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About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1903)
TWO THE D AH Y JOURNAL. SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1903. ,v E &?. THE DAILY JOURNAL Gcrlpps Now Association Telegrams. 3 and 5 O'clock Editions. BY H.OFER DROTHER8. DaMy One Year, $4.00 In Advance. Dally Three Month, $1.00 In Advance. Dally by Carrier, 50 Cents Per Month. Weokly One Year, $1.00 In Avance. staaeaiBaacarani an m mms. ta .JOURNAL SPECIAL DELIVERY. Ono Week $ 10 One Month 35 Thrco Months 1.00 At Journal office. At Dauc's Grocery, 8outh Salem. At Dowersox Grocery, Yew Park. Asylum Avenue Grocery Store, Electric Grocery, East State 8L H-f W H -H S M H 1 M-H-M- The Weather. Fair IIiIh afternoon, tonight and Thursday. She Winked. She winked at me, a niatdon fair; I winked at liar; sho didn't caro. Bite winked agalu, and I did, too; I thought It Jolly wouldn't ou? For she was Just us clilo and uwoet , Ab any girl you'd enro to most, And though ft perfect stranger, yot I fult aH If we'd often mot. And united t her familiarly TIio wlilio she winked nt me. She wink1! at me, a saucy wlnkj Suoli note are naughty, iyou may think; Hut II rather liked It, so We liejit ou wlnkimr to and fro, First she nt me, then I nt liar. Till winks were flying livelier Thau Hhot In battle. Oh, atioh fun! She hud my heart completely won, And I surrendered willingly Ilocnufle dhe winked nt me. She winked nt mo the little flirt I No matter, 'though, It didn't hurt; No Ano would ceiinura hor for It; Hof mamma never enrod n hit. And mamma knows precisely whnt Ib strict propriety or not. !T would have different boon, I own, IfjliO had htten it inaldun grown; Hut she wns only eight, you see, And ho Hlie winked nt mo! Shlney Warren Mnso, in I'uok. LIGHTS FOR THE SUBURBS. The suburban wards havo potlllonod the council for six otectrlti lights, one nt North Snlem, South Salem two, and ISnst Sntem three. It would ho very gratifying to the dweller In darkneee who nre part of the oily ir these llghta could be estab lished at once. Thu winter Is earning on, and In Rummer the lights nr iHit needed. Dut the council demure on the grounds thnt the suburbs jmy to tnxee ns yet. Other In the council hesitate to take action, hecauso they say they wnnt to wult and see If a Htilt will not be brought to teat the charter. The ooii in-II has created three com tulwloni under this charter, and must take every itt that I taken to car ry un the city government under thlH charter. If tfaey vIt for fear of n lawsuit, they rauucl take, n single step or ex iwud a aoUaP tor the old olty, and the new wkmU are under the same charter, And It la the only charter the city htm. lletore any one roaldlng In the three new WHrds an vote tMey will have to pay Uie f8.00 poll tax for the year 1W. As stx light will ooet only about four hundred dollar for n year, the nelte will jay for the light. AityviM) vrho was at the public eeJteel exttwtejtw Ih North Salem and ?adered nixrat Ih the fog trying te find the school huuee, knows In what durkHN the suburb are during the winter. Ughte mean mow Ultwroouree, let ter attendance at ckurche awl lodgee, grwter safety to Ufe ami property. Let ws have the lights. - THE BIKE ORDINANCE DEAD. After the trnMoge of a etringeut Id oyele ordlHgHoe the city council re tmm to poet hoUom howtg an wkt mike rkllHg la prohibited. AkhNWiHti Stall naked the emmetl to order placards posted show tag which Stop tearing your throat! One dose of Ayer's Cherry lcri'rirt I -47lo X VVLWi Uli itw. Km, 1 m : H IIIHllimiU HIM walks wero In tho closed district, and moved that twenty days after posting" he ordinance bo onforced. " This was a srewd move of Alder man Stolz, as his motion got not a single vote besides his own, and dis closed that the council had no lntan tion to enforce the law. Still the law Is on tho books, and, while there Is general riding on ,thc Walks, even walks formerly prohibited are being invnded. Dut riders ride any of the walks nt their peril. The council has onacled an ordlnanco that gives precedence, If not piotectlon, to pedestrians. As Alderman Pohle remarked that, as winter was at hand, It would be hard, on the bicyclists to force thorn to take to the roads. People hare refused to raise a fund for a bicycle path. They say thero is plenty of money In tho hands of tho street commissioner to build paths. The problem remains to be solved, and the alderman or.clty official who will causo to bo built the first mile of practical, successful bike path will Immortalize .hlmiolf. That is tho proper way to tnko the bicycles off the sidewalks build a cinder, granite sand or gravel path for them. ' It -will cost a llttlo monoy, but the prosent condition is Intolerable, whon (he cyclist has no rights, and tho pe des trlnn no protection. THE WALL STREET CALAMITY HOWL For weeks tho Wall stroat crowd have been deluging the country with a calamity howl, about a