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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1906)
10 DAILY CASKa JOUBXAXs SAXHK, OBBOOK, SATTOPAY, MAY 19, 1906. Watch our Store NEXT IMIMIIIllHMIMIMHIMIMIMWIMIllMWi'IKll,lllllll'tI WEEK VALUE OF TAKING NOTES 1 MlllMitlllHIIMMIHIIHlllH""'l"11 ' A few weeks ago an advertisement appeared in a newspaper offering a re wartd of $23 for a pocketbook contain ing "a mass of notes of no uso to any i-r The painters have been working and we've been up set this week, but our new goods are arriving daily and we will be ready for next week in good shape. We want every woman in Salem and vicinity to visit us. We will try to make it worth while to come again. BRANSON & FISHER RINEMAN'S OLD STAND, State St Hatch Instead of Smokestack. The eteam schooner, a vessel whose build and habits aro peculiar to the Pacific, often goes to sea "with her load lino over her hutch.'" Which means that, after her hold) haa been crammed! with cargo, a deckload of lum ber is piled halfway up tho masts, so that her skipper puts out with the water washing green over his main ideck, and nn occasional comber frisking across bis battened hatches. Along tho har bor front of Seattle, Tuns the story of n, passenger who loped down to the wharf in a hurry to got aboard a de parting eteam schooner. II balanced himself on the stringpioce for an in stant, looked down at what little ho could seo of tho laden craft, and hove liis gripsack flown tho only opening in night. Ho was otout to dive aftor -it when a lounger on tho wharf sheuted: "Hi, therol Whoro do you think you're jumpia' tol That's tho smoke stack you tossed your baggage down." "T 11" gasped tho passonger. "I thought it was tho hatch!" Outing Mngazine. Exposure To cold draught xf air, to keen and cutting winds, sudden changes of the temperature, scanty clothing, undue exposuro of the throat and neck after publio speaking and 'singing, bring on coughs and colds. Ballard's Horohouud Syrup is the best euro. Mrs. A. Barr, Houston, Tex. writes, Jan. J, 1902: "One bottle of one but the owner." Tho reward grew, as time wwnt by, without tho discovery of tho much wiFbed book, from $25 to $100. Tho result of tho announcement! was never raado known'to the public It is known, however, to tho adver tiser's friendk ? X The gentleman who wanted the book back so badly was a popular playwright who is in tho habit of carrying a note book in which he makes jottings.-of little things ho chances to see and hear around him, and tho book, to a person unacquainted with tho purpose of its owner, must appear to any one who happened to peep into it the col lection of the greatest nonsense any Industrious maniac ever raked together. So Jt undoubtedly seemed tp.the person who chanced to finU it when the" play wrigHt dropped it from his pocket. It was returned to the address given in the advertisement with a scrap of paper on which was scribbled an un signed message, stating that tho; finder wanted no reward) and would be ashamed, indeed, to take one from a person who was so mentally afflicted as tho owner must be. In tho advertise ment the eminent playwright had given his real name, not tho one by which he is generally known to tho public, and without such a clew as his play name might havo afforded! to tho purpose of tho book, tho finder had) concluded that tho note taker was clearly mentally af flicted. A frierid of mine, who has just come back from Japan, where ho has been engaged1 in a military mission, tells me that over there tho notebook habit is common. Tho little, shrewd Japanese, while in conversation with you, has a frequent knack of jotting down a state meat you mako on a tablet bo carries with him. 2Sy friend described it as an embarrassing habit at first to one unaccustomed to it. You see," remarked a Japanese gentleman, who first, to his surprise, favored him in this manner, "what you have said is valuable. I have a good memory, but I may forget even to think of what you say if I do not make a note of it. Thank you very much." My fricndi found, afterwards that the ....... ..WU, .