Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924, May 13, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
1 Published every Taos rtty sad Friday by the
X. J. tTES PRICKS. Mtmnti
subsckxptios jiAxza.
fHieyeer fa sdvaoee
atonta. latdTMM.............
iMMwmtht, la advaaoa....
One year, en time
.. fUOS
... -60
... J2
.. L29
Tbe Statesmen nac been established ft nearly
f Uy-two feuL and It am tome subscribers who
rcoeiTca u nearly tnt 1004. aal many
ihi Md It for a mMnikio. Bmm ,
these bjee to savin- to paper dlaumtinned
t tne time of cxpiruoa of ibeir sobacrlpaoaaV.
tor tb honest oi te,nd for etaer hmom
we hr concluded te41aeontiooe mbetiitiMM
uly wlxoikHited to do so. AU pttiotti paying
bsretb seoefltof the dtUwnte, Battftaey
ao aot mt tor eta months, tbe nt will be u
a 7r. Hereafter w will send tne paper to all
iwpooaibio peraeaa wa ord ft, tboara tbey
tn&y aot toad tne atewey. wita tbe aaonua
H g thattay at to pay fL3 a yar, in caa they
Wi the jubecrlpUoa aoeoant ma oyer alx
nofiuu. la ordar that there mt ba no misua-
OerataadtDs. we will keep this notice ate coins
CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000
REPUBLICAN TICKET
v -
STATE..
I
3"or Justice of the ttupreme Court.
P. A. MOOBE.
, t 8tat Food " and Dairy Comnua-
:- sionef, '-' i ' M" -
J. W. BArLET.
For Presidential Electors,
J. N. HART.
JAS. "A. FEE,
GBANT B. DIMICK,
r . a. c; HOUGH.
' CONGRESSIONAL.
For Member Congress First Dis
trict,
BINGKB HEBMANX.
Beeond District, ' . !
J. N. WILLIAMSON.
JUDICIAL DISTBICT.
For Judges, ;
XJEO. II. BURNETT, of Marion.
B. L. EDDY, of Tillamook.
For Prosecuting Attorney.
JOHN H. 3d 'NARY, of Marion.
MARION COUNTY TICKET
' County Judge John H. Scott.
Sheriff W. J. Culver. j.
Clerk John W. Roland.
.A sseseor Fred J. Bice,
Treasurer W. Y. Richardson.
Recorder John C. Siegmund,
Hchool fopt.--E. T. Moore.
- t'ommissioner I. C. Needham.
'Purveyor B. B.-Herrick.
Coroner -A. M. Clough.
Representatives Jos. Calvert, Hub
Lard; J. G. Graham and T. B. Kay. Sa
lem; John Kit eh ip, Scoots Mills; Jesse
II. Settlemier, Woodburn.
COMMITTEEMEN.
Cnairmaa State Central Committee
Frank C.' Baker, Portland.
Chairman Congressional Central Com
mittee Walter 1 Tooze, Woootourn.
Member State Central Committee
Hal D. Pstton, Salem,
Chairman County ventral Committee
Chas. n.. Murphy, Salem.
For Justice of the Peace,
, 11. II. lliit.NtU.
For Canstable,
BOBT. O. DONALDSON.
TIES DUTY OF OREGON REPUBLI
CANS.
Every Bepubican in Oregon should
bear in mind tbat his duty is to go to
the polls on election day and east his
ballot for the candidates which repre
sent the political organization to which
he belongs. : It is a duty which every
Republican owes to himself, to those
dependent upon him and to his country,
Industrial conditions prevailing in
the United States are largely the jeeult
of the publie policies enforced by the
party in control of .the government.
