Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1903)
Jrand Opera House JOHN F. CORDRAY, Mflr. rhtf csday Evening, Jn: Eighth Annual Commencement Interstate nservatory of Music Jy Mrs. Etta AndcrsxWillman Jrand frco Concert of tho best talent in Salem, Vocal and In- iitrutnontal. I Everybody Invited '- FRUIT TRAYS. BOXES and CRATES all kinds and styles. First class work and material Prices reason able. Shoo on Miller St., South Salem, Pbone, Red 2191. GEO. F. MASON. .Market Quotations Today JTIBKV MISUI VVIN IIUW. IUUKI fc. Poultry at Btelner'i Market t ChlckcnB-jlOOlle. Spring chickens 13lGc. EggB rcr uozen, nc. Hop Market. ;iIoj)S 1718c. I-' Potatoes. Annies. Etc. Potatoes 25030c. OnlonB C5c. Dried Fruit. Dried Apples 4 6c. Italian prunes, 40a to COs 6o Pctlto Prunes 4c. Wood, Fence Poets, Etc Dig Fir J1C0. Second Growth 14.00. Arh 13.00 to $3.75. Body Oak J 5.00. Polo Oak 15.00. Cedar Posts 10c. Hides, Pelts and Fur. Oroon Hides, No. 1 10"c. Oroen Hides, No. 2-206. Calf Skins 4 to 6c Snoop 75c. Goat Skint 25c to 31.00. Gray Fox 25 to BOc. Coon 10 to 40c. Mink 26c to $1.2u. Ottor 31.00 to 35.00. Skunk 10 to 25c. Muskrat 1 to 6c. Wildcat 10 to 25c Grain' and Flour. Wheat 570c. Oats 30032c. Barley Brewing 65C0o bushel; feed $21 por ton. Flour Wholcsalo, 33.60. Live Stock MarkeL Steer 4 '4c Cows 3 to 3c, Snoop 33.50 gross to $4.00. Dressed Veal 7Cc. Hogs alive CV4C?ic Hogs, dressed 8c. Wool and Mohair. Wool 1C0 17c, Mohair 37c, Hay, Feed, Etc Baled Cheat $13. Clover $10. Bran $23 Short6-$23.G0. Creamery and Dairy Products. Good dairy buttor 16020c. Crwunery butter 22c. Cream, pan skimmed, at creamery ! -IRc nt farm 14c. 2 n M .inMMtnF aVImmAfl. At Com, Creamory 22V5c, minus freight. Portland rviaraei. Tjoat Walla Walla, 73c. Wheat Valloy, 75c. Flour Portland, best grade, $3.70; graham. J3150$3.55. Oats-Oholco White. $1.10. BarleyFeed $20 per ton; rolled, 1220122:50, Mlllstuff Bran, $23. Hay Timothy. $20$21. Onions 40060 cents per cental. Potatoes 40060c per cental, creamery. 2022c; store, 16c Eggs Oregon ranch, 16016Hc per doien. Poultry Chickens, mixed 1212tfc per pound; spring. 16017c; turkeys, live, 16017c Mutton Gross, $3.50. Hogs $60$6.25. Beef Gross. $50$5.25. Veal-7H08c Hopa ltffSOc per peund: , Wool Valierf lBGltitfc;, Eastern Oregon814c? Mohair, 'SCOSUSc. Hldsa-dryflo pound a., upwuii, Butters-Best dairy, nominal; fancy 8'ad News Received. J L, Freeland, tho State-strqt bual noes man, today received the sad word of the death of his mother, Mrs. Mary A. Freeland,, at Falrmount, 111., aged 80 years. On June 1st the Southern Pacific Co. will resume the sale of excursion tick eta to Newport and Yaqulna Bay. This resort la becoming more popular every year, and hotel accommodations are better than ever before, and at rea sonable rates. Season tickets from Salem to Newport 5.00; to YaQUlna, 350. Saturday-to-Monday tickets to Newport. $3.00: to Yaqulna. $3.00. V. Efc 1U"I 6-27-eod Gen. Pas. Agent For llvr troublta and conttlpatlon Thtre'a nothlDK Utter In creation Tfcat Utile Early Illwrs, the famous little They afwajg effect a cure and save doctor y i. i. t-.i Ti.r , Aitttmt from all otber pllla. Tbey'do not weaken tbe i si" tern, bit act M Vtoolc to tbe tl;u by arousing tlie aecrtttona and waterlog. tb liter to tne iuii Btuiuiii - - ,-.---ttooa natnrallr for aale by O. Uaaa, M Stat atreec KANSAS '""" AGAINS'f MEG0N A Salem Visitor to Grasshopper State Prefers Webfoot Fields are Green and Skies are JiBlue but the People, are not Up to Date in Business Lines WlnfioUl.,KanB., May 24,1903. To Tho Capital Jeurnal: You re quested mo to write you how I liked Kansas, and I will mnku tho attempt. I have been here Just a month. When I arrived In April they wore having very pleasant weather, and I thought Kansas wns tho most beautiful coun try that I ever looked at. And I saw more green flolils, and moro cattle, coming from Colorado hero than I have seen all the time 1 have lived In Orogon. From what I can learn tho farmers aro quite prosperous hero. A tenant Iiiib to glvo half of everything that Is raised on a rontdd farm, even to the fruit, and they save money at thnb. They had throe hard frosts about the first of May, and