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About Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1890)
CAPITAL JOURNAL; VOL. 3. SALEM, OREGON, FI.ID.AY, JUNE 6, 1890. NO. 80. EVENING "OUR PATRONS" I Put Your Money Say Wc Scll- TI!K CAP1T4L JOURNAL. where it will do most good. U OTHING 11 u F A D 1 i IT) a u than any other Dealer In the city. Perhaps wo do. We sell as cheap as any body can. All we ask is a fair margin on the goods. We buy for cash, and our expenses are Ugh', consequently we can Sell at a Low Riooire. We have our stock now almost daily almost complete, although goods are arriving Come in and inspect Our Goods and Prices. Everything Marked in Plain Figures at W. H. CONRA ki m 10 One lncc ! otli1,"! A Real Estate Investment pays better Interest than any other adventure. Those who in llrat have the bet chances of improvement. got Eight houses approaching completion in tip m D a i A WHIP, and contracts for Ten more left. Lota in North Pacific addition to Astoria steadily ihcreasiug in value. A few more small fruit farms at Punnyside still on the market, The Ore gon Land Co., with its main oilice in Salem, and branch ofilces in Portland, Astoria and Albany, Ore., buys and sells Stock, Grain and Fruit Farms, and lias a choice lot of city and suburban property. 257 Commercial Street. BOOTS AND SHOES. James Dcnliam & k 118 Stale Street, SalomJ J. W. CRAWFOR has Removed His Stock of Stoves, Tinware and Plumbing Goods to the store recently occupied by J. C, BROWN & CO. Call and if -m m - I Tr"""Tfr I (In "H . J jnT",t:S' I . FUltUSIIEDDAILY.EXCEin'SUNDAY, BY THK Canital Journal Publishing Company. (Incorporated.) Omce, Commercial Street, In 1. O. llulldlnj Kntcred nt the postofflco nt fnlcm, Or.,ns second-class runttcr. HOFER BROTHERS, Editors. Save Your Dollars, and See Him! BROOKS & COX, D lOO STATE ST., SALEM, OR. TT1 u K D K IS, IIK -AND- Chemicals, Keep Your Eye On IIS State St. Boots and Shoes, All Kinds, We Can Suit You. E. BAKER & SONS, VIanu.factu.rers of Cigars, State Street, Salem. o GENERAL STOCK OF DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED CIGARS. We make a specialty of Tobacco Storo Fixtures. When in give us a call. A KUOLIbll rilOMIKCY. Senator Hlscock brands himself as a defunct prophet In advance, in declaring that both national con ventions in 1S92 will pronouueo in opposition to free silver coinage. No man can say what the republl- fcan national couvcntlon will then put In its platform. In tho con vention of 1SSS the republican party declared for perfect equality be- J ween gold and sliver as money, 'hat is a just position and the party hiay take that again. But the party may be called upon to do rnore thau that. It cauuot declare both its lawful children, and then discriminate In favor of gold. It cannot adopt gold and sliver as legitimate ollsptiug of its financial theories and then in congress pro ceed to illegltimatize silver. Thostates of tho great northwest, that are full of undeveloped silver mines, will never bo brought to see the. Justice of discriminating, In the slightest degree, against ono of the precious metals. The masses have no luterest lu keeping gold nt a premium over silver. The unde veloped mining industries of the northwest have n direct interest to tho contrary. Why shnll not tho people of ttie whole United States be permitted to develop and employ ev ery avenuo of enterprise a ntl wealth, silver Included? If the people havo any doubts as to how tho next national conven tions shall stand on this question, they will probably soud delegates who stnnd right. They nro not going to send delegates and