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DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON,, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1904,
. ' '- 3
WLATORS LET
i o ?.
A WOMAN'S
LOOSE OF MARKET
review of grain! trade and
nl rnarKet conamons, iur-
Iclttslvely to The Journal, by
of Fyfe, Manson & Co.,
Itrade, Chicago.)
ins been complete change of
Kal sentiment In wheat for
Holders who were un-
l In getting any material
In prices became discouraged
fed sellers. As the market
i there was a lot of stop los3
people who had holdings
lev were unwilling 10 reauzu
the market was going their
o cau6e3 of tne change to
In wheat are many. The
movement continues long-
eavler than expected. South-
vement did not fall off as
The visible supply was
Bflvo millions In two weeits.
U a let up in the volume' of
tying. The pressure of the
movement became too
as a river sometimes rises
Iks over Us banks so. this
of wheat Beemed to fill up
demandB and then over
lie whole .speculative irauu
eight. The sudden weaken-
corn market Induced wheat
lie approacn 01 me govern
brt. which Is expected to be
itho accumulation of stocks,
fir Russian shipments, supply-
pean demands, all helped to
Stho market.
decline Minneapolis Is sell-
lots of flour, some, for ex
ttdflc copst reports sales of
Japan.
ling for the tiade to discover
he commercial basis. A per-
iulllsa enthusiasm over the
ted reports of dnraage to the
et crop Is over. Speculative
Ihavo taken their profits or
isses: It remains to do seen
Ig the big run will continue.
NERVES
..
H is timely to look ahead and remera
ber that 'last year In November the
western movement was one million
and a half a day and no such move
ment can possibly bo' expected this
year. Conservative operators are
calculating the present .stampede of
holders will clear up the situation
and Mint the next move of the trade
and the public on the buying side
will bo based on a more accurate
knowledge of the actual yield of the
year and that the next period of, Im
provement will be of more stable
character.
Corn operatlons-havo been marked
by a radical change aho. The unox-
THRILLING INCIDENT IN
HISTORY OF A HOME.
THE
Health Wrecked by Burden of 'Anx
iety Ordinary Medicines Did
Not Help Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills Cure.
pected happened the largest v acre
age ever planted and thajnrgest per
centage of green corn ever .seen late
In September all helped forward to n
degree thought almost Impossible a
fortnight before by perfect weather
conditions and absence of klll'ng
fronts. Tho big corn crop Is made.
There Is some shortage- In old
supplies, but the now corn Is king
from this on Offerings of millions
of bushels of new corn for shipment
to meet future contracts became- the
mountain which overwhelmed the bull
leaders regardless of their financial
strength. The men nearest the corn
fields were right. The powerful oper
ators who banked on ridiculously
low estimates of yield and an accident
to the crop were wrong. From a 60c
level May cornTs back near 45c. It
will take more than ordinary develop
ments In cash and export demands to
check tho elnking tendency of tho
price in the face of such magnificent
premise.
In oats there is less severe losi In
prices. The market already had been
depressed by heavy selling against
accumulating stccks. The week
raised visible stocks two and a half
millions to total of 22,500,000. The
May price touched 32c on further de
cline and may reach the 30c level.
VRRH OF .THE STOMACH.
nt, Simple, but Safe
Effectual Curo for It.
and
irh of the stomach has long been
bed the next thing to-incurn-
fbc usual symptoms are a full
ting sensation nfter eating, nc-
lied sometimes with sour or
'risings, n formation of gases,
pressure on tho heart and
id difficult breathing, bond-
Icklo nppetite, nervousness and
&1 played out, languid feeling.
is aften n foul tast in the
Icoated togue, nnd if tho In-
the stomach could be scon,
show n slimy, Inflamed con-
pro for this common nnd ob-
rouble is found in a treatment
ftuse tho food to bo readily,
By digested before it uns time
ent nnd irritnte tho delicate
surfaces of tho stomach. To
prompt nnd henlthy digestion
De necessaiy thing to do, and
Irmal digestion Is secured the
condition will have disap-
ling to Dr. Hnrlnnson, the,
ind best treatment is to UBe
eh meal a tablet, composed of
Aseptic Pepsin, n little Nnx,
Seal and fruit acids. Thoso
5fln now be found at all drug
uoiler the name of Stuart's Dys-
ERblets and not being a patent
rineMcan bo used witn perieci
assurance that healthy up-
. thorough digestion will fol
Corsets for the Nose.
