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About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1903)
'"HtfW p TTTfT "TPBWBr w nr?r t - 1 THE DAILY JOURNAL, 8ALEM, OREGON, 8ATURPAY, OCTOBER 10, 1903. TWO I Bj- lV BSE THE DAILY JOUBHfL 'Scrlppa News Association Telegram. 3 and 5 O'clock Editions. BY HOFER BROTHERS. -Dally On Year, M.00 In Advance. Oafly Thre Month, $1.00 In Advance. Daily by Carrier, 60 Cent Par, Month. WwWy On Year, 91.00 In Avance. . - r JOURNAL SPECIAL DELIVERY. Obo Week $ 10 One Month 35 Tbroo Months 1.00 At Journal office. At Daue's Grocery, South Salem. (At Bowersox Grocery, Yew Park. Asylum Avenue Grocery Store, Electric Grocery, East State St. w . it.- ' nmiimiuiiiniHMH acted upon. What he says about the valuo of laboring men. owning luelij: hqmes Is Ten)mportantj anc w h6be It man-Jfc further dlawwodl mar., nut read what he sads for yourself.. He le'dlaDdsed to take a hopeful vi.w and his cheerful optimism" will do you goed: 4-1 t HIIIIHH IHIHI IHI The Weather. TTonlght and Saturda, rain. o. Janette's Hair. loosen the snood that you wear. Janotto. Lot mo tangle a band In your hair, my Dot, Tor Jho world to mo had no daintier sight 1&an your brown hair veiling your shouldors whlto, As I tangled & band in your hair, my pot nt was brown with a golden gloss, Jo netto; Kt was finer than silk of the floes, my pet,' Twas a benutlfiil mist falling down to your waist. 'Twna a thing to be braided, and Jew eled, and kissed. "Twos the loveliest hair in the world, .my pet. 2(y arm was the arm of a clown, Ja- hotto It was sinewy, bristled and brown, my pet, Hut warmly and softly It loved to ca ress t Your round, whlte: neck and .your wealth of tress. Your beautiful plenty of hair, my pet. Yqur oyes hnd a swimming glory, Ja- Janotto, . Jloveatlug tho old, dear story, my pet. Thoy wo.ro gray, with that chastenod tinge of tho sky, When tho trout leaps quickest to snap tho fly. And they, 'match with your goldon hair, my pot. Your lips but I have, no words Ja- ntjtto They woro fresh as tho twitter of ' j birds, my pet, When tho spring is roung, and the roues are wet Willi the dew drops In each red bosom set, Aud they suited your gold-brown hair, my pot, O, you tangled my llfo in your hnlr, Janette, 'Twos a silken and golden snare, my P8L, Hut, so gentle the bondage, my soul did Implore. Tho right to eantlimji your slave ever- mors, Will my niiRurs enmeshed In your hair, my pet Thus evsjr I dream what you were, Janette, "WIUi yur upj, m your eyes, and your hnltv my ptt Iu the dartoifes of dasolnte years I moan, And my tears" full bttterly over tho stone That eovers your golden hair, my pet. Charles Q. Alplna THE FUTURE OF 8ALEM. Ail lullueutla) oltlien, who in the past has been of the conservatives, has kindly Given Tho Journal his views pn the future of Salem, which ho oonsklttrs very bright. While we do not' actm wjlh him ou all points, his aril u tho main Is very good and worthy of thought, and some at his supgiMtieHs tuutd with profit be A clear skin do&su't go with a muddy liver. Ayer's Pills. &$& "With tin wdndtrful productive ca pacity of our soil, and the Industry of our people, Salem is tfound to 'be come the center of the richest agriaiii tural region in the Wodt It is true, we have no mines, but our other prod ucts are so great, so staple, and so sure of bringing cash returns, that these industries will not only grow, but become productive of greater wealth. It Is estimated that this val la will turn off nt least $10,000,000 worth of farm products this year. The greater part of this wealth will remain In the hands of the people who produced It by their labor They will Invest It In property, In better homes,' In Increasing their holdings and Im proving tholr plants. The surplus will find Its way Into the banks and become stored capital for carrying on other operations, or be held for tho benefit of the ownor for a rainy day. But it is easy to see that dairying, hop growing, prune- growing, grain and stock raising aro in their strong young growth, and destined to In oreaso by leaps and bounds. Thore Is almost no limit to their expansion. Tho people have all thoso Industries masterod. Thoy are a success. ... There will bo fortunes made not only in theso agricultural industries, but In alllod industries, such as the creameries, fruit packing, commission nnd transportation business, and In banking. The two banks at Salem are now crowded to their utmost ca pacity with business. Customors aro so plenty that the forces In tho banks have to be Increased nnd work on over time. It is not saying anything against their capacity to transact business to say that thore Is room at Salem for one or two more banks of tho right kind and handled by tho right kind of people. That a fortune can bo made in bunking at Salem in the noxt ton years by a well-organ ized bank no Intelligent man familiar with the businoss