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About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1903)
THE DAILY JOURNAL, SALEM, OH COON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1903. nvb 2SEJtt fic zs sz se fUl" The Kingliist.Tables In the. Land The kindliest tables in the land -thp tah? whr, uwa fl,a.. of wealth and fashion ircets"-the dinner tables in the finest hotels and private residences every whe, are indebtedto Hawke's Icut glass for r.o little of their beauty. People of refined, fas" llAl. lie tocfp-.Ufin rfldlWf lnniu ilia JJT,- l-.i !, i,ia--w M..wu.ynHunire umcicuw uetween glass that is inferior and glass that is superior, seldom choose any nther kind than Hawke's simnlv hppaiisA It ic Moor krirrMa.. and more beautifully cut than any other in the world. We handle Hawke's glass, and have this fall a superb display of it. in all sorts and styles of choice table pieces. To buy cut vjiaa wiiuuuioccuii; uui iiuc i: IHamlet left our. Corner State and Liberty Streets, Salem. mP 14-M llllllllllll ItHII m I Local Social Realm! Events In the itHiiiiiiiiiiiinnnmi PER80NAL.8. N. Gooding, of St. Paul, was a Sa- horn visitor today. B. O. Judd loft last evening for a Ibuslncss visit to Portland. W. It. Jones, of Jefferson, was a Sa- flora visitor this morning. Sheriff J. E. Moran, of Clinton county, low. Is In tho city. M O. Duron went to Brooks this morning for a brlof business visit. County Surveyor Horrlck returned this morning from a visit to Turner. Judgo n P. Morcom, of Sllverton, vas a Salem visitor yostorday after- tnoon. C. B. Mooros, of Oregon City, waB in Salem yesterday, loturnlng homo last evening. Bishop H. U Burkley returned to Portland last ovonlng, nftor a brlof malt In Salem. ft JTor. j. h. AcKorman ion mis morn ing for Portland, with a view to pro- cocdlBg to Eastorn Oregon tomorrow. Mrs. W. H. Chatton roturned to her (homo In Portland last evonlng, aftor a fow day's visit with hor parents, iMr. and Mrs. George Collins. Wllllo Hendricks, who was recontly (injured by being thrown from a horse, left last evonlng for MU Angel, whero lb.o will resume his studies at tho col Elcgo. v Mlsa Abblo Coulson, who Is hero (for a short stay from Salem, and Miss BBlancho Bailey, of Ohio, spent last iwcok with friends and relatives at Blalno. Thoy roport tho resldont3 of , that city vory entertaining, tho ell nmto vory Invigorating, and tho scon. ory without an equal. Miss Abble ex pects to return to Salem In a fow weeks. South Salem Personals. Elmor Klghtllnger left last night for his homo In Riverside, CaL, aftor a week's visit with his brothers In Sa lem. Mr. and Mrs. Emll Hahn and daugh ter, Nlta, and Mrs. I M. Huson, of Hollx, Ore., who havo boen visiting at tho homo of Walter Warner, in 8outlr ,8alem, left last night for Southern California, whore they will mako tholr future home. Mr. and Mrs. A. Prescott and daugh ter, Mrs. Bello White, and Miss Eu leno Whlto. havo returned from bov- ral months'' visit In tho Eastern ajates. They aro now living In tholr new homo, recently purcnaseu rrora O. W. McNamar, on South Commei tclal street Roy Mlllor, cashlor of the First Na- Itlonal bank of Sumpter, arrived In the city last ovonlng, and will visit with his mother, Mrs. Amolla Miller, on South Commercial street Trifles tiiat arc Necessity To every lady of tasto In dross com- prlso our assortment of diamond rings, bracelets, hat pins, etc Their beauty strikes the oyo at a glance. while the modorate prices open the ioorof purchase to vory ona, Buy ing Is easier where first choices are tmost numorous. Our constant ous Homers keep bringing us now frUnds. IWo grow by our past. (C. T. POMEROY 'Jeweler and Optician, 288 Com. St. We flave Fresb Mianekafia Calces &r EXTRA QUALITY. MADE FRESH EVERY OTHER DAY. At the California Bakery. V X ASSOCIATION CTlinFNTS ENTERING DAILY noK-Ttrn cttRiFfrr! BEST Gyaaftsluai, Batis. Redlijr Rooa. Library la Coaiectloa. Y. M. C A.