This. is an admitted fact, admitted by
both parties. Thisjbistory of the coun
try has repeatedly shown what these
opposing policies will do for its indus
tries and what their effect will be upon
the people. It is of so much consequence
that no Republican eaa afford to ne
glect his duty in so important a mat
tar. -
. There has never in the entire history
of the United States been a period em
bracing eight successive years, when all
kinds of business maintained so high
a standard of prosperity as has been
the ease during the last and present
Bepublican administrations. The eondi-
Tired Out
' I was very poorly and could
hardly get about the house. 1 was
tired out all the time. Then I tried
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and it only
tooktwo bottles to make me feel
perfectly well." a ,
Mrt. N. S. Swianey, Princeton, Mo.
Tired when you go to
bed, tired when you get
up, tired all the time.
Xhy ? Your blood is im
pure. You are living on
the, border, line of nerve
exhaustion. You need
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
SLNatstfkv AntMs. '
. Ask toot doctor what he thinks of this
srsiHt pW family nnxi4-ir-. Follow bis
mdvicm sad we will be astMiint.
j Take Ayer's Pias with the Sarsa.
j parilla. They acton the liver, cure
! fc"jooea,headache,constipation.
w. t Aics CO., Lowell, ataas.
His aim was not
Hood's Sarsaparilla,
hits the disease. ;
Be sure to take
This" Sprine it will rid
makes you break out, that takes away your appe- ,
tite and strength and makes you feel sick.
I Take Hood's Pills, also; if you are bilious , or
constipated.
E. S. Bertachie, Hannibal, Ohio, iayi: "I took flood's
Sarsaparilla in tba spring and ii purified my blood and
fre. me a good appetite,, and made mo feel much better.
- Maggie Perkins, Yale, SIC, says: 'We have used
Ilood's Sarsaparilla in out family for years and have always
found it as represented, a good spring medicine'
; ' ! Ralph Bast, Willis, Mich., says : ' This spring pimples
: j , covered my face and troubled me vsry much about shay- -
( ing. I took a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and the pim
. j pies are all gone." : I
j . : l Mrs. William Howell, Quogue, N. Y., says : " I have
been, using Hood's Sarsaparilla in my family for years as
i a spring medicine. Have found none equal to it," ' '
Accept no Substitutes for Hood's Sarsap&rina end PiHs.
1
tions prevailing during the four years
of Democratic supremacy just preced
ing 'this period, are well remembered.
The great importance of our election
next month rests upon the fact that it
will be ". the first publi expression by
the people relating to President Boone
velt's administration and of his candi
dacy for election to the position he now
holds. That the President is very pop
ular in Oregon everybody knows, and
this approval should not appear to be
lukewarm by a nefl?et to give it ex
pression at the ballot box. In every
state in the Union pnblie attention is
drawn to the result here in June, and
the real eondition should be fully re
fleeted In the popular result. The com-
bioed majorities for Hermann and Wil
liamson should be near, if not quite.
20,000, first, because 'we have it, and
secondly, for the effect it will have in
proving to those elsewhere who may
be doubtful or lukewarm tbat the. peo
ple of Oregon are fully appreciative; of
Itoevelt's administration and of the
very sntisf aetory industrial conditions
which have t dissipated Coxey 's army,
found employment everywhere for
working-men, buried the free coinage of
silver as a "dead issue," throttled the
specters of imperialism and militarism,
and so effectually deprived the opposi
tion of campaign material that Thomas
Jefferson is the only Democrat in the
United States today-who appears to
meet with tbo unquestioned approval
of his followers, and he, for obvious
reasons, is not eligible for the Demo
cratic nomination.
Let every Republican go to the polls
on the 6th of June and discharge his
duty to himself and his country. ;
YET, SALEM IS ON THE MAP.
The Statesman is in receipt of a pam
phlet devoted to the resources and con
ditions prevailing in Oregon, issued by
Henry E. Beed, secretary of the Lewis
and Clark Fair board. It is a very
creditable little publication, full of use
ful information, concise and attractive
ly arranged and. will be instrumental,
if circulated extensively in the East, in
bringing many people to Oregon next
7T- i .