can doubt for a mo mont. Ono firm that has boon making loans as a prlvato businoss has had so much to do that Its mombors havo hardly had time to attend to their own prlvnto business. Money Is being mado in tho newspaper business dt Salem. Thoro might bo a flold horo for nnothor newspaper or two of tho right sort A good social or religions weekly on broad-gaugo linos would prospor here. So would a Journal of literary criticism. If ably odlted, Tako tho carrlor business. Ono man who would porfect u sys'tom of delivering newspapers to residences and busi ness plaros. could make a fortuno And so in many other linos. Thiro are fortunes to bo made In roal estate at Salem. Property Is as cheap as it will over be again In tho history of the state. All suburban property Is stlffeRlng in value and coming into the market. Tho me chanics, teamsters and Iaborors who have had stoady employment at good wagos all summer aro picking up cheap lots, and building homes, or en larging aud improving the homes they have. Tho laboring mail will spend his earnings to the last cont and oven go Into debt to make Improvements. The fortune made by John II. Albert when he laid off the Yew Park prop erty Into an addition, had it taken Into the olty and graded the streets, was almost ontlrely made out of homes for laborers. That Is the only way to build up any suburb, as tho man of wealth picks up a place In the heart of the olty at a. fanoy price, while the man of small means Is con polled to build on a cheap lot In tho suburbs. So there are several sub urbs that are now taken Into the city where If the streets are graded and city water and lights aro put In for tunes can bo mado in real ostate. The Salem worklngmen must have homos, and they want them convonlont to car lines, and with modern Improve ments. Values can be doubled In that kind or real estate If It Is handled -Intelligently and on modern lines for the next Ave years. ... Fortune can be made on building houses to rent During the Lowls and Otark exposition there will be n de mand for hundreds of new houses nt Salem, that vwill rent from ten to twenty dollars per month. These houses must have tnudetn improve ments, such as hot and cold wnter, gas for rang, and electricity for Hunts. They must have graded grounds and neat sumwndlngs. The old-fashioned house without all of these modern Improvements will rent for about one-half of those prices, and will also be In demand. Salem has reached the point where capital aan profitably go Into a better class of tenements, and It Is going to go there. There Is no way to Invest mon.ej' to day s? stir, at a return as la build tog the liner grade of cottages to real nicely painted, nicely finished, no two alike, with good sidewalks, and wa(I-dralncd and sewered. The cow path, crossroads, village style of shack will notjbe needed so much among the new structures that are going up for rent The owner of ten or twenty modern cotta&es, of from five to scr an rooms, would have an Independent Income, and tho Investment peed not exceed $30,000 to $40,000 at tho ut most There is a fortune In a pood office and business block In this city. or soveral of them, with elevators and all modern conveniences. Salem Is going ahead by leaps and bounds In the noxt flvo or ten year. There is no combination of circum stances can stop the growth and de velopment of tho Capital City. We are going to see at least threo belt lines of electric street railways, and one of tho best equipped plants that money can buy at the Capital City. On ono or two of thes,e belt lines (and one of them will bo double-tracked) there will bo pavilions and ploasuro parks with thpntprs nnd places for summer entertainment Tho streets will bo improved so that speeding -vlth automobiles and fine rigs will be a pleasure, Instead of endangering one's life. Tho whole of a renter Salem will be electric lighted, and at least three fino boulevards will be built- to the limits of Creator Salem and they will not bo turned over to some corpora tlon for trolley linos as our host streets are now. Of course, there aro doubting Thomnsos, and persons who oppose all and ovory stop of progress, but tho community has outgrown their Influence and the day Is past whon they could keep Salem off the map by tho more word of their mouth. Sa Iem is going into the rank of the un contested second city of tho state, and the ludicrous farce of keplng it before the world as a town of four thousand people when It has twelve to fifteen tbpusand, la about nt an end. ... Salem will probably nevor be a manufacturing city or a Jobbing con tor, but Salem Is destined to be a groat educational center. Fortunes will be made lioro out of collogos nnd higher schools of learning. Tho Uni versity having got out of debt, nnd having beon put on a cash basis and under first-class business mnnago mont, will now go forward to Its des tiny with $100,000 endowment and n thousand students. Salem law schools, and medical schools, and normal schools, and business colleges and tho Academy of thO Sacred Heart, will now go forward and doublo their at tendance, until the school population of tho town will outnumber its pres ent populntlon. Moro monoy can be had for education, and the people will spend moro monoy on education than on any othor desideratum of llfo. Sa eom has a school population of thous ands of young pooplo and chlldron, and thoro aro fortunos to bo made in connection with education and what goos with It, and belongs to it It Is a universal necessity, and the old fashioned way of begging an educa tion or working it out Is passing away because tho people who prize educa tlon are willing to pay for what they want, and have tho monoy to pay with. Ono of Salem's groatest sourcos of income and employment Is from educational funds. Thero aro fortunos to bo made on all lines. Thero is not a legitimate line of businoss at Salem that can. not bo doubled nnd quadrupled under modern methods, backed by tho b.st nerve and brains and energy of which our people' are capable. There Is not a lino of business nt Salem that can not be duplicated, nnd thero are great er fortunes to be made hero than tny that have been made. In the past comparatively few have made for tunes, because the poltoy of repres sion has too largely prevailed. The few could dominate tho many, keon down all progressiva spirit, and force to the wall every man who wanted to set a batter pace In the community, Hut tho community has' outgrown those policies. Qroater Salem means tho opening of hundreds of doors of opportunities for young men, and business men, that have been closed. The olty will grow In a hundred dif ferent ways. It will have better churches, better stores and more of them, more dwellings by the hundreds and finer residences better street car lines and better transportation fa cilities, better people and more of them. The Catenae wall has beB broken down and Salem will grow In all directions and there will be no way Are You Constipated? It causes more than half the sickness in the world, especially of women. It can bo prevented if Beecham's Pills are taken whenever nature calls for assist ance. Comfort and happiness follow the use of Beecham's Pills SdM ETrrkvt. In but 10c ml X. no son. to head off expansion, or prevent de velopment The edict has gone forth, that Salem shall be known to the world as the second city of Oregon far and away beyond any rival. - Tho Investment of largo sums of capital in the Salem street car lines and In tho Salem browery, aro only forerunners of larger investments In the legitimate Industries of the city. The city can no longer bo hold down to three sowers oxtending back from the river about ten blocks. A sewor system must be built for tho whole of Greater Salem. The city must havo perfect drainage of all parts, mattor what it costs within rea- Connected with perfect sewage, the city should own and operate the water plant Only by public owner ship Is the citizon guaranteed water at first cost, and only by municipal ownership can the sanitary interests of the city bo preserved. Tho poorest citizen Is entitled to water service at cost, and to good sanitary conditions. As It Is now only tho wealthier can afford to havo either. Tho wealthy man's prlvato sewago arrangements are often at the cost of his poorer neighbor's health and tho rich man's cheap wator and light Is ofton largely at tho oxponso of the public taxpayer. Sewago and a water system far Greater Salem might cost $250,000 to $500,000, but thd money would all be expended for labor In tho city and among our own working people, and would not loavo us. Introducing Dull Run wator has been tho backbone of Portland's prosperity and- a public water systom would establish tho sanitary reputation of Salem as noth ing olse will. ... Spondlng a quartor of a million a year for a few years on public im provements means that this city shall doublo In population In tho next few years, and that that amount of monoy shall be takon out of dead proporty and put Into living, active circulation, giving employment to laborers, loams tors, mechanics, and they In turn will part with it ns fast as thoy earn it, and It will pass through dozons of hands, and make all prosperous In stead of a few, as is tho case In n town whore no public improvements arc undertaken. Salem Is going ahead on this lino undor tho new charter of Oreater Salem. Tho young mon and tho men who aro running tho business of Salem, and tho facto ries and Industries of Salem, aro back of tho sontlmont that Salem shall not sit down and fold hands and suck thumbs and proceed slowly to stagna tion and permaturo decay. Tho dis tribution of largo amounts of monoy through labor will moan tho employ ment of at least a thousand additional working mon In this city and