con sequently the fruit crop will not bo as good as It would hove beon, yet there will bo somo of nenrly all kinds, nnd groat quantities of apples. For the last ten days tnore has ucen very heavy rains and some high winds, but no cyclones that wo have heard of. It Is quite warm bore. I havo no no tion of staying In Kansas. I am suro that I like Oregon much bettor, and I nm suro thatl llko the people much bettor, too. Tho merchants aro not up-to-date hero at all. Wo havo grand stores at Salem by the side of Uioso at Wlnfleld. I wns very much disap pointed for I oxpected to And things cheaper here, but I find almost every thing a llttlo higher than there, and not near so good a grade of goods. Wlnfleld has a populatioln of between eight and nine thousand.- Thcro are no oil wells here, but about the first of July 1 will go about DO miles fur ther east whore there aro lots of oil and gos wells; perhaps I will wrlto to yon from there. I expect to go hoik to Oregon about the first of September. MRS. L. CAMPUEM KEEP YOUR HEAD UNCOVERED. The Constant Wearlno ot a nat Propagates Dandruff Germs. Thoro a:o many men who wear tholr hats practically all tho time, when awake, and are blessed with n heavy shook of hair; yet if tho scalp of, these sarao men once bocorao In fested with dandruff germs, tho para sites would multiply all Uio quicker for lack of air. Baldness yfould ensuo as the Anal result Ne.wbro'8 Horpl clde kills thoso gorinB and stimulates unhoalthy hnlr to abundant growth. Herplcldo Is a pleasant hair dressing, art well as a dandruff cure, and con tains not an ctom of Injurious sub stancos. i For sale by Daniel J. SQfc, Bnd 10 cents In stamps ffor samplotd Tho Horplcldo Co., Detroit, Mich. ' Old Twins Hale and Hearty. WJnsted. ConnJjino, JrJf.l W"1 Jonas Hungorford of 'Watertown. who aro th.e oldest twins living In New England and perhaps In tho United States, celebrate their 87th birthday today and tomprrow, Joel having boen born June 3 and Jonas Juno i, 1819. Both are farmers, pale anu hearty, and their neighbors often are puzzjed to tell which is wmen. wey imk so' much alike. Many persons called on the aged twins today and extended congratulations. The Excitement Not Oyer. Tbe rush to the drug store still con-.i-.... ..ii itiiir scores of people call for a bottle of Kemp'a Balsam for the Throat and Lungs for the cure of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis and Consumption. Kemp's Ba sam, the standard family remedy, Is sold on a miarantee ana never iu w "" Price 25c and 50c. ure iMiiinciivu. Dissolution Notice, vntfco Is hereby given that tho partnership heretofore oxlstlng In Sa lem, Oregon, between J.. N. Brown and V. T. Wrlghtman, under the firm name and stylo of Brown & wngm man. doing business a attorneys at law is thl dr.y. by mutual consent, dissolved. Mr. Wrlghtman Is retiring from the firm; Mr. Brown will main tain the business in tbe same offices heretofore occupies oy "-" - Wrlghtman. All parties owing the nrm ot mu fc WrlghtmnR will pay auch obHga in n J K. Brown. Dae4 ai Salm.' Qregq, tbj? 1st day of J.HH& !? J. J? BJIQWN. F T tfRlOHTMAN. H-5w THE DAILY JOURNAL, SALEM, GETTING READY TO BLOOM Active Work to Com mence on Grounds and Buildings Carnival Buttons Getting Plentiful and Everybody, Taking an Interest in Salem's Great Show One hundred dollars In gold and a week's, visit to Astoria an tho honored guest of tho city nnd of tho Ilcgatta Queen, Is tho portion of tho happy Queen of tho Solent Carnival. And tho Dnllaa Chioen In to be the euest of Salem's sovereign during tho great I .MMBiinimur roetlval hero. Who wouldn't bo Queen? Tho lumber for tho big booth-sec-, tlon aud for tho grand arch wns or dered today and as soon as It Is on tho grounds steps will' bo taken to secure bids for tho erection of this purt of tho Carnival paraphernalia aftor which It will be decorated to tho 'Queen's tnsto." There aro plonty of Carnival but tons at Mr. Judah's ofllco In tho city hall. Hoys and girls aro wanted to Bell these pretty souvonlrs of tho big summer festival. Forty per cent profit can bo mado by tho youngsters nnd tho supply Is Inexhaustible. Tho band stand In Wlllson'a aven ue will