Bnt among - the thousand and one
facts it contains, there is no mention
of the circumstance that Oregon has a
capital. Of course, the average East
ern reader would naturally infer, know
ing tne form of government that ob
tains in most states, that Oregon had
not neglected to provide itself with a
eapitaL but he would be utterly unable
to discover from this pamphlet wheth
er it is Moro, Biggs, Tillamook City or
some other seaport out in the foothills
of the Cascades. f
The word "Salem" occurs in : this
running narrative of Oregon 'S attrac
tions, and possibilities and . resources,
but once. The reader is informed that
Salem is the county seat of Marion
eounlyf r M'
.Portland has about eight times the
population of Salem and gets about
five thousand times the prominence in
this write-up Of Oregon inviting fea
tures that Salem does; anU yet, if it
were aot for the magnificent Willam
ette valley, of which Salem is the cen
tral city, Portland would probably have
no existence at alL.
However, we don't care. Salem flies
with its ow a wings, and while we are
proud I of Portland, our 'consolation
comes from the reflection xhat the tour
ist who comes to t hat -ity next ' year
will not have completed his journey,
nor his information about Oregon, until
be -makes a trip to Salem.
By the way, Oregon has a capital,
and Salem is IT.".
AN AUSPICIOUS BEQLNNINO.
f 1
The number of visitors on the open
ing day of- the St. Louis Exposition was
1S7,783. Of these there were 178,423
who were recorded at the gates, the re-
i 1
surer than that of
which -always
s
vou of that humor that
I
mainder beings employes, concession
aires and others who were permitted
to enter in carriages.
'As compared with the first day's at
tendance at Chicago, in 1893j-this. was
very eneouratnng, the number at that
time being 12jfiZ7i Yet, comparative
ly, this about fairly represents the
growth of the country in the eleven in
terrening years, though, the difference
will be in favor of the better atten
dance at St. Louis, the difference of
over fiftv thousand amounting to a
good day 's attendance it-scif.
I There never has been such a collec
tion of the world's resources and exhi
bition of the results of the handiwork
of the human family from all quarters
of the globe as Will be displayed at
St.; Louis this summer. It is to be re
gretted that it must be held in a coun
try with a climate so neatly intolerable
that it will make the attendance prac
tically a punishment for four of the six
months of its continuance. To under
take the enjoyment of sueh a display
while hi the physical torture of oppres
sive beat is like an enort to extract
comfort from an attractive meal while
nursing a well developed case of perse
vering tootlfaehe.
- The exposition at St. Louis will be a
magnificent affair but for that comfort
that comforts and for that pleasure
which pleases, a visit to the Lewis and
lark grounds next year will be not
only a delight in passing but a joyful
memory to be forever treasured.
AN UNFORTUNATE RELAPSE.
The action of the school board in
practically abolishing the position of
city superintendent is disappointing in
that it is taking a step backward
about five. years. It is a notice to the
outside world tbat in school work Sa
lem is not only not growing but is tak
ing on a retrogressive movement. And
this is to be regretted all the more be
cause it precedes but a month the pop
ular vote on thet proposition to estab
lish a high school for the benefit of
those who desire a better education,
whether they intend to take a college
course or not. "
By this mossbaek course - Salem is
falling behind many of the other towns
in the state and from present appear
ances, is proud of it. Six years ago Eu
gene had but eleven teachers in her
publie schools while Salem had thirty
five. Xext year , Eugene will have
thirty-one , and Salem .but thirty-nine.
By its own progressiveness Eugene is
making an enviable name for itself as
a center of education, and those look
ing for good opportunities in that di
rection are naturally drawn to it as a
most desirable place to locate.
Of course Salem has some people who
conclude that because we have the pen
itentiary and asylum here our future is
assured. Why want anything elsef
But we are inclined to the belief that
the people will declare for a different
policy when the opportunity' offers.
Salem is about the last' town in the
state which still resorts to : sedatives
when sorely in need of a stimulant.
A BETRESHTNO DEVIATION.
