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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1912)
flT ClTltU flfjRJAL, gALEg, QBlfloa, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY t U18. Children Cry for Hatcher's V. "OH'i-- 'W.'1.r;. no Kind You Dave Always Bought, and which has been " ... avb flrt VAIt rS. linn w 11. - . "HU in use iv vmo iUO signature of - and linn lun n.. , . io u OTZfl-' Bonal supervision since Its inf LMV t4tcu4t; Allow no one to deceive you to this All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of and Children Exnarlan mni,,. . " 1 inuuw bwu XijtptTiment What ic CASTORIA Castorto la a harmless iratotltute for Castor 00, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is pleasant. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other KarcoHn nbslance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worm and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty veara it m been In constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and . Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving: healthy and natural sleen Tie Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. p CHIME. CASTO R I A ALWAYS Bears the Signature of c He Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years thc ecHTAua eoMMirr, tt uRr anifrr, ncw took eiTT. m.W.WW ., - - ' -'Iiiiim will ! w Incorporations i The following articles of incorpor ! (ilon were filed Saturday with the ; rcreury of state: Oregon Fruit & Development com : w, Portland; $500,000. Oregon Beach Hotel company, ! m View; $50,000. ! Empress Theater company, Port ! Hid; $50,000., Canbjr Mutual Telephone Assocla ' tkt, Canby. Weitern College of Music and Fine lrt, Ashland; $2,500. " I Nicklln Co., dissolution. Pacific Coast Dry Milk Machinery Company, decrease. He Laughed nt Death. DNITRD PBES8 LBJSED WIRI.) Mobile, Ala., Feb. 19. Laughing as he mounted the gallows, J. Lawrence Odom, convicted of the murder of three persons, was hanged here , to day. o It la well for the farmer to know how to rest profitably at this season. He can't well do It without books and papers In the house, and clubs or societies of some kind In the neighborhood. m IN. REACH F ALL Joy AND TO BE HAPPY KEEP WELL USE ONLY Mnii nitnmirnu HOT UldbUVLIUBROUGH'T TO CURE . COUGHS AND COLDS1 WHOOPING COUGH AND ALL DISEASES OF . THROAT AND LUNGS JOY TO Hi'lions Prle 80s and $1.00 SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY C J. C. PERRY. lHHH-mm- 4 s A L E ure to please the lovers of a wholesome beverage, Iways an invigorating, pure and delightful drink, ends strength to the weak and wearied physique, ffects a soothing cure for the nervous ills of life, 'akes life more pleasant and cheers the heavy heart, Brings good fellowship to all who partake in moderation. Enlivens the spirit of thff down cast and disheartened, Endows existence with hopes and aspirations Rsstores man to fulness of strength and activity, THE OPEN FORUM I Tbe Capital Journal Invite Public Discussion in This Department Let Both Side All Matten Bo Folly Brought Out It la Not the PoVse of This Newspaper to do the Thinking for Its Readers. Public Road Problems and Road Construction. Ed. Journal: It seems, according to Nature Student, that the good roads advocates of our cities, Includ ing the governor, who favor the Issu ance or road bonds, are making mis leading statements about our roads, either intentionally, or because of a superficial knowledge and grasp of the subject; the latter view being the most likely. For Instance, according to the public press, Governor West has been having exhibited pictures show ing the good roads built by honor convicts; and the mud roads that are the work of other people. Now it Is unfair to exhibit pictures of the roads taken only during the worst winter conditions throughout the year. Others In figuring the loss In the Increased cost of traffic over our present roads compared with what they figure It would cost to conduct the same traffic over the roads they say they would build state that the people of Oregon are losing about two million dollars annually In this way; but they fall to submit' the fig ures and I challenge them to do so. The fact of the mater Is, that most of our roads are In fairly good con dition from the first of April to about the first of November, or later; consequently for seven months or more during each year most of the roads of the Willamette Valley and probably all over the state can bs traveled by the autolst, as well as those hauling heavy loads. It Is during these months that our crops are nearly all harvested and hauled away to market, befpre the muddy season commences, and when It la not muddy or too dusty a dirt road is easier and bettor for the horseB to travel upon than a macad amized one; hence, where Is the great saving in transportation cost that the theorists figure outf If we have fairly good roads Beven months In the year when the traffic Is heavi