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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1905)
DAILT OATITAU JOURNAL. SALEM, onCOON. TODAY, SEPTETOEE 80, MM, You Cannot Buy Purer Whiskey than HAYNER, no matter bow much you pay or where you get It. Wo have been distilling whiskey lor 39 years. We have ono of the most modern and best equipped distilleries in the world. We know of nothing that would improve our product. Perfection In the distiller's art has been reached in HAYNER WHISKEY, which goes direct from our distillery to YOU, with oil of its original purity, strength, richness and flavor. It doesn't pass through tho hands of any dealer or middleman to adulterate. You thus savo tho dealers' big profits. You buy at tho distiller's price, at first cost. Don't you see the economy in buying HAYNER WHISKEY, as well aa tho certainty of getting absolutely pure whiskey? United Statei Senate, Washington, D. C. "I hava used HAYNER WHIBKEY for medicinal purposes In my family and have found It very satisfactory. 1 believe It to be a number-one medicinal whiskey." Thcmas S, Martin U. 8. Senator from Virginia. HAYNER WHISKEY QUEER RACE ON SAKHALIN TF 20 FULL QUARTS 4 s FULL $M OD EXPRESS liUAHlO tHfetAIU I C-20 FREIGHT I y - PREPAID Send us lbs abovo amount and we wfll ship In a plain seated case, with 00 marks to show contents. Try the whiskey, have your doctor test It every bottle If yon wish. If yon don't find It all right, ship It back to us at OUR EXl'RNSR and your money will be promptly refunded. How could any oiler be fairer? You save rrtonty by ordering; 20 quarts by freight. If you can't uso so much, get a friend to join you. You can have cither Kyo or Bourbon. Kemember we pay the express or freight charges. Write our nearest ofUco and do It NOW. G09 THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY St. Paul, Minn. St. Lou It, Mo, Dayton, O. Atlanta, On. Distillery. Troy. O. Cipltal, $500,000.00, pild la foU. Established 1800. Ainos Tribe, Worship the Sun nnd Sea and Live Under Ground COIN BUT NO LOVE waxatn fenriff jjSjjjBjftg rapatoru4W'r DiarnixaW. MS Farmers to ronn Unions. Chicago, Sept. 20. A determined effort will be made on tho part of tho American Federation of Labor to brink' "bout the unionization of tho farmers of this country, nnd their affiliation with the Amerienn Federa tion of Labor far mutual benefit and protection. In Wisconsin nnd Minno eotn n number of farmers unions havo been formed' already, nnd nccording to tho statement of tho offlclnls of tho federation, tho nfflliatlon of Jhcso far mers' unions with tho American Fed. oration of Labor Is morely n question of time. Tho lenders of tho fodonv tlon nro highly enthusiastic over tho prospects of nn nlliauco between tho city wago workers, tho form hands, nnd tho farmers. It Is expected that tho western farmers will bo well rep resented nt tho noxt mooting of the Amerienn Federation of Labor, which will bo hold in Pittsburg in Novombor. It Is not expected that tho plan of nfllliatlon will moot with any opposi tion from tho federation. Will Build a Buddist Tcmplo. Los Angoles, Cal., Sept. 20. A eito for tho first Duddist tomplo over built In the United States has been solcctod here, nod as the funds required nro on hand, tho work on tho building will soon bo started. According to tho stAtemoat eff Lord Abot Spcnsbaku, tho head of tho Buddlsts in tho .United Stntos, tho tomplo will bo n, magnift cont structure, closely following tho Oriental stylo in India and Japan. o Commencing Boptombcr 1st Tho Southern Ptclflo will soil special tickets to Portland and return, account Lewis and Clark exposition; rata: Ono and one-third faro for round trip, $1.85. Limit: Thirty days, but not later than October 31, 1005. A. L. ORAIO, 8-20-tf Q en. Pas. Agt. FIRST Bty Ffeeland Consolidated Now 5 Cts pe Shate Cho prlco will positively advance) In a few weeks. rhls mlno will bo a dividend-payer, and tho stock will bo worth 91.00 per share In 12 months. Ihli li not a prospect, but a developed mlno with moro than 2,000,000 worth of oro In sight. Buy now, but do not wait until tho stock goes to 25 cents per share. 