The address of Superintendent Acker
man before the Evening Star Grange
in Multnomah county last t Saturday
was such a remarkable departure from
the usually beaten path on the subject
discussed that' it takes on the appear
ance of an oasis in a vast desert. -And
the Statesman thinks none the less of
it for the reason ' that it follows ' the
same line of thought expressed in these
columns but a few days before. .
Haying seen an extended experience
in the publie school work, both as a
teacher in , 'the public schools and . as
State Superintendent,' Mr.C Aekermaa
has observed the misdirection of :
greet deal of 1 effort " in the present
methods of 'teaching children a deal of
stuff that will in no way be of benefit to
them ia after life. Without the : least
. ii.! 1 1 i f.
eom of Waiter 1
eertain kinds of instruction, he is
v&rtnelesa filled full of it and when
the active period of his life begins he
. " f " , . - .
is stocked up with a load of af orma-
tion that, in fact, has unfitted him for
his 'chosen work- 'r .QZ
wi ;flf ft
. '
and among them are those who will be
come, farmers, lawyers, doctors, engin
eers, clerks, architects, manufacturers,
and every other" imaginable line of bus
iness, all of them with general smat
tering but not fitted for a, single voca
tion. Assuming that most boys attend
some Und of school until they are
twenty years of age, it follows that the
that training that will mort likely
period thus ooed should be employed in
qualify them for some yoeaUon already
I
Bt nnder the resent .vstem a ioh
lot of boys tfarned out of our schools
t -j-- . "
after attending them for ten years are
all equally quUlified for the same busi
ness or equally disqualified for any.
Having been taught the' Same thing,
what one of they knows they jail know
and what one iof them does not know,
none of them jknows. They have all
been taught along the same lines al-jto do his duty by tne race whicn ne
though being compelled in a short time! honors, if he has to bolt the regular
to embrace tven.ty-nve different call'
ings.
While manunl work should be direct
ed by a traincid mind, the necessity for
manual labor .will always be the lot of
a vast maioritiy of people and some in
strnetions as to this should form more
of the course! of studv in all our
schools. Superintendent Ackerman puts
this phase of ithe question clearly when!
he says, 'historically, our educational
system has developed from the top
down. Instead of beginning by estab -
lishing eommton schools for the training
of the - maasts along lines that bore
somewhat on! their future work, and
then' establishing high schools and
academies, its needed to continue the!
work begun in the common schools, and
lastly, to ;found the colleges to com-1
plete and refund out the work of thejity it is xa the authorities were tak
elementarV nd secondary schools, wejing teps to bring the guilty parties to
began by founding colleges and then
founding preparatory schools to fit boysl
for eollegesj before we had establishel
common m-nooi system ior tne euueu-ioasy
tion of the masses, and most of the!
complaints "that are and have been
urged agaiaiit our common schools have
resulted frotm this order of growth."
Mr. Acker man's plea for more atten -
tion to thode things that compose the
practical sidU of life, is timely and
treats of - the. greatest defect in our
school system, common or collegiate.
The agricultural colleges of the coun-j
try, for the reasons considered by the
State Superintendent, have been fori
several year the most practical, and, j
tbererore, ustrui schools in the entire
list. And it Us largely through the
jeet lesson afforded by them that the
defects in oiJier schools have been!
- .
made the more manifest. It is encour-lnsed
aging that the) tendency in educational j
matters is towkrd a clearer recognition I
of the nccessithr for more practical in- j
st rue tion and less that is purely theo-l
reticai. t i
TWO EUTD OF DEMOCRACY.
i ;
For the Democratic party Mr. Bryan I
is a veritable Olid Man of the Sea, Hei
has reached that; stage of political in-1
fallibility where; no .man who differs!
from him as to wiat constitutes the fun-1
damental principles of his party, has
any right to be heard, or will be ser-1
iously listened to if he can prevent it. I
The absolute resignation with which he j
cordially admits bis supreme knowledge I
as to what bis party stands for, is one!
of the amazing exhibitions of the age,!