boforo the first year of their employment Is ovor more thnn half of thorn will build homos, and' In turn omploy the mochanlcs and all tho building trados will bo running ovor with domnnds for tholr sorvlcos. That Is tho only way any city is built and tho only way any rapid growth can bo accom plished. Tho futuro of Salem is bright with promlso and thero is not a city on tho Coast has so much to gain by shaking off the - palsied hand of moasbacklsni and stopping into tho front rank of progressive communi ties. A quarter of a million spent on sewers and fine streets next year moans that profits will be mado by contractors and homos will bo made possible for laboring mon, and thoya will bo able to own tholr own homos In many Instances where' they now rent. About half the laboring men Of Salem llvo In ronted houses. This will not be so in tho future. The la boring man asks employment, and It It Is givon to him under fair condi tions he Is able to becarao a home owner. To own his own home Is a fortuno for him. Labor Is tho true backbone and conservator of any community and a policy on tho part of any olty that gives large employ ment to laboring men, makes that olty prosperous. Thore neod bo no fear that Salem will go Into wild spec ulations, and bo plungod recklessly Into debt. There is loss toleration fot the grafter and the boodler In this community, than anywhere on earth. The people will not employ a man, high or low In station. If they believe In their hearts that he Is corrupt or dishonest in private or public affairs SaMn people are naturally honest and too conservative to leave much ma,r gin for peculation. For fear 'that some man will make a dollar dishon estly they will refuse to make my Improvements whatever. This featf has largely been overcome, and the people have found that public bust niw can be just as honestly trans acted as jnivate business and this has .inspired them with greater con. fidenee In the future of this community- . Eho Kind You Hnvtf Afrravs TJouolit. nnd which rinfl hm in nso Tor oxrer SO yearn, has homo tho slpnntnro of nnd has heen mnuo under his per. jfyt'T'L, sonal supervision since ita infancy. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" aro but Experiments that trlflo with and oudangcr tho health of Infanta and Children Expcrlenco t gainst Experiment, What is CASTOR I A Cai Tia Is a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Paro gor,'. Drops and Soething: Syrups. It is Pleasant. Ifc con tin s neither Opium, Morphino nor othor Nnrcotlo eubsuinco. Its ago Is its guarantee It destroys "Worms and allays Fcvcrlshncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething1 Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of OS9xic The Kind You Have Always Bougl In Use For Over 30 Years. TMC Ot NT.UH COMPANY. TT MUflflAY TMCT, W YOB CITY. OABTOHl BMnti yl Ktd tw Rm fotrt Baqje1 B!(uti af UMBRELLAS A GREAT ARRAY Ftfom 50c to $3 a Piece all Steel Rods Our special values in the ones we are sel ing at $1.75 They are wonder j for tl money Good gloria silk, fine handle worth $2,50 our price SI 75, Greeiibaunfs Dry Goods Store. 302 Commercial Street THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE The University comprises the following colleges and scjioo The Graduate School, The College of Literature, Scien and Arts, The College of Science and Engineering, CCvJ Electrical, Mining and Chemical Engineering, The Uniyer ity Academy, The School of Music, Th3 School of La? The School of Medicine. . TUITION FREE. Incidental Fee $10 00. Student Body Tax $5.0! Tte twenty eighth session opens Wednesday. September 16. 1903. Fo catalogue address Kezlscrar, University of Oregon. Eueene. Signs of Renewed Activit In the roal estate world Indlcato creasing building oporatlona t Spring. an' prompt us to remind ; that pur facilities for supplying b and soft wood, lumber, lath, shins' and othor building materials aro coptlonally good. Wo will bo plett to furnish estimates on contrti largo or small. A car of Mill C shingles received. QOODALE LUMBER CO. .... Near S. P. Pas Dtp Phone S1. A Pipe Dream It would bo to think that you could havo your linen or colored shirts, flan nels or woolens laundrlod at any price In Oregon with tho samo artlatlo fin Isb, beautiful color and faultless work as we aro doing all tho time by our perfect and finished methods. When wo "do up" your soiled llnon it is aa frosh and faultless In color and finish as whon It was bought Salenf Steam Latmrfry. COLONEL. J. OLMSTED, Prop. D0RUS D. OLMSTED. M?r Phono 411. 320 Liberty St -SS lcT.or " ""' ." re4Mat8iai8ioittiiatHitiia4H :::::::-A G E N C Y O F:::::::: BALFOUR, GUTHRIE & CO. GRAIN BUYERS ANDSHIPPERSOF (VR AlN Oats For Sale. nop GROWERS SUPPLIES. Crude and stick Sulphur. i 'i i I J. G. Graham, Agent, 9A7 UnmrniMM CI Q.l.m flr m i - J wi WUUUBJUai Ull. U"U1, w c Ctai96aioiiga8aiaiiaiiai0lfrM' - i n4T.MHMMl mm