boon bo shifted to tho center of the Carnival grounds In tho booth- imMiin nM.l will 1... ttmilft tfaltltn Ml snow, 'it will bo lighted with eIoc. trlclty nnd bo an object of beauty and a sourco of delight "when baud begins to play." tho Tho guaranto fund Is being circu lated throughout tho city and Is being rapidly filled. Tho citizen's havo as much faith in tho coming Carnival a Its nmnagcra havo, and this Is as It should bo. If tho people don't bock such an enterprise, no small group of workers can accomplish anything, work they never so hard. Tho Salem Carnival will bo as bril liant as 1000 electric lights of varied voltago can mako lb. If the ladles of tho Maccabees DO put a candidate for tho Qucenshlp in tho field and undertako her election, au rumor baa It Uioy will, then tho Imllntii it-Ill Hv linfuwwin tlilii nml Jiinn 15th. As many of tho Carnival cxouuttvdlhls place becauso Utah has not kopt committee as can gt away. w)ff gojlta promise as a state. Ueforo Utah tomorrow, to DallaV, to witness tho was admitted there was a promise of grand opening of tho Wood moil Car absolute sogrcgatlon of church nnd nival there, and during tho ceromou- state and complete abandonment of lea Incident to tho Installation of' th"5g polygamous practices. In both In Queen, will tender that' pretty sdvew stances tho promlso baa been Ig elgn a cordial Invitation to come o nored. Thore Is a state law. to be Salem as tho gueot of our QucoriWind suro, against polygamy, but It Is not of tho City, during OUIl CARNIVAL, enforced. Tho Mormons run the . too stum ui ,.,. wu..v u cognlxaneo of tho practice I'olyg- Sv)tli the pyrotechnic glories that aro nmy bu h rMUmM, aIm01t t0 thu to b kept tlazlnAon tho Carnival Bam'o' o,tenf as .formerly and there grounds bore, on po night of July eeni tQ bo JJ0 way ()f gpt(Jng , ,t . . -. IT ...... .. t. In U .in- T uow ' Mr. -Arnold Uan$ust added a dog and monkey exhibit to his splendid Hat of Carnival attractions for he Sa- lem engagement Ho is a rustier and by tho tlmo he sets up In tho Capital City he will havo far moro than con- tracted to show hero. There will bo five prlzo babies In tho Capital City aftor tho Carnival, though there never was a baby that wasn't a prlzo bab'jMo a greater or less extent. Kecp.your eyea open for the prizes aqd tfho rules of the contest. Tho Judjjeif aroto oe oiu Never So Danarous as Now. Bachelors, tho mot disinterested. "Mormonlsm," said he, "was never (and probably the most uninterested) M dangerous as at'' the present time, creatures In the Tworld. but who are Bmpjy because of the political In too honest to ta bribed by the flUonce It h'aa acquired. With two smcothMtdadoytho PJttleat mamma thirds of tho population, It has Utah or tho lovllest bjiby firth e country absolutely In Its power. Idaho Is al- ; so undor Jjorroon influence, and Ne- to it, vada, Oregon, New Mexico and othor Suffered O MOntllS iUte. are also proselyted. The dan- 1 can heartily recommend Acker Tablets for dyspepsia and stomach troubles. I have been aunermg tor eight months, and tried many reme- dies without any relief, until I got Acker's Dyspepsia Tablets, which I used only a short time, and am now perfectly well. Thanking you tor we speedy recovery, I am gratefully yours. Francis I. Cannor. Vancouver. Wash. Send to W. II. Hooker L Co.. Buffa- to. N. Y- for a free trial package. Nothing like them. qApXA Bauttia 1H Data fcat)fl Eft OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, MORMONS ARE GOOD STAYERS Dr. T. C. Iliff Dis cusses the Case of Reed Smoot Secretary of the Methodist Church Extension Society Talks Interestingly of Conditions in Utah Dr. T. C. Illff. secretary of tho Methodist church extension society, who Is In Tficomu In his otUclal ca pacity, has been prevailed upon, somowhat against hi Inclinations, to speak Tuesday evening "nt tho First Methodist church on the subject of Mormonlsin. As head of tho Utnli mission of tho Methodist church nt Bait lJiko City. Dr. Illff was a flro brand among tho Mormons for n quar ter of a century. Ho was head of tho 'committee that took Upon Its should ers tho task of ousting Huberts from tho senate. He and his friends nru now active In