WRJfflWMIiWPipt i In r DAILY OAMIAI, JOUKNAIs &AXEM, OREOOy. THTTB3DAY, MAY 3, WW. DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL BY HOFXK BROS., Publishers and Proprietors. ELBCTION DATES TO KEMEMBES. Canvassing votes for noBslaatiag state and district candidates Kay 5. Last day for filing nominating pet! tiona for county offices May 19. last day for filing certificates of nom laatien May 5. General election Jane 4. THE SATiEM OF THE FUTTJBE. Tho Capital City is looking forward to groat materia growth and expansion. OTJB PRINCIPAI. STBEET IS BE ING PAVED TtZ A SUBSTANTIAL MANNER-, and many new residence are being constructed. Under a popular and enterprising management .Willamette University is adding new buildings and growing into a great school. Maintaining an upfce-now progres sive high school Salem has every in ducement and advantage to induce rapid growth of homes and family population. When the city has its first mile of well-paved street there will be a de mand for general street Improvement THE EBA OF MUD IN WTNTEE AND DUST IN SUMMEB WILL BE AT AN END. The construction of an electric line to Portland will double transportation facilities, and rapidly increase the population of the city. THE FIBST ELECTRIC LINE WILL "PROBABLY OO VIA OREOON CITY. Another eleetrie line will go north through the Champoeg and Uutteville country and probably via Newberg, ifcMinnvlIle. Forot Grove and Illlls boro to Tillamook. Wo have referred to material expan sion. There must first be an expansion of ideas, a spiritual expansion, so to speak, to make it a greater Salem. God made the country. Men make 'cities. But men must have the mind to crcntc to be creators. IT IS MIND ALONE THAT IS CAPABLE OF OBEATNESS, AND MEN OF SMALL MINDS NEVER BUILD GREAT CIT IES. Salem need an enlarged mutuality n consciousness of possibilities an awakening of ideas. Village concep tions mutt give place to metropolitan-ira. Hare you forgotten that family history of yours, with its ten dency to weak lungs? Your doctor has not, if you have! w in .ti vn hm ofwt.t rf inoer of hard couehs in your case. Then asc Mm what he thinks about vour taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. If hesays it z - .- itt. Is a good medicine, why not take It? ; JLnrmWiii Hard Coughs ubUih i J. C.JLrwCo.. Iw.ll, Kim. . THE REPUBLICAN OUTLOOK OREGON. IN The Oregoniun say the real charac ter of u political party does not change. i:nl benee it objects to Chamberlain for governor, because he is th candidate of tho Democratic pHrty. THE SAJIE LINE Or AROUMENT COULD BE MADE AOAINST THE CANDIDATES OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IN OREGON. If Chamberlain, as a candidate, is to bo belli reMnsi(le for the sins of the Democratic party, why not hold aay Republican andilat responsible for the sins an-t short comings of the Re publican party in Oregon! Tim REAL CHARACTER OF PO LrnCAL PARTIES DO CHANGE, AS THE CHARACTERS OF THE LEAD ERS CHANGE. Tii ltooHvlt administration, with it nnfffAvt persecution ef fraud and it vigilant warfare against offending tru1 and rororfltions. b a revelation of peaiitilltM.s within the ltopubllean party that malt followers of W, J. llr a treutlil fur that gentleman's luurels as political reformer ROOSEVELT POLICIES APPLIED TO STATE ATFAIRS IN OREGON WOULD WORK WONDERS. How much of the new spirit of ag jjrivnilvK public administration ia the Interest of the people will enter into the new state government remains to be seen. The Republican candidates for gov ernor, treasurer and secretary of state WILL HAVE TO TELL THE PEOPLE NOW THEY PROPOSE TO BUN THE BTATE GOVERNMENT. What policies shall be pursued in the administration of the school lands! Shall there be a state board of con trol to reduce the expense of managing state institutions! Shall taxation be eqaalized so that corporations, millionaires, franchises and eapital will bear a more just share of the burdens! Shall the taxpayers get the full ben efit of the operations of the state treasury! It must not be overlooked that the Republican machine in Oregon has not formed the habit of looking at state administration from, theso standpoints. THE VOTERS HAVE BEEN DOING A GREAT DEAL OF READING AND THINKING ON THESE LINES. IN TIME THEY WILL ACT. Whether tbey will act with the Re publican party depends upon the im pression made by the leaders put for ward by the party. Dr. Withycomba's platform is dis tinct'vely a reform platform. He out lines specific demands for progress. Mr. Duniway, for state printer, made a reform campaign for his nomination. If he carries out tho pleadings of re form made in his primary campaign, and makes good his exposures of graft in state binding and printing he will help the who! ticket. There is no reason why every Repub lican candidate for a state office should not stand aggressively for reforms and, business administration. That is peo ple's Republicanism. That is IJoofc velt Republicanism. It is what the peo ple exjeot of any party they put in power. To merely pay high taxes and get nothing in the way of reform and progress is not worth any voter's time going to the polls. The future of the Republican party