repre sentatives to their political conven tions and legislative assemblies, un questioned and unasked, so much In tho future as in the past. "Buying the cat In n bag" is not as popular J In politics as it once was. Tho ab- absolute will of the masses I must bo more aud moro directly I represented in tho politics of state ! aud nation. JUMPING ONTO THE JOURNAL What n Few Correspondents Havo to Say on a Tender Subject. CAPITAL JOURXAIi JOTS. Why not n chamber of commorco for Salem? PVS peps the city Jnl A. REN Doalar in- JH PERMffiyjr mir am Furniture and Carpets MivoiMnna' PriwHnHnns and Fanillv Recines carefully com- I -Physlclans' Prescriptions and Family itecipes careruny com pounded. A full line of choice Imported nnd Key West cigars Real Estate, THE GLOBE i & (III V.VL 298 Commercial Street, 'Salem, - - Oregon. AOI iicliange! 292 Commercial St,, Salem, Or, Has h large list of choice farms and city property for sale on easy terms. Homesteads loaned. money to Loan On improved farm." aud city property at low rate of interest. tSTWe have also in connection with our real estate business, an EM PLOYMENT and GENERAL INTELLIGENCE Bureau, where nil orders for help will be promptly attended to, aud situations also obtained for the unemployed. A. KIvKIN, Continues the I$uine.-s formerly conducted by Krausse Ji Klein, at the old Stand on Commercial street. BOOTS 1 ! REMOVAL We Have Removed to Bush's New Brick Corner, Will le pleased to receive calls from my old friend and now. Mammoth New Steck: ! at Living Prices: Corner of Commercial and Court, And will continue to carry the tlnct line uf Dress Goods and Trimmings, j. i i Salem, Ladie Ladies and (ieuts Famishing Goods, Clothing flats, Wraps, Etc. in the City. We are agents for several specialties. J. J. DALRYMPLE & CO. OulvAbstractBooks IN MARION COUNTY. Wwk promptly anil reliably exeewUtd by the SALEM ABSTRACT & LAND CO., FRANK V. WATERS, Manner JACOHSON , Dealer In Lumber, Lath and Shingles, at the old Dorrance Yard, Sjeet3l attention given to furnish Kiln dried and Superior ' Flushing Lumtor. , W. M. Sargent, Dealer in- Wall Paper, Mouldings, Piatures Frame, Window shades, IUuy Cat, Express Wagons, Not I una aud Toys of all kind. A Plu Line of Etohlngu and Engraving, Oil Painting and Chromoi. Wra CKITIC18INO THE JOUltNAI.. A number of correspondouta criti cise tills paper lor some of its campaign and after cam paign reflections. An editor cannot hope to escape this, aud wo do not wisli to. If we never hud any opinion of our own or never said anything to diner from any body, we might as well not print a newspaper. A newspaper man who has to discuss lrom three to ten thousand subjects a year, cannot bo Infallibly right in tho estimation of everybody. But ho can aim to bo fair, and his work must be estimated on ills all tho year around service. Tho critics, whoso letters wo print elsewhere arc older residents, and older cltlzeiiB than tho writer. They may bo near er right than tho writer. Wo give every man tho fullest liberty to cor rect any statement of fact or opinion that appears in this paper, when ho does so from good motives and to advance thocauseof truth. Wo havo no false political pride and our love of truth and Justice should ho the guiding principle of all our actions. Now, without desiring any fur ther controversy, ono word with our Union party friend. So far as tho assertion of ono writer goes, that the republican party Is incapable of any reforms, we beg to dlfler with him. Tho party that abolished slavery and has strangled polygamy In tho territories Is capablo of meeting any greet moral problem, and solving