TmtaJSSi&iMmtmp wmW'j hi mm in -ia MhfatiMMaaaaLrfMa; Wii " i,miMi . rnjum Can6t6ate6 Before tbe people of regon in WHAT I SHALL DO WHEN GOVERNOR jj Marion County Candidates for Oregon Legislature J i i (J (From Portland Evening Journal ) REPUBLICAN CANDIDA IE. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE nBHL 1 BY W. J. FURNISH At the outset, I can promise the people of the stntc of Ore Ron that when I nm elected governor their overy Hunt shnll he deeply respected. 1 bellovo that I can truthfully say that when my term shall i . ...i.i ii. .,nn..i.. .fin i,n.'.. nn nmiun trw rnrrmlnlnt niralnst f. IIUVU U.lllim llIU IUUIIU Ml,, llii . vm..u .. - --.,--- my administration. ' , ..lit. .1.- ..I..1.1. nf l.f nnttpA My every act snail do in accoiu wun wo i-nmo ui m ..... people. My administration of public affairs shall correspond to my administration of my private business shall bo conducted on a plane or economy commensurate with the best interests of a progressive commonwealth. It shall be my nmhltlon to servo the stato as Hie trusted manngor of a great private 'business would be vcqulied to serve those by whom ho was employed. There will he no unnecessary frills or furbelows about the gubernatorial ofllco If I am chosen to (111 It. I shall seriously con template the trust Imposed In me, and shall aim to dischargo It In tlio Interest of all the people, as my best Judgment shall dic tate. In my hands the olllce of governor shall conserve the entire $ stato, preferring no ono section to anothor section, nor one class o of eltl7.ons to anothor class 3 BY GEO. E. CHAMBERLAIN. If elected governor I will do whatever Is necessary to correct abuses In the way of ofllclnl extravagance which are recognized as existing. 1 havo no hesitancy In saying that whatovor may bo the po litical comploxlon of tho loglslnturo my first aim will bo to scrut inize overy act that comus to tho ovocutlvo for his approval and if vicious or extravagant, I will havo no hesitancy in placing upon It tho seal of my voto. . I bellovo thnt the oiheors of tho stnto should bo placed upon salaries, and tho constant and repeated violations of tho consti tution with roforonce to Incronao of salary by tho creation of use less commissions with salary nttnehmontu ought to ho abolished, and I will do all in my power looking to tho accomplishment of this result. I promise, If elected, a business administration in every sonso of the word, and a saving to tho taxpayer for tho stato an amount as large In proportion ns 1 havo been eunbled to save tho taxpayers of Multnomah county In tho administration of the af fairs of tho ofllco which I now hold, and I nppoal to my rocoid In that respect as a guarantee otmy good fnlth. With rofcrenco to tho mnungemont of the public hinds of the stato and tho common school fund, and otbor mattors con nected with the fiscal affairs of tho state, they will each and all havo my undivided and caroful attention. ftBBnngnnff .mfa ''lSannnM HuHt 4ljPfP ifH IARI0N COUNTY LEADS FOR DIRECT NOMINATION Pass Meeting of Citizens Called for Satur day April 26th at Two O'clock v, m. Candidates in This County Pledged to Secure a Cleaner System of Heming: primary cieuiuua Canidates to Be Nominated By Direct Vote of the People-Fight Started to do Away With Slated Primaf ies-To Abolish the Shackled Conventions -To Have No Aore Packed Conventions-To Get Rid of Corrupted Nominations Itltlons have boen circulated in Blemibllcan and Democratic portion lalem for tho post few days, and BielnE cenorally signed by crtuens fil parties to form a Direct Nomina-. S League under tho following neaci- Direct Nomination Leanue. Jhereas, Both political parties In ion county have declared in xneir Jorma in favor of direct nomlna- as the true tolutlon of primary rm, Kpfori. thi underpinned V0ter8, ,,,w,-.., -..