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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1896-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1896)
f Vf? - DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. 1f iffi! 4' ASSOCIATED PRESS D-LLV. a roi 8. SALEM, OREGON Til UUSDAY, SEPTEFBER 17,181)0. a iAHV" DOES BUSINESS AT THE yofk mUt - I GOES BRilVELy i Bryan Slept Well and Talks Better. PROGRESS OP THE REBELLION. NO?25M A Battle With a Mob UiiCAco, Sept. 17.-An Infuriated Havana, Sept, 17.-The band of -"""'' l 'A" ,",urllUet, Juan Delgado Is reported t haio , m f laborcr!i batUcd wlUl tllp burned the farms of Gatora, Chlncal NEW YORK DEMOCRACY and Tlraboquc, on tlio canal, and scv eral settleinenls near Santlagi Vegas. The insurgents burned sev eral ranns In Havana province be cause tlic owners refused to pay the ,.,intlnuetolnerc:nb? Compare our prices and Roods with i 2 olfcred by other mercbants, and you have the answer. Vp -ire doing an absolutely cash business. We buy and sell .". ,'nch i.nlv. In every transaction there is a good ner cent- ...mivcd. and we give the customer uio benefit off "junta. Reliable goods aud lowest prl business the benefit of all ices Is the reason dls- mir OSPERS. Ours.tock of shoes Is complete. The 5Doote,Sbo?s, hicli wc carry are the standard of good quality. Cluthing in ureat variety at bed-rock, hard times prices. Bring your cash and receive full value. E.T.BARNE S Unreservedly for Bryan and the - Chicago Platform. Charlotte, N. c, Sept. n.-Brjan began -speech-making early today, after a night's rest on a .special train. ne left the sleeper at 8 a. ni., and was escorted to the poslolllce Park by the Hornet Nebt's riflemen and the local Knights of Pythias Comuiandery of mounted men. He addressed several thousand people, and left for Durhnm at 10 o'clock. taxes levied by the Insurgent". Noar ' Palos, In Matanzas, the Insurgents have burned the tobacco plantations of nerculano aud Esperanza, causing' a loss of $400,000. In the last few nays they have nlso burned a large amount of property near Puerto Principe. .Several soldiers of the battalion of Los Xavas, guaidlug the trtfclia Jucaro, have died fiom sui The first 1000 .soldiers of the rcj meiils iccrntly anlvid fion have arrived at Jucaro. loIlce of South Chicago at 0 o'clock- last evening for tlio possession of a V!ltTnn.fIrtttfir tflmt.i Hmtt l..... . .... i delos . imraiimu , wiui lyncning, because his runaway , horse knocked down several of the crowd. After a fierce struggle, In which clubs and stones were freely used, the driver Peter Zlsllskl, was rescued from his assailants. In addl tlflti to the half dozen men trampled beneath the hoofs of the frantic horse a uumborof tlio crowd were severely beaten by the police. A passing engine frightened the horse, which had been standing In front ofra house, and he dashed dow n the street toward a crowd of working men who were leaving the steel com pany's works. Zlsllnskl nut Hatred to Spain mertake the runaway, but could not at' trokc. ,' n force-' IWW.I.,.1 II. I.,... I. I.. I. . . - . t i vwu.ufi mis ihiim:, iiii:ii .swept IIIIO - ia .tijuiivu irum xaios, .uuianzus, .!. XXJCXOKEGONZCXXZC oddsfpial Exposition Portland, Oregon, Sept. 19 to October 17, The irreit resources of the Pacific Northwest. Agriculture. Horticulture. Fisheries. lines, Minufsctures, Transportation, Machinery, Trade and Commerce will be represented lore completely nun ever Deiore. turanu Dana concert erery aiternoon and evening, fcciil attractions every night. Lowest rates ever made on all transportation lines. i Admission 25c. Children 10c. ror exhibit space apply to Geo. L. Baker, .Superintend t, M the building. E. C. MASI'EN. S. lg WN MOWERS. HAY RAKES, MACHINE OILS and AXLE GREASE. GRAY BROS., ardware, Stoves and Tinware, SALEM, OR. ki)E.V HObE. Ll'VNSrRINKLERS, BICYCLES. SUNDRIES. amette ' FADING HOTKl. OF THE CITY. Hotel. K:uic:d rates. Management Itucral. Electric tarn leave hotel or all public buildings Facts of interest. Special rates will be given to permanent patrons. A. I. WAGNER) ens fal Suits Ready. r SJr H S' 1S he grandest, the most select, the choicest fitment of men's dress suits, business aits, every day suits your eyes ever be eH fabrics that are meritorious, linings at are reliable, styles that are new, fit that rws study, and last, but not least, prices fat arcvwell, orices that fit vour ourse, be Small Or lafa. IVWr fall cnifc at ffom vu r fi IV Tf AUM MVfc - New York Solid. Buffalo, Sept. 17. After re-asm-bling today, the Democratic state convention business proceeded with expedition. Ex-Congressman Hosea H. Rockwell, of diemum? rnnni.v. vras elected permanent chairman. He made an able speech, in advocacy of the Chicago platform and ticket. The New York stale Democratic platform unieservcdly endorses the platform adopted by the Democratic party In national