DAILT MT KtXp JOOMTAX, ULSX, O1H0OB, TUEBPAT, MABOT " 0S
MH.Y CAPITAL JOURNAL
BY HOFER BROS.
t)N(aiSBEi
OFFZOIAIt CENSUS SALEM.
MAY, 1004, 13.287.
WO OHATTLE REPUBLICANISM.
The Republican party was organized
tte abolish chattel slavery, nnd history
Trcevrds that its mission was to mnko
Jl tnon free.
The- party has novor gone down to do-
ftfctii, weept when its temporary lenders
Jprgot thin principle, and returned to
(CHATTEL OWNERSHIP OF MEN.
TIio boss ami tho innchlno that Insists
en owning public officials Uko slaves
ifor personal purposes, anil driving thorn
St do Us deeds dinks tho party to tho
fafgrtidntion of chatttels.
Tim problems of city government nrc
rsnsde Impossible of honest solution
"WHEN TIIE SLAVE-DRIVING BOSS
-3JEMA2TO8 TO OWN MEN to do hifl
ljicmonnl bidding in tho city council or
twffiorclng lawn at his bohost.
!If the boss and professional poll
tudan, who does nothing but plan and
ponli grafting pollticnl ontorprisea to
enrich himself nnd pay his strike., is
-allowed to dominato the party It hun no
Hulairr-
'Organization and innohino politics Is
Twrmissablo for public nndg, Tho load
enrtrip that accomplishes results for
geed government Is nlwnys desirable.
Ijcnrtorship for tho personal graft Is
.criminal.
TIIERE HAS BEEN TOO MUCH
SJHATTEL REPUBLICANISM IN OR
jBGON and elsewhere. Tho nation, tho
alatn nnd our eltlos, counties and
'Bchonls have Hufforod from It. Thero
roust bo n hlghor and bettor typo of
'leadership,
Tho Republican pnrty of the fitliiro
Siaa got to substitute a llttlo more
limins for nppetlto, n llttlo moro ability
or grasping greed and n llttlo moro
public uplrlt for moro desire of power
anil 'plunder.
The chattel Republicanism that in
nasi on personal ownerslilp of the can
ittidotc, before it will support him for
flluijo, will bo wiped out root and
branch. Tho men who practice It tiro
tho nil thorn of tho grafting processus
tthat ruin our legislatures, mid mako
oir atato governments oppressive.
HO AMERICAN HOOLKJAN.
Tho April HverylMidy's'Magiirino has
a startling article on the political situ
ation In droit Hrltain.
It allows how UNDER TIIE TREE
TXADE POLICY tho number of tinein
ployed has increased, until Kngliind
3in nn army of homeless people,
Tho decline of agriculture dnfes from
the repeal of tho com laws. Tho docai
dence of manufactures has begun with
increasing velocity.
The ultle cannot ejcund, as in
Amoricn, on account of tho tenure f
atnten being rigid and immovable,
-through laws of entail.
All the expedients of statesmanship
have failed to relieve the deterioration
-of industry, and the decline of manhood
among the manse.
sclf-hclpuil men and women. '
In place of tho antiquities and pro
fessionalisms that aro reducing the
teaching profession more nnd more to
an abeordlty and an anarchonism in
the strenuous and rushing life of to
day, thero is a growing recognition, of
other and moro useful and practical
equipments for the modern man nnd
womiiff. Tho writer, who has only n
public school education, was given the
advantage of being brought up to
work in the garden, to caro for cows,
pigs and chickens, and henco had some
training that many children do not
receive. Ho is inclined to believe that
tho domestic duties learned as part
of tho home lifo wore fully as valu
able as what he learned in school. The
steadying influence of industry can
not be overlooked a a a valuable part
of education. Kducation without in
dustry, or the habit of application to
useful work, is n farce at best, as it
creates desires, notions that reader
tho individual discontented. The pub
lic sohool or any school is predicated
on tho fact that every home cannot
supply tho opportunity for learning tho
common brnnchos. So every homo will
not trnin the child in habits of indus
try wll 1 not teaoh those common
branches of labor on which a hnppy,
contented lifo nn head of a family so
much deponds.
What should bo taught in the pub
lic schools to mnko a man or woman
n better citizen, a moro useful fathor
or mother? Wo should include sow
ing, gardening, cooking and manual
trades, at least so far as woodwork.
Tho girl who can handle tools has n
sixth sense a percoptlvo power and
a grasp on things in gcnornl that can
never be obtninod in nny other way.
