sa r'rw DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1007. I-A IJ. L. STOCKTON THE OLD WHITE CORNER Rwsli! Rsh! Rushl a courteous manner. Tho public la certainly showing Its confidence In The pooplo of this vicinity know full well that wo can bo depended up,- on for reliable morchandiso at all times, no matter what others may do, no matter what inducements aro being hold out to" tho trading public, wo will and can moot tho prlcos, quality for quality. But everyone gets waited on in our methods of doing business. Elegant Silk Skfets Dtummets7 Samples Twonty-seven black taffota, silk skirts woro sont us by ono of our traveling friends especially for this salo. Tho prices aro less than manufacturers' cost, and you should by all means avail yourself of this opportunity. $14.00 valees fo $ 7.00 NATURE LOVER EXCORIATES ROOSEVELT Dr. Long Makes Some Quotations From Teddy's Books v 16.00 23.50 17.50 a n It ti it it 8.00 12.00 9.00 Hundreds of Assorted WAISTS Will Be On Sale Today C EACH 25 Whlto lawns and colored each. percales. Values 50c to $2.50 TfatfeWitli People Whom Yoa Know Dmiime?sr Sample Sale of Waists 150 lawn wniBts, worth from $1.50 to $2.00 each, woro loft by a travel ing man who wns homownrd bound YOUR CHOICE, $1.25. It does not roquAre sale artists to" hand out these 'CUfq-AlNT Ruffled Curtains at Half Price All good valuos,, fairly sparkling with truo worth. X 1JU- l3t IIT. wtDurwv TOWELS AND TOWELING REDUCED Soo our window display of special bargains In towols and towollng, G$ to 20 We Ate Positively En thusiastic Qvet Out Values And wo havo just reasons to bo so. Wo aro oncouraged by tho remarks of our customers, who aro unanimous In tho opinion that wo try to bo fair. FAIR every day in tho year. Wo never shirk our responsibility. Ladies' Suits Reduced Some Half Some One-third Some One-fourth Somo 115.00 to $26.00 values re duced to $5 OO each. A Colwldge House Doomed. Yet another qf London's historic houses Is doomed. This tlmo it is 71 Berners street, where Samuel Taylor Coleridge lived during tho period hen he was making what Leslie Ste phen has called "his last pathetical ly feeble attempt to mako a living SOMETHING NEW In Bifocal Lenses tt us show yon a neat, up-to-date tni for near and far-seeing. It U fully as good as the expeaslve klad, halt the eoct. Doa't throw away your broken $. Brlag them to us. We ea "Plicate aay part, with little ex- Chas. H. Hinges Gwdaa U QjiHWtii m Ceamim.,! twet, by lecturing and Journnllsm In Lon don." Tho house stands at tho Ox ford street end of Derners street, and is to be pulled down In tho course of tho next few weeks to glvo place to an extonslon of tho premises of a Arm of Oxford street drapers. Somo time ago tho London County Council placed a tablet on tho Iioubo, with tho Inscription recording tho fact that "Samuel Coleridge, Poet and Philosopher, Lived Hero," but tho tablet Is now hidden behind a board which annouces In staring letters the coming extension of tho drapery premises. Apart from tho famous house at tiro Grove, Hlghgate, where, in the Oilman household, hi spent tho last eighteen years of his life, this house on Berners street Is tko only one of Color Id go's numerous residences in London that now remains. Ills other dwelling places In tho-metropolis In cluded 42 Norfolk street, Strand; 21 Buckingham street, Straad; 348 Strand; 10 Kins street, Covent Gar des; 7 Portland place. Hammer Kith; a house oa Bridge street, Westminister, and lodgisgs la Pall Mali. All these have row beea re placed by were Modera bulldlags. There Is a slight doubt as to 7 Port land place, Hammersmith, but It ap pears to bo now Impossible to Identi fy this houso, and tho probabilities point to Its having boon pulled down. Colorldgo'a resldonco nt tho houso on Berners street covored tho greater part of tho years 1812 and 1813. Ho had previously boon lodging with his friend John Morgan, at Hammer smith, and when Morgan moved to Berners street, In April, 1812 Cole ridge went with him. Long before this tlmo Colerldgo had bocomo a confirmed victim of tho opium habit, but If a letter written from Berners street to his wife, under dato of Xpril 21, 1812, Is to bo trusted, ho