Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1902)
JMMWIH.lUIStilUJ ,! WW?WBMC,aK9ffS?trrwi.j --. yft7iTj,-Ir7rJgr,sr-Tglr4;Wrrr trXffiXSnii3maflmMintfia?tT ..iimhm WWiffiig5VWVMapr'Wini ariWfBfiriiTMrifuuntiinimjjiiit-j YAMHILL COUNTY YOTER c2ziZ2z I When you see i- New Embroidered Ithe Moon Turnovers H. Tells the Sentiment of Re Republicans Over the Left Shoulder, It's a Lucky Look. Ibolversorfe ltl!l l"s i But a better look, still, will be to come in and see our !: 8 new Spring Suits, They are as handsome as can be. - They Favor Geer as a Candi date for U. S. ISenator m LOOKlng at inem over eiiner anuuiuer, yuu win I that thev are say HHMiMMauri .48?- x ULl , ft :1. Whi ' l. JC Lawn Kimonas 75c, 85c, and $1.00 each Pretty styles made of sheer lawns In the new Persian patterns, trimmed with wide bands. ALL THE NEW SHADES. ( C nr a V rMX v twy More New Ribbons Kverj day brings something now to the ribbon conn tor. Hoeta of now things to holp tono up tho new gown. Waists.. Great Showing The stylos nro more charm ing this Spring than in any provlous ooason. See Theml Pi a a irJlll Tho new black and white stylos, mado of mercerized fab rica that can hardly bo dUtln gulshed from silk. Worth 11.25 in the regular way. Offered for Tuesday only at " 95c each Walking Skirts All tbo now materials mado in tho latest way. (iiiif IfllTK! k CM Nowest styles In stripes and plain colors. 8c yard Twonty-flvo different itylos to clioono from, Most stores sell thorn for 10 conts n yard. Men's ' Wear... ELASTIC SEAM DRAWERS Tho latest improved style. Thoyaro on display in our fur Dishing goods window. 60c pair Neckwear Everything that's nei ties for men aro hero. 50 cents r Fancy Hose A great varioty. effects. All tho new 25 and 50c X j t 7 Dotverson's "ISBT" f rfy. , New Chiffon Tuckin gs New Rufflfngs1 3T TP r v2- ch m r a JOS Perils Of the Mariner Submerged I may re;J at uruiiKrusi umt n nihmj Derelicts Most Dreaded Of the Ocean's Terrors Most (luiiKurrt of tho liljjli sons, ami thont nro plenty of tlii'in, can bo Kintnl rn tsrthiKt to sown nxtoiit. Hoi'fs run t rolled upon to Iihp their pluoo, mill if ships do not go to thorn they will not Ko to tho ships. Nluuils nnd IiIkIi wlmlu nrv lieinlileil befdielmnil, tho former by lines of brenUet-H Mini tho lutler by MIUT ATLiXTIU UKHIM ttXl. signs tliet every stminnn knows. Hut Who ts to KUC0 at tho path of tho dare UctT At tho present moment tbure are many of these grim vnndoror at largo. Many a ship Is abandoned at boa, yet coutlnurs to live after tbo crow ban left. Take, for Instance, the big Norwe gJLsn bark that Is troubling tbo minds oXUInor captains. Hho was nbuiulonoil .off tho Norway coast some months ago because tho was hopelessly waterlog IMd. Tho orcw thought she would go down, but ho did not. Not long etiico sho was reported In luld.Atlnntlc, right lu tho trnok of tho (treat ltoera that run to Aiuerlsa. Tho attlp tfi'it uw her bad no meaus of Mzlida with her, a.nd any morning yoq , ocon 1 1 groytioiiini nan siruoK iho dere lict and mini;, dragging down with hor Imnilietlsof IIvoh. That vomoI bus boon reported llvo ttiuoH niitl tit plat'os hundreds of mile npart. Klio iippeius to travel on nu uv urnge 1(1 miles u day. Then theio Ih tho Mouiwihlb. Kbo was u Milt lull full rigged Nblp, a clipper fauiotiH for weatherly (jiialltlon niul good puwMigoM, and hIio mostly traded to lllo. About llvo years ago hIio Hprutig u bad leak, which nooii got ultogothor be yond control, mid tho crow abandoned her about r0 inlloa from tho coast of Hrltlsh Uulaiia, Tlioy ronchod laud wifely, but tho Momsahlb did not sink. Hho got Into a northerly current and drifted up nearly aa far as tbo Florida keys, whore n coasting bchoonor feel lug her way along the trneklowi coast ran Into her nt night. One of tho hands Jumped on board thcdorollct when they struck, and ho was left thoro by thu coasting crow, four of whom es caped out of six and landed ton days later on tho mainland, They had a fearful time before