est Is there not a limit to the extent we should, go In providing better roads the other five months to serve the needs of the lighter traffic? There are worse things than tem porary mud sink-holes in the public roads that the people of Oregon might have occasion to meet and overcome. For Instance, interest upon uncalled-for bonded Indebted ness, followed by huge grafts for public funds. The mud-holes In the public roads can be avoided to a great extent in winter and will nat urally dry up In summer; but It takes hard earned cash to fill taxa tion sink-holes. The people of Los Angeles county, California, have ex perimented with the road bonding proposition, and are having both the mudholes In the road and the taxa tion sink-holes through the bonding system. The farmers would prefer to spend their time in Improving the roads upon plans that would not create such taxation sink-holes;; and not be compelled to spend much time In combating such plans. But If we muBt make a choice between having mud-holes In the road during' the winter, or filling sink-holes In the taxation system continuously for the next 40 years, we will choose the mudholes in the roads, as they will be of less hindrance and less burdensome. The governor states that he desires good roads to encourage more peo ple to settle In the country, and he argues that bad roads are the prin cipal cause hindering the more rapid settlement of the country districts. I deny that such Is the case, and In proof of It would cite all to the fact that American farmers by the tens of thousands annually are flock ing to Canada to secure cheap lands In unsettled districts, where there are no established good roads. Fur ther, that whenever the United Statos government throws open to home stead settlement good land, that can be acquired by those with little means, that there Is always a wild scramble and rush to secure such lands, regardless of public road con ditions. To me these racis prove that It Is cheaper land upon more liberal terms that la needed to build up the country districts, and that building roads hastUy under a bond ing system must necessarily advance the price of lands IWore It passes out of the hands of speculators and Into the hands of actual permunent settlers; thereby making higher priced lands, assessments and taxes, which means more cApllal necessary to buy the lands, and h ss opportun ity to develop It value after it has passed from the hands of specula tors. Upon a cb tax system of building roads future settlers would havt a better opportuUty to aoqulre land while It 1 chwp eouId ro" ployed a part of the time doing rtrnd work, and could be paid with tax ORS.GilEATOn'S AWFUL EMRlEtiOE During Change of Life How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound Made Her a Well Woman. Natick, Mass. "I cannot express what I went through during the change oi me oerore I tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I was in such nervous condition I could not keep still. My limbs were cold, I had creepy sensa tions, and 1 could not sleep nights. I was finally told by two physicians that I also had a falmnp I raskA one day of the wonderful cures made by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and decided to trv it and It has made me a well woman. My neighbors and friends declare it has worked a mir acle for ma.. . Lvdia R. Ptnlchim'a V.iro- table Compound is worth its weight in goia ior women during wis perodor life. If it will hnln AthnriB vnn mv nnklUh mu letter." Mrs, MARION SWEET GREA- TON, No. 1 Jefferson St, Natick, Mass. Chanee of Life is one of the mmt critical periods of a woman's existence women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy knnnrn tn so successfully carry women through una trying penoa as Lydja i. nnkham's Vegetable Compound, , If TOO want snenlal adrln writ in Lydia . Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl. annual) Ljnn, mass. lour letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held la strict coafldenoe. 5p- 1 ... money that would otherwise be paid an Intwent under tho bo&uiug sys tem. And such settlers would get the benefits of such employment, the Increased value of the land as well as the benefit of the roads. Question: Shall we build perma nent public road payrolls for the benefit of permanent settlers In country districts; or larger, more temporary payrolls for the benefit of transient contractors and laborers but temporarily In a community; and therefore necessarily employed at a greater coat? FARMER BOY. HuHlness and Uprightness. Ed. Journal: As I have been an observer of our school system for some time and as you have extended an Invitation on the subject, I'll be one of the "Good Fairies" to keep lifting the subject up before the peo ple that they may be able to see the conditions. Things have come under my ob servation that were appalling. I was astonished to find that men in trusted would do and sanction such procedure in school