- u f Rout renard to political affiliations, sr the formation of a direct noml- in league, to take such ateps aa necessary to draft a bill and se its enactment at the handa of Inext leglalature. .. Sinners to the Call. l.re are a hundred or more sign- So the Direct Nomination League. ng them the name of the follow- cll known cltUenB of various par T Geer. Tilmon Ford. B. C. Squire Farrar. R. J. Hendricks. ir Work For Cuba i It was proposed at the Os- I .mferenre tat the United State ll-ain l2o.o(H).ooO for Cuba. For- 1 r j ears later we entered upon a ' free Cuba, which cost us $400.- We compelled Spain to re in -h the sovereignty of the Wand. K -t k itoaaession of forU aiw har- i and all public property. We st Ipaiilsh soldiers home at oar own c'e We paid the Cuban tmopa rf ' ur owa treasury R. Hofor, Max Duron. W. IL Holmos, N J. Jurtah, II. F. llonhnm, W. T. Slater, J. A. Joffroy. L. H. McMahan, F. W. Durbln, W. T. Williamson. Rev. Win. Conoy, W. M. Kalsor. J. H. Mo Nary. D. J. Fry. J. M. Lawronco. Goo. B. Gray, T, II. Patl'on, Thoo. Roth, K. M. LnForo. Potor Graber, C. S. Hamil ton. J. T. H. Tuthill. Honry Cornoyer, H. M. Rranson. H. D. Thlolson, U. P. Walker and many othors. Mass Meeting at Marlon Square. Tho leaders of the movement havo decided to open their campaign for pure primaries by a mass mooting at Marlon square on Saturday, April 2Cth at 2 o'clock p. m. If tho weather Is unfavorable the meeting will take place at the city council chamber. There are to be addresses by promi nent citizens of both parties, and a non-partisan league will be formed to carry on a campaign to secure the en actment of this law. and forever do away In counties that want a change with the present corrupt method of controlling nominations for public oftlce- wo raimiit ami constructed rail- liv roads, constructed hundreds of mllea of wagon roadts. wrought order out of revolutionary chaos, reorganized the government, projected the Cuban In all their right, maintained an army 1 Cuba to preserve peace and expended acme millions of dollars In building up what Spaniards and Cubans had de stroyed. After all tata expenditure of money, after three and a half years of recon struction work, the United State on May V-h to turn the tetand over, without money and without priea, to the Cubans for local self-government No other nation ever did so much. sin o mufh for a struggling. aiJr SHf'' ' ar.,.u9K3QriURaH i 9K 1bIbS W&t SJalaCWaB aSBbIH GtSB)4 f BBBBHK BBBLH BHfft i AlIL. flalBBBBBUnr mH E. M. CROISAN. Hon. K. M Crolsan. tlio Republican nominee for senntoi from this county, Is too well known to Its voters to need much Introduction nt the hands of his newspaper frlonds. Ho was born March 27, 185C, at tho pioneer homo of his fnthor, Henry Crolsan, three miles Bouthwost of Salem. Ho grow up on tho farm and continued to make his homo there until about thirty years of ago, when ho wns appointed doputy sheriff of Marlon county, Bon ing In thnt capacity for four years In 1888 ho was nominated for sheriff on the Ropuhlltyui ticket nud elected Aftor sorvlng two years ho was re uominntod nnd again elected, In June 1890. x After retiring fiom olllce In 1892 ho engaged In the farm Implement buslnoss In Sftlem, which ho conduit ed until May, 1901, when ho Hold out In order to givo moie attention to hop inlslug, which business bo Is now ex tonslvoly engaged in. Ho vn chair man of tho Million county RepublUnn Central Committee In ISO I ; superln tendent of tho stnto reform school fiom 1897 to 1899; membor of the Re publican Stnto Cent ml Committee for Marion county in 1890. Mr. Crolsan Is an oetlvo cltlen In