they got more, uowever, ror tuoy uao no time to take water or provisions. Tho man on the McuiHiihlh had the boat time of It, for he found plenty to oat and drink, lie actually lived n boo id two weeks, during which time the vwt hcI fell In with a westerly wind mid was blown r00 mile Into mid Ailunile. The mini, whose name, by the way. ts Max l'oterxou of New York, run up signals of dlhtiottt) mid was taken off, together with u chest of valuable he had annexed, and taken to i'orto Itlco by a trading veosol. He Ik ntlll alle It wiih only four ywir ngo-aiu' the MeuiMihlb Is yet atliwt. She was reported Mime time ago ufi St. Helena and n year befoio that at u point W mllM eMNt or Kt Helena where -lie all but camied Iho Ioho of tin American tixuip Ktewmer John L'am mock. The latter Vttel Imd her Ixtw stove lu by a collision with the derelict, but managed to keep nilou all the way to Vigo, hi north Spain. titlll btranger Is th history of lb fa mous Itolerllng. a Haubih brig that caught llrv oh the I'urw Uluiids, woriti of Scotland. .She burned nearly to lb water's tlge. and the eivw were taken off by another brig tlwt came to tin roscue. In some way tho Itolerllug eMMed sinking and was seen u mouth later off the I'ortb. It was rouwrkwl of tUU derelict that she must have imsmhI right down the Uugllsli awst aud through the rhiyiuel. Imagine a dere lict iHisttlng through the vtrtilt of Do vrl A n way. an orient liner, n-itorted hor off Cape I'lnUterre, In wort hem Smln. and a yinir later uewa came (Wat the charred hulk was knocking rwiHd the seas a few wo mile out from tke Gape Verde Islands. Ske was kleUy a tight vessel. At last she ctutw north agulu after n eollUton lu the Atkiuttc irnn a coiner ytoRwer anil wms simk by a I'reuch fuuboat In the Kay of His- In all !I5 dlffureiW vohmois iopohoY having seen her lu one place or anoth er. She hnd no masts standing and wiih more like u raft than n ship. Her decks were nearly IIiihIi with the sen. Another derelict of which much lins been heard Is thu Katlshn, n Itusslan wheat laden full rigged ship. A flue vowel she was, over ",(HX) tons burden. On her way to the liver Plotte, howev ir, hIio fell lu with a ship stricken with jjellow fever and took off the crow, llvo lu number. The fever ship, n .Spanish tun U, thiii nlo hocniiio- derelict, hut she was never heard of again. The Kntlhlm palil heavily for her charity. One by one the crew went down with fever, and corpse after corpse was dropped over tho side to a hurried burial Nervlce. There was a doctor alHiard, an KnglUhumii, but he could not check the raging scourge, and at last the undermanned boat drove near the llraxlllau coUHt not far fioui Itahla. Hy that time the only mail left alive and untouched was the second unite. Doctor and all had succumbed. He tmik the Nhlp's Jolly boat, being unable to launch the long boat, and reached the count two miles frpiu Itahla. A ter rible story of suffering was his. The Katlsha did not run ashore, how ex er, for a wmtcrly wind took her to m'ii. She wnx next seen M uilltm south of Natal, halug lu some way dilftcd round the C'iin. At that time she was dUmiistod, but seemed sound us fur us the ctiptulu of the Merryweather, a Yankee steamer, could Judge when he IHIklHHl. Nineteen weeks biter a trading steamer, the Throstle, sow her only a few miles from the Ceylon coast, ami another steamer that come Into Colom Ih lu a damaged condition reported having collided a score of miles out with n derelict bearing the mime K:tl situ on her stem lu Hussion character, so It was Mild. So It seems the Katlsha mads a long voyage of It. All this time she must have drifted round with the skeletons of some of the feer slain crew lying below, for the oteupod mate had not been able to throw them all overboard by hlutwlf. It hi a grim story, the abandoned death ship drifting from ocean to ocean with hor grlMly freight, n "terror Umt walks lu darkuesa" to all tlmt plow the seas. Ami It all likelihood she is drifting yet. for