-oercUl nS CbtatUU Sts- Pboae 2081. Cetaloar free iiKe witnessing namiet, wun fewewy QMles Death Of S. Howards Stephen H. Edwards, one of Lane county's foremost and wealthiest pion eers, died at tho homo of his nephew, County Commissioner H. D. Edwards, at East 14th and Hllyard streets, Sun day night near 12 o'clock. Tho cause of death was principal ly duo to old age. Ho was 79 yoars, 9 months and 22 days old. He surforod sovoroly from stomach troubles. Eu gene Guard. Young Men's Republican Club Thorc will bo a meeting of the Young Mon's Republican Club at the ofllco of J. O. Graham. Wednesday night at 7:30. Buslnosg of Importance will bo transacted, and mattors In which tho club Is vitally Intorosted considered. It Is doslrod that nvery mombor Is present. H. D. TATTON, Pros. CLAIR BAKER, Sec. Devllflih 1b Ononumm I.nk. Much Interest has been nwnkened by tho alleged discovery of Hinall squids, miniature representatives of tho terri ble dovllllsh of tho occanHin Ouondaga lake, near Syracuse, N. X- Professor John I). Wilson and others havo pro nounced tho specimens to bo genuine squids, and tho discovery has brought out accounts of previous flnds of tho same kind In the lake. Professor John M. Clarke suggests that tho animals may bo descended from ancestors which entered tho Inko when It was In communication with tho sea by way of the St. Luwrenco valloy and that their kind bns been enabled to survlvo amid such strange surroundings ou account of tho salinity or the bottom waters of tho lake, which nro In contact with th.o rocks from which tho Syracuso salt . works dcrlvn Uieir wupply. Of course, you are going to take lunch wlth'the Citizens' Light & Trac tion Co., and learn how simple a gas range really Is. 3t Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Slogmund; of Mehama, spont tho past few days In this city, visiting their sons, J. 0. and W. M. Slegmund. They loft this morn Ins for home. Common pepper is pepper and almost anything else a quarter pepper three-quarters that, very likely. Sells "cheap" and pays 300 per cent. Schil ling's Best is nothing but good true pepper. If you want dirt you can add it for nothing. Rome Made D -s NIGHT SCHOOL X X TEACHERS: SMALL COST. LOST IN THE STORM Carl Mealy Has Been Missing For Six ' Days Was Hunting In the Moun tains With His Uncle is Believed to Have Perished Charles McKInnon, whs llvos on Canyon creek, just above Lower Soda, arrived In Albany last evonlng, Bays tho Albany Herald this morning, with tho nows that Carl Mealy, a well known young man of Foster, Is lo3t In tho mountains. Ho dlsafipoarod six days ago, and has not been heard of. Searching parties ;have been looking for him tho past four days, but to no avail, and nil hopo of rinding him f live is given up. Mealy went hunting last Wednes day on Mount Bald Peter, In company with his undo, William Mealy. Thoy became separated, as Is customary in doer hunting, and wore unablo to find each other. After tramping about for somo time William Mealy discovered that he had lost his bearings. Tho snow was ovor a foot deep, and, al though ho is an uxporlonced timber cruiser, ho could not find his way. Ho realized that ho was complotely lost. and wandored about all Wodnosdny night, finally finding his way to the foot of the mountain nnd reaching home Wednesday. But his companion, who was also ovidontly lost In tho thick woods, row made pathless by tho storms, was not so fortunate. When Carl did not Ni$iieiiiiiiii Don't Cry over split milk, but take precauslons not to spill any more byuslntr only per fect combination pen holder andlnk well, which IS the "SWAM FOUNTAIN PEN" You don't have to take It apart to fill cleans Itself every time It Is filled, and has an adjustable feed, and Ii tbe only pen In exlstance that has these superb features ! reach homo on Thursday night great alarm was foil for him, especially since William Mealy had had such a hard tlmo to find his way out ot U10 woods, and searching partlos wero Im modlatoly organized. Largo numbora of tho soarchora havo boen looking for the missing man ovor slnco bo disap peared, and at least 30 mon wero on gaged lit searching for him last Satur day, but no traco of him whatovor has been found, Tho gonoral supposition Is that Mea ly has met with somo Injury, and bo Ing unablo to move or, at best, to mako slow progress, has beon com pelled to llo down In tho snow and dlo. Ho was ono of tho most oxporl onced timber cruisers In tho moun tains, and It seems strange that ho should havo beon lost for so long a time on llald Potor, whero ho was ac customed to hunt, unless somo injury should havo bofallon him. It Is thought he might havo been struck by a falling treo or limb, as there bad beon a sovore storm the day before ho wont bunting, and the limbs of the trees wero wolghted down with snow, and llkoly to break. It Is not at all Impossible, though, that he bocamo lost and wandored around until ho perished from cold hunger and deprivation without re- collvng an Injury. A few years ago a well-known man named Melntyre, liv ing near Cedar Flat, dlsuppartHi while hunting on Hald Peter, and was nvr heard of aaaln. his body was- never found, and he disappeared as com