Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, October 16, 1906, Page 5, Image 5

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DAILY OAMTAL JOURNAL SAIiEM, OREGON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1000.
HELP
MAKE A
TICKET
1WW MfcW M
DIRECT
NOMINATING
PRIMARY
LET THE PEOPLE REGARDLESS OF
PARTY EXPRESS THEMSELVES
AND DOWN WITH SECRET
MANIPULATORS
i
Cravenette
Rain Coats
Let the People of Each Ward
Have Something
to Say
Citizens of All Parties Requested to
f
Register and Express a Choice for
Each Office to Bring Out Candi
dates At the Coming City Primary.
OFFICIAL NOTICE OF CITY PRIMARY NOMI
NATING ELECTION
.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ON SATURDAY, THE
3RD DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1000, AT THE POLLING PLACES
OP THE CITY OP SALEM, OREGON, A PRIMARY NOMINATING
ELECTION WILL BE HELD, AT WHICH THE REPUBLICAN
AND DEMOCRATIC PARTIES WILL CHOOSE THEIR CANDI
DATES FOR CITY OFFICERS, NAMELY:
(Pill In Your Choice.)'
FOR MAYOR
FOR MARSHAL ,
FOR RECORDER '. . . , '
FOR TREASURER
FOR ALDERMAN FOR SALEM NO 1, TO SUCCEED
F. W. STEUSLOFP
FOR ALDE'tMAN FOR SALE.M NO. 2, TO SUCCEED
C. A. RAKER Z
3 .S..1..V
ill
FOR ALDERMAN FOR SALEM NO. 3, TO SUCCEEIV
P. R. WALLACE ,. . .a.
$ is
FOR ALDERMAN FOR SALEM NO. 4, TO1 SUCCEED
J. C. GOODALE, JR
V
FOR ALDERMAN FOR SALEM NO. 5, TO SUCCEED
P. L. FRAZIER
FOR ALDERMAN FOR SALEM NO. 0, TO SUCCEED
E. C. CHURCHILL
TOIl AliDKHMAY FOR KAT.K.U 0. ft. TO SlimRIMl
J. N. SICAIFI
I
FOR ALDEKM.IN FOR SALEM NO. 7," TO SUCCEED ' '
L. W. ACIIESON .j :...Kl,.. '.JT;. . .".
WHICH WILL BE HELD AT 12 OTOLOGIC NOON AND WILL
CONTINUE UNTIL 7 O'CLOCK IX THE AFTERNOON OP SAID
DAY. ' ,
NAME OF VOTER
WARD
EACH VOTER IS REQUESTED TO FILL OUT HIS CHOICE
FOR CITY CANDIDATES AND AN ALDER.MAX FOR HIS WARD
AND GET HIS NEIGHBOR TO DO THE SA.ME. IP YOU DE
SIRE GOOD CITY GOVERNMENT DO NOT LEAVE THE SE
LECTION OP A TICKET TO THE BOSSES, IN THIS WAY
FIRST CLASS MEN CAN BE BROUGHT OUT FOR EVERY OF
FICE. LET US HAVE A GENERAL EXPRESSION OF CITI
ZENS AND THE RESULT WILL BE SLIDE PUBLIC FROM DAY
TO DAY. NAMES OP PERSONS CASTING THESE BALLOTS
WILL NOT BE MADE PUBLIC. IT "WILL BE AN ABSOLUTE
LY SECRET BALLOT TO ASCERTAIN THE WILL OP THE
PEOPLE AS TO WHO THEIR CANDIDATES SHALL BE.
MAIL, OR SEND, OR LEAVE YOUR NOMINATING BALLOT
AT THE JOURNAL OFFICE TO BE PLACED IN THE BIG PUB
LIC BALLOT BOX.
