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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1912)
re Six DAILY CAPITAL JOCBXAL, SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 191i II 11 ri n N it It II tl II U M n 11 tt u n M M II si M 'tl tJ II n n u It n M 11 M n 91 M II ri u 11 it it (1 It It it it n 1 1 1 1 j 1 n 1 1 THE CAMP GROUND IS BUSY PLACE The Bulletin Tuesday morning says: Day opened clear, but clouds In the went. Ijitil night the Indications were rain, John P. Humphreys and C, L, Hum phreys, of Macleay, pitched tent yes terday. Undo John Is a fumlllar fig ure on the camp grounds. Secretary Meredith has a lame arm from carrying the Immense amount of letters recelvod dally, It 1b almost a physical Impossibility for him to read the largo accumulation of mall, much less to care for the thousands of little details. Con Homyer, the popular superin tendent of the state fair grounds, had averaged 40 miles a day for the past ten days, up to midnight !ant night. Con Is a good pedestrian, but the high stepping required over tho grounds will tell on hhn. Hilly Taylor, of No. 19 Moody, was culled to Macleay last night to got his threshing started. Oeo. D. Hlbbard, of Sllverton, will be found at his old location after Thursday. Tho Hlbbards aro regular campers, 'fronton Hlbbard came over two years ago for tho last time. J. J. Wiseman, of Dallas, who was unable to attend last year after having selected his lot, has Blnco died, and IiIb old time friends will miss him. Mr. Dryant, the florist, went Into camp yesterday. Prank Alloy and family, of Rose liurg, will arrive with tho Douglas county delegation Friday evening. They will have two tents, making thus far fifteen camps reported for Don Kins. The man who claims he cut down the camp ground cherry tree, the rose bush referred t In a recent bulletin, feels grieved over mention made In this bullotln. He folt that he was told to cut down a green vine that trained against a hoiiBe and leave It a dead bush on the ground In tho campers way. Thore Is no disposition on my part to injure any person. Those who know me know that I have ever been a defender of the trees and the vines and that it spells trouble when one Is Injured. It has coBt me some harsh words and the loss of Homo posslblo friends In days gone by, but If I am remembered whon I pass on, It will be because I am a friend of nature and of the camp ground at the Oregon State Fair. We once took the 7(ith do- greo In an order, not the grange, that taught us to not always do that which we thought we were told to do. We found to our humiliation that we mis interpreted the order and It may be the cuBe with the party who feels In jured. He believed ho was told to do this find as In the case of our own brought words of censure. We trust that ho will consider this the 7!Hh de gree. At no time In 25 years have thore been as inuny people In camp prior to the week of opening as there are to- duy. Things are looking mighty good. I H. Fletcher, Salem, has his big tent up and Is a citizen of the Tented City, and may be found at the corner of doer and Booth, J. T. Berkwlth, of Turner, for 28 years In charge of the hay barn, and one of Marlon county's commissioners will be In camp Thursday, Norlyn P. Hoff, of the Oregon Agri cultural college surveying party pitch ed his tent yesterday. Goorge lloeye and family, of Oregon City, set tent last night and are at homo to thoir friends on the Broad way. They are Just opposite the Dou glas county location. Mrs. Hoeyo has attendisd every fair save one since 1802. INDUSTRIAL FAIR CLOSED SATURDAY School Children's Products Were View. rd by 41X10 During the Two Days' Shew. mi: A, WliHammerless - .22 REPEATED All o CA kf mmm Sure Safe Shooting for Man or Boy And a dimple Kale to Uare f or The Remlngton-UMC .22 Repeatet is rifled, sighted and letted for accuracy by expert gunsmiths. It shoots as you hold. The simple, improved safety device on every Remington UMC .22 repeater never fails to work. Accidental discharge is impossible. The Remlngton-UMC .22 Repeater is easily cared for. In taking down, your fingers are your only tools. The breech block, firing pin and extractor, come out in one piece permitting the barrel to be cleaned from the breech. The action handles .22 short, .22 long or .22 long rifle cart ridges any or all at the same time without adjustment. , Rimtngton'UMCtix prfct shooting combination RcrniniJIoo. Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 200 Broadway 4 New York City Albany's first school children's In dustrial fair came to a happy close lust Saturday night after a crowded attendance. There were perhaps 2000 pooplo who attended tho fair during flaturday afternoon whllo In tho even ing the building was crowded to Its utmost capacity. Tho exhibit was of course of great Interest -to everyone who viewed It and the people marveled at the me chanical and other productions of the youngsters as well as the splondld specimens of garden and field crops presented. It Is estimated by County School Superintendent Jackson that fully 4000 people visited the show dur ing the two days it was open. Superintendent Jackson had the ex hibits loaded on three dray wagons this morning and sent them to Sclo to be exhibited at tho county fair. The exhibit here will bo augmented by ful ly half more than what was displayed hero, and which It was Impossible to bring bore owing to the buay seaBon. All In all the Industrial fair was an unqualified success and gives ample reason for making It an annual event It has been demonstrated, however, that It would be more desirable to hold tho fair at a later dato In September or October for Instanco. The veget ables and other farm products would be more mature and the buBy season would then be over. Albany Herald. RURAL CAR It I Kits TO HOLD COXVETI0 The Oregon Rural Carriers' Associa tion will hold their tenth annual con tention at Dallas beginning Sunday, September 1, and holding over Mon day. A splendid program Is provided and the meeting will be a notable one. A vast amount of 111 health Is due to impaired digestion. When the stom ach falls to perform Its functions I properly the whole system becomes deranged. A fow doses of Chamber lain's Tablets Is all you need. They will strengthen your digestion, lhvlg r.rate your liver, and regulate your bowels, entirely doing away with that miserable feeling due to faulty diges tion. Try It Many others have been permanently cured why not youT For sale by all dealers. THE ROUND-UP D. K. Gill, aged 65, a prominent O. A. R. man. died at Oreornn f!itv vnHtir. day. The Damascus creamery plant In Portland burned at 10 o'clock Tues day nlfht. Ixiss about $2000. Plans for the entertainment of Roosevelt when he visits Portland next month, will be completed tonight. Eugene V. Debs, socialist candidate for president, will speak In Portland Labor day, Sept. 2. Poor Nick; his distinguished father-in-law is against him, and his wife, It Is supposed, Is a feminine "chlp"of the old block." "Were all medicines as meritorious as Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Romedy, the world would be much better off and the percentage of suffering greatly decreased.'' writes Lindsay 8cott. of Temnle. InA Vnr ! sale by all dealers. Hop picking began at Aurora Tues day, but will not be general until next week. Edward Struck, a young man of Hood River, was found dead yesterday In an orchard where he had been working. An empty chloroform bottle was found near the body. He suffered from acute indigestion and was accus tomed to taking the drug, and it Is presumed, took an overdoBe. The Bowies' alfalfa mill, at Baker City, burned Sunday night, and indi cations are that the fire was of In cendiary origin. The loss was about $6000. Mrs. C. B. Merrick, whose husband, Portland's postmaster, died at Lake view last week, received word yester day that her brother had accidentally gotten his leg crushed In a logging camp, and may die. He was pinned down by the log for more than an hour before he could be released. Bay City has, by vote, authorized its