Perhaps few members of his party I
would suppress their joy if Mr. "Bryan I
would retire to Lincoln, as a private
citizen should, devote all his attention I
to his paper, and let the rank and file,!
together with its! leaders, select its I
candidate for President, as was the I
custom before Bryan became an immov-1
able figure Ion the Democratic political I That this! company lacked conserva
horizon. Ko doubt Mr. Bryan's mostiBm, and that the lack of this element
devout followers will admit that he is
a positive menace to that harmony I
which every member of the party would!
reioiee to see perch upon the folds oflunmoaiate xuture developments war-
the organization's banner.
Mr. Bryan is going to rule or ruin
the Democratic party. He makes no
iR YOU AGEING? J j
was "seventy years young.
Some men are . old at ' halt
that figure. 'v'
Age is not In yearsT" It is
in the blood. Scotts Emul
sion helps to keep you young
by keeping your blood young;
oy - supplying j it witn an
abundance of rich, pure, vital
nourishment; carrying j con
stant life and .renewal to
every fibre of yourl body. It
Will help yOU tO rob advancing I
years of half their sting. I
' --, O . I
,WeTI mtmi yoe a taasple tree apes i
SCOTT SOWS. st Ptarl Stnet, V v YtdL
ALLUOLBl
Who wish to retain
or regain their
lTi!,nortaBt onestion and the wise wo
all-important question and the wise wo
I man will resort, to Hostetter's Stomach
Bitters at the first symptom of any de-
rangement, because she knows it always
prompt relief. Pains In tne Back,
Bloating, vomiting. Headache, Indigea-
Itton, Dyspepsia, jrainxxng epeus ana
SeeplessnesB are . all danger , signals
which require the Btters. Try one bot
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS.
secret of his intentions. It must.be the
Kansas City platform or a second Pern
ocratic candidate. Practically all there
is to be said: descriptive of what is
V" happiness to
wa
WIS JHiny; mmavpvv ' w vmwJm
Psopners, ana leamea inves-
1.. a. I I 11 i s x.
"K0" "
. all lines of research
bunched the; results of their combined
labors in that tf aultless - instrument
first thrown to the admiring gaze of
oppressed millions at Kansas City.
Any change from that sum of all
knowledge must bo a backward step.
Being certain of it, Mf . Bryan proposes
Democratic nominations. It would be
better for the Democratic party if Mr.
Bryan had never been born.
A REIGN OF TERROR.
The condition of affairs existing in
j Lake county between. ' -the sheepmen
and cattle men is aj decidedly serious
one. The difference between the situa-
tion there and the J&rgis-Jett read in
j Kentucky, for 'instance, is not very
1 clear to the naked eye. Creed Conn has
been assassinated by the cattle men,
so it is said merely because ne pos-
sessed some information that would
have implicated them in the grose and
wholesale killing of, several thousand
sheep. Certainly, when, such a condition
exists in an otherwise peaceful common
I justice.
But when: cowardly assassination is
I resorted to, a competent eraedv is not
to suggest. The district attorney
is a brother; of the murdered man, and
I men who will deliberately slaughter
innocent sheep by the thousands in
order to get? revenge on thetir owners,
and then assassinate an innocent man
J that he may not appear as a witness,
I are not to be balked in their intentions
I by any ordiaary process of law.
I The situation as reported from Lake
county differs little from a veritable
reign of terror. And yet, the guilty
parties there should be brought into
subjection to the law, if it requires the
I entire power of the state. Cattle men
ob-land sheep men alike have rights upon'
the publie domain and while the en-
1
croachments of either upon the lands
bv the other arn sometimes verv
annoying, he resort to force,' not to
speak of the killing of stock and the
murder of men. should not be nermitted
while the state has the power to en
force its laws.
OPPORTUNITY RETURNS.