threatened panic. After Morgan and the gang of mushroom, shoddy millionaires have lloated all the watered stock, thoy must turn around and squetae (hair victims. The crime of 1870, In demonetising silver is a bauble In financial felonies compared to Issuing fourteen hundred millions of stocks and soiling thorn on the $400,000,000 of steel properties. On top of this wero hundrods of smnllor stock-watorlng schomoe, run ning Into the billions In tho aggrogator all devices for robbery, and now comos the hurvost. Horo Is tho latest howl of Henry Clows & Ce: As for tho Industrial section of tho market, its futuro. It must bo admit ted, Is uncortnln. Liquidation In that quarter tins b en simply tremendous, and It would pjom as If these securities had fully paid the penalty of oxcostdve Inflation. It must bo remombered, howovor, the Industrials have not vat withstood tho crucial test of a busluoes reaction; their docllue thus fnr, Btoel oxcopted, bolng due to failure of promoters and underwriters to llont their new croa tlons. ' The general conservatism now pre vailing In buslneee circle, whllo nn assuring symptom, Is strongly sug gestive of reactionary tondonclos. If merchants buy loss, ns they aro doing, whon the harvest Is good and farmer are prosporous, It means lose to do In the factory; and If railroads begin to economise and stop unusual outlays, that means lees demand fur steel and many other products. Uuslneee men recognise that prlcos of mnterlals and labor nre too high, that construction work of all kinds Is too expensive, ami usee up capital too rapidly. Muoh work Is eonsenuontlv de ferral, and the decline la steel is the ttrat step In an inevitable readjust ment to a lower level. Labor, too, must take Its share, , Wages and exactions of the unions have risen to practically prohibitive points under an over-aggreealve and over-grasping leadership. The coining winter Is likely to aee many Idle workmeu, and the labor movement, a movement having great yoealblUttee (w BOOl has been weak ened by Ite own folllea, which will be likely to cause a eet-bnek in It ng greeeiveneee for aomo time to come. The preeent reaction la as muoh the reeult of uxceafiea of labor as the ex ceeaes of Wall street, with this dif ference; that the pewalty of the latter has aliaoat been paid, while the penal ty for the former is still to fall upon tnoee at fault. 0 ii. The Value of Bible Reading, (Chicago Ueeonl-Herald.) Chancellor MusCrark. of the New York unlTeralty, baa proposed an entrance requirement for college etu dejHta that would utunOe moat of the apfillcMts for ndmlaaloN and also the Mer rlaaawen and gnutuatee, lu clutUng a pretty long Uafc of profee eore. H Is that they should know by heart th Ten OonuMandtnenU. the Seon on the Mount, a okurch eat chUw of aowe kind and a score of the Soriptnre nanlnje and the heat chvMle hyMina. Ilwt aweh a retnUremnnt will he geawrMlU- enforoed Is doubtful, but there can he no queatfen abont the Iwwenee ahie of WhMeal stndy. and narttCHhtriy f th wtBtorlelag of ma ny paseageja both the Old and New Tofttaweata. TW work, we knew, la I part of the training of tho Sunday schools, and yet It Is surprising how many educated men there are who scorn to have missed It entirely. Whether it is relatively less common than it used to bo, we do not know, but there are casos which would in dicate that it has not bcon much ad vanced by the "modern facilities." A father who had a very moager school ing In the days before the war will astonish his sort to whom he has giv en every educntlonal advantage The former has had a discipline which tho latter lacked, and he has a possession for which thoro is no adequate sub stitute To say nothing of tho question of faith and rollglous conviction, the loss is fatal to any proper enjoyment of tho IMble. Not only Is Milton unin telligible without the Bible ground work, but most of tho groat poets, orators and essayists, who have con tributed to tho glorias 'of tho English tongue have owed an Incalculable debt to tho saniB source. But It is more apparont now thnn over that of making many books there is no end, and in tho dolugc of print tho noble Is noglected for the ignoble, and at tentive assimilative reading seems likely to becomo a lost art. Every young mnn, wltothor ho is going to college or not, could certainly profit by the hint which Chancellor MacCracken gives, o Fungi For Food. According to current dispatches, an omlnont Drltlsh physician announces thnt "an entirely new sonsatlon" can be obtained by oatlng fuss balls, or puff balls. Shades of William Hamil ton Gibson! says the Now York Tribune. Why, that fungus hns been a well-accepted article of food with tho elect for a score of years. The "new sensation" promised to the jaded palates of British gdur mands Is an old thing here though none the worso for being old. Our British brothom aro to bo congrat ulated, not on a now discovery, but upon tholr bolatod acceptanco