So tho boy or girl who knows how to
plant nnd care for growing things has
a rotation to tho useful and beautiful
things of creation that will bo a
means of aalvatlon undor tunny cir
cumstanced The boy or girl who
knows how to proparo food in a sci
entitle nnd economically correct ninn
ner will novor go without well pre
pared food. Thoro aro those who want
their daughters to lie above sowing for
u living, who want them to have a
buslnoss or' art education, forgetting
that needlework In an art in itself,
hit us look into the many kinds of
needlework that a competent worker
with tho neetllo anil shears ought to
know. Horo is nuonumorntion of' the
winiii, with many of the kinds of
stitches that aro used teday:
Storking web stitch; rolled hem;
overland patch; hem patch; limine!
seams; dorothy seams; buttonholes ami
darning; stocking darning; llnoii darn
ing; French hem stitch; mitred stitch;
three-coruerud darn; blind hem stitch;
slip stitch hem; gathering, gauging
jfiissets; plneolots; bias seams; match
ing stripes crosswise; longthwise;
hemstitching towols; putting on tapes;
hnmstttohod riillles; gathering; taking
' ' ' -
I i,IHL 1UMM , " - " Y'
J; - Siil& G
I BSm1w RWlPSSSlPSM lever
I VWtWimWMmli NOW TAKES TIIE PICK OF OUR NEW SPRING SUITS-SWELL AS uo"
I -simmlllfwili mmm BW (I I can be-just landed, they're all good, there's, some sat-
1 wilMrar Mlm m' isfaction in picking from our startling assortment the
1 mmMlMIBM WX P ONE YOU THINK IS BEST. IN STYLES AND PERFECTI6N OF FIT-
ItiWraMraArir1 H close around the NECK, SMOOTH AUBOaa TUB uhest and
'SSSI MKwBPw . '"'' N L SHOULDERS AND UNDER THE ARMS THEY ARE SIMPLY ALL
" ''-Mmf!m V" II RIGHT, WOULDN'T BE HERE IF THEY WERE NOT. PRICES RUN- I
I" Seall'iV L ALONG SOMETHING LIKE THIS: I J
'"Mflmi U $ 1 0, $ 1 2, $ 1 5, 5
' SKM $20 and . $30. S
ST'f-' YOU CAN BE SUIXED SOMEWHE RE ALONG THE LINE. TRY IT. Wp0r1
Fine Cfotfics Makers IRh0
aALTlMORE NEW YORK I Bscie
G. W. JOHNSON & CO. I
LEADING CLOTHIERS jj
Halm
up n hem; carrying up a seam; basting
Ktltohu; Krenoh somiii; bnck seam;
half-bark; overcasting; fell seam;
limn seam; ovorliHiuliug; licmbiiiig and
sewing on lace.
Die above constitute some of the
iumIii features of a course of neotllo
Tb Hor war awakwied KugUnd to
thr nwful fact that laek uf omploy
meit nud lack of proper supplies of
nourishing food HAD WEAKENED
tnre NATION.
Hut of It, (MM) men who offered to on
Itnt the war ultlce was obligeil to rejtn't
10,tKH), anil limn) of the rglmt wore
uiadn upiiii riMlucml ted of (ltnetw.'anil
were, mere shells of num.
Tho heavy fighting In the tiotith Af
rican war had to bo done by tho Saotoh,
the Irish and th Colonial regiments.
DUeaue and Deer pluck inowihl down
tbo Hooligans of Or eat Uritalu like
Aim before lightning.
THE REVOLUTION THAT IS ON
IN OlilEAT BRITAIN WILL NOT
tSXtABB until tho factories aro runti
tr.A ikltllkfcfru ikl hil.kBtAftl ftBAkl I li.k liAi.i.k. f
-"' " " '-' " '" """" Mm f wowtui
irns are aminex niiu empmytvii ami no
ntly fd, and HtMillgHiiUni U no more.
Voturu or ruiiuo EDUCATION
11 Inkei a century to live down an
Ideal. Tho public Iuh1 , system
lowl being emnclmtml frflin the
lilcalu uf the pt. The nahtlar of an
tiquity wn a heldeM kluil uf penwH,
tceiutHl with Hivtt anil veweratloa.
I work as has been adopt el in the pub
He whools of this city. It is true the
jmronts must still my for the chil
dren's lessons. Hut this step taken in
tho public schools Is very significant
of the tendency of things and should
encourage lis to think education may
in time Imoomo more practical. The
knowledge of needlework in general
has been commented upon hore us il
lustrative of the value of a moro prac
tical education. Do not imagine, that
the artistic side of life and the criti
cal faculattes are net awakened by
learning to do tilings with tho hands.