In a local item in. the Statesman
few days since reference was made to
the work of a corporation, now extinct,
but which undoubtedly left a ! greater
and more permanent mark on Marion
(and Polk county than did any other ag-
gregation of business men that ever
labored for the development of this
eountry.
The Oregon Land Company, in which
Dr. 1L J. MJnthorn and Mr. B. S. Cook
were the instigating spirits, came into
existence with a definite object. Its
managers saw the necessity of dividing
P the large tracts, of land held so as
to bar the extension and growth of the
Capital City, into smaller ones, if the
Willamette yalley were to aeenre immi-
gration. They saw; and appreciated
the opportunity, and grasped it.
necessary; in business led to its final
anioing, nor that it charged! higher
Pces for some of its properties than
ranted to the purchaser, is neither here
nor there ri
t I i
What tuis corporation did was to
county and surrounding eountry which
11s eviueni to any one. v nere origin
ally was a 3arge traet of laad poorly
"mm utt poony. icnceu, are vouay
many attractive and happy homes. The
oil is cultivated and bcareth fruit.
Prune orchards, hop yards , and other
classes of intense agriculture were made
possible through the work of this cor
poration. Immigration came and the
immigrant JcWld remain, leeausc the
small tract of land was within the reach
Lf bis pocket book, and the labor
nec
essary to tvi cultivation within, the
limits of his strength. Whatever that
company's I shortcomings, and whereyer
it may have failed, ao one can deny the
fact that tbo increase in pomiation
and wealth "of Marion county and. Polk
county of tbe past sixteen years should
be lai-gely; Iredited to it.
he Um BOW rii,e f' it succc.
f ....II... :
on the same lines which should have
capital enough to take pp also the ciues-
lion of inter -urban transportation. To
build a ear line from Salem south, to
Liberty, and on beyond; to build a line
to Silverton; another to Aumsville,
- . 1 he Jaduui There Is plenty of
business awaiting the company or indi
vidual who will put its or his capital
into this field, and Salem and its sur
rounding country would reap the bene
fit.
TEACH TH EM HOW.
- As a valuable aid to the kitchen me
chanic who prepare the cuisine. - of
mortal man, the editorial page of the
Oregonian is certainly to be commend
ed. In its edition of yesterday the
cooking editor of thai able and highly
patriotic journal has a recipe by which
the uninitiated may prepare the Oregon
prune in so tempting a manner that if
its advice bo followed, the whole popu
lation would soon be full of prunes.
The Oregonian thoroughly and well ap
preciates the prune situation, and is
wisely trying to aid to a knowledge
of this most, valuable and . delectable
fruit. It well -says that "if some way
can be found to show the people of the
Northern and Middle states what a. pal
atable food the Oregon prune is, the
demand will be permanently increased
and a steady market secured." :
vThe fruit has been very cheap, 1V4 to
cents being the basic price of to
day, but this fact may not prove an
unmixed evil to the grower of prunes,
as it may have the effect, and no doubt
is having it, of introducing prunes to a
great many people who will now be pur
chasers thereof, and who, under the for
mer high prices, would not have tried
them at alL ' '
One hitng that it would be well for
prune growers auQ packers to' do, would
be to discover the most delectable man
ner of preparing prunes; for the table,
and disseminate this : information in
the form of well worded recipes for
the guidance of such housewives and
cooks as have never experimented with
them in any other manner than that of
'boiling them to pieces on the outside,
while the flesh still clings to the pits.'?
Teact your consumer how best to use
them, and he becomes a voluntary, ad
vertiser of vour fruits.
A DESERVING CANDIDATE.
Jn speaking of Marian county's sons
who are before her people asking; for
their suffrage today, the candidate for
District Attorney in the Third judicial
district is so well known in this com
munity that comment on his personatity
woubi Je almost superflou".