council to Increase Its bonded Indebt edness by $100,000. McMlnnvIlle will have a children's Industrial fair and baby sljow com bined September 27-28. The "Oregon Wolf" won the free for all In the Astoria regatta yester day, making the flrBt 20 miles at a 40-mlle-an-hour pace, and braaklnir all speed records of the Columbia. SOLD CHEAP MILK IN "HORLICK MILK" JAR W. W, Pearce, manager at Park and Washington, pleaded guilty beforo Jus tice of the Peace Bell to selling a cheaper grade of malted milk from Jars In which "Horllck's Malted Milk" had been blown and when Horllck's Malted Milk was called for. He was fined $25 and costs. The complaint was signed by Food Commissioner Palley, who Is determined to stop the practice of substituting one brand of goods for another without notification of the substitution being made. Ore gon Sunday Journal, Portland, Oregon. HAVE YOU A BAD BACK? Drive away your backache, get to day a package of Mother Gray's Aro matic Leaf for the kidneys and cor recting that lame, sore and all un it ni,.ui .1,1 i .i.... . . .'.u"s "8 01 me nerves. 11 your ,a Buuui u;Kianeys act too frequently, or action week earlier than usual, and pickers aro "reasonably scarce." Thomas King, aged 17, was the lead er of a party of three that has been taking Joy rides In "borrowed" auto mobiles. He Is In the hospital with a dislocated leg, the result of the car he had borrowed Jumping the grade. is painful and scanty, Aromatic Leaf is corrective ana tne best regulator. At drugglBts or by mall 60c. Sample FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co,, LeRoy, New York. , General Booth was one of the few men who had a great scheme and made It work. j "I was cured ol diarrhoea by one I dose of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera Livestock will be a ble feature of and DlarrhnnA ftomodv ,rio r - - J I " . .10 ill, 1U- the Polk county fair at Dallas this , Gebhardt, Oriole, Po. There Is noth- year, Oct. 3, 4. and 5 Cooper's New .Discovery Makes You Well and Strong Just a little Cooper's New Discovery only a few doses and your stomach distress, Indigestion and dizziness will quickly vanish and you'll feol fine. It your stomach troubles you, and you feel droopy, half-sick and all tired out take COOPER'S NEW DISCOVERY the one best stomach remedy. It'tonea up the system, restores the digestive or gans to their normal condition, relieves constipa tion, helps the liver and kidneys, and makes life worth living. As a Blood Purifier It Is unequaled. The basis of life and health Is dependent upon the abundance of pure, rich,, heal thy blood. Impure blood Is usually marked by weakness or lack of energy; you feel lazy, dull, tired and gloomy. Your blood lows sluggishly and you call It Spring Fever Now, In the Spring of the year Is the time to purify and cleanse the blood. Cooper's New Dis covery will create a healthy flow of pure, rich sparkling blood that will circulate at a rate that will give you vim, vigor and energy to do your day's work and enjoy life as you should. For sale at PERRY'S DRUG STORE At All Druggists MMMM H u 1 J u II M M It lng better. For sale by all dealers. Thanks, Mr. President, for signing the Panama canal bill, though it didn't suit you. The picture but they must dren. ohows are a fine thing, be kept right for chll- ilZEZZZZzzzsssESin MMMMMMaM''lM'''''J''-'l)l-llilMlltlMIMlMMMIiUMrit FIFTY-FI rrn 11 M M i NJ J JL5 wl Salem, September 2 MBIIIIIHIIWBBBMBMIMBmBSMMsn to 7, 191 $ 1 8,000 offered in Premiums on Livestock Poultry, Agricultural and Other Products IIS ace Dog Show Tonarnameimt foootihntg Band. if are woriss Send for Premium List and Entry Blanks Reduced Rates on All Railroads Comceirte A 'H-O-TO For particulars, address Frank Meredith, ecretary, Salem, Oregon 1 ii II 11 11 II ft! tl 11 N II tl 11 II M 11 II II 11 ri ii ri ti ii ti ti ti ti ti ti ti u 11 11 II 11 11 tl II tl 11 II II II 11 II Si 11 11 II tl tl 11 II 11 tl 11 II II tl tl 11 II n ii ii ti ti ti ti u in mt mmu n mm ivm Bum mt m ii I mi tm mi m tmj nm mw mm hm 'mi mm mwww 1