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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1912)
ful persuasion, to compell the picketing’ seems to be: Has every strike-breakers to desert the em min 8 <ig i work for whom ployer; and thus if not assaulting a id wnecj s « s fit, or have at least, not fighting the side o mar a i 1 i > Y tergere wit.i which is doing the picketing. h'8 4 igl Jg at his ow Why do unions picket a place e Lij .” of business where all the busi- ■ess is done by mail? Certainly Experience teaches that it is not to advise the buyer that th almost impossible for any union place is unfair, but to indue rA a .—f1 1 1 1 j । , to conduct M a — strike peaceable. good, honest workmen, who wb ; -.4 In but very few instances have to make an honest living, to lea» I the unions gone on strike and the employ of that firm. Ino' ar picketed a place of business with er words, the don’t want the j out committing murder or as they don’t want anyone else O ’cns Similar sault. have it; »either do the wan a t The very principle of picket-' person to run his business as he ing breeds a desire on the part sees fit so as to make a piofi ” day« of ple-s,”»t r in f r a Etj uhlican adm.n of the strikers, when they find i and a living. itio ’, iges are high, when < themselves unsuccessful by peace) The main question in rey rd ■ Il V.ork has jeb; PICKETING NO PEACEABLE PURSUIT Store News I he enormous business we have done in the last few weeks has compelled us to buy more merchandise in order to supply the demand. We are pleased to inform that in the last few days we have received any amount of new Ladies and Misses Coats and lailor-made suits, and Men’s and Young men’s suits and Overcoats. Ladies and Misses Tailor-made Suits from $10. 0<) up. Nice selections to choose from, ladies and Misses Coats from $5.00 up. Clothing to fit, from the smallest boy to the largest man and at popular prices. Complete stock of dress gocds, fancy goods, Ladies and Misses Furnishings, Shoes for the Whole Family. Our new Stock of Furs has just arrived the s ere getting high ces for ir pr iurta; when f j ries are ig fa.l time and th icople of i ar< too prerwrou. think of they ere apt D -r^t the c r. t ; prv.ic rf r 33 n the fall ÀS l, tí the Co/ ; of i laut Har- .so i s Cumin’ ara ‘ cn, < .0. s were i.m.lnr to what they a; at present, »a tact, the /resident In hij message to Coagresa in Decern! er cf that year, fl spoke of the unparalleled prosperity !ln every industry in the country. But j Cleveland was elected President In November and out of a clear sky, dis aster fell upon the American people. The fear of Free Trade paralyzed I them Immediately. In his message H to Congress at the opening of his I term. President Cleveland spoke of I the adversity which had suddenly de- I scended upon the people. For the j purpose of refreshing the minds of I the people of Oregon In regard to I that sorrowful chapter in our history, ■ when three million men were sudden ly thrown out of a job; when every I farm was loaded with a mortgage, we print below a partial list of the dif ferent disasters which befell the Am erican people within fourteen months from the date Cleveland was Inaugur ated: to take a leap in the dark and again exchange the great prosperity of the present for another era of hard times. *f they want “Patches on their pants” •gain, let the farmers a-d working men vote for Professor Wilson, the Free Trade theorist. Roosevelt’s Soliloquy. I’m twice as great as Washington, I’m twice as great as Grant, If they a third term ¿id not get. They need not think I can’t. I’m twice as great «« Jefferson, And Madison combined; I’m twice hh great as the whole line Of presidents, I find. I’m greater than my country With its customs and Its laws; With its poor old constitution And it.» presidential flaws. I’m twice as great as any man Above or 'neath the sod: In fact, I’m ha'f inclined to think I’m twice in great as God. Gov. Johnson Not Hopeful. When Govarnor Johnson left Cali fornia to begin a stumping tour for the third term candidate, he prac tically acknowledged that he was en tering upon a hopeless task. “I am not going to resign,” he said, “and after the November election it Is quite possible that I shall return to the office I now occupy.” Like a great majority of the Bull Governor Johnson is dis couraged. It must be plain to Roosevelt, even hrough the fog of his prodigious van- •y and egotism, that he has a Iosin; jht on his bands. D a YTON a UTO end TRANSFER CO. CARRIES Tir s Casings Tubes Presto Tanks Everreidy Batteries Ga soluie Lubricants Auto service day and night In fact we carry everything in the line of Auto repairing. All work Guaranteed. M. G. Müler Prop )AnnUa‘ EncycloP^a. We would be pleased to show you our stock and prices be- ore you send your order to any Eastern Catalogue house as we can, and do compete with any house which does a legitimate business, and we are “Johnny-on-the-Spot” to make things right if they should go wrong. Goods flitted and altered free of charge at our own Tailor ing Shop. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED:-If you are satisfied tell your friends. If NOT tell US. D. M. Nayberger Former Partner of and Successor to R. Jacobson McMinnville, Oregon WHATF NICER A FINE NEW GRANGE AHO BEAU \ AHU JVST ASKYOVR WIFK IF SHE WOULDN'T LIKE TO HAVE A NEW RANGE? SHE'LL LIKE THE KIND WE SELL. COME SEE. HARTE & CO V A r A “ A \ 4 V A V 0 F A V July 18 1893: Denver, Colo., four banks close their doors and there are runs on other financial institutions. Westy 24: More bank failures In the R ejolved . July 26; New York; two stock ex change firms fail. Ten banks suspend, most of them Northwestern. Other business fail ures reported. i Jyly 28: More failures and suspensions, including nine banks in the West anti one In Kentucky. August 1; Collapse of the Chicago pro vision deal. Many failures of commission houses Great excitement in the Board or 7 rade. August 8: The Chemical Bank, one of ,?Wrongest in the country, Is unable to fill its weekly order for small currency August —: Madison Square Bank sus pends. U’ Much excitement on east side New York among Hebrew laborers. Police called out. August 22: Encounter between anarch- New “y^800*“11818 averted by police In August 23: Meeting of anarchists brok en up by police. August 30: Kansas coal miners’ strike ended with nothing gained. January 15, 1894: Secretary of the Treasury Carlisle announces his intention to issue bonds. January 17: The Secretary of the Treasury offers a »50,000,000 loan for pub lic subscription, according to his an nounced Intentions. January 24: Strike in Ohio of 10,000 miners. January 27: A mob of foreign miners destroy property at Brantvllle, Pa., and elsewhere. February 16: Many New York silk fac tories close on account of strike In oh,° nn the ml"*» In the Maslllon district closed by strike February 20: In Boston a riotous as semblage of unemployed workmen dis persed by police March 2: Six thousand miners in Jack- son County, Ohio, out of employment Puterson, N. J.: General strike among the silk weavers. March 3: in West Virginia st-tking miners burn the railroad bridge and com mit other lawless acts. March 13: At Paterson, N J., riotous proceeding on the part of the striking silk weavers. March 17: In Colorado Governor Waite orders state troops to Cripple Creek to suppress mining troubles March 30: In Boston a large body of unemployed workmen march to the state house and demand employment March 24: A movement Inaugurated in various parts of the northern states, known as the Army of the Common- i wealth, Coxeyltea. etc., proposed march- to Washington and demanding help at the hands of Congress. March 3f: Coxeyltes are a source of •error to certain western towns, upon which they quarter themselves April 3: tn Chicago 5,006 plumbers, painters etc., go on strike April 3: In South Carolina the gover nor declares martial law in all the cities of the state April 4: In Pennsylvania 6 men killed and 1 wounded In coke riots. April 13 The general council of United Mine Workers orders a strike affecting ' 3,000 men April 16: Strike on the Great Northam _ spreads to the Northern Pacific ' April M: In Omaha a mob seises a I train of box cars and attempts to deport 8 Kelly s Industrial army, but the army I refuses to go 5 April 31: About 15,000 miners stop ~ work In sympathy with the coke strikers $ In Pennsylvania fi April 28 Arrival of a divtalon of the : Coxey army at Washington A division of the Coxeyltes arrested at Mount Sterling for holding up a railway ( train. l’n,ted States troops ordered to assist the civil authorities In the far west .. On the Great Northern railroad system *b*. knights of I^tbor are called out on strike April 3». Kelly’s army. 1.000 strong. at Pet M<dnes • M Strike of 3.000 painters tn Chicago May I: Attempted demonstration of CMoy s army on the steps of the tVpHnl 8 It la only cemtnoa sense to believe ► that like causes will produce like ef fect*. Do the people of Oregon wiah that a man 5 mould A lways have A G ood opinion of H im - self , U/ hich he gains by what HE KNOWS OF H/M5ELF OTHERS SEE THE OUTSIDE, BUT THE CO/^FOPi HE GETS COME5 fPotf WHAT IS NEXT TO HIM- RoW/V. RIP THEM CAN ANYTHING ¿ERVE To MAKE YOU HAVE betteropinion of Y ourself than w I ar INGGCOD, ¿MCCTH UNDERWARE B0DYKi?,Er Yv°’ body but y < rjelf , bui A TR17F vm/ did you ever TH^ You \ WITH YOURJELF THAN YOU Aiv l WITH ANYONE EL5E wr CAN PUT YOU CN GOOD TERM5 WITH YOUR 3ELF, IF YOU BUY OUR UNDERWEAR A? UNDER UJUAL PRICED AT L. J. SHIPPY HOT POINTS FOR HOT WEATHER It is Economy to use a "Hot Point" Electric Iron. The Yamhill Electric Company has them. See