The knowledge of mnklng tnpnstriea,
embroideries ami other beautiful
iieodlow-ork hus bemi known for oontu
rltM, but tho problem of putting tho
on n selontltlo lm-
xirt of the odueu-
U but Just Wing
solve).
'IV meet the denmnda for practical
methyls wad supply the wnnt that has
Wen but Inadequately Met, teachers
Along tliN lino have adopt i)d medel
Kewiug ha the bent and mest protiU
methiMl of iHxtnifttiuu as It brings in
all at Itch, niihh ami heme used In
hand to e.xccuto wlt'i care and precis
ion. Thero is nothing in a course of art
needle work but uccomplishoi training
for tho child. It has been found that
children who have finished it can with
very little instruction do very benuti
fill vork. sit Is onsy to understand
how this training fits a girl to sue
cessfully undertake the finest art
needle work, as she is not only trained
to skill with a needle, but her senso
of proportion is cultivated; her oye Is
trained as to color and her mind is
made flexible und creative by being
educated to work Independently.
ROB-
jnrt uf plain sewing
K',ls and making It
liiukini Lwrinunts. Klnee lit aav work
Kferlly K .lepeilHt uh tkt eWar-',, tllBW.u Hndorstiindtiig ef the jtIii-
,ij mWP KrWl p.N mpmimmii .. k , .wl the
METHODS ARE OREATER
BERS THAN MEN.
Lord Hroughnm is creibted with hav
iug written: "The lawyer is a gentle
man who rescues your property from
your enemies, and koeps it to himself"
Uvea nowadays we sometimes pnv
too high a price for protection against
our onamiosi
A merchant finds thit a competltior
Is taking away some of his trade, and
in his effort to get it buck ho selects J
advertising methods which costs more
than tho recovered trade would bo
worth.
In buslnosM iwpoeinlly in Advertis
ing wo are robbed by .ruotliods
oftener than by mon.
A modern newspaper represents the
perfected machinery of publicity,
compared to it, ' programing," "Post
ering," "plaeardiug," elroulnrUlng,"
'eouvenlrlng," and related motuods
are as tho mule-cart to the oxpross
train,
A merchant whose cashier turns em
bossier Is unfortunate, but a merchant
wkesfl judgment turns onbealor is
still more unfortunate.
In buying publicity a werehant is
Stanford Remains Arrive.
San Francisco, March 21. Tho steam
er Alamedn, bearing tho remains of
Mrs. Lcland Stanford, arrived fromS31 '
Honolulu this morning. BJIai
torn
sea
in
Som6 peoplo stand on their dignity
until something more substantial offers.
Mowers
li
H.
H. B. MARRIOTT WATSON,
Author of "Hurricane Island."
H. Marriott WatsoH, the author 1 his first nlv
of "Hurricane Island," has had a
very inteesting eareer marke.1 by
many uniisual literary frieailshi. IU
was lwrn in 1SIW nt relloMrll,
Australia, where his father was hiIh-
really buying roenlts. tHcome, patron-,H,or, s,,"l,ntl,v the family lired
age, "Jiusy Days.". And, sanietlmu?, j,u 1WW "'!. where .Mr. Wato
he buys nnd nays fer these thlnua Kdateil from the ualversitv. In 1SS3
without nny Kwumnce of their deliv
ery. He weald not Hiakelnrgo. -pur-
HHes or cioth iroin a man whesqfn
111! U'Aul t.k l.t..l.u.l ...U 1. . . .
""- "'. nr n ;OOK lip
journalism jmeMfully. It hM wkij
a eontrtliBtor to th St. Jhmmw Ota set t
retleettvl in Dr. doUatHMi's fHwou let
tcr ti 1AI iMienterlleUl, wkoee Mtr
ago fur ht Mew iltetlmMry he had to
licltcd. A the whalsr whs profound
n Kuowicugtt hi nariewt lanxefee. ,Hxt WetMNea ft'.
mauinaiiD turn, mi nHiiqim.Y, au vm
i the infant e,W( wheu it edvae tH
first Wep It the lecaleattag of priaei
t)ee whiek are the foundation of
needlework NHd each jwrt of the work
Jsttould U therwi;l'ly tawght tkt the
The prwgreM mml HMrly be
staw im tkev are net nlv lenrHiec the
nwledKO f the &mm vnfMm RWi ,WIH, j,Ml nr ir.,1,,
ajitm nf the world. This tviie uf th'. ... . ..,.. ... ...