See the People nominating ticket
(or city election on page flvo of thla
paper. Read It; study your local
needs and All It out to suit your
Ideas. Then cast the ticket In the
ballot box at The Journal office. The
results will bo mado public, and thus
every voter can express himself. At
tno regular primary election pre
pared tickets will bo supplied, and to
vote for any one not on the slate
will bo almost a waste of time, as in
many instances these tickets will not
bear the names of persons you want
to voto for. Express your cholco In
this popular ballot, nnd possibly It
will result in your cholco being
adopted.
PORTLAND'S JUICY SUPPLY.
; Embalmed Oysters One of the Lux
uries.
How would you like It If you went
into a first-class restaurant soma
night, nnd, after ordorlng largo
Eastern oysters, learn that the wait
er had served you with a number of
bivalves which had been preserved
In embalming fluid? Wouldn't it jar
you?
That's what you may expoct, ac
cording to Mrs. Sarah Ann Evans,
the city market Inspector. Slio said
this morning that last week sho
found a large quantity of Eastorn
oysters which she was certain had
been embalmed with a fluid similar
to tho preparation used by under
takers. "I was surprised to see such a
large quantity of Eastern oysters In
tho market, for It Is a difficult mat
ter to keep so many on hand at this
time of tho yenr," said she. "I
grow suspicious and took samples of
thorn home. When I cooked them
they certainly acted peculiar. I
may bo mistaken, but 1 am almost
certain that embalming fluid had
been used to preserve them for ship
ment. I took samples to Pure Food
Inspector Bailey, who 1b testing
them.
"This embnlmlng fluid contains
an acid, nnd is Bald to-bo poisonous,
especially If the. oysters wero enten
raw. The offect of tho poison Is
Boniowhnt modified If tho oysters are
cooked. If It Is discovered thnt tho
oysters contain embalming fluid,
steps will bo tuken to-provont tholr
salo."
Mrs. Evans nlso Bald alio knew
cold storage plants whoro undrawn
chickens had been kept In cold stor
age for nearly a your, and wero in
bad condition. When tho opportuno
tlmo came, sho said, she will give
out soino Interesting Information ro
gardlng cold-storago fowl. Telo-
grnm, Oct. 15.
f :&flf! Ill
1 'fmMMk e i lit
aiW riiAi.t iiuu Rm
The rainy season has begun. It Is
time for you to think of geltlui:
clothes to keep you. dry. Tltero N
nothing thnt will Klvo you more, com
fort nnd service- ami protect you from
the mlii than out CRAVENETTE
RAIN COATS.
Wo linvo Crnvenelto Fnbrlcs In tho
fnshlouablo wears and shades.
Prices $10 to $25
The Cravenette Hats - $3.00
Salem Woolen Mill Store
Copyright 196
The House of Kuppenhebaer
ANNOUNCEMENT
To our many friends and custemers:
Wo wish to announce that today
wo havo sold our grocery store to
the Molr Grocery Company, for whom
wo bespeak the same kind treatment
that has always beea shown us.
AVe take this means of thanking
you for your very liberal patronage
during the past five years.
We now intend to devote all our
tlm$ and energy to our confection
ery and bakery departments, and
hope to be ablo to serve you la a
more efficient manner than la the
Mist,
Yours truly,
FULLER ft DOUGLAS'
Confectioners m SUU St.
t
Rakers' TfeM 1ST
Grand Opera House
JOB! F. OOXBKAT, Mgr.
JU SDAY, OCTOBER 16
H. H. FRAZEE
Presents
THE BIG FUN SHOW
Uncle Josh Perkins
SINGERS, DANCERS AND C03IE
DIANS. AN EVERIiASING SUCCESS.
See Uncle. Josh at tho County Fair.
Watch for the big parade of the Hay-
, eecd'Sand.
Prteee 5c, 35c, 25c.
Tuesday at 9 a. aa.
Seat sale
The Rest Doctor.