(uwu .v Ml 4l.i:iUUA.t j I something of an eccentric, had many Mon- Ono cannot "wriggle" out of imitators, and so far from conceiving them so easily. How often we wish we of note which will bo useful for every ono to make. It is the note of tho use ful hints as a guide to the conduct of life or the formation of character. "We com? across them continually, recognize their excellence and forget them. "Wis dom seems 60 cheap thai wo imagine ive can get it when wanted. ''Xow, my dear sir," said Henry Irving to a gentleman who had sought hU advice as ,to the 'best way to suc ceed in his profession, "I have given vou some useful hints. I will give you another. "When you get a useful hint don't forget It." But that is the ordinary way in which wo treat them lAro we not able to ge tsuch a lot of them that we dso not think any worth havingf Gladstone was a great man at notes, an 1 with his marvelous memory ho was able to recall in almost orery predica ment some saying which helped him to liht or to encouragement. He was an in tefatigable gafherer Of the wisdom of others for application to the affairs of the moment. In that respect he was much like the great Lord Lytton. "When a friend remarked to Lytten: "ily dear Lytton, what a wonderful ly quick brain you have got! On the spur of the moment you have given mo the best advice possible." Lytton in formed him, with a smile, that the ad vice wax a few hundred years old a quotation from a notebook. President Roosovelt some time ago advised young men to mako note each day to tho answer to the question, What havo I done this day to better myself? Ho declared that it required a I considerable amount of courage to per severe in tho practice honestly a man has so often to fill up tho day's record. "Nothing." It was just tho getting onnoyed with that disagreeable confes sion, he declared, that helped a man to the resolution to havo something else to record, and tho system did its ob servers an immense amount of good. It rendered shirking1 Uoing what one ought to do moro difficult. I havo not tho slightest doubt that he was right, and that tho Roosevelt "tip" as to how to succeed is a valu able one. Lawyers attach enormous importance to having agreements be tween persons set down in black and white. A gooii deal of virtuo attaches to having matters relating to oneself also witnessed in the same grim fash DO YOU CW Strawberries Thp.V will ho ntonrifitl n.a . -.., . ,,.- iicAi weeK and right for canning. Don't can anytWn.S Salem grown berries. " We were the first people in Salem lose, u you the famous , 1 Clark's Seedling And this year we will have a large supply of" . the best berries grown in this vicinity. We ' have contracted for a lotof Clark's Seedlings from a local grower. Both stores handle them. We can supply you with J if you need them. Roth & Gtah Up-to-date Gtocen j 4J0 State St, f 75 Common 1 1 -ovaaiBiaMannHHHHnHBHMMMHHH that you might think it ru'do of them Ballard's Horohound Syrup cured rao of to mako a note of your remarks, they a very bad couch. It is vrv ntiannt i-ormW). f, o , is ... t - rf j-.. HHV .vtwtuvu fc"U W,t i ftl bViULUliUUUi .11. to take." Sold by D. J. Fry. (SloaiVs Liniment ICaresIumfcagol Pcicn25POr&rL00. BmiiUm BlgEltBrt cf OATORlA. Iha Kiad Ytfn Hgra Ahwjs Bt &&C In Unusual Company. Sarah Homhardt, tho famous prima donna, was in Ashland en route south ward. The great French woman,' who at 02 years of nge is still "starring," traveled in her private car and her parts- composed the only passengers on tho third section of tho overland train, thin rest of tho train beine made un of f'.lrwll,.! M .... . .1 .. -iviiMimiii cjirw. ASmankl "m you did not say something worth their remembering you must bo a duffer! Few people nowadays keep notebooks in any systematic manner. I do not of course, refer to memoranda books of addresses and things of that kind, but notebooks in which to jot down acci dental chanco treasures which may be useful in tho conduct of life or of busi ness. Thb notebook of that kindi has "gone out," and it is not difficult to discover why it is. Wo think nowa days that wo havo always such heaps of knowledge at our elbow that it is not worth while to go to any trouble re specting it. It Is not every ono who wants to writ a play, but there is ono species could, A wise system of making notes means much in life. a ga - ,. I ., &"- & j hE3S tr jUiim I A Mountain of Gold Could not bring as much happiness to Mrs. Lucia Wilke of Caroline, Wis., as aid one 25c box of Bucklen'o Arnica Salve, when it completely cured a run ning sore on her leg, which had tortured hor 23 long years. Greatest antisoptic healer of piles, wounds and sores. 25 conta at J. O. Perry's drug store. Russla'B "Grand Remonstrance." From Wo-tminster in. 1641 to the winter palaco in 1900 is a far cry, but many readers of tho proposed address to tho czar, which was submitted to the douma by its committee on Tuesday andi printed in our news columns yes terday, have undoubtedly recognized in this great document nn echo of the Long Parliament'6 stern protest against tho effort of Charles I. tfc crusU English liberty. Tho British grievances wero mero shadows of Rus sia's wrongs, and yet -tho .Russian) Mb tho other, anxl yet th broad and all embracing dtemand in each case ia for a responsible ministerial government by officers accountable, noc to the throne, but to parliament, This being obtained, law and) liberty aro assuredl The likeness might easily be extended. Russia has not yt punished her -Straf-fords and) Lauds, but