" J ii iae Heewie aau luiwure pner-
uj v is sw.i .nKf.,sr. iHW . llwvtMl? aeWHiplUked this tSK V4H,ll
ffeWeiu f wathematUs with wkieh Ua wr, tUnitil ,,ubluVel i.h.1
ffeM4iil rrt.lKi)Hftii . jmiwle tUe j rWw td ,tjBRUi,u hetwew te -iM
f ttone who wink to bMe 9iAlml ttMll Uo worthlew te judge ef
.mW1 trheM. And ly tho oln ul h6 ..miUty f her own work, as well
i fwwilder tho wwleru boy or girl Kl xMt work of otkera.
-eAr vtK kBewledjr "f wore Ae ks lee said, the kIw t tke
rti 14m), that eaabl ket systew it edueatlonsU It is pUuaed
mn m4 wiM U bMHi )f-ii to train the eyo to m ctrUy tke
aijjraa sH-arewail onjWe nad wUd t Uirwt with futility sad tke
tory was "in his hat," ami whoso "'" friendship with J. M. IWHe
toty to deliver tke eeth euliljiot
bo vea iferrd but he Mealnniuly
buys Md jwya fer "pMblieity" in thiif
way.
Tke HierekMHt wko keep a receptive
ear fr tke Ieat wrd of human ox
perlenee will that, wkea his tr.iilo
luttvntt Mi. lT.i... . . i-i ..
Vv..... ..... ,.,.,. (wkuw turtle
to publisk his gt iHWk, "Retter
Dotid," and collaborated with him in
Hiehard Savnm."
Mr. Watson wai assoeiatd with the late
w. h. Henley on the Xational Obscrv
er and wa Utor assistant editor of
the Pall Mall Oasotte. He claims to
have discovered H. G. Wells. His
wife is Hoeemond Marriott Watson,
herself a clever writer. Mr. Watson
has for some yw,rs devoted himself en
tlrcly to romantic fiction, the best ox
preM'oa f Wi8K ..jIurrlefne Is,
t." fasciaaUag, adventuresome
r.v uf a wutiay ' 0erman
lriaees yH.ht, which has been hap
ptty called "a rare eombtaation of
'"''" l"H4' and 'The pr.
eaaa.' "
Wc have the best
tfiatmoney cau bay
also cheap (fles.
Let us show them
to you.
RJVI.Wade&Co.
M
H
m
m
14
I mi
iMiner
Fruit Uulnjored.
The raia ef tke pa few days kas not
diiiHiige.1 tke early fruit cron. aad
t -. .. . . . 1 t t . . 1 .. - '
u reuti rNHH U eowpot Iters, it Is. wnue it aas-neea eold eaougk to wkitea
delivered t him. JadMous uewa I tiie faetkllls, yet tke tdee-ioMw are bright
pajw advartbdag doee so deliver it; (and giw god prtwpeets of sooa M
tke at her klads of "advertijlng" do ' ll? Wyaad tke fat stage.
Hat. The weather ma a ka Wea UA
Oregon this spring, aad oar fault val
leys this fall skaald fairly groan, ao to
tteak, witk atans Uunteont jtrt-l.
Nowspapex for Sale.
A. T. Fetter, atTara tke Drain, Daa
1ns eouuty, Oregaa. Xeaparetl far M)
at $S0CL It is a gao.1 weakly aawaaaiHv
property, in e at tke Wet Uttfe
(eivBS in tke state.
Install Telephone System,
The Southern Pacific is installing tel
ephone aleae their line ia Seutkern 'Ore
gn fer the better proteetioa ef trains
belween sniall twas.
Take yaar ahoe repairing ta Nlek
Uler, at "The Toggry." 3-SQ4t '
OIULDREN CRY rOB
FLSTOHIl&'S CA8T0&ZA.
I
CHILDREN CRY FOR
FLETOHKR'3 OASTORIA.
A Pleasant Way to Travel
The above is the usual verdict of
th. treveler using tke Missouri Pacific
railway between the Pa,Jfie eoa.t and
t , and we Ulleve that the serv-
Uis uatamaat ft. D
4 Sarlag, and Denver tkere are two
tsf stl.. , rrrl8R Pu,,man, t
wt itaadard elatrifl-likti.t .!-.
ears. The sawe enall, . 1-. . I
fresa Kansas City and St
Uais ta Memahis. urn. rL . , -'
4 Ifraaare " ..a"l
nat ,1. " W81 or
W. a W'BRIDE, Gen. Art
12 Tkird 3t, Pertlant'ore.
Bt$y A
Bank D aft
Xevor risk your money la ty
mails. For absolute safety, t
trming cost, buy a" draft at this
bank.
Salem State Bank
L. K. PAGE, Pfesldeat
IE. W. HAZARD, Cashk
II