporations. Owing to tho strugglo betweeu the Demoorutio and Republican par ties over the creation of the commis sion, nearly all tho leading Demo cratic politicians were against it at the start. But that time is now past. The commission Is a non partisan continuous body of three men, who perform a great public ser vice for tho producers and deseryo to Lo sustained In the fearless dis charge of their duty. We were glad to see the Republican state con vention endorse tho fight of the commission for lower rates and nlso recommend that the commission be mado elective by tho people. If the other parties ignore the policy of establishing legal rates of freight, fixed by a commission elected by the people to look after that matter, they fall to antloipato a great public issue in this state. GOVERNMENT MONOPOLY, Following is tho plank of tho Ore gon People's party relating to tho liquor traffle: 0. That alcohol in any form shall bo sold only by state agents, said goods to be pure and sold at cost without profit to the ugentB, and shall hot be drunk within tho build ing nor within sixty feet of the place where delivered nor in any place of resort of gaming, thus abol ishing license, the sulooon in society and the saloou In politics. That the national government shall not li cense the salo of any alcoholic sub stance in any state legally prohibit ing the sales thereof, nor shall it In In any way interdict or Interfere with such prohibitory laws. As Oregon is not a stato whero sales of liquor is prohibited by state law it is obvious that the People's party as endorsement of tho voters of this stato for their plan of govern ment monopoly which they declare will abolish license, and free society from tho evil effects of liquor as well as politics. If such a govern ment monopoly as they propose could be possible under our form of government, it would still be matter of grave doubt whether It would be desirable, or would achiovo what the People's party claim. That li quors should bo guaranteed pure, supplied at cost by stato agents, the only restriction being that the buyer go sixty foot from tho government saloon tc make a beast of himself is a proposition which docs not pos sess any merit whatever over the old fashioned idea of freo whisky, whloh has been done awuy with in alt civil ized lauds. The time when any ono could run a still and any one soil liquor wherever and to whomover they pleased has passed away In all lands. Restrictions aro now placed on tho traffic everywhere. Theso tho People's party would rcmovo, make it pure and cheap and easy to be got, direct from the hands of the government. Tho evils that follow the use of liquors would not be ovils the less because tho government sup plied tho liquor pure, cheap aud easy to obtain, with a government liquor agent at every corner. Plank No. 0 Is pure rot. It Is an Immoral, demoralizing proposition. Tho corruption of politics when still further corrupted by having control of tho liquor business would become the ruin of tho nation. Tho present army of internal revenue officials would bo multiplied a thousand fold. Tho government would have to sot up a liquor ag'n for every few hundred people, or at least two thousand agents In Oregon alone. Tho mut ter is not worth tho space It takes to discus' It, except that Its supremo folly excites supreme contempt umong thinking peoplo. If the People's party did not con lino relief from the liquor trafllo to their absurd nostrum it would bo moro tolerable. If they would al low that possibly education or homo training had something to do with whether a child should grow up to bo a drunkard or not, the specific they oiler might bo treated as an other proposed experiment, But as a solo remedy It sluks beneath con tempt. Their solution for the evils of a trafllo which In tho United States rises to 000,000,000 per annum, whou the bill for publlo ed ucation runs up only to 185,000,000 w?ll It Is no solution. Catarrh Can't Bo Cured with Local Ai'I'uoationh, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to euro It you have to take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Onro is taken in ternally, and acts directly on tho blood und musous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is no quack medicine. It was prescribed by oue of tho best physicians In this country for years, and Is n regular prescription. It is composeu ot tuo oest tonics Known, combined with the best blood puri fiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients Is what pro duces sucii wouderiul results In cur ing catarrh. Bend for tesllmoulalt free. F. J. CHENEY is. CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Bold by bruggUts, price 75 cents. Will be (ound an excellent remedy for sick lieuditcfce. CurUr'4l.!itle UUtt tills. Thousands oi letters from people who have used them prove litis fact, 'Xtf tbem. Jf sick heiidscbe l misery, what are Car ter's Ultle l.lver tills It tbey ulways posi tively cure I IT t'eople wbo bavo used tlieai speak frankly of tticlr wo-tb. Tbey are small and easy to take, If you ones try Outer's Llttlo Liver tills for sick headache, biliousness or constlpa tlou. vou will never be without theui. They are purely v-Ub!c, mull and easy U take. Don't forget Ibis, Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Food Report. Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE HOME AT LAST. A little chlldl fair haired, with wondering eyes. Post, throngU an opon door, Into the street. She wanderod on, lost in a land of sighs, And wept, "Is there no tost for weary feet?" Deep In tho dark a door xtood open wide, A light streamed from It brighter than tho day; A mother's voice kept calling: "Hero! Abide! Como Home, my llttlo one, you'vo lost your way I Como noruol" A wretched man, forlorn, with matted hair, Stood In a crowd of sots moro beasts than men; Deep curses rent tho air, and dull despair Supremely reignod In that accursod den. Gut high abovo its rovcls rang one sound, Cloarer than scablrd's over roaring sea Tho volcoof wife and weman: "Lost, butfoundl Como Home, my llUBbondl Cornel Oh, fol low mol Como Homel" A poor lost soul, oast down with wretchedness; I'alo death was ringing ont his fatal knell; No ono to pity; no ono there to bless The parting hour of ono who loved too well. Thon suddenly a volco "Oh, which Is best?" To llvo or die? Evor to sing or sigh?" Tills volco eternal whispered: "Como and rostl Como Home, sod soul, and rest eternally! Como Homel" Clement Scott In Theatre. SIio nnd Strength of the dulf Stream. Even those who navigate tho wa ters of tho Gulf stream do not fully roalizo tho strength, of its current. Two or throo years ago a government V03selwas anchored in tho stream observing tho curront. Tho wind was vory light when a sailing vessel was sighted ahead, drifting to the northward. As sho camo nearer and nearer it became ovidont that thoro would be a collision unless steps woro takon to prevent it. Tho crow of tho sailing vossol trimmed their sails to tho gontlo air, but it was useless, for onward Bhe wont, carried by tho irrosistiblo forco of tho current di roctly toward tho bow of tho steamer. As tho vessols approached each otlior, by a skillful uso of the ruddor on board tho steamer aho was moved to ono side, and tho sailing vessel drifted past a few foot distant. Tho captain of tho latter was as aston ished as ho was thankful that his vossol was not lost. All that ho could cry out in broken English as ho flashed by was, "I could not help it; tho water bring mo hero." John E. Pillsbuiy in -Century. Seven Thousand Miles of Wheels. If all the locomotives in tho United States woro couplod together thoy would make a train of solid iron and stool ovor 300 miles long. Add tho passenger cars and wo would havo 800 miles moro of wood and iron; this would givo us a gigantio pas songor train COO miles in length, counting both engines and cars. Should wo want a hugo "mixed" train wo might add tho "box," "flat" and every othor kind of freight car, and our train would thon havo a total longth of ovor 7,000 miles I Tho passongor cars in this gigantio train would bo capablo of seating 1, COO, 000 peoplo, and upon thofroight cars could bo loaded tho weight of all tho pyramids of Egypt and all tho stato capitol buildings in tho United States boaides. Vorily, great is tho railroad system of America. St. Louis Republic. A Georgia Negro Farmer. Thoro is a negro in Meriwether county, Ga., who has fifteen children living. Tho family, it is said, oat a buahol of potatoes daily. Thoy run athreo-horso farm and mako all thoir provisions nnd thirty bales of cotton besides. Thoy raiso sugar eano and mako their own sirup and sugar. They oven raiso rice. Thoy ecouomizo in ovory way, making thoir own plowstocks, for instanco, doing thoir own blacksmithiug, qto. Every edgo is mado to cut. An ovi doncoof tho negro's good manago mont is shown in tho fact that lib has liyed on tho placo twenty years. Philadelphia Lodger. Sharks' TeetH as Weapon. Sharks aro among tho most ancient of fishes. Long boforo tho first rep tiles appeared in tho world, to bo fol lowed in thoir turn by tho mammals, thoy ruled creation at a timo when nearly all tho earth was covered by soas. Thus groat quantitios of fossil sharlcs' tooth aro found scattered ovor tho bottom of tho oceans. Such great ones as that montionod havo boon largely utilized for battlo axes and othor purposes by savages, who aro quick to tako