The "smart" set In society and
their followers In humble life will
do almost anything to "Improve"
their personal nppearance. Cutting
dimples has been quite tho rage for
some time past and the writer
knows that "dimple cutters" In the
West End have been doing quite n
big business during tho present sea
son. Ijidles who never dreamed of
having dimples before have now got
what they think admirable -specimens
upon the face and neck. What will
happen when dimples go out of fash
Ion it la difficult to surmise, but no
doubt the "beauty doctors" will be
able to mako tho necessary repairs.
Our contemporary, tho Medical
Press and Circular, In IU current
Issuo, deals with another of the latest
novelties In this direction. It ema
nateslike other things of the kind
from Paris, and li a "special corset
for the nose." It Is readily conceiv
able that prolonged and severe pres
fluro for the correction of a supposed
malformation may bo most injurious
under certain circumstances; while It
is questionable If mere alteration In
position would have tho slightest ef
fect In removing a "bottle" noso or
In overcoming a chronic rosacea To
tho practice our medical contempor
ary applies the sledgo hammer of de de
nunciateon: "To lower the art of surgery to the
lovel or mere facial beautlficatlon
may be sometimes undignified, but
to tamper with anatomical outlines of
tho human countenance 1s one of the
most Insidious form of ouackery
when undertaken by unskilled hands,
Some Important facts bearing on an
exciting event which occurred' In Jan
uary of 1903, have recently been
brought to light. At thnt time, It
will be recalled, an employe was re
ported to have mado an attempt to
stab his employer, Mr. J. A. Wyatt.
The murderous purpose fortunately
failed, and tho courts disposed of tho
legal aspects of tho case. The public
excitement died down, but the matter
had other grave results, which for a
long time threatened to make It a
tragedy. Mrs. Wyatt, who had been
pros' rated by anxiety for her hus
band, did not recover from the se
vere shock to her nervous system,
and the doctors In charge of tho case
corn exe;ted themselves in vain to help
her.
To a reporter who visited her
home at No. 1189 Seventeenth street,
Des Molne3, Iowa, Mrs. Wyatt de
scribed her condition at this time as
fo'.lows:
"My solicitude was so great that It
affected my heart and then my bloin-
ach. I had pain In the region of the
heart, palpitation and shortness of
breath so thnt I could not walk vory
fast. My head ached very badly and
I was finally seized with vomiting
spells whenever I took any food. A
doctor was called who pronounced
the trouble gastritis, but he gave mo
no relief. Then I tried a second doc
tor without benefit. By this tlmo I
Sml lioKninn vnrv wank. 1 could not
keep the most dellcafo bro'h on my
stomach, and at tho end of a month
fl was senrcely more than skin and
bone and was really starving to
death.
"I don't look now like a woman
Just ready to die, do 1? Well, I owe
the recovery of my health to a very
simple circumstance. One day when
I wns down-hearted at the failure of
everything that was done for mo 1
reca'led how much benefit my sister
had not from Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
and I decided to tnko them In plow
of tho doctor's medicine. They help
ed me right away. In four days I
could tako -weak tea and crackers. In
two weeks I was ablo to leavo my
bod. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills was
the only thing thnt checked tho vom
iting and as soon as that was stop
ped my other difficulties left me. I
have a vigorous appetite now and am
ablo to attend to all tho duties of my
home."