Hon. John H. McXary is one of the
lest equipped men In this judicial dis
trict fer the office, lie has already
been thoroughly tried in the duties of
that position, and bis election will be
no mere experiment. In him the people
will be sure to have an able and compe
tent prosecuting officer, lie merits the
vote of every man, whatever his poli
tics, who deire that the duties of the
prosecuting Attorney be well and prop
erly attended to, with a view to main
taming peace and preventing crime in
the district. Mr. : McXary 's experience
will also prove valuable, as it has in
the past, in preventing the expenditure
of the publie funds in cases of purely
malicious character. He deserves the
vote of every Republican because of
his Republicanism; of every man be
cause of his integrity and knnwledg of
the duties of the position to which he
has been nominated by his party.
ANENT THE WEATHER.
The genial temperature of the past
few. days is a cause for congratulation
for other reasons than that of "bodily
comfort. While in Oregon the neces
sity for tightly shut up houses and un
ventilated sleeping apartments does not
rule to so great an extent as it does in
the states further east, yet a few days
of this kind of weather will do more
than any medicine to relieve local dis
eases peculiar to cold weather, and to
bring many convalescents out into the
bright and free air which is so neces
sary for their comfort and return to
health.
Oregon has been very slow indeed in
its development of the merry springtime
this year, so . that if the usual time is
allowed for, that ; season, it will bring
summer very "late in the felL" There
is no doubt at all-that an Oregon spring
is fruitful' of the finest- - weather the
weather clerk has on his list, but the
present year" has been rather un joint
ed, and the true springtime has come
is on a slow freight. It is here now.
however, sad it is not necessary U call
the attention of the Statesman's read
ers who are here to it. This is only
for those who live on the other side of
the mountains so i they may know.
So far o the outside world is able to
lesrn, the authorities at Cor vail is are
doing noth tag, whatever, to I discover
who sold whiskey to young Keady, in
violation of a state law, and which was
directly the cause of two'deaths. At the
time of the excitement it was said that
" a strong , sentiment has developed
against; celling intoxicants to mlftors,"
but what has become of that senti
ment t The man who sold the liquor
to Keady is precisely as guilty and as
much in need of punishment a the man
who will do the same thing next month.
Why not enforce this excellent law in
the case "in hand 1 Why wait for an
other murder? If Smith sold the w his-1
KICK AND SGREALt
BeSj's Awful Suffering from
Eczema.
Cc:!i Hot Hold H-r; SnaTcio
Her Rciafid Arras.
Gullcora SaYcd Her Life, So
Hotter Says.
When my little girl was tlx months
old, she bad eczema. We had used
cold creams and all kinds of remedies,
but nothing did her any good, in fact,
she kept getting worse. I used to
. wrap her hands up, and when I would
dress her, I bad to put her on the table
for I could not hold her. She would
kick and scream, and when she could,
he would tear her face and arms
almost to pieces. I used four boxes of
Cntlcura Ointment, two cakes of Cutl
cura Soap, and gave her the Cutlcura
Resolvent, and she was cured, and I sea
no traces of the humour left I can
truthfully say that they have saved her
life, and any one suffering as she did, I
should advise them to give Cutlcura a
fair trial.1 MRS. G. A. CONRAD, Lis
bon, N. H., Feb. 7, 1893.
Fire years later, vlx., Feb. 23, 1903,
Mrs. Conrad writes t -r-i
- It Is, with' pleasure that I can
Inform you that the cure has been per
manent as It is now six years since she
was cured, and there has been no return
of the disease since, and I have advised
a lot of friends to use the Cutlcura :
Remedies in all diseases of the skin."
Instant relief and refreshing sleep for
skin-tortured babies, and rest for tired,
fretted mothers, in warm, baths with
Cutlcura Soap and gentle anointings
With Cuticura Ointment, the great skin
cure and purest of emollients, to be
followed in severe esses by mild doses
of Cutlcura Resolvent. This Is the
purest, sweetest, most spetxly, per
manent and economical treatment for
tortortog, disfiguring. Itching, burning,
bleeding, scaly, crusted tud pimply
skin and scalp humours, eczemas,
rashes and irritations. '
SnM tbtnacfcmrt OmvotM. Cutievr Rmlmit, V.