3100 invested now will make a fortune. Wo wfll show you this prop. crty at our expense. If net found as represented you aro under no ob ligations to buy. What moro can you ask. For particulars call at our of. flee. The J. C. LEE CO. Inc., 337 STATE ST. gnool; 50ES The Boys' Shoe Question fsataHMMsWMsMMMHMH Boys will bo boys, and tho aver age boy is always boy enough to be hard on shoes, Boys' shoes should bo well made from good stock, in order that they will not wear ont until they have done their duty well. The only regret that many pa rants have is that they did not try our Boys' Sheets long ago. Prices $1.15, $1.60, $2 to $3, ac cording to size. Seattle, Sept. 2C Nicolay Kirilcff, of Vladivostoek, n, man who was sent out through tho wilds of Siberia by the Historical Museum of New York city for tho purpose of .studying tho prlmitivo raeos found there, reached Scattlo yestorday morning nnd depart ed last night for his oriontal home. While ho has spent nearly n yoar in this work, his Inst trip onding in Se attle, occupied but n llttlo more than three months. As be could not speak a word of English, it was nccossnry to interview him through nn interpreter. A physician by profession, ho is also" nn author nnd lecturer, and proposes to travel throughout Russia exhorting tho pcoplo to do something for the enlightenment of the rneos ho found on the northeast coast of Siberia. "Siberia somo dny will bo a grand country," ho said. "It Is rich in furs nnd minerals. It is as a sleeping giant awaiting the touch of .a magic wand to spring Into lifo nnd activity. I havo traveled oxtenslvcly through thnt country, nnd I know it is rich ns Alas ka is. I havo found tribos of natives who wear roughly fashioned gold orna monts ns othor natives wear bear teeth nnd claws. They know nothing of min ing, nnd that gold must havo been whero thoy could plek'It up off tho ground. "I might say that that cnUro coun try is but waiting tho coming of tho railroad that will somo day, I am snrc, cnclrclo tho globe. It will be essen tially a railroad of tho north, and I bolicvo tho tlmo not distant when they will find that two bands of steel will bo nblo to cross Bchrlng sea. When tho railroad comes bringing civiliza tion Into tho wilderness, then you will seo great stakes lost nnd won, in tho gnmblo with fortuno on tho wild wastes of Siberia. "You sco tho Illstorlcal Museum of Now York is greatly interested in tho study of primitlvo man as ho exists today. They havo sent all told threo of us out on such mission. I nm but following in tho footsteps of Borgorass and Jossup. Borgorass began this work ns a naturalist, Jossup as a scientist, nnd now I am following them as a phy sician. It Is interesting, this sort of study, Docauso ono is often stopped by sheer wonder to think that In this day nnd ago of tho world there should be races of pcoplo who havo not advanced in civlllxation a single step in 400 yoars. "Tho most interesting raco of peo- Jplo I havo vervfound was tho mere rolie of n nation In Sakhalin island, off th const of Siberia. They are known as the Ainos people. Of all the oriental nations, thoy are probably the most prlmitivo. "Tho tribe is living entirely apart from all other people. Thev have a form of religion and a syetatn of nie.lt eine founded en sorcery and witch craft, aad these forms they have main tained and eluag t. for the past 400 yoars. "During that time the Rttiaa gov enuueat has net lifted a finger to help thesti U mere lightened ways, and what little shreds of culture they have obtained were give them by American whalers who eaaasloaaUy tojeh at the islands for food, water and supplies." o- Woman Sues in Civil Courts Wfci'e Man Relies on Cupid Tipton, la., Sept. 2fl.-In a suit upon a .tlOOO promissory note by Mrs. Kath arine Ralston,' of Portland, Or., is re vcaled a shattered romance. It. S. Wal ters, the wealthy defendant, claiming in his answer the woman was to marry him for the $1000, but did not. Tt appears that Walters in 1003 and 1904 went to Portland, Or., and thcro met Mrs. Raleton, a widow. Walters proposed and was accepted, says his anwer, adding that Walters gave Mrs. Ralton considerable money and went home, uaderstanding that she would soin follow to Tipton, where tho mar riage would tako place. Shortly nftcr ho got home, ho says Mrs. Ralston wroto him stating thnt she had been robbed, and wanted moro