Not only great anxieties but small
dally worries use up nervous force,
nnd In multitudes of such ea3CB every
organ of the body finally gets out of
order .for the nerves supply the vital
energy to every part. uaseB hko
theso do not yield to ordinary medi
cines. They are reached and prompt
ly cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for Pale People, because these mar
velous pills act at once on the blood
and "supply, it with nourishing ele
ments that are carried to every nerve
In tho body.
The wdy to feel well, and to be well
Is to keep tho blood pure and rich.
The remedy that does that tho most
quickly, thoroughly and cheaply is
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They are
sold by all druggists.
Hs Surrendered.
A story is to'.d of a labor war in
Jones county, Mississippi, whfch wns
recently fought out to a conclusion
by one, Moses Adams, who owned a
saw mill at that place, and whoso
long tlmo amicable relations with his
employes was severed by the de
mands of the latter, which he con
tended he could nqt concede without
loss of not only his profits but his
capital.
Having received his answer, tola
workmen struck. Undismayed, Moses
Adams set about to secure other
workmen to take tho places which
the strikers hod abandoned. The
strikers went Into camp, surrounded
tho mill, sent out pickets, who throw
out, hard and fast, all tho strlko
breakers who camo within the lines.
Moses Adams fought his fight out
sldo the armed ramparts for a wholo
month; then he concluded to surren
der. His manner of doing so was In
etilct accord with the mofct honorod
rules of war. Instead of yielding his
mill to the strikers for so much loot
or of selling or leasing It to somo ono
who would re-enllst the strikers In
his service, Moses Adams courteous-
ly Invited them Jo witness his subju
gatlon and retreat.
Ho did precisely what Kuropatkln
did nt Lino Yang when Kurokl mode
that position unattractive; ho blow
up his works Having distributed
the dynamite with skillful precision,
he applied the match, and In less
flme than It takes to tell It tho en
tire works had disappeared from
Jones county, Mississippi, and the
war botween him and the strikers had
come to an end.
pppppjpppjPlpjppppppA
irnrmlnr tisrt nftpr mfnls.
v"--e- - - ----- . ivij uuuvi lunvu uj uuomiivu unttu"
B. Workman, of Chicago, Ills., anj for tno gake or pampering a foo!
u im. umiH iSn vanity." ixinaon Daily wewu.
I A.l ..t.l I il.nl
'Catarrh Ih
1 from a neglected cold In the
thereby the lining membrane
oso becomes inuamea nnu tno
Is discharge therefrom passing
fd into tho throat reaches the
this producing catarrh of the
Medical authorities pro
for me for three years for ca-
stomach without cure, but to-
am the happiest of men nfter
Inly one box of Stuart's Dys-
fablets. I cannot find appro-
vords to express my good feel-
?have found flesh, appetite nnd
est from their use."
's Dyspepsia tablets Is the
preparation as well as the sira-
id most convenient reniery for
Irm of indigestion, catarrh of
billiousness, sour stomach,
urn and bloating after meals.
Mrs.' Gilbert Has a Birthday.
New York. Oct, 21. Scores of con-
giatulatory massages from men and
women prominent In tho theatrical
profession all over tho county were
received today by Mrs. G. H. Gilbert
upon the eighty-fourth annlvorsary of
her birth. Flowors, too, fairly rnlnod
upon tho vorl ablo actress, and her
homo, at No. 33 WeJt Sixty-first
street, was a perfect bower. Never
in bettor health ana as eager ior worn j
a9 tho youngest beginner, Mrs, uu.
bort spent a good part of tho day in
rehearsing "Granny," tho Clydo Fitch
show which Is to bo produced at tho
Lyceum Theatro next Monday night
and In which she Is to have tho prin
cipal part.