Rev. B. C. Horton, Sulphur
Springs, Tex., writes, July 19, 1902:
"I havo used In my family Ballard's
Snow Liniment nnd Horehound Syr
up, and they havo proved certainly
satisfactory. Tho liniment Is the
best wo have ever used for head
ache and pains. The cougtat syrup
has boon our doctor for the last 8
years."
Bold byD. J. Fry's drug store.
Typotheta Election.
The local DeVlnno Association
has chosen the following officers for
tho ensuing year; President, N. D.
Elicit; secretary, J, I. Conger;
treasurer, F. Jaskoskl; auditor, Geo.
F. Rodgers.
Economic Waste in Transportation.
Tho result is that tho carrier, In
order to securo tho tonnngo, must
nccept it at a very low rato, desplto
tho length of the haul. This Is tho
familiar caso of the special or com
modity rato granted to build up
business In a dlstnnt market. Special
rates confessedly form three-fourths
of tho tonnngo of American railways,
as has already been said. Tho as
sumption is usually mado that such
traffic Is a gain to tho railways, Jus
tified on tho principle of Joint cost,
as already explained. But docs It
really hold good In our hypothetical
caso? There Is a gain of traffic In
both directions, to bo sure. But
must It not bo nccepted at so low a
rato that It falls perilously near tho
nctunl operating cost? It Is posslblo
that oven hero It mny add something
to tho carriers rovenuo, and thereby
lighten the Joint consts In other di
rections. But how about tho com
munity and tho shipping producers?
Are any moro goods sold? Porhap3
tho widened market may stlmulato
competition, unless that Is already
keen enough nmong local producers
jln each district by ltsolf. Tho not
result would seem to bo merely that
tho railroads' gain Is tho shippers'
lossv Thero Is no addition to, but
merely an exclmngo of plnco vnluos;
Both producers nro doing business nt
an abnormal dlstanco under mutual
ly disadvantageous)) circumstances.
It may bo said, perhaps, that the
situation will soon correct Itself. If
tho freight rntos reduce profits, encli
group of producers will tend to draw
back from tho distant Hold. This un
doubtedly hnppons In mnuy cases.
But tho Inlluenco of tho rnllway is
nntngonlsllc to such withdrawal. It
Is tho railway's business to wldon,
not to restrict, tho area of markets,
"Tho moro thoy scattor tho bettor It
1b for tho railroads." "Keop ovory
one In business somowhoro." And
If necessary to glvo n fillip to lan
guishing competition, do so by a con
cession in rates. Is thoro not danger
that with a host of eager freight so
licitors in tho field and equally nm
bltloiiB traffic managers In com
mand, a good thing may bo ovor
dono, to tho disadvantage of the rail
way, tho shippers nnd tho consuming
public? W. Z. Rlploy In Political
Science Quarterly.
Tapping Canadian Wheat Flt'Jds.
Those, too, who "think national
ly" seo In tho Qreat Northern's plans
only a mounco to tho wolf nro of tho
wholo country. Tho first danger,
which has already boon voiced by
sumo members of tho Canadian rail
road commlBlson, thrcatons our min
ing lndustryfl for tho building of ti
Unltod States lino In Canndn will ro
now tho demands of tho Mlnnonpollo
and Duluth millers for tho frco en
try of Manitoba flour Into tho repub
lic, or, nt lonst, a robato on all hard
Canadian grain mixed with softer
American grades for tho European
market. Tho Dominion, of course,
can In this caso protect Its own In
dustries by Imposing nn export duty
on whont. Tho socond dangor con
cerns our carrying trndo on tho
Great Lakos, for as soon ns tho Great
Northern pntors Into competition
with tho Canadian Pacific nnd tho
Canadian Northorn It will havo to
roduco Its present grain rntos 15
conts a hundredweight botwoon
North Dakota and Duluth to 10 conts
a hundredweight tho rnto llxod by
tho Mnnltobn. govornmont botwoon
Winnipeg and Port Arthur.