tho prime of his manhood. Ho has acquired some propoity, and tnltos prldo In hooping up a Hue home, as well as 'assisting In many public on torprlses. Ho Ihih the ability to rep resent his constituents ulily In tho Oregon senate, and will no doubt bund overy energy to that end, and to mnko for himself n recoid as a good, uueful business legislator, o for the best Interests of the masses for economy, for low taxes nnd for reasonable salaries. Ho Is tied to no man's string for United Stntea Bonn tor, but will voto and work on that si ore ns a Republican, fighting for IiIh own choice In confovenco, but abldliiR tho will of tho majority fnlrly ex pressed. o BBBBBbHbLw "laftKBBBBLBH HE Wm ' W bHHbw' "yHr BBBBBBbBBAiJk lBBBBBI FRANK DAVEY. JOHN W. ROLAND. There is no candidate on the Repub lican ticket that command more res pect than dooo John W. Roland, the nomlnoe of his paity for the Import ant position of county clerk. He la a clean, active young hualneas man who Is favorably known and ikmmb ses all the qualities to acceptably All the position to which he aaplren. Mr. Roland was born in Danville. Illinois. September 1, IS 18, and croas eed tbe plains by ox team, with his parent. In 18S3, locating on a farm one mile east of Jefferson, and he haa thus been a realdent of thin county a half century. He grew to manhood on the farm nnd was educated nt tho Ji ff( rson Institute Knguglng in mor (handlslng he successfully conducted mull himlneMM In Jefferson for 10 yearn, during which time he gained a wide acquaintance and u thorough knowledge of the people. In UOR he letired from the mercantile bualneaa and moved to this city, where lie now reaidea. He la enguged In the fire In aurance and guarantee bond bualneaa, conducting It auceeafully at 800 Com nietclal atreet. One of Mr. Roland's supporter well anya that he will bring to the of-, flee qualifications that are needed ( there, and he will give to the people, an administration that will be In all reapecta aatlafactory. Frank Paw ) boin In Inland In 1860, came to America lu 1KI.7, to Ore gon In 1880, to Salem In 1887, newspa per man mid lawyer, man of family and pretty home In this city; a ready. vlgoioiiH writer, an able orator and debater; entirely feurleee and open In Ing people, but If Culm, under the pro tection of the United State, go for-l ward with her people attached to free institutions and her trade tottered by beneflclent laws, then the money will have been well uaed. Chicago Intel Ocean. A GREAT NATIONAL PROBLEM. In spite of the fact that there la practically no Democratic party In ' Multnomah county, and of the tact that the Republican and Democratic platforms are almost Identical, the Oregonlan refers to the cowing aUte election aa drawing the attention of the nation. "As gffw Oregon, so goes the world.'' The eye of the nation are upon you! The retention of the Phil llHdnee depends on the cowing eloc-( Uon! That ie the as aun Ut eble one faction to triumph over the poo pie. ! That haa been ued to carry worr election for twenty yearn, with mre or leas force, and la the on hooe tor aucceea of the Jack Matthews Konl ikana In thin cawpaign. So far as steadfast RepubU. an i-rm el plea go. the welfare of the Republi can party will not be promotwl by the succewi of the faction that run thing In the laat legislature Willi the high eet atae tax In year, another loot legiaiature at their handa meana death to Republicanism. They do not want steadfast, consis tent Republicans. Mr. Furnish was a Democratic sheriff two terms, a Cleve land collector one term, a gtdd Demo crat, then a Republican candidate, then a aupportor of the Coruett fac tion, then a candidate of the Mitchell faction That la a perfectly consistent record