advantage of tools offered thorn by nature without labor, Washington Star. Au Asiatic Alphabet. Silas B. Bench has discovered rut Asiatic alphabet which has boon wholly taken from tho various changes which tho moon undergoes during tho month. This curious moon alphabet had twenty-eight let ters, ovory ono of which resembled tho moon in eomo of its phabos. Her first Query. "My dear," said Mr, Cubbago to his wife, who was dangerously ill, "Mrs. Kickshaw is dawn stairs and wanta to boo you." "What has eho got ont" asked the dying womau foobly. Now York Epoch. JACK TBI R1PPEE. Traced Through the Cslasies by a Corps of Detectives. THE DEEMING MUBDEK. Five Murders Already Proven Against Him. San Fb'anoisco, April 10. Th steamer Alameda, which arrived from Australia brings details of the Deoming murders. Nothing since the early days of tho settlement in West Australia has so stirred the colony to its depths. All business was stopped at every place through which Deeming passed on his way to Melbourne, and the people turired out to have a look at the criminal. Tho crushed and mangled body of a woman was found in a populods suburb of Windsor, southeast of Melbourne, March 6, and a week later Deeming was In custody, charged with the murder. The last occupant of tho house was a man who gave tho name of Drew, arid ho disappeared suddenly. He com plained of tho leaky condition of the Walls of the house, and told the landlord that as ho was a practical man ho had bought some cement and would patch up tho walls him self. Ho cemented his wife up in tho walls. Drew was apparently of sporting proollyitles, dressed In the holght of fashion, nnd was bedecked with diamonds, and carried himself with tho air of a lord. He was traced to tho steamer Kaiser Wilhelm, whero ho was lndentlfled as Albert Williams. Eight day after tho enmo Williams sought another victim, through a matri monial agenoy in Melbourne, and went on by steamer. On the voyage ho made desperate love to a young lady passenger, Miss Kate Rounse fell, of Bathurst. His manner cap tured tho heart of the fairWttenger, and when they arrived at Sydney sho had promised to become his wife. He was then traveling under the name of Baron Swanson, and In glowing terms pictured to her hra vast handsome revenue, and mads glorious promises for their fu ture. Step by step tile detectives traced him, aided in their search by his ostentatious display of diamonds and general bearing, and bis love ontanglemeut with Miss Rounsefeil eventually led to his capture. At Sydnoy, Swanson was identified as Albert Deoming, a plumber and gas fitter, who was accompanied by his wlfo and two children, and who Berved a sentence at Darllnghursfc for larceny; and eventually the record of tho man under the names of Deeming, Baron SwausoQ, Drew, Williams and JLawson was mad baro lo tho world, He was traoed , by tho police to tho Southern Cross mine In tho YUgarn gold field, West Australia, whero he was working as engineer, and was at tho time fur nishing a house In anticipation of his marrlago to Miss Rounsefeil. Tho lattor's father was a tradesman Who died some years ago, leaving a Widow nud children. Tho eldest sister Is now a milliner at Bathurst, und Deemlng's fiancee secured em ployment at the principal stationer's and nows agency in Brisbane, Stw afterwards accompanied her brother to Brokenhill, and while there was taken sick and was obliged to re turn to her sister In Bathurst. It was on this trip that she met Deem ing. She was only a country girl of 10, und uover doubted tho sincerity of Deemiug'a motives. The elder sister was so taken with the alleged baron that sho readily gaye her coo sent to tho marriage. While Deem ing was at tho mine ho wrote bis unsuspecting flauceo constantly, und In oue of his fetters, under date of February 8, ho says he is in trouble, having bad ono of his bejpt stolen from his cabin with 190. Further on he says, "I must now tell you, dear, what I hayo dono since my arrival here. Boon as I got here I put au adver tisement In tho paper I have sent you, by which I have bean apfoluted managing engineer at wages of JU per week with a house for the Ant six months, aud &) 10s per week la future. Besides this I expeot to make 3 per week. The mine at Yllgaru is about 250 miles from Perth. There Is a fine tewu and healthy climate and eveytfatjJ that can bo wieetea tor ana eomtmx You mtwt not think It is like Bm kenblll, Far from It. Now, asses as you get this letter, dear, semi gat ' a wire. ftHd let ww know wheljafff you can coaw at otiee. IwUtfct Home for you and everythinjr, a$ ranged for our nuurriafe on yovt arrival. Now, don't keep um wit" log, dear, So long as we are to bo . .-.,- ;,. . qii.-jTwifcwwMMnws; r KUkJ-X f