convention at Chi cago, pledges William J. Bryan and Arthur Sewall Its hearty and active support, and declares as its deliberate judgment that never in the history of the Democratic party has a platform been written which embodied more completely the Interests of the whole mass of the people, as distinguished from those who seek legislation for private benelit, than that given to the country by the national Demo cratic convention of 1890. John Bojd Thatcher, of Albany, was nominated for governor. Hon. Wilbur F. Porter was nominated for lieutenant-governor, and Robert C. Titus was nominated Judge of the court of appeals. The presidential electors were chosen, and the-convention adjourned sine die. 4.75 TO $20 UoteonsSi fete and lirwtw StrAfits. II Vf) MM tSf J' I tL W i V Club Conventions. Wabhinqton, Sept. 17. The con Tention of the national campaign clubs of the sliver party originally called for September 23, at Chicago, will be postponed until October 3, at St. Louis, where the Democratic clubs hold their convention. Arrangements are In progress for a joint meeting, Steel Men at Canton. Canton, Sept. 17. McKlnley's visi tors today consisted of the employees of the Edgar Thompson steel works, Penna. Fully 2,000 men were In line. At McKlnley's home, hearty con gratulations and. assurances of support were offered by J. L. Jpnes, spokes man of the party. McKlnley re sponded. A reception followed. Sheehan Resigns, New York, Sept. 17. William a; Sheehan today sent the following let ter to James K. Jones.chalrman of the Democratic national committee, Chi cago: "I respectfully tender my reslg uatlon as representative of the state Of New York, upon the Democratic notional committee." Complete Returns. Portland, 3Ie.,!Sept. n.-Completc returns of Mondays election are at hand. The total vote Is: Powers 83,673; Frank 31,841. Rapubllcan plu rality 48,732. mat In consequence of hH ungovern able temper and his immoderate drinking. Insurgent Leader Lacrctc was abandoned by Rolofl several days ago. y The steamer Santo Domingo arrived here last nltfit, liavlng on' board 20 olllcers and 750 soldiers of the rein forcements from Spain. Yesterday the work of transferring the boys from the asylum of Bon Eflconcla to the seminary vyas com menced, wlille the girls were today removed to the nuns' convent In Santa Clara. The sick soldiers arc being moved to the asylum of Bon EOconcla, which has been arranged for a hospital. There Is a report in circulation that Maximo Gomez has left his camp at Guasimas with Agrmonte, .going in the direction of Santa Clara, to form 11 junction with MuJIn and iiodriguez In Sancti Spntu. It Is nlso reported that Rodriguez lias arrlvin.that district. Plans for a balloon, which, It is claimed, can be lowered or raised at pleasure without the use of ballast, have been offered to the government, and will be examined by a commis sion, Tlio news Is continued that the in surgent leader, Morejon, whose in fluence In the revolution has been great, has died of wounds received In a skirmish In Matanzas with Colonel Molinas Appeals To Our Ambassador. Washington, Sept. 17. The stute department has been advised that Tynan, alleged to be the famous "No. 1" of the Phoenix Park tragedy, now under arrest at Boulogne, has ap pealed to Ambassador Eustls, claim Ing exemption from surrender to the British authorities by reason of his AmeJican citizenship. The ofllcials of the state department decline to say In advau.ee what action would bo taken n such case, but the practice In the past has been tq avolt Inter ference and permit the surrender, presuming that the proceedings are In accordance with the usual legal code of the two countries, American citizenship can not bo et up to prevent the extradition of a person arrested in one country for crime committed In another. The United State has never gone on record as taking an advanced position In this mattcr,'a!though some other nations claim that such persons cannot be surrendered without the consent of the country of their citizenship. The authorities on extradition show that France ha always asserted a right to surrender fugitives of a third country without sacking Its content, wj (he prospects for successful intervention on behalf of Tynan are small. ciowd. A dozen wont down. many or thoso who escaped lt.s hoofs Iwlng struck by the wagon. In an In stant Zlsllskl was surrounded. In vain he explained his helplessnes, but his captors seized him, threw him to the ground and were crying for a rope when the police came to the rescue. Breach of Promise Case. ... Chicaoo, Sept. 17. Alfred Fenther- stone, u wealthy bicycle-maker or this city, has been sued for $100,000 for breach of promise by Ilss Maud Stev ens. Nobody appears- to know much about the young woman, and her at torneys decline to talk. The defend ant Is now In Now York. It Is said ho has been playing tho races there with great