Then, naturally, tho Grent North
orn will enrry nil Its freight bound
for Lnko Superior through by Its
own lino to Duluth. Hero, ngnln,
Canada holds tho koy to tho situa
tion, nnd can, If she Ween, divert
tho grnln trado from Buffalo to Mon
treal. To quote from Mr. Hill him
self, tho Domlulon could build tho
much-discussed Georgian buy cnnal
through Lako'Slmcoo to Toronto nt
a cost of from ?G0, 000,000 to ?!".&,
000,000. This waterwny, ns pro
posed, would admit ships drawing 21
Moro Laborers AVanted.
This Is tho tttlo of an editorial In
tho Christian Advocnto of this city,
tho official orgnn of California Meth
odism. Discussing tho Industrial sit
uation tho odltor, Dr. Bovard, says
under dnte o'f Octobor 4th:
"Tho fact romalns that labor and
materials are scarce That being
tho case, undor nil tho p'rluclplos of
economics tho prlcos for thoso com
modities will naturally bo corre
spondingly high. In nil thoso Indus
trial processes nn unknown and un
expected factor lurks. San Fran
cisco will bo rebuilt. That is ,o
prophecy; It Is simply lnerjtable.'lt
Is no exaggeration to Bay that tho
rebuilding of Snn Francisco Is far
moro difficult that tho building of
tho Panama cannl. In fact, tho re
moving of tho debris in probably
equal to tha ontlro construction of
thu Panama Cannl. What Is nocdod
Is fifty thousand lnborors nnd ma
terials sufficient to reconstruct the
city. Labor Is scarco In nil parts of
of tho country. Modorn nppllnncos
nro so much moro adequato, and effi
cient thnt ton yonrs nro now crowd
od Into one. Thnt is not nn exagger
ation. Tho modorn machinery will
onnblo San Francisco to mnko a
hundred years of progress In tun
years. Tho wise mon should tnko
Into account tho 'unexpected It
will Hiiroly happen." Snn Krnnclsco
Progress.
Tho Royal Month and tho Royal DIs.
rasV.
Sudden changes of weather are
especially trying and probably to
none more bo than to tho scrofulpus
and consumptive. Tho progress of
scrofula during a normal October Is
commonly great. Wo never think of
scrofula Its bunches; cutaneous
eruptions, and wasting of the bodily
substance without thinking of the
great good many sufferers from It
have derived from Hood's Sarsapa
rllla, wfcote radical aad permanent
cures of this one disease are enough
to make It the most famous medicine
In the world. There Is probably not
a city or town where Hood's Bars
parllla baa not proved IU merit In
more homes than one, In arresting
and completely eradicates scrofula.
which Is almost as serloai and as
much to be feared as Us near rela
tive, etftsamiittoBr
Cures Winter Cough. '
J. 13. Oovor, 101 N. Main St., Otta
wa, Kan., writes: "Evory fall It Jins
boon my wife's troublo to patch a
sovuro cold, and thoroforo to cough
nil winter long. Last fall I got nor
feet of water, nnd would mnko tho a bottlo of Horohound Syrup. She
water touto betwoou Montronl and, used It and has been nblo to sloop
Chicago or Duluth 1C miles shotor soundly nil night long. Whonovor
than the present routo botwoon thosu tho cough troubles hor, two or throe
Chicago or Duluth 15 mllos shorter doses stops tho cough, and sho la
carrying 400,000 bushols, or 12,000 .ablo to bo up and well," 25c, EOo
tons, could no the wholo dhitancojnnd 11,00.
without lightering, and could, thoro-. Sold by D. J. Fry's drug store,
foro, nfford to carry grain nt 3 conts .Money Plenty, JIiihIiii'nh HrUk.
a bushel, or 112,000 a cargo each This heading Is from tho Los
trip. Thus, nil United 8tntes grain Angoles TlmcH, which snya:
raised north or Kansas City would Tho banks of Sun Francisco novor
go by way of Montronl. But tho before had bo much money It tholr
most Insurmountable difficulty con-.vmiltH ns thoy havo today. Tho In
cons tho winter traffic, for, aftor torruptlons and difficulties oxporl
tho closo of navigation, all frolght onced In rebuilding tho city make u
cnrrlod by tho Great Northorn bourid comparatively small domand for
Court Notes.