money, which ho sent to hor. A little later, ho says, sho telegraphed she had been hurt and was In a hospital. Wal ters says ho sent moro monoy, nnd then sent a draft to pay her railroad fare. Sho was to arrivo in Tipton on a certain day, bu came scvoral days earlier and, unknown to Waltors, took a room at a hotel and began to inves tigate his financial condition. Finally, says Waltors, she got him to sign a promissory noto as a sort of pre-nuptlal contract, saying sho want ed the money to educate hor llttlo son. Walters gave tho noto on promise that the wedding should take place nt once. The woman consented, but before tho marriage ceremony could be performed disappeared. Later, in Cedar Rapids, sho is said to havo tried to sell the note. Then she went to nn attorney, and suit fol lowed. Waltors got an injunction re straining Mrs. Ralston from disposing of tho noto in nny manner, and alleg ing it was secured by fraud nnd mis representation and through unfulfilled promises. WORKING WOIVIEM Their Hard Struggle Made Easier-Interesting ments by a Young Lady in Boston and One in Nashville, Tenn. lyMxFrankkOrser nfrMssPearl Achersfl Mining Association Reorganized. Bl Paso, Texas, Sept. 29. Tho In ternational Miners' association, whoso membership ineludes mining men from nil over tho great Southwest, partlcur larly the territories of Now Mexico and Ariiona, the state of Texas and tho Mexican states of Sonora and Chi huahua, has been reorganised, nnd the membership is now at work to help mako the coming gathering of the Amorlonn Mining' Congress in this city, November 14-1S, a big success. This association alone will send a large del egation and the display whieh it will havo of tho great mines in tho south west will be instructive and Interest ing to tho visitors. All womon work; somo in their homos, somo in church, nnd somo in tho whirl of society. And In stores, mills nnd shops tons of thousands nro on tho nover-censing treadmill, earning their dally brond. All nro subject to tho samo physical laws; nil suffer allko from tho same physical disturbance, nnd tho nnturo of their duties, in many caseo, quickly drifts thorn into tho horrors of nil kinds of fcmalo complaints, ovarian troubles, ulceration, falling nnd dis placements of tho womb, leucorrhoja, or perhaps Irregularity or suppression of "monthly periods,'' causing back ache, nervousness, irritability nnd lassitude. Women who stand on thoir feot nil day nro moro susceptible to those trouulos than others. Thov esnoclallv rooulro andnvlirorat- ing, sustaining medicine- whUU will strengthen tho lomalo organism nnd enable them to bear cosily tho fatigues of the day, to sleep woll at night, and to rlso reiroshcd and oheerful. Row distressing to sco a woman struggling to enrn a livelihood or per form hor household dutlos when hor back and head nro nohing, sho Is so tirod sho can hardly drag about or stand up, and every movement causos pain, tho origin of which is duo to sorao derangement of tho fcmalo organise;. jiiss F. Orsor of i warrcnton Strcot, Boston, tolls women how to amid tiA I miff eritur: sho wrltM- 1 TVvir Tfr Plnlrlinm. " I suffered misery for several vcanwia irregular menstruation. My back sdadl had bearing down paint, and f rennwit kti wuiuj. jl uiuiu nub BiuL-ii nun mn i s..jl. tlrnir nround. I consulted two xinAtS. aches; I could not sloor without relief, nDd dm a lout resort. I trtf T li- T.. mi.i.. ,-.. . .. uyuin n.rin uiara v egeiauio I ornpounlijj to my surprise, evory ache and pain fcftiai I gained ton pounds and am in purf oct hi&i Miss Ponrl Ackers of 337 North Sna I mcr oircoi, -napnriuo, xenu., writtj, Doar Mrs. Pinlduim: "I suffered frith rmlnftil nnHrv!. . backache, bearing-down pains, palni una tho nhrinmnn- wax vnrv nanrnm ..J tj.. blo. and mv trouble ctow worm nnm "My physician failed to help n urfl decided to try Lydia E. PInkham's Vnui Compound. I soon found It iru dour a good. All my rmtns nnd nchH dlsappsirsl and I no longer f ear my monthly poriodi' Lydia E. PInkham's Vegetable Coo pound la the unfailing euro for all theii troubles. It strengthens the proper muscles, and displacement with all lti horrors will no moro crush you, Backache, dizziness, fainting, bar ing aown pains, disordered stonucli, moodiness, uisuko oi