not many months since an Australian trading brig fell lu with her off Sumatra and nearly ran ber down Into the bargain. Another Kutblw dsrellct. a suiall Dualsb coaster, waa seen not long ago near the Slietlands by a Norweglau timber Iwrk, so there are probably two Katikbas MMunlug the wilt water at the Hrwcnt moment It Is to be bopod they wilt soon go to the bottom. Of the scores and humtretls of tea sU that sail and are never beard of again It Is likely a large uumWr nioet tlMtr fate by running lute derelicts lu mMsms, OoveruHieHts tie what they eau. (Hit to hHHt fr an abandeHwl ves sel ts a tkauklsjw task. Tii bark Oruudel. after a loug aud honoriilifo life In the titfuf. a miuv, was put to timbering, caught lire, was abandoned and drifted about the North sen for a yenr, sinking one ship and dumngliig another so much that it was with tho greatest dltllculty her crew could got hor to port without loslug her. Anothor timber bark, the Vulfrega, was In the North sea olght months nnd was collided with lu a fog by a collier. The collier was ro injured that she hnd to run for the nearest laud and wns benched on the coast of Holland near Haarlem, for there wns no time to run for a port. Derelict sleamcrs are rarer bv a lone way than sailing ships. They generally manage to got somewhere and aro usu ally of more value for tho sake of thclt lyings. However, the Wlldgaus, n Gcr IBVHB 8TKICKKK DJUtKMOT. man tramp steamer, broke dowmju the Pad tic off New Zealand and soon after sprung a leak. The skipper ami mates thought they might as well accompany the crew, aud after a rough time lu the boats lasting six days and nights they mado the coast of New Xoulmid without loss ami lauded. The steamer drifted lute a southerly current, then a northerly and was seen by trader who was Hying to the 1'rlondly Ules. After that the Wlldgans lobbed suuth again, then right away to the west coast of South America, even tunlly going ashore at Cape Horn and breaking up. o OjOkSTOHlA. UuttU y H KM Yw Ik w Hnn BwjW. McMlnnvillo, Ore, May7, 1902. Editor Jeurnal: Knowing your history of tho past to bo consistent with honesty nnd equal clinnco in ar gument on all subjects, I assume that you will submit a few remarks bear ing on tho political status as they now appear on tho horizon of this campaign. To start with I am an honost, con sistent Republican, so educated and trained, born thrco days boforo the fbattlo of Bull Itun, 18C1; having nover hold ofilco nor am I now aspiring to nn ofilco, but suffice this preliminary as sufficient That in all candor of consciousness of having been right in my past political lire, I hereby an nounco that 1 am In favor of tho peo plo of Oregon electing Qco. E. Cham berlain governor nt tbo coming dec tlon. It Is truo this may appear abortive but Is It not time tho people arjBc In emphatic strength and call a halt on factional differences, and demand In tho councils of tho .state's welfare that thoro is no compromlso with vir tue. Is it not tlmo that "Boss Rule" bo eliminated from the Party of Em anclpation? May there bo truo men enough in tho Ropublican party to nrlBO in their strongth on tho 2d day of Juno and proclaim by thoir votes "Wo nro dono with tho laundry work of Multnomah County's Dirty Linens" by electing Oeo. Chamborlaln governor, and forc ing a direct primary law at tho com ing sossion of tho legislature, as a curb to Mltchollism, Simonlsm and othor "Boss Machines" that havo kept nolghbors and neighborhoods in tur moil for many years In tho genial clime of Oregon. It Is noedloss to more than refer that sinco J. N. DoIpL was sacrificed for tho wolfnro for tho now predomin ating faction of Multnomah county Republicanism as honosty ln"Mnchlno politics" I havo been lonry when I havo hoard tho oft repeated "Stop Thlof." I ropeat now, I nm sanguine of boing right in this letter as I am that Hon. J, N. Dolph should havo hnd (ho ondorsomont of tho Republican pnrty wlion Hon. George II. McBrldo wns olected to tho U. S. sonntc. I