was at this tlmo making an effort to give up tho drug. During his ri denco on Berners Btreet Colerldgo lectured on Greek mythology, Shake speare, poetry and other subjects at WllMs Rooms and the Surrey Insti tution. It was while he was Uvlsg on Berners street that his tragedy, "Kemorso," was, through the influ ence of Byron, produced at Drury Lane. Produced la January, 1813, the play raa for twenty Bights- a considerable success for these days. Pall Mall . t . i W'V mm "It ia an unwrltton law of tho cnnip." says Dr. Long, tho natural ist, in an intcrvlow in tho Now York Times, "that you may go after gnmo when you need It, but must spare tho animal that comes confidently to your own door, But Mr. Roosovolt makes his own laws. "Sitting on his vornndn, a door comes to drink nt tho river in front of him. Tho great huntsman re re eords: " 'Slipping stealthily Into tho houso I picked up my rlflo I held true, and as tho smoko cleared away tho doer lay struggling on tho "Too bad thnt deer did not know sands." tho heart of humanity nB well as Mr. Roosovolt knows tho heart of tho wild things. "Ho writes of two nntolepo: 'They stood stdo by sldo facing mo, mo tionless, unheeding tho crncka of tho rlflo.' Ho killed ono, nftor four shots, and thou took sovornl vnln phots nt tho mato bb It ran away. 'This door did not scorn sntlsflcd,' ho snys, 'but kept hnnglng around In tho distance, looking at ub.' A nnturo writer would say hero that tho deor wns looking for his lost mato; but that, of course, would bo a Ho. Ho was moroly nshnmed of not letting himself bo killed by so great a hunter. "Thoro wns ono Inst oik loft In tho country whorcin Mr. Roosovolt had his ranch In tho West. Ono day tho lonoly old follow, tho Inst of n noblo race, wandorod upon tho ranch. Ho bolongs to n gregarious trlbo, nnd ho probnbly felt thnt ho might (flnd a sort of companionship among tho cattle. 'Of courso,' wrltoa Mr. Rooso volt, 'Bitch n chnnco wns not to bo noglectod.' Ho grabbed hjs rlflo nnd ruBhcd eut: " 'My bullet struck too fnr bnck, hut mndo a dondly wound. Tho oik dlsnpponrcd In a wild, plunging gal lop. Wo followed tho bloody trail and found him dead In a thicket. No sportsman can ovor fool kecnor plonsuro and solf-sntisfnction than when ho walks up to a grand oik lying dend' In tho cool ehndo of tho evorgroon.' " To this Inst Bontlmont Mr. Long utters n distinct donlnl, addressed directly to his opponont In tho con cen con teoversy: "You nro mistaken, Mr. Roosovolt, profoundly, absolutely, hopolossly mistaken. Thorp was a bottor chnnco thnt you neglected when thnt lonoly old oik, tho last of his rnco, wnndor cd to your rnnch, scolng your cattle unmolested, and thinking, It niny ovon bo, in his dim, bruto wny, that hero wns a placo whoro ho might bo safo from bin enomlos. And thoro Is a kconor plonsuro than to walk up to a noblo nnlmnl dead In tho cool shndo of tho evorgroon, his glad llfo gone, his symmetry distorted In tho death struglo, his beautiful brown coat all clottod and blood stained, nnd his soft yc Blazing rapidly as If to hldo tho reproach that Is In thorn. Thore Is a greater ploauuro nnd wisdom in all this; but you will novor know what thoy nro. Tho bloody endings ovor which you gloat bring llttlu 'self-satisfaction' to a thoughtful man who hns seen tho last look In tho eyes of a stricken deer, and who remembors that ovon this small llfo has Its mystory, llko our own. You uro not a sportsman, though you havo slain your thou sands; you aro not a naturalist, though you havo measured hides and horns; you do not and you cannot understand 'tho henrts of tho wild things,' though you havo mado a' griovouB quantity of them bleed. It noeda no oyo-wltnoas ndr any affida vit to support this statemont. You havo yourself furnished nlf tho proof." SCHOOL BOARD MEETING. Chairman Crolsnn Shuts Leo nntl Ep Icy off From Committees. Tho now school board hold its first rogulnr mooting Monday night In tho high school building. Tho matter of improving nnd repairing tho buildings wna flrat taken up. Tho East school will rocolvo two coats of paint, Including ho roof. Tho ropalrs suggested In tho prin cipals' roports from tho dlfferont schools was loft to