success, having won, It Is claimed, $25,000 In tho last four days. Anti-Italian Agitation. Rio Dh Jankiiio, Sept. 17. The Jacobin party is preparing' to inau gurate anew the antl-ltallan imita tion. It 1r feared that grave conlllcts will occur. It Is rumored thatn revolution Is being organized by the Jucoblnsand the monarchist party, and that the Italian question will servoasabaso for an Insunectlon against the gov ernment The authorities are aware of the rumors, and are taking meas ures to prevent tlio plans of tho agU tators from coining to a head. The Issue in America. St. James Gazette nf Monday, July 13, 1800. The merely personal side of the electoral conflict In the United States ought to 1)0 of small Importance even there. To us it Is, properly speaklnir or no consequence It Is notorious that for a long time past tho courso of thing has been a gal not tho farmer as ho has hitherto Imph im,w0,i 1.. America. lie has taken advances rrom tho bank, and tho steady fall in prices makes It even harder for him to ja7 back. A bumper harvest can do htm little good, sluco the misfortune, Iscxnctly this: that tho market h overstocked already, and that the greater the output the greater the fall In prices. With that prospect beforo him, tho farmer Is ready to listen to thoso who tell him that the money-lender has uininfair advantage. What the,fiir mer has to offer In tho market, in order to bo nblo to pay, sinks continually In price, while tho commodity sold by the canltnllst-nntnplv. m,i,iiu steadily rising In value. 1 1 Is not wonderful that the farmer listens to those who tell hlni that a remedy will be found by the freo coinage of silver for it will enable him to pay In a medium which hns not been rising in valuo but sinking In proportion with other thing. To him it may well seem monstrous that the hundred dollars he borrowed must bo repaid, without Including Interest, by n hundred and twenty, while the measure of corn, for which In once received live dollars, now brings htm In four. THK I'OSSHILE DANOKR IN AMUR1UA. From tho LomlunJSpectator, July 11, 1S!)(J. We cannot overlook tho fact that the majority of citizens in tho west aro small free-holding fanners, one-third or them mortgaged, whose Incomes have been nearly cut in two by the rail In agricultural prices, who pay tlirco sets or taxes, tlmsc or the districts, or the stntoand tho nation, who have for years attributed their difficulties to Insuillclent coinage, and who'nro pene trated beyond any population in the world with the view thnt'tlmv i.v - citizens of tlio American republic a right to material ease nnd exemption rrom anxiety. Wo aro unable, therefore, to feel confident that such a popu lation, conscious or irresistible weight In the union' may not, under pressuro or economic cares, rise as the French peasantry did against what they con ceive to be unjust exactions, and insist that their ruleis shall at least try to equalize more cleaily tho material position or all classes Thoy not only declaro that silver o'ight to bo mado legal tender nt the ratio or 1 to 1(1, that Is, at nearly double Its commercial price, without waiting for any inter -national agreement, but they avow their Intention of avoiding if theyican all contracts for payment in gold, thus, as they openly acknowledge, reducing all debts by one-hair, while Increasing equally the prlco or all commodities produced in America. They spcclllcally rcfuso to all holders of United States bonds the option of demanding gold, and they declaro that 11 gold standard Is a British device, favored also by the eastern states.for plundering tho Ainerl can people , '"'" ' ' ' ' , , . An Offer. Nkw Yomc.Sept.n. Jnmes Wakcly John L. Sullivan's old backer, has made an oiler or a purbo or $10,000 for the Fltzslinnions-Corbett fight to bo "pulled off" In private. Corbett has wired that ho Is willing to .accept the offer, if It Is the best made. Martin Julian, on behalf of Fltz slmmons, lias declined for the present to.condlder It, Against the Sultan. London, Sept. 17. Tlio Standard publishes a dispatch from Constanti nople that the young Turk party .Js covering tho city with placards Incit ing tho people to dethrone tho sultan. Serious trouble, it is added, is certain to occur within a wcok. Turkish troopships aro nightly deponing Ar menians to Uio Black sea, where It Is belloved they aro drowned. Tho British residents, at the in stance of tho British embassy, have telegraphed to Lord Salisbury, stating that their lives and property aro In danger. Tho French residents havo taken similar action. British and French fleets aro now near tho mouth of tho Dardanelles. Fuad Pasha, one of the sultan's aid-de-camps, was questioned as to how long tho forts along the Dardanelles could check tho passago or tho war ships, and lio replied that they could stop them for about hair an hour. Attacked by Natives, Viknna, Sept. 17.