the compalgn against Heed Smoot. Aftor his sermon last night nt tho First Methodist church, which was on rellgluus lines. Dr. Illff talked with a Ledger reporter on tlio subject which has occupied such a largo oharo of his busy lifetime. "Tho dllllculty in our fight against Reed Smoot" said ho. "Is that wp haven't anything so doflnlto and tan gible to work iiKn as In tho caso of Roberts. Smoot Is not a polygamlst At least, he says ho Is not. I met j'n the other day in Washington and ho reminded mo that I had known hlro from boyhood and should know that ho never llvod with but ono wife. I told him that I wns obliged to ac cept this statement of his raso as far as It went, but that my solo ground of opposition to him was not polyga my." "Do you opposo Senator Smoot on religion grounds!" Dp. Illff was asked. Why He Opposed Smoot. "No," he wiled. "I opposo him be- causo his sworn duty to his rllglon Is greator than his duty to his country. Tho Mormon believes that his blh opa and leaders are cmlowml with a dlvlno right to rule; that t'uy are ca pable of ruling ovr all others. This Is one of tho cardinal prinalplcs of Morinoulsui. They do not separate church and state, but placo tho " (ill Kflll first nnd tho , state- second. -8moot should not bo allowed to hold state, and tho omuiais refuse to ibko In splto of Its coiutltution and laws, utaii is a polygamous state, because ho church Is dominant aud IHa '. In Pe or U.e Inhibition "f the consJtutlon the church rcgu- latea all branches of polities. 8n,o' could not havo been elected without Mnco of the church He was the church's candidate, and that Is Kr0und enough for opposition to him. ilut whether or not that Is sufficient- Jy tangible to appeal to congress re- mains to be seen " pr- jyff wu ajed a .1 his opln- 0n of- ql0 Bprcft,i oOformonlsra. - . . A l ger from tbla Infloenco would not be t ,. Miitictni did not cater to ,t( but xxitAw cahnot always bo ,,1 upon .. ytm tugYO that Mormonlsm wJn iecomo , gprlous menace," was lgked .,j h,nJ (t d0Cf not ntaln the ole- mmt ev!l, roake It tbe source of national trouble, but if the Mormons ,nou!(j ,uccecd In the next few years in ejecting five or ton Western United guu Benater aad congressmen, they couW w jmw,rgnole themselves by securing legislative concession that tbe evil would bo bard to uproot. Of eourac. no man who la nominally a polygamlst may ever again bo elected to congress, but that matter 1903. The Wife Our Store is a bower of white. White goods are pn display in every part where a dis play is possible. Oar sale of white Is the most attractive in the city. Bargains on every side in desirable white stuffs We try to he as original as,posJfcljWith our disp'ays. Always try to do some thing different from what has been done elsewhere. We never misrepresent, never disappoint. COME SEE, Wafrwm mmmmmmimmMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiiimammmmHm little to tho Church If It can elect men pledged to Its support." Appeals to lanorance. Dr.-Illff was asked to namo tho ele ments that havo enabled tho Mormon church to so successfully promulgate Itself. "That Is hard to state." ho satd. "Mormonlsm Is fanaticism, and It has spread llko most fanatic notions by appeals to Ignorauco and super stlllon. Asldo from thin I attrlbuto Its growth to tho perfect organiza tion. Its system Is admirable, and thu leaders havu never lost their grip upon tho people. Bomo predicted that when Ilrlgham Young died thu church would go to ploces, Then they prcdlrted that It would last dur- Iiir tho lifetime of certain men who had been trained under his tutelage, but they have died and the church la now 300,000 strong, and thoroughly knit tngother. (liven a belief In tho Inspiration of the Mormon Illlilo and the divinity of Mormon leaders; add jl' this a perfect organization, supple mented with nusiness instincts anu a ilinlro for political advantage, and ce ment this with the base human ele ment uxpresscd In polygamy, and you have an Institution that Is mighty nearly impregnable. "We aro told that education Is the remedy, but against theso odds edu cation Is a alow process. Dozens of their young men go tn Buslern col leges, but thoy come