Mrs. Gilbert Is an English womnr,
born In Lancashire on Octqbor 21,
1821. Her firat appearance was In
the Norwich circuit as a dancer In
184C. Tho Barae year sho had mar
ried a professional dancer, George
Henry Gilbert. They camo to uiu
United States In 1849, and sho contin
ued as a dancer until 1859, when eho
began playing'" lending old woman
characters, In. which sho has acquired
her present fame. Her husband died
In 1SCG. In 1869 Mrs. Gilbert entered
Augustln Dafy'H company and re
mained In it until his death. Since
then she has been with Charles Froh
nian. Celebrate Nelson's Victory.
London, Oct. 21. Trafalgar Dnv
for tho anniversary of tho battlo of
Trafalgar, fought October 21, 1805),
was celebrated today in the custom
ary manner. Many parts of tno
world woro represented among tho
beautiful floral offerings that wore
n-aced about tho ba.se of Nelson 8
Column, ln Trafalgar Square Nelsons
old flagship, Victory, at Portsmouth
was decorated in honqr of tho day.
: Excellent Custom Mill.
8Red Star MiHs, of Turner, are
the most reliable concerns of
nd in this valley. Under the
etnent of T. N Humphrey the
of that section find it to their
It to natronlza these mills, as
pake & specialty of that class of
See announcement dwlt
An Apple Country.
A. P. Aufranco, who has Just re
turned from tho British possessions,
says tho country north of us is becom
ing n goat applo exporting region.
Ho was employed as an. apple packer
nn Tyini Aberdeen's oitato. at Vernon
Cleveland Speaks Tonight hj. c. Tho expremlor of Victoria has
New York, Oct. 21. There was an 1 300 n0res in apples, and shipped near
unusual air of bustle about the jy mo carloads to tho Eastern mar
Democratic headquarters today ket-
caused by tho activity In completing
arrangements for tho mass meeting
In Carnegie Hall tonight, under the
auspices of the Business Meii'd Par
ker and Davis Association. The an
nouncement that former President
Graver Cleveland Is to preside has
caused more interest to be taken in
tho demonstration than has attadioi
to any of tho political rallies held in
New York so far during the present
campaign. Though the former Presi
dent has made It plain that he does
not intend to deliver a speech it is
generally expected that ho will have
a few words to say in expression of
bis views on the Issues of the present
campaign and of endorsement for the
national ticket. The principal ad
dress of the evening will be delivered
by John G. Carlisle ex-secretary of
tho treasury.
O.A.
Batl
filgutcr
of
ITOZIXA.
.j; u uh Yts Kin Unn Et
Good Spirits,
Good spirits don't all come from
Kentucky. Their wain source Is tho
liver and all tho fine spirits ever
mado in tho Dluo Grass state could
not remedy a bad liver or the'hundred
and one 111 effects It produces. You
can't have good spirits and a bad
liver at the same time. Your liver
must be in fine condition If sou would
feci buoyant, happy and hopeful,
bright of eye, light of step, vigorous
and successful in your purults. You
can put your liver In fine condition by
using Green's August Flower the
greatest of all medicine for the liver
and stomach and a certain curo for
dyspepsia or indigestion. It has been
a favorite household remedy for over
thirty-five years. August Flower will
make your liver healthy and active
and thus Insure you a liberal supply
of "good spirits." Trial Ue, 25c;
regular bottles, 75c. At all dnicxtsts.
At Dr. Stone's drag stores.
Miss Rose Hennessy, well known as
a poetess and elocutionist, of Lexington,
Ky., tells how she was cured of uterine
inflammation and ovaritis by the use o,
Lydia E. PiriMiam's Vegetable Compound.
" DKAn Mns. Pinkham : I have been so blessedly helped through tho use
of Lytlln E. Plnklinm's VcBotnblo Compound that I feel It but just . to
acknowledge it, hoping that It may help somo other woman suffering- as I did.