in Oregon depends on the 'attitude? the idjpis, the vigor and the earnestness of its leaders, and on their making tho jveople understand that they mean busings. JUSTICE HAILEY TALKS To the Graduating Class at the Medical College at Willamette University CHAMPOEG DAY. A habit Is for mod through repell tion of Ike sjwuo act. If you will covenant to lay away a certain sura every week, and kcp faith with , yourolf," yeu will lavo formed a habit that it worth something. The frnlls maybe gathered In old ago. or in time 'of need, and may prove of untold benefit. - " Savings deposits of one dollar or more received at any time. Interest .. -. . . - ' "'v1- f paid at thev rale of Three per cent per annum compounded semi-annually. SayIi Departmoat Cxtfl Natkwal Baafc The anniversary of the organization of the provisional government of Ore gon was obsorvod at Champoeg with a suitable program. While thoro wore no political speoeh.os allowed to be made, there were prac tically none but politicians on the program. In fact, Champoeg day is a kind of Purine roast Fourth of July, where a Western Declaration of Indepundenco of (Jreat Uritaiu was again published to the world aol AMERICANS TOOK THEIR LIVES IN THEIR HANDS TO UNFURL THE STARS AND STRIPES OVER TERRITORY THAT HAD LONG BEEN IN DISPUTE. There is a grt quantity of rot, cant and RBOlilMjry In this fre country about excluding political ducustionsj on any pnbjie neeasiun. the plenoec who stepped; out at Chumpoog lwlf a century ago took de liberate political action to establish rlf-government by the people. IN OUR GOVERNMENT EVERY CITIZEN IS A POLITICAL FACTOR AN INTEGER OF THE CONSTITU- TION. He is bound to be a .politician or become a blank, a cypher. It in eutAsenlatlng citizenship to for bid political diseureioa op any public occasion, It is political hypocrisy to protend that overy oandidato at Cham poeg was not talking for political of feet. The attendance on Champoeg day was not as largo as uual. But the four hundred preont were TYPICAL ORE OON PEOPLE FINE LOOKING, PROSPEROUS, "WELL DRESSED, WELL-BEHAVED AND HAPPY. How would! it do to celebrate Cham poeg day on the Fourth of July each year, and make It a great patriotic hol iday ! Thoro should bo a larger park laid on there by tho state to eommetnorato this historical spot. Notice to. Bend Holders, Notice is hereby given to parties holding bonds 1, 2, 3, and 4, issued by school district No C. of Clatsop county, Oregon, that the same have been called in, aid will be paid within thirty days of this date, at the office of the county treasurer, 33&.5G3 Commercial street. Astoria, Oregon. Dated Atorla, Oregon, this 1st day of May, 1006. C1IAS. A. iraiLBOBN, County Treasurer, Clatsop Countr. 5-S-SOt Learning, ability and character are tho three leading and essential requi sites in every professional man, and pre-eminently are they so in the med ical practitioner, the faithful perform ance of whose duties is of vital import ance to the happiness and welfare of every community. Learning sufficient for your beginning you now have, oth crwise you would not be graduateJ here tonight; but remember, you are only graduated, not finished. You have laid only the foundation and are now to build the superstructure which sbal be for you an evidence of success or failure just as you build. Ability you have, as shown by your success thus far, but this you must and will increase by diligent application and experience The talent of ability must be doubled in manyfold if you would deserve the regard of the faithful servant. Learning and ability are vain indeed unless supported by the prime element of character, without which neither man nor woman in any walk of life can hopo for truo succe?. These three then, learning, ability and character quickened by love for your profession and its duties, will make each of you what I trust and hope you may all be come successful practitioners. Not as reapers of great financial rewards but as splendid servers in relieving the pains and sufferings of humanity. Yours is a noble calling, full of pos f ibillties of good to the world and hon or and fame to yeurself: The sacred office of the ministry teaches the fath erhood of God and the brotherhood of man, and points the way to the joy? and beauties of tho life, eternal; the splendid calling of the lawyer protects the rights and redresses the wrongs of humanity in its various forms of social existence; but to the noble profession of medicine Is entrusted the grave re tponiibility of keeping strong the di vine spark of Hfo from whence spring hope, ambition, action, the vital forcer of all success. Noble though your call ing, nobler yet are its results when you follow it- with the high resolve of doing juytico to yourself, your patient' and your profession. Your field of ac tion is world wide, over land and) sen in the frigid north and in the fever laden south. Every nation and every people need you, want your help. No color, no condition, no prince, no pau per, but gladly welcomes the relief of your skill. Christian oivilisatlon and heathen barbarism alike receive with joy and gladness the doctor, whoe preonee brings Hfo nnd vigor to