mends anusocletr nil symptoms of tho one cause-wIJ bo quickly dlspollod, and it will null you strong and woll. You can to)l tho story of yonr nt lenngs to a woman, nnd rccoire ip f ul ndvico f rco of cost. Address Ma Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Lydia E PInkham's Ycictablo Compound Secceeds Where Others Hal Tha Colonel's Waterloo. Colonel John M. Fuller, of Honey Grove, Texas, nearly met his Waterloo from liver and kidney trouble. In n recent letter he says: "I was nealy dead of these comnlaints. nmt i. though I tried my family doctor, he did mo no good; so I got a 50c bottle of your great Electric Bitters, which cured me. I consider them the best medicine on earth, anc. thank God who gavo you the knowledge to make them." 8old and guaranteed to cure dyspepsia, biliousness and kidney dis ease, by J. C. Perry, druggist, at 60c a bottle. Tho Post Card Craze. L.e. Sept. 2. The poet eard araa. whieh originated in Germany same years ago, wews to have found fertile sail la Great Britain, judgiag fram tha anoraaus number of such il lustrated pest aards wailed every day In all parts af the United Kingdom. In this aaaaaetien eoaaiderable comment has bean eattsed by the fact reported to the leaal pwtal authorities, that after the reaaat visit of the British squad ron, wr in the Baltie, to Holland, aver 88,000 sash view pst cards were fauad In the mail boxes of Haarlem a shmu tawa near Amsterdam, Prae tiaolty all tWse eards had Uaa mailed by tha affiaers and men of the British fleet. niu yj W hd Yw Hot Afrtti Bftj .Salem's "Big Shoe Store Oregon ShoeCo Tfte Slioes Incredible Brutality. I would have been Inerediblo bru tality if Chan. Lemberger, of 8yra euse, N. Y., had not done the best ho could for his sneering son, "My boy " ho aays, "cut a fearful gash over his ejo, so I applied Bueklen'a Arnica Salvo, which quickly healed It and saved his eye," Good for burns and ulcers, too. Only 25c at J. a Perry's Drug Store, O.A. sVuttU ttcsattrs at VOJrlX.c.,, rf w s-wlWirUriJUwrt Bag) The Syracuse Chilled Plow is a mighty good plow. The sharo Is nttachod with two Mtsand li firmly seated, there being no cross strains on it to broak it. The slope of the shin helps clear tho trash, nnd thoro is no bother fr inai source. Tha moldboard is longer and higher than common, making a splendid tun to the furrow. The heel of the landside has n slo- like n sled runner, hcnv the pl may be "backed up" without straining your baok. The handles are longer than usual, makine it an easier nlow to lsc. It runs very staady and will saour wherever ncbilled plow will scour. The jointer is a splendid patterns with a peculiarly shaped si ink tilt clear better than the ordinary straight shank common to most jr.rs. There are scores of these plows in ue all over the Red Hills. The bh! who have them are the best friendB they have. I When you seed a walking plow couie and try one. They come n all sUd( every oje guaranteed. r A Wiggins IMPLEMENT HOUSE Do you want anything in the way of Groceries! If you do you will make a mistake if you buy without seeing our Bna showing. Come ia and seo what wo havo to sell anyway, and get our prices. Baker, Lawrence & Baker Successors to Harritt Is Lawrence. U. J. LEHMAN Saah and doors, AU kinds of house rinUhtng. 'Phone 131 black. Also two ftoora of warohousa for rent; elmtor and switching faculties. No Piano Complete Without the Pianola lusieaa or having an lnstrnmnt i i.. i n.i. i - Mu the lim 77 v every member of the tamU? maklne mu8'"' "efl " - ""u "uuui lane plain. Every class of music is avnlinW .i .. 1L. ..-i. ..! Welt ,, CT.Slt,0nS' Pera8' danco mus!. P0P J. yJU mJ beeowe familar wlth tlm aU Md ' .w ti. tu qo not knnir ,. . , ,. . . . nv I. .i a fat.., - i. , , " Ul music, mo Aietrostyie, woicu -Ul iv P 1"' indIoates tor y "very shade of expression, .ui jou have to do is to foliw ,. .. i.' .u. ...i i.n r arked upon the music roll. " """" "" " brr!f M'rff1 Pianolas $250 and $300. Purchase may to w ""B'y installments. Sold In tho Northwest only by Eilets Piano Hotise Salem Store. Boom 7. McCornaek Block- Large stores Portland, Spokane. Wall wli .nJ settle. Wash.: Boim .!d, tW!!ta' Id4h5 PnBtlM0. Stockton and Ooakland, CaL; AstorU -- uu4oioa, oj WAKQ gUinyq and BEPAjBCfo A MPECSAJUrt