At yestorday's session of depart
ment No. 1 of the circuit court Judgo
Burnett made tho following docket
entries:
R. L. Sabln against R. II. Dakln,
action for money; Judgment fori
plaintiff with order to sell attached
property,
Allco Cole Pressler against Oscar
Colo, administrator of the Levi Bart
mess estate, motion for ordor on
former attorney to pay money; on
motion of defendant order U Issued
directed to W. H. and Webster
Holmes, attorneys of this court, re
quiring them on or beforo October
29th to pay to defendant. $82, 50 or
show causo why they should not be
punished for contempt and that this
order with defendant's motion and
affidavit In support thereof bo served
on said attorneys and each of them
on or before October 18th.
for Kuropo would cortalnly bo sont
out via Now York, as that port is
500 miles nearer tho western grain
fields than Is Halifax or St. Johns,
nnd, compared with tho consequent
saving of rail haul, tho shorter
ocean trip from a Canadian port
would recelvo but slight considera
tion from shippers. Tho tho eastorn
sections of both tho Canadian Pa-
money. Ono San Francisco bunk Is
reported to havo $12,000,000 In
Now York loaned out to correspond
ent banks. Of course this money Is
subject to call and can bo returned
to San Francisco in loss than a week
If there Is any employment to be
found for It thoro.
Tho business of tho cloarlng-
houso of San Francisco shows cm-
clflo and tho Grand Trunk Pacific phatlcally this financial condition,
Wood PoIsoiiIbk
Results from chronic constipation,
which Js quickly cured by Dr. King's
New Life Pills. They remove all
poUonlous germs from the system
aad Jnfuio now life aad rigor; cure
soar stomach, nausea, headache, dl
ztaees aad colic, without grlflag or
discomfort, 25c Guraatwd by J.
O. PiT3rrdriifitre.
would suffer severely as would also
tho Canadian Atlantic fleet. Corre
spondence Now York Post.
It Is said that thoro are at tho
present tlmo considerably ovor 700
permanent buildings under construc-
flnn In itin rttv. Mriut tit Himii urn
Register Early, nlmnlv n that tlitn ivhM Mia rttir.
"Please register early and poIdjng of tno (lqurg j K0,nK on, Actusi
tho rush" Is tho admonition that building operations havo scarcely
City Recordor Moores gives to tho.Kun. Tho Inliow of monoy con
voters of tho city. To assist all In "M ot a "fV"0' Tho r,f ea
the matter of registration tho office tttt,oraont ,by t.o national
.in i . .. ...i i. , i...-'nh on Septombor 4th showed an
will bo open during tho noon hour,, , . ,. . .
lllklUHBU Ul IllUiriUUItl UVU4I vt, l
tnost 19,500,000 ovor tho record at
tho tlmo ot tho provJous call, June
18 th.
and until 7:30 In tho evening, be
ginning Monday, October 29th, The
books will closo at C p. m. Novem
ber 2d.
A Badly Burned fllrl.
or boy, man or woman, Is quickly
out of pain it Uucklln's Aralca.
Salvo la applied promptly. O. J
Cure Clillbi aad Fever,
O. W. Wirt, Nacogdoches, Texas,
savs: "His dauehter has chills and
fever for three years; he could not j Welch, of Tekoneha, Mich,, says: "I
find anything that wpuld help her use it In my family for cuts, sores
till he used Herblae. His wife will. and all skin injuries, aad And It per
aot keep house without It, aad eaa-.fect." Quickest pile cure known.
aot say too much for IU" 50e,
Seld" by D. J. Fry' drug tef t.
Best healing salve wade,
C, Perr' drugstore.
2Jc at 3