of a good Yankeo dlscovory made many a year ago among tho New Knglnnd hills. Nevertheless the British physi cian In question ontltlod to grati tude for cnlllng public attention to the mattor, nnd It is to be wished thnt In somo way n wider lntorost might be aroused In it In this country. At prosont only two kinds 'of fungi nre much oaton, and they, because of tholr market cost , nro chtofly ro sorvod for epicures. Ono of thorn, tho mushroom, ought to bo as common nnd as cheap as potatoes, and thore nre many other fungi equnlly desirable for food, which ought to bo upon the tnblos of all. Thore are few artlclos of food at onco so dollcious to the taste, so grateful to the digestive organs and so nourishing nnd strengthening to the body as fungi, nnd thero nro few thnt can be pro duced moro cheaply. It is deplor able that so Important a food supply; should be so neglected. People are porhaps prejudiced against fungus by occasional cases of "toadstool" poisoning, nnd thoy havo a protty general superstition that all fungi savn truflles nnd mushrooms nre noxious. The lattor notion Is widely mistaken. The fact Is thnt among the many common species of fungi there nre only a few poisonous, and they are readily distinguishable by iiereons of intelligence. William Hamilton Gibson used to knock fun gus growths from stumps and decay ing logs and cook them Into some thing as savory as terrapin and more nutritious thnn beefsteak. What he did and whnt some others are doing, all might do. A little Instruction and a .little discretion are all that la needed to make every woodland a larder and evory old pasture a co pious producer of choice food. Found a Rich Pocket. George Fiok and a companion, nook-et-huters, made an oxeeedlniily rich Had In the mountain Bide, two and oae-half tulle weet of Jacksonville, n few days ago. The two men trooad the lead from Jackson creek, ami at the point mentioned, a little over two feet uuder ground they struck a IMU pnyry dyke, and In this, clustered to gether like a wasp neet, waa a buueli of n nugget, which amounted to HIM. The strike te one of the rich eat that has been reported In Jacikaau eouaty tor aome time past. Aehlaad Tiding I - ' li 0 i Dlspatohcd With a Shotgun. John Onibb wm out feeding some hose near Dee Hollow, on the Dead Indian road, and about oae mile above the Aadnrwa place, when ho euddeiily eame Into ctoee quarter with aa Im Mteaae brown bear, twitting arouad for part of the feed being distributed to the hog. Mr. Grwbb had with Mm a sbetfftte, awl at abort rang youred the oontHts of the shr Into brulu, killing him akpoat iMtaatly. Tho brute tlRMd the scale at M0 wounds. Ashland TWIag. DEER ATTACKED MAN. Strange Battle Within Five Miles of Albany Animal Was Killed. Albany, Or , Oct. 21. Henry School, of Shedds, was attacked by a deer last Sunday aftornoon within five miles of Albany, and narrowly escaped death. While visiting at tho farm of Julius Vose, In BontOn county, about five milos from this olty, Mr. Schocl was wulking through a field In company with F. W. Seeck, who recently cam to Oregon from the East, when a deer, pursued by n hound, ran Into the field. A dog which accompanied the two men joined In'tho chase, Bear ing the hound away. Tho deer, no longor pursued by the hound, and be ing almost oxhausted, stopped run ning whon about 20 yards from Uio men, nnd walked towards them. Tho men stood waiting to see what the doer would do, and, although School carried a loaded shotgun, he did not fire. Tho animal walked up to within four feet of Schoel, and then It suddonly rose up and lunged nt him. Ho dodged quickly and es caped the deer, but one of Its hoofs grazed him as he passed. School whlrlod and fired, hitting tho deer in tho sldo. The animal, wounded nnd infuri ated, turned and ran toward Schocl. But ho rotalned his steady norvo and presence of mind, to which he prob ably owos his Ufa, and fired straight nt the doer's head, killing the rapidly advancing animal Instantly, o State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, Be. Frank J. Cheney makos oath that he is senior partnor of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in tho city of Toledo, county nnd state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and ovory case of Ca tarrh that cannpt bo curod by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to beforo me and subscribed In by prosonco this Cth day of De comber, A. D. 188C. A. W. GLESON, (Sf.al Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken inter nally, and nets dlrcatly on tho blood and raucous surfacos of tho systom. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O Sold by all druggists, 7Gc. Hall's Family Pills aro tho best. WINTER MAIL RATES. No Second Class Matter Will Be Ac cepted for the Yukon. Tho various const postofllcos fiom which mull Is sent to the Interior of Alaska, among thorn Tncoma, were notified Snturduy that the sending of second-class mnll was over for the season, excoptlng as already announ ced nowspapors to a single address, oach newspnpor wrapped and ad dreesod sepnrataly. This distinction Is made In order to eend the news dealers to tho ex p roes companies, whoso rates aro higher than mall ratoe, for they chorgo enough to covor tho cost of the long sled Journey over tho loe, whllo the governments of Can ada and the United States opsrato their Alaska and Yukon malls at a distinct loea for the benefit of the Isolated people in the North Their desire to assist their people In the shadow of the, long midnight does not extend to a desire to do frolghtlng nnd express buslneee. Were it al lowable to send In that manner It would be cheaper to send all freight by mall, doing everything up In small packages and paying full rates. Word of the condition of the Yukon river is that the last boat to attempt the passage down the river In tho preeent stage of low water and float ing See has already left White Horse, though several boats are yet on their way up river from Dawson, with lit tle prospect of arriving nt the rail road terminus. TWO KINDS OF CHILDREN Children that grow too fast and those that seem hardly J to grow at all, both need Scott's Emulsion. It gives that rich vital nourishment which is the secret of all healthy growth. It rounds out the long limbs, and helps children to grow without using up all their strength in growing. Mothers ought to know more about the wonderful help which Scott's Emulsion would give their children. Will Mai yoa t unfit frtt ape reftttt. SCOTT ft BOWSE, Petri Stmt, New Yck. Blip Kind You Havo Always fu uso for over SO j-enrs, and ft"Jr sonal supervision sinco its Infancy, f"C6CCwlt Allow no ono to doeoivo von in tliti All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" aro but Experiments that trlflo ivith and ordanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience i gainst Experiment, What is CASTORIA Cai.f ria is a harmless suhstituto for Castor Oil, Pare gor. Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It coutui s neither -Opium, Morphino nor other Nnrcotlo suhsiance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys AVormj and allays Fevcrlshncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind; Colic. It relieves TcoUiing Troubles, cures Constipation nnd Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAY9 Boars tho C&kricucMM The KM You Have Always M$i In Use For THC O tNTUR eOMMNT, t Fair Warning to Stock Owners. Persons owning horsos or cows nro warnod that herenftor all stock run ning nt largo anywhoro In tho city limits, Including the new wards, will be taken up subject to tho city ordi nances. D. W. GIBSON, 10-13-tf City Marshnl. Dog Catchers Wanted. Thoundcrslgned would liko to cm- ploy aoveral compotont men to assist In enforcing the dog lav. Call at city hall. D. W. GIBSON. 10-13-tf City Marshal. Silks anil Satins a t25c j Bricht colors such as f lUCKV ourcnase tot ables us to sell 50c satins for 25a per yard! We also add a few pieces of silk just for v riety at Abe a yard. . 1 Hi t gcoas win not remain witn us long Greenbaunfs Dry Goods Store, 302 Commercial Street A Pipe Dream It would be to think that you could havo your llnon or colored shirts, flan nels or woolons laundrled at any price In Oregon with the same artistic fin ish, beautiful color and faultless work as we are doing all the time by our perfect and finished methods. When wo "do up" your soiled lluen It Is as fresh and faultless In color and finish as when it was bought. Salem Steam Laundry. COLONEL. J. OLMSTED, Prop. D0RUS D. OLMSTED, Mcr. Phone 411. 320 Liberty St ::::::::A G E N I BALFOUR, GUTHRIE & CO.: GRAIN BDYERS AND Oats For Sale. HOP GROWERS SUPPLIES. Crude and stick Sulphur. f J. G. Grata, Agent, fCfr0HB4aiO4-tOttHHH0tl-eMKJHa(f It8fl e Bought, nncl which has beca has homo tho slgiiatnro of has been nmdo under his per. Signature of an Si ,na- r P' na- coi vnn Over 30 Years. MURRAY THCCT. MCW YORK CITY. CHEAP SUNDAY RATES Between Portland and , Wlllarr.rt Valley Points. Low round trip rates have Ul placed in effect between Portland i Willamette Valley points, in elik direction. Tickets will bo sold S days and Sundays, nnd limited ton turn on or boforo tho following '. day. Call on Southern Pacific Cil agents for particulars; 2.20 trip Salem to Portland and return 10-ltf W. E. COMAN, Q.PJL Dink, blue and yellow. both von and ns pm Lome early, as thei , A Signs of Renewed Actlvltj la the real estato world indlc&Uk creasing building oporaUons Spring, an-1 prompt us to remind tnut our facilities for supplying faua and soft wood, lumber, lath, shlntffco and other building materials art Poor, ceptlonally good. We will be pie to furnish estimates on contr large or small. A car of Mill shingles received. QOODALE LUMBER CO, 8 . Near 8. P. Pat Di? Phone (51. 3& Cv"T KHOffttB'KHKM- C Y O F:::::::: SHIPPERS OF fl-R Air 207 Commercial St.. Salem. Ore. i i i nnTWff W t