-A scientific party from the warship Albatross, It Is announced, was attached on August i0 by natives or Guadulcanar, Solomon islands. A geologist named Fulton, a midshipman and two seamen were Wlcd, Bell Taken to London. Glasgow, Sept. 17. Edward Bell, the American arrested upon the! froopa Disarmed. Berllv. Sept. 17.-A dispatch from Constantinople says a guard of Turk-! charge of participating with Tynan, Jsu troops on dutyatYHdlz palace, ' Kennedy and Haines in the dynamite composed of four battalions (if Alba-! conspiracy to blow up the resldonce of pao? was forcibly disarmed last I Queen Y!ctrla at Bqlmoral while t"P evening n the presence of a large czar was her guejti was bawled over body of troops and replaced by five to Scotland Yard cletcutlvei this Zraikiw .battalions, I morning and taken to London. Battleship Texas Floats Again Newport Nkwb, Sept. 17. The battleship Texas, which went ashoro last night, was floated early this morning, apparently uninjured. Four tugs were required to get her Into deep water. A Cuban Suspect, Nkw York, Sept. 17, -George Car. los Rololf, a Cuban, was arrested to. day on the charge of aiding and abett ing in sending filibustering expedi tions to Cuba. He Is said t ho Major General In thetmnvof Genera) Gomez. State ok Ohio, (Jity of Tolkdo, i Lucas County, f M Frank I. Cheney makes oath that he Is the senior partner of the firm of F.J. Ciibnky & Co., doing businens in the city of Toledo, county and vtate aforesaid, 'and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE IlUNDUliD DOL. LARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the Uso of Hall's Catarrh Curk. .Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, litis 6th day of December, A D. 1806. if-' i A, W. Gleason, Seal. Notary I'ublic Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J.'Chkney & Co., Toledo, O, CirSold by Druggists, 7'c, Did you over trade ut a one prlco cabli store. If not, try tho Now York Racket. Their goods aro the bcst.nnd prices the lowest. at Plunged Over the Grade. Wallack, Idaho, Sept. 17- The four-horse stage from Murray to Wal? lace plunged over the grade, killing one hor&e and Injuring the others, No passengers were killed. Killed By a Blast. Viotoh, Cojo., Sept. 17. Dan Mr. Lcod and Frank Ledbctter were killed today, by the explosion of the Inde pendenco.mlne. They.drlllcd into.u blast that had failed to go off, In Town. , You'll 1ms Muprlt.., t Won't "yellow tho clothes." Won't burn your hands. Nothing equals it. Better than soap. Extra largo jmcknges. Soap Foam Washing Powdor. John Huoiikh, The New York Racket is located opposite the First National bank. Visit our store once and, you will bo our steady custouiors. .'it When you need shoes or clothing' the Now York Racket can lit you and the price will Jit your purso. .'It STATE NEWS. A club of 222 for Bryan, was organ ized at Tho Dalles last Saturday. Mr and Mrs. N. T. Moqrc, of Al bany .celebrated tholr golden wedding last Monday. Joel Granholm, tho Swede, who was found dead last Saturday, near Forest Grove, died of heart failuror" A Umatilla county Bryan club was organized at Athena on Saturday evening with a membership of 143 names. Tho graders employed on tho As toria & Columbia River Railroad, un earthed the skeletons of two inqn last Saturduy. Tho houso and two barns of W. A. Williamson, near Coburir. was burnnd last Sunday. Seed and winter feed' weroall burned. A Bryan silver club has been organ ized utSmlthlleld, In Richardson pro duct, Lane county, with 108 members. Tho precinct cast 121 votes last Juno. There are a great number or filled $10 pieces being circulated In Port land. It Is supposed that a gang of sharpers havo worked the town for all it was worth. M. Wllklns, or Coburg, has received1 his certificate of award for un exhibit or clover, ryo, barley, wheat and grasses at the World's Columblat,Ex- "My rrlend," said the Baker City, evangelist, handing hint a tract,'"hoy do you stand on tho great question?" "I'm for freo allver," responded tho long whiskered man. Tho fall term of the Portland nub ile schools epened Monday, with 200 principals and teachers at their re spective desks. Between ten and eleven thousand pupils will attend'. Tho first nntl-Republlcan club eveV organized In Florence .precinct Laho county, haBii meinberslilpof 105. Tho voti or this precinct last Juno wan, Touguo 01, Vundorburg 70, Meyers, 10 and Chrl8tcnson 2. Many persons suffer with u constant" headache that comes from eye slratii.V a pair of good glasses properly fltlea;" will relelyo this.' Ytfareycs tested freo. . C'HAKLES H, HlNUEH. , v Graduuto Optician. 233 Commercial St. tf Jones Did you hear about Mrs. Win. McKlnley suing for a divorce? Smith No; whuturo her grounds? Jones She alleges that the major Is getting too thick with Hanna. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Baking Powder SOJLl)TElY PUE J L SA0PMHK