For years I enjoyed tho best of health and thought that 1 would alway
dono. I attended parties and receptions thinly olnd. and would bo suddenly
chilled, but I did not think of tho results. I caught a bad cold eighteen
months ago while menstruntlng, and this caused inflammation of tho wotnl
and congested ovaries. I suffered excruciating pains nnd kept gotting worsc
My nttcntlon wns called to your Vo'notftblo Compound and tho yondorfut
cures It hnd performed, and I made up my mind to try It for two months and.
seo what it would do for me. Within one month I felt much better, anil
at the close of tho second I wns entirely well. ..',
"I have advised a numbor of my lady friends to uso It, and all expresa
themselvcs as well satisfied with tho results as I was." Miss ItosK Noka,
Uennesbv, 410 8. Broadway, Lexington. Ky,
Tho oxporlonco nnd tCNttmony of somo of the most note
women of America go to provo lioyond n question that Jjyrtla 13
Plnkhnm's Vctfotnlilo Compound will correct nil Biieh troublo antB
at once, by removing tho cuuho, nnd restoring tho organs to
Bormal and hculthy condition.
"DKAn Mns. Pinkham: About two yours ngo I consulted ft phy
sician about my health which hud become so wretched tlmt I wns no
longor ablo to bo about. I had Bovoro backache, tonrlnpMlown pains,
pains across tho abdomen, was very nervous nnd irr tuulo. and Una,
troublo grow woreo each month. Tho physiolim prcrtcrltjed for mo, bub. -I
soon discovered that ho was unable to help mo, and I then douidod tr
try Lydla 13. Plnkhnm's Vegotablo Compound, and noon found thab
it was doing mo good. My nppotito wns returning, tho pains disappear
ing, and tho general bonelits woro well marked.
" You cannot rcaliaj how pleased I was, nnd af tor taking tho nicdl
cino for only threo months, I found that I was completely cured of my
troublo, andhavo been well and hearty over since, and no more fear tin
monthly poriod, as It now passos without pain to mo. Yours vory truly.
Miss Peaiil Aokeiis, 327 North Summer St, Nashville, lonn."
When a mcdlcluo has been Buccessf til In restoring to licaltu
more than a million women, you cannot well say without trying l
"I do not bcllovo it will help mo." If you nro 111, do not hcnlUitn
to got a bottle of Lydla E. Plnklinm's Vegetable Compound nnd
write Mm. Pinlcliura at Lvnu, Monk., for special ndvlco. Her ud-
vicois iree anu uuipiui. um i-uji numj uij ........
$5000
FORFEIT K wcnot forthwith nrodnea tiitorlglntl latUnand ilguatnri(
iliw.UiUmoBUlJ.wh.UU trill prOYettlf toliitgoiiulnneM.
ijoia K. l'lnkluuu Mail. Co., Itfuo, MMav
MMUMIIIIIM'IIHIIIIi;
BRYAN'S VIEW OF PLATORM.
"I slinll not misrepresent the sltunttlon, or nppcnl for votes for tho ticfccS
upon falso grounds. A Democratic victory will mean very little, if any,
progress on economic qucHtlons so long nn tho party 1 under 'tlio control of
tho Wnll Street olemont. The labor plank, na prepared, by Judge
Parker's frionds on tho Hubcommltee, wits a straddling, incnnlnglcss plank.
I The nomination of Judge Park-r vlrtimlly nullities tho nntMnwt
'phink."-Wllllnn Jennings Hryan, in "The Commoner," July 13, 1504.
: ! Heat
The
: : Msic
: : Sattitday
li Night
; At The
Big
: Piano
: Sale
j j Allen & Gilbert
: Ramakeif Co.
:: Ofcgoa'sLcadfng House
: - Salem Branch.
299 Commercial St.
To the Wotld's Fair
Soon o Not at All
Next month Is Ha la.t, you know, nnd if you are wine '
you will go before the llunl ru.h. Tharo nro
Low Rates on Special Dates
And tho Burlington ouVa a inlendld wvlce via the Sconle
linei.
If you aro lntereittd aenJ
vour namp nnd addrei and
, I'll write you full pnrtleular.
1
A. O. BITOLDON, General Agent,
100 Third fltree.
PORTLAND, OBEfJON.