affairs. Politics Is one of the things wrong la our school system. When our schools are run In a business and upright way, we may be able to get better results. Another thing I find the teachers are Instructed by the higher-ups" not to help the student That Is very good logic as far as it goes, but In nine cases out of 10 with most teachers that Is too eaHy and goes too far. The student's time goes on, but there they are, handcuffed. We have our fCO.OOO and $100,000 high , schools, but whtre are the goods? The teachers' salary has been doubled, two county inspectors added to the list, at $100 a month each, but how about the taxpayer and Btudent? I know a district that hasn't had a legally hired teacher of legal papers for about two years. Who Is to blame for that? I am of the same mind as Mrs. Ella Flag Young, of Chicago, "What we need is more superintendence and not more superintendents." She finds they are expending $270,000 on poor teachers and the students going over the same Steps a Cough Quickly --Even Whooping Cough Co(k Hrmrif Kaallr Matf at Hum fur Sue. If you hve an olwtinalo, defD-ientcd eoiiKh, which reflux-" to lie cured, get a 60-confc bottle of l'iiiex, mix it with honi-mde iiirw syrup and start taking it. Inside of H houri your eoii)h will be gone, or very rwarly . Kven whooping cough ii quickly conquered in thia way. A60-cent lt'tle of I'inex, whi-n mixed In a pint bottle with home-made augar syrup, givi vou a pint a family supply -of the flnwit oougli remedy that money could buy, at a clour aaving of 2. The suirar vrup in easily made by mixing a pint of granulated urar and pint of warm water, and stirring for 2 iriinutea. Pincx anothn and hrals the inflamed tticmhranra with remarkable rapidity, U itimulaUa tlu appetite, it llnntly la. tive, and h a pleaunt tnnte children tnke it willinglv. Splendid for croup, aathroa, bronchi'tii, throat tickle, diet paina, etc., and a thoroughly uccnful remedy for Incipient lung troubles I'inex is a apecial and highly conmi traUd compound of Norway White Tine extract, rich In ffiiaiacul and other heal ing pine element a. It haa oft-n berg imitated, though never lucreaBdilly, for nothing m will produce the aama w aiilta. Bimply mix with aiijmr syrup or trained boiier, in a pint buttle, and it is ready for ue. Ihe irenuine Finer la guaranteed to five absolute satiatartiun, or money r linked. Your Hriioyint has I'iriex, or will get It for J"". W not. aend to 111 I'tnu Co., i t VV7ae, lai. work for the third time. Another year or so like the past year no doubt we'll be in the came shoe as New York found itself a few rears ago, the students will have to leave the 8chools to get self maintenance. My good people, we think our po sition U pretty hard now, but Just wait until we are harnessed and in the arena of the One Board system that is being advocated, . the system wherein "We'll have everything our way We'll hold the pot, hire all the teachers at a fine salary, keep the best ones In the cities and send the' poor to the country to be educated and tell the parents to stay at home and mind their own business." Wake up fathers and mothers, at tend your school board meetings, see what is going on and cast your vote for legality and honesty. A PARENT. DIDTIC ESCAPE OF Men cnitso rases lsissd wisa. Nogales, ArU Feb. 19. Officials of the Mexican state of Sonora an nounced today that they will seek the extradition of Juan Romero, charged with embeizlemeut, who escaped from Mexican officers in Nogales, Sonora, plunged ' across the international boundary line, 40 feet away, and defied his pursuers. Romero escaped while being taken from the jail to the Banco de Sonora to draw money for personal expenses. The officers refrained from firing at him because of pedestrians, and gave pursuit. So close were they when the boundary was reached that Romero dived headlong for the American side. One of the pursuers dived after him, clutching a leg, which Romero jerked free as he rolled Into the United States of America. He sat down and calmly rolled a cigarette while the Mexican officers of the law stood and shook their fists under .his nose. o Are Ever at War. There are two things everlastingly at war, joy and piles. Rut Ducklen's Arnica Salvo will banish piles In any form. . It soon , subdues the itching, Irritation. Inflammation or swelling. It gives comfort, Invites Joy. Greatest healer of burns, bolls, ulcers, cuts, bruises, eczema, scalds, pimples, skin eruptions. Only 26 cents at J. C. Perry, o There are said to be four things anybody can do: drive a horse, teach a school, preach a sermon, and edit a newspaper. Near Rochelle, III., an Indian went to sleep on a railroad track and was killed by the fast express. He paid for his carelessness with his life. Of ten it's that way when people noglect coughs and colds. Don't risk your life when prompt use of Dr. King's New Discovery will cure them and ao pre vent a dangerous throat or lung trou ble. "It completely cured me, In a short time, of a terrible cough that fol lowed a sovere attack of grip," writes J. R. Watts, Floydada, Tex., "and 1 regained 15 pounds in welKht that I bad lost." Quick, safe, reliable and guaranteed. 