nletly as If swallowed up by the earth. Hald Pstsr U a nwwntaln about 3io0 fet high Ih the edn of the Cas cade mountains. It to about six mllM north of the town ot Hotter, and Is six mild frown the Willamette Valley and Cascade Mountain, waon road. It to densely wooded, and Is a good htoiUns place, aUtteuRfe. as has bees prove. It to a perilous plaee for hunters woet of the year Carl Mealy, who has been given up as dead, to a well-known young Ban. living la the vlelnlty of Fester. He was 27 years old, and has spent nsoet of sis life la that vicinity. His father live In Portland, but be has resided with bto uacles, near Foster, for some time. Flipped Up By a Falling Tree. Olen & Cox, who Uvea near Pros per, where be baa been logglne during tho summer,' mot with a' povortf acci dent Monday evonlng, which rnjfiht havo provon worse, bu.t which will re tire him from labor for a few days, or, perhaps, weeks. ' Ho, was helping to foil a tree, which folVacross a log, upon which ho was standing. Mr. Cox was thrown Into tho air and fell back upon tho log wUh a forco sulllolont to Jar him up sovorcly, while two of his ribs were cracked by the fall. Dr. Kliuo was called, and looked after tho Injuries. Bandon Record. Has Moved. Jacob Vogt, tho shoomakw and re pairer, will horoaftor bo found on Stato street, just opposite tho Roth & Graber store, and will bo pleased to have all his old, as woll new pat rons, make him a rail. 2t tinting a Prlcktr Tear. My tlrst sud cxporlcucc of tho Af rican prickly pour was gained on a visit to the market place of Algiers. Tho fruit was handed to us, politely peeled by the Arab dealer, and thus nit we miitlo acquaintance with Its de lightful coolness no suspicion of Its evil qualities entered our minds. A fow days later, adding tho excite ment of a llttlo trespassing to the r.iore legitimate pleasures of a country rumble, wo came upon n well laden irrotip of prickly pear bushes and could not resist tho temptation to help our solves to some of tho fruit Tho result was woeful, Concentrated essence of stinging net tle seemed all lit onco to bo nssnlllng hinulH, lips and tongue, uml our skin, whorevor It hud come In contact with the ill nntured fruit, was covered with a thick crop of minute, bristly hairs, apparently growing from It, and ven omous iiud Irritating to tho last degree Our silk gloves, transformed sudden ly Into miniature robes of Xoasua, had to bo thrown away, perfectly tinwoar nblo, and the Inadvertent use of our pocket handkerchiefs before wo had fully realized the oxtont of our inlsfor tutio caused fresh ngonlos, In which nncn na wnll nit linn rmrtlcltmtcd. For many a day did tho retribution of that theft haunt us In tho rorm ot myriads of tiny stings. "Home Llfo ou on Os trlch Farm." Pattern's Book Stoe Indiana anil CMUenahlp, India ti8 who mulntalu their tribal re lations aro not permitted to voto In any state. They am not citizens of tlfo United States, but merely "wards of the nation." In all tbo states, wo be lieve, an Indian who has severed bis tribal relations and become a cltttcu aud a tnxpayor has a right to voto on ati ouuality with tho whites. In the matter of voting tbo fifteenth amend tiieut to tho constitution prohibits tho states from ranking any discrimination on account of race or color. Our nat uralization laws, for Instance, do uot admit Chinamen to naturalization, but tho supremo court bus decided that a Clilnnlnnii born hero Is as much a citi zen as are tbo descendants of tlioso who en met over with John Hmlth to Jamestown or with tho pilgrim fathers to Plymouth rock. And tho Indian ought to havo bettor rights hero tliao tho Chinaman. Ht. Ixiuls Itepubllc. Discovering a Gold Mlnr. Hold was dIsco ered In California In l&IK uml lu Colorado In 18S8. Tho dis covery was accidental in both cases, and tho fact created the Impression that mines wero "lying around loose." Adventurers drifted about In hope of "stumbling upon a mluo." Mr. Tlmyui In his "Marvels of the Now West" mentions eovoral Instance of lucky "stumblluff." Three men while look lug for gold In California discovered Ihe doud body of a man who evldentlj bud been prospecting. "Poor fellow I" suld ono of tbe trio. "lie has passed In III cheeks." "Let's give blm a deeetit burial," said another. "Home wife or mother will bo glud If over she knows It " Thoy Utgati to dig a grave. Three ff-t bulow tin) surface thoy discovered signs of gold. The strutiger was burled In unother ji!nce, and where thoy hod located a grave thoy opened a gold mine. A I'rrnk (Hunt. Manager of Hliovv Havo I got a va