tho commltteo on ropalrs, which will mako out a re port as to tho necessary improve ments. Tho Bum of $281.05 wns voted for expenditures upon chemical and physical apparntus, ns suggested by tho sclenco teachers, and rocom mondod by Sttporintondont Powers. In Suporlntondont Powor'a report it wns requested thnthnother teach er bo employed in tho high school to nsslst in English and iriathomatlcs. Ho showed In his roporb thnt tho Sa lem high school toachorB woro now Instructing tvn avorago of 10 moro students each than tho teachors In nny other high school in tho etnto, and 20 moro thnn In somo of tho high schools. On motion of Dr. Eploy It wna de cided to omploy this additional tench or. During tho pnBt year thoro woro at lenst GO non-roaldonl pupils in tho high sohool, nnd, upon tho sugges tion of J. M. Powers nnd motion of Dr. Eploy, n tultlton feo of h per month was decided to bo placed up on nil non-rosldont pupils next yoar. This will holp to defray itho oxponsca of tho nddltlonnl toachor. Tho clork waa InBtructod to draw wnrrnnts to pay $1.60 onch for tho services of tho Judges and clorks of tho oloctlou. Principal H. T. Bolt, of tho North Yamhill school, who was oloctod principal of tho Lincoln school, has rocontly Bont In hit resignation, nnd a now man will havo to bo found for tho place. When It camo to announcing tho standing commlttootr, Chnlrmnn Crol snn plainly throw down tho gnuntlot and Ignorod tho old moinbors of tho board, by giving tho loading chair manships to tho now momborB. Thla 1b In lino with tho methods of tho would-bo political boBs, for ho Ig nores all procedont nnd courtesy to olnp tho old momborB In tho faco. He probnbly expects to advlao tho now members in their dutlos, and thus bo tho wholo thing. Tho quos tlon now la, will tho now mombora bo forced Into lino by this high handed species of flnttory nnd by a man who hns Involved tho school dls trlct In a lawBiilt in lotting commit contracts to his pots ovor tho bonds of tho wholo board. ' o OREGON v MILITIA TO CAMP Oregon's National Guard will oc cupy flvo dlfferont camps at this .year's encampmqnt. Final orders, distributing tho entir'e guard, were Issued yesterday from ,tho headquar ters of Adjutant-General Flnxer. Flvo picked companies go to Fort Stovens and three to Fort Columbia to particlpato in tho United States nrtlllery nnd coast dofonso maneuv ers. Pnrt of tho Third infantry goes to Scasldo, tho artlllory goes into a. neparato camp on tho coast, and the . rost of tho gttard -will havo its out ing near Roseburg. Tho disposition of troops, as an nounced by Gonoral Flnzcr, is as fol fel fol eows: Roseburg, July 20 to 29 Head qtiartors, First Soparato battalion, Compnnlos B and D of the Separate Battalion, Company G, Third Infan try and Scparato Companies E and F. Scasldo, AugiiBt C to 1-1 First battery of flohl artillery. This pe riod will bo davotod to artillery tar gob practlco. Fort Stovona, Wash., July G to 15 Companlos A, O and K, Third In fantry, and Companies A and C, Soparato battalion. Fort Columbia, Or., July G to IB Companies B and M, Third Infan try. Scasldo, July 8 to 1G Companies D, E, F, II, I and L, Third Infantry, Soparato Company Q and 'Hospital Corps. DIVORCE MILL GRINDS. Flvo Couples Whoso Hearts Rent n n Ten. Now Married In Wyoming. Word, has boon rocolved hero of tho marrlago of Gcorgo Vlesko, for merly of this city, and Miss Florence L. Pomeroy, of Fontenelle, Wyom ing, which took placo last Thurs day, Thoy will mako their homo In Portland. o Do Net Neglect the Children. At this seasoa of the year the first uaaatural looMsej of a child's trowels should have iamedlate attea tlea. The heel tblag that eaa be gtrea U ChanberlalR's Colic, Cfcelera aad Dtarrbeea Remedy fellewed by caster ell as directed with each, bet tVs ef the remedy. Fere sale by Dr. SUae's drug stare. A Fan WorkXd by Hot Air, Consul E. H. Donnlson writes thnt a Gorman firm hns recently Intro duced Into Bombny n portable fan, which Is propoilod by n hot alr-onglno nnd which Is dostlnod to havo n lnrgo Halo throughout Indln. Ho particu larizes as follews: Owing to tho Intonso heat which prevails In this country during most of tho yonr, fans of somo