their suffering subjects. The path of eivl llitioa was blazed into darkest Af rica by obo of your calling, and todav tbe blctaed gospel of poaee and good will to men is being carried into the heart of Heathendom by Christian do torn whase hoaliag efforts make possi We the good work of their co-laborers in tbe cause of Christ. Every land and all time bid yoa eorae. Prosperity wants relief from the sickness of it's Jxrl.s; poverty from the 'ills of itr laek of aeotositios; poaae from tho evils of plenty, and war from its wounds. Tho wonderful progress of rocent years in the pruetiee of medicine and tho skill of surgery has taken away raiieh of the aid time dread and hor ror of tho doctor's coming. Tho tor tures of surgery have been relieved in largo degree by the use of anaesthoties and the heroic doses of the old saddle bag doctors nre succeeded by tho more palatable and effective prescriptions of tho modorn physician and druggist. Hronil-mindcdmoss of the profession in. soarohing for truth has reached beyond the narrow confines of any one partic ular school or cult of modieino, and gleanod tho good from many sources to tho honor of the profession and th welfare of humanity. This work is go ing on and every day blngs new ideas new thoughts, new remedies and great er good to mankind by the thoughtful and persistent research of your mem bers. It is a progressive calling, open ing wide tho avenues of improvement and ever urging to better .ways and means, its enterprising followers," Tho duties of a doctor are var.ous and trying, and tax his every faculty, from physical strength to mental and moral fiber. When the business world has worn itself to sleep, tho midnight pfcr-ician from the comforts of ms home tJ the succor and relief of the ;.trPeA His social and family pleases are subject to the demands 0 dutv, and even sweethearts and wives must bear some of the burdens t of the doctor lover and husband. Thus jou see your pathway will not be one of roses,' but rich rewards will follow Perhaps not always in money; but, bet ter still, in the blessings of those whe Jove and honor you. Tho knowledge of a good deed done," of a needed moth er wrested from tho portals of the ?rsve and restored in health and trench to her little ones oftimes proves a greater reward than 'much ml. I do not mean by this to say. tbtt your work should be a labor of love aloae'. Far from it. Suffering humanity u, not all confined to the poor. For, tunately for your profession there are those who can and should pay their ,ictor, but let your charges be rea onable for the service performed and see that you collect them. You cannot live upon charity and succeed in your profession. You will need money for books, for instruments and other pro fcssional appliances, for your home and for your loved ones; and it is a fine thing to have on many occasions, es pecially on rainy days and when we grow old, for although we may never grow old in Oregon, wo do have rainy d3VS. The world will demand of you more than professional skill and attention to duty. It always has loved and always will love a smiling face, a happy, hope ful temperament. Cultivate them. You will need them all tho way along. In fact, "The thing that goes the farthest to ward making life worth while, That costs the least and does the most is just a. pleasant 6mile. A smile that bubbles from the heart and loves its fellow man, Will drive away the clouds of gloom and coar the sun again. "It pays the highest interest, for it is only lent, Its worth a million, dollars and it doesn't cost a cent. "There is no room for sadness when you see a pleasant smile, It always has the same good luck, it'i never out of style; It nerves us on to try again when fail ure makes us blue, The dimple of encouragement js good for me and you. "So s-milo away, folks always know what by a smile is meant, It's worth a million dollars and it doesn't cost a cent." I have spoken of character as being one of the essentials in tho physician but character can only be preserved by proper habits and you will pardon me if I digress to fay that the world has pased the stage when tho dissipated man is regarded as tho smart man of the community when sober. Physical strength, mental power and moral sta mina are all undermined and destroyed by intomperance and dissipation, and good character soon lost. Tho, true physician over seeks to preserve and strengthen tho physical, mental and moral forcos of Lis patients, and must do so by example as well as by pres oription. No. one oomes in closer con taot with'the sacred circles of our homos than tho family physician, and you owe it to yourselves, to your homes and loved ouos, to your profession and to tho onuo of humanity, nover tc cross tho 6acred threshold o a home whoso family secrets arc entrusted to your care and whero the blessedi state of motherhood should exist, save ir honor and sobriety. Many and eubtlq are tho remedies you will doubtless use; all God-givon, but too many man-made I am not a physician nor the son of p physician, but I have been a patient and lot mo give to you three remedies nil abundant in quantity, splendid ir quality nnd reasonable In