to rally Republicans out of devotion to great national principles that consti tute tbe Republicanism of Grant. Gar geld. Illnine and McKIniey. all his professions; loyal under all fir- J cumstuuees to his friends and to Ida principles; lndeudent of factional Influences, thoroughly versed, by the-' ory anil practical knowledge, lu the af- fairs of the state such a man ought and will make a useful and reliable legislator. He was nominated on his J merits In answer to the desire of the people, and nut because he was the choice of politicians, hunoe he may be depended on to keep a strict watch THOS. D. KAY. The JoiiitoI take i Ki.nt pl nwuir In unqnnlllledl) commending Thos. II. Kny to the voters of Mai Ion county us a caudldnte for leproseiitatlve. Hu Is a good type or citlaeu to have put to tho front, and with moie such men lu tho halls of legislation the peo ple of Oregon would bo bettor served. lie Is manager of one of the Inigost uoolou mills on the Pnclllc coast. It lias the largest payroll In Salem, nnd the employes gut good pay The mill Is a good paying business to Its pro Jectois. and a eiedlt to Oregon. Mr.Kuy was born In Trenton, New Ji-rsey. He heciimu an Oiegoulan befoie he was one your old. his imr-c-nts landing lu Salem 97 years ago, lu 1806. He spent Ills early ytwrs In lliowusvllle. Oiogon. He was literal 1) brought up lu the woolen mill bust-ui-MH, Ills rather being for many years manager of the foetoiy nt llrowi.nvlle. Mr. Kay spent three years lu McMInn vllle ccdlege. After that lie worked In a store lu Portland for a year, be ginning when he was 30 yenrs old. For twelve years pievlous to coming to Salem Mr. Kay wna engaged In bualuea In Mc-Mliinville. He came to Salem in 186, going Into the service of the Thos. Kny Woolsn Mills us as sistant manager and salesman. He served lu this en welly until the death of his father. Thos. Khjt. In April. 1900. He wns then chosen aa mana ger or the mill and preahletit of tho comiiaiiy. which iMwItlou he has since retained Mr. Kay was a member of the city cchjiicII or McMlmivllle during his res idence theie, and also of the school board. He Is prominent In the Mason ic order and is also a Woodman SQUIRE FARRAR Squire Farrar, who heads tho Ma rlon county Republican ticket ns can dldnto for stato senator, is ono of Sa lem's old and tiled citizens whoso life Ims largely been spout hero, nnd who has been known ns an ncllvo business man for a quarter of n contury. Mr. Fnrrar wiih born In England G2 years ago. At tho onrly ago 'of 8 years he ciimo to tho Unltod Sthtas, locating with his pnrontu In MusHach usetts. nnd when ho attulnoiU man hood's estate ho enmo to Oregon, remhlug heiu lu 1802. Ho first stop ped nt Ilrowusvlllu, whero ho sudurod employment In the woolen mills, but he soon came to Snleni, accepting a position lu tho Wllnmotto Woolen Mills then running hero. lu 1870 ho started a grocery store, and most successfully conductad It until 1892. when h) disposed of tho then large buslnoss, engaging there after In tho hop husluoss, nud his wide knowledge or tho groworn, to gether with his high standing as a business innn and a citizen, has brought him into tho rront rank Intho hop tinde. Mr Farrar was always InloroBtod In sec ui lug manufacturing establish ment h for this city, and It was ho who went to llrowusvlllo nnd Induced tho late Mr Thomas Kay to come to Sa lem and stall the Solum Woolen ,Mflls. Mr. Fnrrar look a generous bloak of stock lu Mr. Kay's Snlom company, and has stood loyally by tliu business until it Is now a most prosporous ono. As his friends know, Mr. Fnrrar haa always been u Republican, having voted for Abraham Lincoln twloo, and every Republican president down to McKlnley. He has ut the some t(mcj been sulllclHUtly Independent to ho ways found among the butter ultfinont of his patty, and u hearty supporter of the best class or local govarnniuut. 