it too. If the genial Mr. Robertson or any other Union party man hope for any moral uplifting of the masses from the democratic party his hopes aro destined one day to be quenched. Let them Htudy the record tho democratic parly Is making in tuo supreme court, and see If Is not akin to the black record of the democratic members of that court before the i war. Fuller, Lamar nnd Field saw the original package decision In the national way (as did some republi cans) but when It came to suppress ing (olygauious Mormonlsm lu the territories, these democrats turn tail on Nationalism with a big N, ' and dtolare that congress has no power to forfeit tho proporty of n polygamlst church. Lot our friends study these records nnd we if tliey want to assist that sort of things. Wo do not believe they do. Ei). JouitNAL. In your paper of Juno 4, under tho tltlo "Tho Result In Oregon," you say, "every farmer who has failed to get as much for his crop as ho expected, or to get ns big n yield ns ho hoped for vented his ill-will by voting against tho republican candidate (Thompson)" Tills is certnlnly not complimen tary either to tho head or heart of the farmers. I think It does them positive injustice. Is it uot possible that our usually courteous editor was himself n "llttlo off his baso?" Do you uot know that tho owners of farms, and also of little homes lu cities and towns are paying moro thau an equitable share of tho taxes? Tho idea that this Is somehow brought about by tho present finan cial system is very prevalont. Mr. Thompson was supposed to staud ns tho mouth-piece nnd ndvocnte of that system. Mr. Pennoyer theop poslte. Your platform, you admit dodged tho question. "The weak ness of the canvass was In tho plat form and its presentation to tho people. ' Silent on tho only state Issue of Importance tho ques tion of non-tuxnble bonds." You seem to blame the convention lu tho first place fur not adopting a positive plank on tills question, and then the committee for not defining what tho convention had left unde fined. There you are wrong again. If n republican victory was tho great, chief important object to ob tain, then tho conventions and tho committee did the onl practicable thing. To hnv- declared against non-taxnble lonli would have been fatal in Portland and lost the sup port of the Orogonlan. To declare for non-tnxable bonds, It would lose the solid KUppoit of the producers. They were thus between the thvand the deep sea. They undertook to run the gauntlet. They failed. The farmers generally believe your party Htands for non taxable- bonds. You cannot convince them to the contrary by Juggling, and tho nomination of a national banker who voted six times for natioual bonds. Had tho "truo Inwardness" of this non-tiucuolo bonds Infamy been properly pre sented before tho people lu black cued enormity by n party whoso Bklrts were perfectly clear, nnd with ability, Ponnoycr'B majority would not havo been four thousand but ten thousand. TJita -la tho rwv. sou thofarmors so generally voted Pennoyer, nnd not because- thoy failed to "get ns big a yield as ho hoped for" I do not believe that your party can take n clear cut, well defined position, for any reform, nnd win. I sympathize with your vary laudable efforts to secure that end. J. P. ROHIIKTKO.V. Auotlicr hotter. Ed. Jouiinai., Silt. I am utterly astonished nt your sarcas tic remarks in Tin: Evi:ninc Jouit nai, about tho Granger, I quete: "Every farmer who failed to get as much for his crop ns ho expected or to got ns big n yield ns ho hoped (or vented his Ill-will by votlug ngalnst the republican candidate." Now tho grangers havo