sanujr for a giant? Why, you don't look lire feet! Candidate Yes. that's Just It. I'm dio smallest glaut on record. Ooes Dick to Iowa. Governor Chamberlain this morning honored the requisition of the Gov enter of Iowa for the arrest and de livery to the agent of Iowa of Jehn Slemer, wanted lu Clinton county, that stato, for forgery. Slemer was arrasted In Washington county, this state, two years ago, for forgery, eoni roltted, and sent to the penitentiary for two years. His term expires to morrow, &Rd Sheriff J. U. Moran, aeat of tbe stato of Iowa, will be frMmM8rMteWg9ftmHM I TS&oiJ&iits of Tfiafifcsglyiiig Our national holiday is only a few flays i away. Families and friends on that day will lay aside the daily routine of life and meet once more about the table and fireside. A great day is our Thanksgiving Day, but friend, wnen others are dressed in their best "bib and tucker," how'll you show up in that -faded and shiny old suit of yours? While it's on yotff mind you'd bettfr come and let ua At you oat with a anit that's becoming and up-to-date. With our tailors, wa have isollltlea that no other atora around has for fitting you In a rody.to-wer eult, andae to the stjlo, quality and workmanship entering into our suits, wo challenge tho world to bWo you better value for tho money. wiu rvacu Ol ail HI t MS IS ? rfsryjvmj ffSJi KJfZAWlS s rj s ,aajpjjjssMsjBjsaeassjssssjJf,sgy j m 2f t ," j J a J 4-lrHfltiMtHHJm4sH glvon charge of tho prisoner, nnd ho Icavos thtB ovonlng for homo, taking SlomtT with him. Biomor forged a note for S700, se cured the monoy, and escaped to Ore gon. Hofnro tho forgery wob discov ered, Blemor was arrested in Oregon on a similar charge, nnd sent to tho ponltunllary, and tho Iowa oftlcors awaited tho expiration of his term hoio boforo coming nftor him. Quests of the City. John Yntes, who raised a disturb ance In tho St. Klmo rostaurant yes terday, whllo Intoxicated, nnd dam agod tho cash roglstor, pleadod guilty to drunkenness and disorderly con duct this morning In tho city record er's court, nnd was fined 10, which sum ho paid. Jack Martin, rolcasod from tho penitentiary a fow days ago. and W. Dalr, wero arrostod for bolng PiMinTuuiinrnTHinnnnnHnfinnniiiTg I Don't Wait Until the man offers to IUY your land; get your i Title Straight 1 Now Then there is no de- lay when you want i to SELL You may THINK your title is PERFECT. 1 Do you KNOW it is? 1 Salem Abstract ! and Land Go. I F.W, WATERS, Mg. Eiiiiuiuiiiuuuuiuiumiuuuiiiiuuuiil ' i i A Grand Clean-up i !l Our entire stock of Shoes and Rubber goods to be II . . !! sold at sacrifice prices in order to adjust our new !! ; goods, Bargains for all, call early and get the ;; !! cream of it. ; I P. Monfred I i i Successor to Jacob Yogt. 265 Commercial Street i : 4lttvsM - r V; - - g Jm CSZZftCyKZZjl The Boys will be there, too. Rooks will be laid aside and the boys will meet with father and mother and aunts and coutlua and all the reit. How It adds to the boy's self leipect and uanllneis to bo Hoatljr arcaacd, to say nothing ot hli pleiuuru. We Lead the WHIaraetto Valley In boys' as well at in wen'a clothing, not only In showing tho largest assortment In tho valloy, but became our patrona have learned that our eulti aro adapted to boys' woar. They stand tho ratket, and aro priced within i IAH a drunk. Doth pleadod guilty nnd woro glvon 2t, days in tho city Jail. Mar tin was woll suppllod with morpblno nnd cocalno, lmvlug acquired tho drugs slnco leaving Uio prlspn, and these drugs, with a goodly doso of al cohol, resulted in his arrest last night, Robblns Will De Here. Hon. J. II. Robblns, representative to tho legislature from Ilakor county, wrltos from Bnn Francisco, whoro ho Is for tho bcnoflt of his health, that should tho govornqr call an ex tra session, ho will hor on hand t3 dlschargo his duty to his constituents. What a disappointment Mr, Hob bine' presence will bo to thoso anxious Republicans called out by the Horald, who havo boon so earnestly hoping that Mr. Hobblns 1101 gono so far away that ho could not got back, and his seat In tho legislature would bo declared vacant. Hon. I J. Adams, of Sllvortnn, was a Malum visitor this afternoon, mmnmmammammmammmmmmammmmimmmmmiiimia Wheat j Flout I Only $M5 per sack ! ! Thi famniK iineycpll'd I Peacock Brand of flour, f The finest flour ever sold ;: in the city. Try it once. I ; We will sell to you again. ; ; n I D. A. White &Son j Feedmen and Seedsmen ! 301 Oom'l 8t, Salem, Oregon. aWfr'Ki I I f ! 4atlstaHiesMN8 xr r y r m arw . iiT r fj$7A yL6ryOnJMr& - a ! Hard I i i cN