price, once given mo by a worthy member of your profession. Your druggist doesn't keep fhem in stock, but nature's storehouse is full of them, and tho law guardi their purity with a jealous band. They aro the universal remedies, God-made and God-given, light, water and air Use freely and often. If in this brief address, I, as ? member of a profession to which the best years of my life have been given nmi to which I hope to devote my re ruaining years, have said aught tha, will assist you in the high, calling you have chosen, I shall feel my effort not In valn. lint it is not the efforts of others that will lead you to success You must win your own way. Genius has been defined) as infinite capacity for hard work. Hay you all possess It. In closing, lot me say that success STOP, WOMAN! AND CONSIDER TrlEALIy IMPORTANT FACT CAll CHICHtSTCN'S CNfiLISM !3iWBSYAfcBJA r..i''iyn. LuukUtWKHH t cMiuiuMnars ncLbH mmm u n iwi i, wul ' That in address ing Mrs. Pink ham you are con fiding your private Ml to a, woman a woman whose expert' ence with women's ' dis eases covers a great many years. Mrs. Pinkbam ia tho daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkhani, and for many years nnderherdirection, and since her de cease, shehas been advising sick wo men free of charge. Manv women suffer In silence and drift along from bad to worse, knowing full well that they ought to have immediate assist ance, but a natural modesty impels them to shrink from exposing them selves to the questions and probable examinations of even their family physician. It is unnecessary. Without money or price you can consult a -woman whose knowledge from actual ex perience is great. Mrs. PlBkham'fl Standing Invitation. Women suffering from any form of female weaknessare Invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkhani, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman ; thus has been established the eternal confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and tbe women of America which has never been broken. Out of the vast volume of experience which she has to draw from, it is more than possible that she has gained tho very knowledge that will help your case. She asks nothing in return except your good-will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. If you are ill, don't hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink ham. Lynn. Mass., for special advice. When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health so many women, you cannot-well say, without trying it, ' I do not believe it will help me.", should not be measured by the effect of the world upon us, but by our effort upon tho world. The future lies before givo to tho world your best efforts and receive your just reward, remembering ever, "We aro living, we are dwelling In a grands and awful time; In an age on ages telling, To be living is sublime." III! Gold Dust Flour Made by THE SIDNEY POW ER COMPANY, Sidney, Ore gon. Made for family use. Axk yoar grocer for it Bran and nhorts always on hand. i P. B. Wallace ! . AGENT wtt8waaaBa Steamers Pomona and Altona leave for Portland Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 10 a. m. Tuesday, Thurs day and Saturday at 9 a. m. Leave for Corvallis Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday about 6:30 p. m. For Albany daily except Sunday about 6:30 p. m. M.P.Baldwin, Agt Patronise Yoar Home In dustries and keep yoar mon ey at home. . Not a new business, but the old black smith, wagon and paint shop of Jacob k Arthur very much enlarged. We xe prepared to do all kinds of fancy paint ing, sign painting and buggy, carriage and wagon painting; repainting and zf pairing furniture and musical instru ments. A first-class painter employed. Light and heavy wagons and baggie oa hand and made to order. oiY. sailed for it any part of the city-Jwl returned free of ekargbyr.W. Johns er William Cross. JACOB & ABTHUB. Phone 1483 litis. 2226 N. Treat St. -22-tf Proper food win htbtj iu onying voa hJ u - itAFA tllM !. It 1 -"' s we rtjssU tn npt n- '!.. . 1 SOnable nricA. "1 Baker, Lawrence ij onccessors to Harrittti Tell Y GmM That you want the m der that he haj-tluh Salem that put up ia jars, and he will gire j Eppley's Perl Baking hi Which is guaranteed to be wholesome. It does iti tai can be depended on. Gxj use it. INSIST ON GETTIK! i ii mi i " iniMaffl When You Greets Your Best Girl You should alway be J j and well dressed lid u'i J immaculate ia iti scvj l exquisite fiaisL foumlfllj way constantly, ndto! J you have it Uuadrie4ft! J? SALEM STEAM LIDS' Colonel. J. Otorteid, Ps Dorus D. Olmsteia, xf. Phone 1U$7K.W a, mJLt DON'J ""mil T.TTCK When vou buy lambfc . ...-.. w voa wuj- a eeriaiui,' - I L 1...ntir on ths uc." '""" . "ff.rf to . prices you ---- fail to get our ow - near S. P. UeP01- iT. 1 Screen Dm pOOdMl' ftor. t" H I have a of cedar screen etc. tt stack o! U Lawn and FieW ,.. .., pI. AUtwl g., --, wAJJ3 030 Ocert51' nl I IMMNG TlNNtfGj I A. L FRASER Cornke Work, Heating and Buikfing Wors Estimates "Mad and Work Giiar" Murphy B State St Salem, Or eg on HBpi a --- IS ra or. pain and suffering takes itfcUar. M mUm i Kzzmrt&r. sis i-a? - t -Si. .-JSn