11m has several Union MorvtMl. on tho city huird or ahleitnen, with recU erodlt to himself nud the city, ami the brood knowledge or public affairs he has acquired will be or Incalculable value to th iople or the state In (hu ImiHiitunt business matters Unit will come beforn the next legislature., Mr. Farrar does not play the name of politics, but his nomination Is tliu re sult or a demand on the part Of all elements or the party lu this iiQuuty. It will give good men In all juytls pleasure to vote for hliu. iiiji lib lieshles hattsuliig u few joHUeal IHcrasltes, what will Oisgou ge9Ut of that approprlntluii that Is baUlK spent on the Charleston Midway? NojTilng but whsttlng Uie appetite of the, some pumsltes for another mill on the neott legislature. Politics Of The State Senator, Dr. II. L. Ileiiilersoii; rep resentatives, H. M Lorntaen, John llahn; county Judge, A. M. Smith; commlejtiuiier, 10 .is Llbhe; slierlff. Jens IL Hansen; e'erk, it. J. Sloop; treasurer, II. F. Allssi; wsaeasur. P. A. Trtilliuger; surveyor, Kato lUifigoiid , coroner. W. C. A. Pelil; jgsUcg of tlu peaee, C. C. UUipgor; roHatable, Wil llam Kelley; road Mporrtaor Jini Chltwood. The earning camguIgH In Chkauia county promises to be the hottest -t er waged In the county. The cHUt-iut movement people held a waeeUng W.-d HMMlay aftornoon at Oranun City in the oWee of Gilbert ii. Hmtm. who i their candidate for representative, and mapped out plans for a rigorous cam patjjn. Tho ClUsens' movement composed of nemarrnU and diaaatisAed RepubU n in Ctauoo county, hold a mass rue.ttng Wedgaortejr at Aatoria, and, after a-i..,tir.K a lethy piatortn, MHt taming a ptank opposed to nsh traps In the Colombia, namtxl the following lb k.-t Geed Meals, A meal can be enjoyed wtl" B"' bread and pastry are used. suh as are ntade at the IHqnoer Hakery All god houssHeeport use this baking. o Wild Rose PkMu la the ream of wheat, nutritious, the sweetest, the b high grade goods m ihBW bbbV W s BBBSDuV 'BBBBBBBJ k ' iXfwcnHKaaBBBl ' iw JaLVBnBM A M CLOUGH A M C'I'iukIi au.li.Utt un tht- lt puklUau tic-kot fur corinr of Marion county, was bom at St. Johns. Ver mont. September I, lafto. Whoa he wa li years nt.l h'a parrnN t nuv. t to Duffalo. New York. After a ront- The Young Men's UemoonUul fIlli, or linker county, have arntiigtMLfor Um opening of the campaign lu lasbsrit Oregon nt Raker City, AprtJ i6th. when Oeorge 10. ChamberbilH Una ac-c-epted an Inrltatlou to be pregfitf. Clayton county, Iowa Mr. Qtougu lived in Iowa until the aprlng of llrTs. when he i nine to Salesa, where gg hug UvtHl ever since. He bus been tN Ut uiidurtakliig business for M yeart. He u now at 107 Stnto street, whnro In- ha bad his business fur li ftyH t tb- time he has been In SatOM Mr ('lough Is a careful aiuj IMi hi able buslnes man and a moi gitf. ii Mi- t ever faithful to dHly, apt in- tli atend to the work of tho ulnM r . oruner of Marlon county In u man nix that will satisfy his frtoHoj atut tin- public generally. He Is Ut every aid di-nurvlttg of tho plan ,aL tjks l.an.U of the eleeUMS of Ujnl Plllr '1 in- n- eut statistics of Uta qJMtultsjr or deaths show that the large, majority dlewltb cousuiuptlou. Th(stwMiseas i way i ominence with an aptKirvutfj" harmless cough which can bo cured in stantly by Khpj Rahtam for thn throat and lanes, which is guaranloed to cure and relieve all lasen Price 3 centn and a" entn. For sale Uy all druggists 1 Wild Rose Flour m all the rag$. The dm tbure of a year they went to whitest, the purest, Uie best. .ys ?h H.V- liSM m : "?j i .? 1 1 ." ' J r t :n i v