60c and $1.00. Trial bot tle free at J. C. Perry. o For market purposes plant but one kind of potatoes; "mixed lots" do not command the .best prices. The Sound Sleep of Good Health Is not for those suffering from kidney ailments and Irregularities. The prompt use of Foley Kidney Pills will dispel backache and rheumatism, heal and strengthen sore, weak and ailing kidneys, restore normal action, and with it health and strength. Mrs. M. F. SpaUbury, Sterling, 111., says: "I suffered great pain In my back and kidneys, could not sleep at night, and could not raise my hands over my head. Out two bottles of Foley Kidney Pills cured me. Foley Kidney Pills have my heartiest endorsement." Red Cross Pharmacy (H. Jerman). , Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA umifflMiff IflFRtHCH FDTALE PILLS. A Malt, Ctmm Wwuww 9m Ann wmmm Mimrwf afMV. m !1W Tl Mil. Hrl tM4; ( Ratio. Is, tif.o Utitui'iawd of al'iMf KAinlv4. aVel rli tIJprtM, lllam4 Uh-wm trial, toba Mid fflf- r;Ui4. Sauupta f ret. ff jwf 4fwfgM4aM aw ha tivsa Bskl ;mi trttm la thm IftifTVD MILICIl CO,, t lAWfl.T, 9M. $ol4 In Silta to Pt. !. C. SIom SALEM DANK & TRUST CO. GENERAL HANKING AND THL'HT Ill'HINEHfl With our assurance that we are aole and willing to take car of It, wt solicit your Banking Business. Open an account with us, and we will extend you every favor eon. slstent with good banking prin ciples. WE PAY FOIH PKU CENT OX HAVING: IJterrty Bfareet, I nut off BUtm J. L. AHLERH, President, W. O. CAST, CsAbler, I. I. CAST, Vlcv-Pras. DR. L. B. BTEJEVE8, , H. ROBERTS, VI rectors. Entire Line of Notions included in thi3Sale Infants' and Children's Section We need tbe rooia ia cur infants depart- i :: nient for the new Spring goods that are x :: daily arriving and have taken all broken I lines of slips and dresses and divided then 1 ?a- L C 1 I . lsio icree cpeciai im LOT 1. Regular price 85c to $1.25 Special . .... . . 69c LOT 2. Regular price $1.75 to $2.50: special . . . . 31.39 LOT 3. Regular price, $2.50 to $3 special . . . . . . jpl.SS PAC3 THKKf ; H rSHEPLEY9Sl i Dressmakers, Sal of Notion I Feb. 19 to Feb. 25 Tracing Wheels Patent Beltings Open to All :: Binding Ribbon ; - Finishing Braids Garment Fasteners Tape Measures Dress Shields Cotton Tapc3 I Bees Wax Hooks arid Eyes I Feather Bone i r Linen Tapes Collar Supporters Bias Lawn Tapes IS Hair Good, : : Last Week of Hair Goods Demonstration :: Mrs. Overstreet, well known the entire :; length of the Pacific Coast for excellent I quality hair goods, invites you to inspect :: the exceptional bargains she is of ferrag. You :: will find here the largest assortment of real t hair goods at special prices shown on the racmc toast This Week Only I U. G. Shipley Company )nalNj Popular s 145-147 North Liberty Street, fsl MEUCllAJfDISE Between State and Co art. PKICES REAL ESTATE BULLETIN E. HOFER & SONS INVESTMENTS IXCOME PKOPERTY TO TRADE. Properties valued at $9500, and bringing In $900 per year Income, to trade for Improved farm. Will assume one or two thousand If farm Is suit able. No. 79. Six-room house, with full bauement and tot COxlOO, Just off from State street. Lots of fruit. All as sessments paid. A bargain at $1000. No. 67. 1 2-3 acres, just outside of city limits on South Commercial street. $1100. rOBTLAKD riiOFERTY TO TRADE If you have a large or small acre age tract to trade ror Portland resi dence proiKrty, see us about It. We can give you several good trades. ACRE IX CITT. No. 118. One acre In East Salem district only Ave blocks from State street Seven room house, barn, chicken house etc. Several fruit trees. All assessments paid. Price, $1,850. Two lota oa Ctiemeketa street, close la for $2,500. DAIRY LAND. Mr. Investor: Now is the time to buy cheap dairy land in Llnooln county In the Yaqulna and Sllotx dis tricts. We have It from $10 an acre up. through place. Small bouse and barn, Orchard. 100 acres of good timber. Price, $25 per acre. No. 74. Corner on Capitol street, 70 xl25 feet and 6-room house. Bearing fruit trees. Large barn. Price $1250. SMALL APARTMENT HOUSE. Well furnished seven aimrtmont house. Oood location, deferable ten ants. House full at present and making good Income. Price for equipment furniture and business. $vC0. List your property with us for re-ulls. & SONS !13 S. Commercial Street Jrj pJQ fin feffA Hi ' OF THE MAKING OF BREAD like that of books there is no end. You would think so anyway if you could see the rack after rackful that comes from our ovuns, and we baks more every day. The reason ? Well, there are lota of thsii. The best and most satisfactory way to learn them Is to try the bread. Jutt try It that's all. CAPITAL BAKERY 439 Court Street Phone f-4 o n i i V Ui-U ai a w 4 I HJi I rt:a tMi,u',!i:vi!.'