kind aro a nocoHslty to tho comfort of Euro peans, and their oftlcoH, shops and residences nro nil equipped with tho old-fashloncd swinging scroons known as "unkahs," which consist of a ploco of o!oth or matting strotch od ovor a rocaucular framo hung from tho collng and kept in motion by a servant nt tho ond of a cord. Whorovor electricity Is Introduced theso nro gonerrilly superseded by oloctrlc colling .fans Tho nntural flo'.U for tho hot-air englno fan would bo In localities whoro thoro Is no electric power, but It has boon found that It can compoto with tho oloctrlc fan in tho lattor's own field, owing to tho oxtromo cheapness of tin cost of Its running, which Is about one-fifth of that of tho electric fan. Tho fan Is propojod by a hot-air englno, tho boat bolng gonornted by a Korosono lamp which hold about ono quart of oil, sufficient to keep tho fan running for ovor twenty- four hours. To tho lamp Is attached u small glass chimney, which fits In to a largor metal chlmnoy connected with tho engine. Upon the top of tho englno Is hung tho fan, similar in shnpo and size to tho ordinary elec tric fan, whoso speed Is governed by tho slzo of tho flame; that Is, to ro duco tho spoed tho Hanio Is turned down, and to Increaso it tho flanio is turnod up. Tho whole outfit weighs about thirty pounds, and sits upon a small stand, raising tho love of the fan proper to that of an ordinary desk. It Is ft-tted with handle, aad cka be easily moved to aay portion of tho room or house deeired. Judgo Galloway hold a special ss. slott of dopartmont No. 2 of circuit court last ovoning, and botween the hotira of 7:30 and 10 o'clock four mlsmatod couplos weJrp released from tholr matrimonial bonds, and In n fifth case, Peterson yb. Peterson, a docroo, which was agreed upon, waa prosontcd'to tho court. In the caso of Ida Hammond vs. Charles Hammond the plaintiff was glvon n docroo of diyprce on the grounds of desertion. Tho parties woro married in Jackson county, Or ogon, about ton yoara ago. There woro no children or proporty rights involved. Mrs. Martha McElroy was given a divorce from a6orgo H. McElroy on tho ground of cruelty, and also was glvon tho custody of tho thrco minor chlldron, ngod in, 0 'and 3 yoara. Tho plaintiff nnd dofondant had boon married ovor 20 years and four chlldrun w'oro born to tho union, throe of whom still survive In tho enso of John II. Bwlck vs. LUIlo M. 8wlck tho pjalntiff wa3 glv on a docroo on tho atatutory grounds of adultory, and was glvon the cus tody of tho llttlo 4-year-old daugh ter, Dolllo Swlck. Tho parties were roHldonts of WoHt Stayton. Cruolty and inhuman treatment woro itho grounds upon which Mrs. Nottlo Godfrey aocurod a divorce from John A. Godfrey. This is the caso which grow out of the trouble that tho partlos had in the Rose hoi yard last Septombor, at which time, Godfrey was arreutod and arraigned In Justlco Webstor'a court or the charge of wlfeboatlng, In tho dlvorco suit of Loo Peter son v. Rhoda Peterson a docree, which had boo agreed upon by the nttornoys, was subeilttod to the court. This Is tho case where a Norwegian was Induced to marry a girl hardlx In her teens in ordor to shlold other parties. Not fktgr. "He's a maa of liberal views." "As te hew?" "DttttrHiutes that freely." -Sx- caaafe. FftlrmoimtM Ixmk, ' In ono of tho City Loaguo games last night tho Woolon Mills woh by a small margin ovor tho Fair- mounts. It wns no walk-away for thom, and It was only on account C a couhlo of had thrown to first that thoy won. At tho boglnnliiK of tho third la niug tho scoro stood 1 to 0 in favor of tho Fairmounts. It was then that tho South Salem boys piled up th errors. Miller throw IiIkIi ta Ru. tnussou on first base, lettlsg Hateh, all tho way around for tholr first rua. Oa another wild ithrow from third to first Farmer west arowad to third, and another ma a who was ea first wont la. la the feurth, each. team got one more run, making the score 3 to 2 ia favor of the Woele Mills. It was a shut-out fo bath, sided la the fifth, ) fltaadiajc o the Teams. Team Wea. Lt 'P.O. Y, M. O. A. .... ...8 v. ..mi , T, K. W. M. .:,.., 1 fit Fatrmeuat . ... , ,1 jjs, MerchaaU x I V i '1 f,'l , " r ,A I 1