published far aud wide for tho past two years that thoy would not support nny man for ofllco who would uot pledge him self against not-tiucablo bonds. Do you supposo thoy did this simply for child's play. Farmers may bo fools but candidates need not oxpect their votes nor you their patronage by tolling them so, A GiiANQKit, Republican. It Is Governor Pennoyer with a vengenucc. again, Thnt Albany excursion wns quite an advertising boom for Salem. Nearly everybody In tho county outside of Salem voted for Pinnoycr. Salem will not go backwards be fore it goes forward. Some towns do that. It is hard to lltid anybody that does not now think they voted for Pennoyer. Democratic aud Indcpcndo n t papers havo a rocky road to trnvol before them in Oregon. While uot in favor of tho original packago decision, Mho Journal Is Itself an original package. Why cry over political blood spill ed? It Is no thinker than water. Press ahead to now conquests nnd reforms. The corrupt use of money to nchiovo results Is not confined to political nnd legal contests. "1 can tako money," a prominent sporting man is represented as remarking, "arrange any prize light, horse race, sword contest, swimming match or other sporting event to come oil' In America to terminate a certain way." Mikct many pcopto miserable, and ott" ic:mH to nrlMcstnictioti. Distress ain citing, sonr stomach, sick headache iie burn, loss ot appetite, a iamt,"aii co'" reeling, lad taste, coated tongue, nnd irr. nianty ot tho bowels, ai DistroSS tho moro counion syn Aftnr tnms. Dyspepsia does :' : M'lur get well ot ltsofr. it it Eating quires onrettfi, porslft attention, and a remi-dy liko Hood' S -parllln, which acts Rrntly vrt -HV,.- It tones tho stomach nt:fl i''1- '" regulates tho dlgcMton, rrfuif' w i nppctlto. nnd, by that Qt,K overcoming tho local MnocJnjhc sj-mptoms, euros tho Hioanaonc licaUaclio, mul refreshes tho Urea luia.i " I havo been troubled with tlyspcpMJ I had but llttlo orpetltc, and wliat 1 du. ,. . cat dlstrosscd me, or .li- Heart- mo 1ItUo R0(Ht. Afu-rt.-t burn Mr i would oxprftn- .falntticss, or tired, nii-sme ici-iinjs us though 1 nan noi cm i.mvi. .... ..., trouble, I think, was wwravntrd by my business, painting, and from being iu-r( c less shut up In a room u 1th gotl T fresh lmlnt. I.ast spring e,vmrtii Mook Howl's Harsuparma StOmaCSH and It did me an Immense amount of gi It gavo mo an appetite, and my fod i. I tshedand satisfied tho craving I h.-d j rr Iously experienced." Gnonaa A. Tao!'. Watcrtown.Mass. N. U. It you decldo to take Hood's B i saparllla do not bo Induced to buy auy otln i Hood's Sarsaparilla 3olilbTlrusjlt'- ?' Mxrory.1. prepared'-CI.HOOIACt).1AMit!ifnilot,lorell1Ma--. 100 Dosos Ono Dollar Spenking of tho election and the tariff, the Oregonlnn says: "If Ore gon has expressed nny opinion upon the McKlnley bill, what that opinion is may bo read lu this ma jority of 111)00 for Mr. Hermann. Wo commend It to the thoughtful consideration of the Mills bill tariff reformers nil over tho country." Insure in Your Home Company ! The State," a They are cracking things along nt u lively rate in congress. It Is now certain that Idaho will bo admitted immediately uflor tin. silver bill Is disposed of. In nil piobablllty, Idaho will be u state within two weeks, when tho governor will tasue his proclamation for nu election, ami political wlre-pu'llng will begin. Tin: JouiiNAii olllce acknowledges tho receipt of a peek of Oregon strawberries, varying from llvo to ten Inches in circumference, nnd I raised ou tho state's prison farpi. On tho packago of delicious fruit was a card labelled, "Compliments of