back to what. Thuy aro placed In positions of Influ ence In the church, nnd tho leaden In tho Mormon church aro men who get rioh rapidly. Tho pecuniary In torosta of timse young men demand (hat thuy suppress any rellgoua doubts that may havo beon created at sohool, and Jf thoy show a disposition to hold baak thoy are often Induced to enter upon tho practice of polyg amy, thus committing themselves to (he church for life. How the Ranks are Recruited. "That 1a the way education works at the top. At thu bottom the ranks are belnK recruited from foreign countrlea and from the white of tho Southern mouptalns and elsewhere. They are paually people who believe ImpHcltltly bji thoy are taught, and thoy believe that Jpsepn aroitn ami RrtKbaiu Young aro actually gods In heaven. To Uavcn tho Ignorance with education imough to weaken tho grip of Mormonlsm Is slow work while their method of making con verts seems all too rapid. "Outwardly It Is a shrewd roan who can detect any serious defect In Mor mon teaching. They preach openly practices that aro wholesome and pure, and it Is only after they liaro secured tholr convert that they be gin to Insist upon the fanatical be lief and practice that constitute tbe evil of tho sect." W sll th areatest of blood puri fier, Acker1 Blood Elixir, under a po Hive guarantee. It will cure all chron ic and otber blood poison. If , you have eruption or sore on your boar, or are pale. weak, ran down. It I Just what you need. We. refund money f yoi are not atlsfled. 60 cents and $1.00. D. 3. Fry, druggist A Few Pointers. The recent statistic of the number of destb show that the Urge majority die wllh consumption, Thl disease may commence with an apparently r ' . u -,kl.l. .on l rnrl tlnitantly by ?em' Bataamjor tbe '. .. ..u ail niil Price 38e auoT 10 cnt, For salt by U Awgglit. 1 PAQE THREE Carnival WILL NOT LET THEM ALONE Negro Question. Wouli Take Care of Itself Misguided Fanatics Agitate Race Problems of Which T&ey Show They are Supremely Ignorant Now York, Juno 3. "To tho whlto race bolongs the responsibility for the condition of thu black man In tho south, nnd (ho people, of that'seotlon of our country havo mi right to nullfy tho 14th and ICth amendments by tho suppression of tho negro Veto." said tho Iluv. Dr. David nregg.'who wa apUudod several time during hi ser mon on "Has tho Civil War Bottled Anything?" In tho tafayctta uvonuo Presbyterian church. Brooklyn. Dr. dregg elaborated on the causo of (he Civil War nnd Us horrors as an illustration of what should not again, bo gone through with, arid Bald that unless this Southern negro question were taken up Immediately by wise heads- on both sides and quickly brought to an amicable settlement, he felt morally certain (hero would bo an uprising, tho result or which could not be predicted. There was every Indication, he said, that tbe Bouth was gradually drifting back to slavery and thl ha been doubly mado cor tain In tho act of two or three state. Tho negro ha been disfranchised, and "disfranchisement of a raco can mean only one thing, and that is tho negro Is forced to do the whlto man' bidding, and 'such bidding In thl case Is nothing more than puro slavery It should not ba permitted to extend further." Com YaI where you feel at home. Tho Whlto House Hestaurant I the placo. Wo are ready for you day and night o GOOD VOll ClIIUlIIRK. Tb pleaM&t to tad anil harmlMa Out Uloul Couib fore gltn imnwdlaU ralUf io all ea of Cough, t'tuop anil U Jilp. UcauM It dc not twu indlauly Into lh itomatb. but lair tjfcrt rlt it lb Mat el lb tronbla, It draw out tba In flammation. nal abd vxtkr soil curt-a urtaaDtotlr t.y tnabllla tb laoss ;o trlbnt pura lUa-sljlofaml llfa-italnlo oilfto to lb tlwii and tlMuta. Vt aals by I. O Uaaa. W iat "- Public Wool Sale Tho Marlon County Wool Orower Association will sell to the highest bidder, at tho elty ball, la Salem, on Saturday, Juu 0, 1903, at 1:89 P. ra., 100.000 pound, more or leu, of valley wool. The right to reject any or all bid will be reserved, Wl 11. 'DQWNINU. A, T. WALN. W. W. QUVK W. . KAOAN. Q. W. DIN8MOKB, Sale Coumltee. OAaVVOXXAt ,4 aantia 1 bi tltd VW IfaW JtfWH BWjM KfMtu llsW1 ? sj&J-&.. ' w j 0fSfrt