we remember their fate as wo read) tho solemn de mand of tho adUxcs for tho removal of the czar's councils of "the officials who separate tho emperor from his peo ple," and who havo "alid heavy af flictions upon tho land" and "covered it with suffering, with executions with out judicial sentence, with, violent out breaks, with shootings and imprison meat" Evidently Russia has in lex parliament Pyms and1 Hampdens, as well as Hydos and; Falklarids. England had to wait for tho revolu tion of 1688 to give her a responsible ministerial government. Russia may not win this great foundution of free gov ernment at once, but tho 6trugglo will not down until victory is achieved. Smaller demands may bo more easily obtained, but the fight for true parlia mentary government, with a responsible ministry as its executive, will not be appeased by minor concessions. SHORT ORECRSfkr REGULAR ME Both aro served to perfii popular prices )r A Good Dhstr tor ' White House Restdurti GEORGE RKKAjaJ Phone Main 1 MtttM A Positive srectseity. Having to lay upon my bod for 14 daya from a eoverely bruised leg, I only found relief whon I used a bottle of Ballard 'a Snow Liniment. I can cheerfully rscoihawnxl 'it as tho best modicino for bruises ever ea to the afflicted. It has now become a posl orals havo turned to British precedents tivo ltjr upon myself." for the model of their own grand ro-1 . Byraee, merchant, Dovcrsrille, When Buggy Buying Remember there is a price below whkh a good honest buggy cannot be built- iu m piivc wuvc YviHcn k is unnecessary to ero. Mover, Babcock, Stavcr Bee Line, many other reKabfe makes at prices that carry wkh them a SUWWK6C ui me wt vwhoc vawe tor them-I o I vestmaM obtainable, LWIS & Sta VPt4 Co t19',229' 237 Salem Branch, W CAREY, Manager I ut&efh monstrance. The world's debt ta the English patbmakwB in constitutional government was never more plainly ac knowlcdgor. Tho English parliament in 1641 had already sent Stafford to tho block and Laud) to the tower. Charles, untaught by theso warnings, rushed ahead to his fall, struggling for control of tho army and tho public purs, and bent on sup pressing religious dissent. Ho refused to trutt ministers whom parliament) could trust. In this crisis Pym and Hampden appealed to the nation. The grand remonstrance was prepared put through parliament, presented to the king and1 published to tho people. Alone with thte Magna Charter, tho petition of right and DUJ of rights, it must be studied by nil who would understand tho winning of English liberty. It fearlessly arraigned tho faithlosa king ror wa violations of law and pledges, Texaa. 25c, 50c and $L D. J. Fry. Cow Cultora in University Town. Therrt ia but ono cow In Eugont that understands tho Chinese language. This bovino is tho jroperty of Joseph Luckey. Regularly several times each day this animal ia led through the dength of South Pearl street at one end of a tether, whilo MH. Luckey 'a Chinese servant, "Deen," manipulates the other eadi of tho hemp. "Dees" keeps up a continuous stream of lastruetiona to tho cow, which ho couches in bis best and most easily understood Chi noae. Tho cow has learaed w&es the timo arrives for a discontinuance of reaching to tho roadbide for the juicy grass bunches. She recognizes this in tho higher pitch of voice and the fuller tone, assisted with an occasional tweak Sheet Musc We any M liarfi music, u 11 m U u J productiow tot Tutor, W or Edison. Talking Machines And don't forget IW musical irratrnmeats i ' guitars, mandolini, L. f. SAVAGE a .T Weac' 03d i 247 Commercial 8t, &J of the rope. The esac meanbm of the Oriler is bitAi MiDnVjAA Kt i tfia f 1.1a. !).. . . I .. - V. i i "'' " w an by those w4o meet them early "oem 'T v; '""Twwence arraiBed is the moraiss and toward eveaing George HL It denuded obediesee to law, securities for the adminastratioa of jwrtiee aad liberty of belief, ad alfeve all else, Bisitera responsible to parHa awat, esii esjoying its coafideace. The slsalarity of the Rattan eitu ktiesi is obous. The problem of ec Bfttioa dUTex is deUals fres those of PSMOBS It's too bad the cow cam't talk, for there is no telling what cosapfeiats sh aight wish to makte through her f aaiil iarity with the Chinese tengaage. This eow haa assoeiated m Iob? with "Deen" it is Awbtful whether she any I JEtJZS. loBger understaads the siaplest expres-l7 8 i JTZ' ! DR. HUM Wonderful CHWSE DOtj; WiB tret y i?fL and euro any diseeM w wiW "rn- Is tun !!$', . i l. ursd sf rTiBs Baaem, " - .. j fci people here, w"- for 20 r " ,Tj--i 3-.l. a1 With ..., eatarxh,th-.,Jj2Sf mstisB, etosweb, lir, - j m I SI I Dr.Ktna""', .ad femal trW. J, w ?!" t-T Prfess for ", Tt i, ae eee7 " If yea wsat it fr ,.-i-J n Hn ..M frK'ftJL jt Art ri sesrn s i u" mr OBT oni in Englieh.-Eugee Begiter. 'Ojw ?' M A r.aw. i&mmH. r. .-V.'."vu. mi.j