Bupt. Downing. These berries nro of Pennoyer majority vnrioty." All right, boys. They tasted llrst rato. Nosoiir grapes hero. The Farmers' (Irish) Gazette gives tho following dlll'erent way of trad ing balky horses, which wo recom recem mend: Pat the horse on tho neck, examine him carefully, on both sides; if you can get n huudfull of grass give It to him; then Jump into the wagon and give tho word to go nud lie will gotiernlly obey. Which 1ms ror tho past ls year's PAID MORE TAXAS, Issued Mote Policies, Received More Premiums And Paid More Losses Upon properly located In Oregon or Wash Ington than nny other company. It was -Ik first Company to ray all Losses in Full anil in Casli By tho tluoo groat ronllngratlons of s i ' KlloiiHbun.'nni) Hpokuno Full GEO. 'm. HEELER. City Agfir And Hpoohil Agent for Marlon County. (lllU-o In Iho oomimiiy'n hulldltv.. Ciiiiilal (i mm One of the vory best Investments lu the city for capitalists Is that bus liiuM corner of ours 05x105 feet, and one of the busiest corners lu town Has a flue two-stnry brink block of CKNSUH UUUSTIONB. Tho superintendent of tho consus has prepared n list or twenty-six questions which tho consus enu merators are instructed to put to the people. Twenty of these questions havo passed tho ordeal of practical application nnd six are ex periments. Tho latter six are as follews: Whether suffering from ncuto or chronic disease, with name- of dis ease and length of lime uflllcted. Whether defective In mind, sight, hearing or speech, or whether crip pled, maimed, or deformed, with name of defect. Whether a prisoner, convict, homeless child, or pauper. Is the house you llvo lu hired or Is It owned by u member or head of the family ? If owned by tho head or member of tho family, Is the houao free from mortgage Incumbrance? If the hoi'so Is owned by head of the family and mortgaged, what Is postofllce address of owner? ff the toUHiis enumerator has not been around, you had better, If a married man, talk all these ques tion over with your wife and for mulate Intelligent answers, It will not do to refuse to answer, and no one should knowingly misinform or deceive the aent of the government. A OA.SI! IN rOTNT. In our forefathers' ilajrj, pimples W)r at tributed to dlittKcd blood. Hut modern medicine- lit demonstrated that rich food doet uot crtato vruptloni by fouling Die blood, but rntnrds dlgertlon, vrhleh niaLc the itouinch torpid, nud tho circulation ilujnrlib, and In turn ouuci nil enfeebled action (jf the porea which lougnst or become pimply. The modem theory tliercforo h not to treat the blood, but tho utomarh nud liver, and It ft under thli new Idea, tliut JoaVcse-table-Hariaparlllown coucetved. Jt li ulp Inf the- uM " blood illtomij " Idea out of pi iitence. A csie In point- " I havo had for yrari apelli nt indlcr-atlou nud dynpepsU nud tried nearly cverythlatr finally I took ono of the leading aarispariiiaii, It itiuwd plm plu to break nut on my face, which 1 irutold wairautvdby t)iootaiti. Hearing that Joy'i VefctabloarKporllIdlil not con tain mineral, I sent for It. Tho pimples dis appeared ami I havo hud no roturn of the eld ipelli. II it a ciro for ludlgei'.lou and dyipepila aud tbc nt i-udaut face cmptloni." Uai. (. ' t.t, im Ulvlon stuwt. H. V. Nprlnir I'dvor. At thbmeiwon ofthoyoHr tlio nmnt vla- 11)10 oiujii IlllYUH JtWI- (in: of wirlne, tlrfd and worn out, wltn oroim nnd honrty jxoilo often huvo fin, iitiihlilfin Imlfi unvtlilntf. und :-: ".-- :-. ; '.";t.. : ni.. Ijiouk out III iiimpim nun ihimh. umi liuiny ILtl.nt vnn riviulri, In n mild to til I) lilfdlulllH tllHt will uot Kcntly on tho lUnrutid blixitl.iitid for till", notliliiK iviiiuU Dr. (Iiimd'h Imi proved i.lvttr I'llTn. 