On form of CSocoUto C'Uxl Jill., -v r-r vial of ,
Ot.toMst, Jflo.. ftoap ..- l)vrt.i Ixitiiloo. U 'harto
twin Kq- t rarte. i Rm Im Wis i B.-iti, lir rm.im
sh An. l'i Hi ras Chm. Cora . buM flynalma.
htaa4 tot - Caucata lkia UoSk-"
key trt Keady is. he not a mi1ject t
puniMhnie'nt as Jones who may --do tli
same thing next month A 'right k.iu
licnlthy" public sentiment tn 'irvM4Ui
will look into the cmm jut j.;it .is
fully as it' propose to ..administer jnn
tice in. the next. In f:irt. if Smith
punished nw it. may : prevent .Jimh-s
hinii'lf from contrilutn t.' lUf nnr
ler of HtiiN one or more it t. ! rf
t'orvallis. not to pek Of .tl.e m'uIc
soiite effect it would luiie lx'n-.
And -now the Democratic-piijnT r.
worrying because the eb'i-tioii of IK r
mann will -he a slapJJn tlVe f;i-c .
the President." This' stal-tiifnt f-existing
condition, as seen fr in she l!;t
oerati5 standMint, m j-uri-liarcl ..wil u
depreKing spprcheiiHiooiis. rf-m'inds n'
of the campaign of lui year. - lf tin-re
is anything on earth that wv-iiM - ;:ui
grief to the Defnocrati heart, it wa:l l
be a disposition, no matter from wluit
source, to slap ' Presijent. . lCus'v-ll.-But
-this is a mere "matter of tfnipcra
ntent. The Iemocrat wln liis
greatest delight in 4 slapping the l'r
ihent" himself, abhors t lie tendvi'n-y i t
do such a thing by a IlepuMicaii ''es
pecially, if it involvesj rattling a vto
for Hermann. I " '
There .is' probably not a man in Sa
lem, and hern is -.Tlicrej all t he eir uiu
stances attending the i adininitratin
of the Indian Schwl are lwst "iiiidi-r-"
stood, who believe ,fsuiTintenlcfit Tot
ter has permitted or engaged in any ir
regularities in the discharge of his du
ties.' As be has pointed out, some of
the civil service rules are not Hpiilj-
cable to conditions prevailing there, but
these are not of serious cons-pi ut
Certain it is that ho1 hai made. a very
efficient officer, the discipline has been
practically erfect, and nobodv believe
for a moment that be has undertaken in
any way to bring a financial profit to
himself through any sort of irregular
proceedings. .
Those iron scats in Marion 8U'i.ri
mark an appreciated improvement in
Salem's natural park, and there will
not be a day throughout the entire sum
mer when it will be too Warm ther
for comfort. The preservation f tl;-
square for public purposes was a'bappy
forethought of the pioneers who wer5
looking to the future of Balcm'a at
tractive f?atures. Kifty years afro thcr
was strip of timber reaching from.Cemt
mercial street to tbe river that whi
utilized for luwlicr, being sawed in a
mill on the creek in North Salem. Mar
ion; Square, alone, was preserved,
though wost of the trees now staudiu
there are a second growth.
Parker is decidedly out . of lin k.
Cleveland talking for him in the iia-t
is said to have hurt him in the Wet'
sod Bryan talking against him in tl"
West has hurt bijn in the East, whils
his own ersislenl refusal to talk at
all has hurt him ail over the country r.
It is becoming more evident every day
that Jcffcrirt's pri-Sent ' pomla.rit y
tests ufu the fact that he h.isn't naid
anything , at all for near a lumdred
years.
Jim Cwper was in 8alem yesterday
without an oweoat. He never wear-
an overcoat during the piojjrea-i . o -
tampaigu. , : - .