ask every honest man In tho Repub lienn pnrty would It not bo woll for us to bang up this motto In our dining room "Lest Wo Forgot," nnd arguo our fldollty to party not on tho Philip plno. quostlon, but for tho wolfnro of our own Fair Orogon. Let us bo dono with strlfo, let us put a cpilotus on factional party ques tions and elimlnnto tho story of Simon MItcholl nnd Mntthows, Cohon, and othor such factions. It Is In lino with tho Roforondum as ondorsed by both Ropublican nnd Democratic partlos to bo voted on In June. ii is into inni mr. furnisn is nn litolllgont, upright young man of fair buslnoss qualifications, nnd I ndmlro his Judgmont of tho gold standard, as advocated by thousands of othor honost Domocrnts who voted for Wm. McKInley In 189C and 1900, all praise! But outsido by what furthor right should ho receive from us special rec ognition? Wo nro taught that oppor tunities grasped by tho forelock of time lead to fortune. I notlco that In 1893 or the beginning of the rocont pnnlc Mr. Furnish had not galnod ro nown ns a forclblo man, but slnco that tlmo through circumstances ho Is now reputed to bo worth ono hun dred nnd fifty thousand dollars. It is nn old saying "An ill wind that does not blow somebody somo good." I nm Informed that tho bank that Mr. Furnish Is now controlling dur Ing the panic became Insolvent nnd the nssota were purchased for -10 cents on the dolar, that the defunct bank held mortgagee on thousands of acros of Knstorn Oregon lands that were valued nt one-half thelV presont vnluo, ho was ably backed by the First National bank of Portlaud nnd today can count ono hundred and fifty thousand dollars made In less than ten years, but romomber many n farmer and tradesman lost part of that money by a policy preolpltated by Clevelaud'8 administration and for cibly ondorsed by this same Mr Furnish. Is It not woll for us to re member the motto "Lest We Forget," Very truly, NICHOLAS K. KKGQ. Smoked Meats. Wo are offering a fine line of smoked meats this week. Hams 12 cents per pound and shoulders 8 cents. Fine sugar cured breakfast bacon and fresh family lard, at Fondrloh's Market. The Nv Jersey legislature has ap propriated $12,000 for the establish ment of a course of ceramics at Rut gers College, New Brunswick. The new course is regarded as a decided novelty la college curricula. Strong's to Be Reopened. The dUIng reams of Stra reataii. mat will he reeled May lJth under the taatiagwaMt of Mrs. Geo. F. Smith. 5-1-tf Several new Spring cutshave you seen them? If not ijj come in and look. Atind we say LOOK " buy when you are ready, but the JUCJK will altord us pleasure and cost you nothing. Come. G. W, Johnson & Co. Clothiers to the People 257 Commercial St-. Salem. B& This signature la on ororr box of tho gonnlno Laxative Bromo'OuinineTbicUi S7ZnrM&, remedy that curcii a cold In one lmj. DflLRYMPLE' S A new line of Bar Coats, Barter and Waiter Coats Bar Vests, etc. Just in. Extra Values at 65c, $1.00, $1;25 and $1.50. ...That Offer... We made you this week by which you can save from $1.00 to $7.00 on a made'to'order suit is a good one. T m Co Eifflaiii laiiorii' Is the largest concern of its kind in the world. At our special prices they are cheaper than ready-made. We" receive suits'.every day. Come and see how we make 'em. S This signature Is on orcry box of tUo vtnatno Laxative Bromo-Ouininc Tablets j "H Tfllin remedy that cotva o eoltl lu two day. Ivauglilin Fountain III1 Pens The kind that are so well advertised. A Perfect Pen at a Popular Price IM X The Laughlin feed is the perfect result of long experiment. It conducts the ink from the reservoir to the pen point with absolute uniform ity and certainty. The flow is regulated automatically bv the act of writing. For $ we will send you by mail a Laughlin pen, and if after one week's trial you do not think it equal to any other $3 pen, you can return it and get your money back. Barr's-Jewelry Store Leaders in Low Prices. Cor. State and Liberty St., Salem, Or.