'liu-y ulvo an iicllvlty Id thu llvur, purify Iho blfjfxl and by lliwlr mild tonlo ui-tion, now vitality win klrnnfrtii to tho rntlru ayntotn. Hold nt 'A conU box by Kmltli .V Htiilnor. Two Through Ti-ains Each Way I1AII.V, VIA UNION PACIFIC SVHTICM. Oiiniiionclne with Hunduy, Maruli ixilli nmi hiiu u-coim-oiuM iieveui honored on 'The l.lmti-l Hwit li Slid will I I. ie Mall." HOviir- Jas. Batchelor, Prop'r. Warm Meal? at All Hours of the Day Nnno but wlillo lnbor tuimlovetl lu this CHtllbllHlllllOUU A khxI Hiitxtiautlal meal c-ookod In llrst-rliKNHtyln rwcnty-nvo cents iwr nicni, R 135 ID 11- R O N T. Court street, lirtwyon Journal Ollleo and .liiiiii) h lavury. For Sale On asylum nvcntie, ono mllo from town, nud three minutes' walk from electric Hue, one of tho most desira ble plnces ubotit tiwu. House contains ulno rooms, hot nud cold water, hath room, etc., nud In per feet order. Barn nud out building, Willi about dl acres. This will be sold at u bargain if applied for nt once. Six acres would pint to good advantage. JOS. CRUMP, Heal Eslnte, L'OO, Commercial street. 3-G-tr. Pioneer Bakery AMOS STRONG, 271 Commercial Streel. French und German Wlicnt nnd Ityo Uronds lu City Styles. Vienna Jtolis. SPKCIAIi'V OK FANCY CAKES. Pastry und Confectionery Unking In Full Stock. My now bread nnd cako bakera are flrst-ulasH artists in their line, nud I aim to huvo Everything as Fine as Hie Finest. FINE HORSESHOEING -AT- Scriber & Pohle's. HpBolaj attention kIvbii to shoving roua atani.drlvinu horvtw, InlarfOrJniranactln plwt huniM, a luro Stock of H-Made Shoes Carried. Wo Ktvsuur ncrwiiml attention and em ploy non Nut fcxparta In this ddpartmont 47 and 51 State Street, Salem, Or. The To Home Heekrr. Capital City railway Prices the Lowest. three store rooms 30x70 ffet, with! ofllcos overhead and other buildings. ' It rents to nay 10 per cent, on the , amount. It Is the host site lu the ..(a fun a l.f.f i.iln lifillui. tfiatu fkt II tl 1 Ui iui niHiimire iiuuk u v-.ii.t . j to the beet for a retail trade; best Mr. David blmtJMJii fins laknn ciiarge I bargain in town. Balem Iind Co. ortheir real estate uepunmoniai no Postofflci Wook. rtw-tr ' HtaU strwt. Call and see him. trulix 3 until, a well ulo on llw lunii 1'iyem, ni. i unuz. , The Llinitud 1'Juit Mall" trHlmt are mulpiwd with l'ullimni pulaeo nnd oolo-l Dint altcperi,, dlnlnit cmrx, oliulr eun mid I oouotiM, und run aolld botwien 1'ortlund ana t'hlriei,uuiiy wimoiiiumingo, Tlio"0 erlnnd Klyr,trttln nro julprd with 1'ullmun (mluco alMtpera and (xmoliw, jlwen I'ortlnnd und Counvll lllufni, and Willi I'ullnutii colonial atiier lM)twen Cortland ai.d Knuwu City, dally, without olianKe. I'oiintctlona cro mude ut 1'isnlella with through tntin loanil from Hull lJke, nud aK'heyonnw with thrttuich truln tu and from Denver, KanMu city ana hi. lhim. H I m IS L com- . ' mnmr l.i nraiviriul tf ittlX llf if rift.UiPatll". , enthomethliig to their advantage. The above iruln. utlord the (iiilokiwt ' time llwen the Northwwt l"uolile eouot unit Kiutlern and oulhrrn ikIuv. i IMiUiltxl lime or trulim, rat,, liirouuli tlokeU, tmicuuv oheeka ete., k.ii bo lr etired upon appllmtlon tnany Wr&at of th Union 1'aetaa syateni. J. w. i.qi!, 1' Capital Dairy Co. A. . Kmrehlid, 11. J. Kelly ami yr t llunii re prejmrtd to deliver tlresli milk, etmlettun w, m any Mirt of the city, laveorden, at Mlnin .i Low'a ntnble. S-7-Suw (Imi'I !. 1JOI8KA MAN NINO Avnt. trt, Hnlem Orivn &' nt. iiirt B33K BrSi EMORY Mlcd wn.lrrnc (aired Boot! lreH t'.uni0uiii. ' vi aw ol.iilon to It ' tm . Af KwyW