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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1908)
,1 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, AVEDXKSnAV, FEBItrARY 10, 1008. WHO REALLY KNOW PEOPLE EL . Mrs. Emma F.Mnmford,NoTf I MlSfeN. JOWs Court, Salt Lake City, flesitfltftev I 000 rilBHHHBiKSV ' by Retting my fooUvot. rUB ! .jfliEHlHBfel ' WSWJ iiSmlmaKBmfcmX : 8tlfr nmi sor -ltu B novo ; JIIIHpHBKBLHRI f i sB mWKS9KWSKBSBw cold whlch 1,n(1 settled an ovor HHHiBffinrsliv PC t Hi .MBBBjiffl8snBBBBBBBxWV :. i k.i.. mi.1.1 HHHIbBbSkK'JHh fiMM?MmlEr v'iHIJHH'- A rUBh to mrad, causing dizzi- HiHHnBISk fflMmwWm!' -9HVm ;nesa and blinding headaches. - sHLJHHHBllfi riffaraMMBBP KBS- v A ' "Ab BOOn BS 1cruna to- ' HHBBHbjh WKflHP :' -:i:MlH 'i: :A ! conimonded to mo I decided to ! BfcPHflHHMHHHHHV J i oHnHP': x - 4H ' glvo u a trlal nd nra pioased kEilSESBB 1 IflnGOHP $iBP HHr':' V..: ; to Bay that It cured me after:; HHBM9MK HHK Sf 'MmmmBmi;W '. "I think you havo a splendid !! HR'HffiftlSH mHMKBPkJI ''" S'fevl ' S??.dlolno and gladly ondorao ' iPliKieKMIiSiW ' J fllMWBRM- - .:: MiiiliB,i. oPlo preferring solid medl-; KWlHW I WnUmSlk-- WmK0BB fl&W ol??B 8nld call for Poruna. HKr11 I jgnMhHV vte :X; sbbbHbW ..BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBW"JsbbbbbbbBBBBBBBBbV - - BBBBBBBBTBW sbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbP ibbbbm ::'v----HP' ySHHHHB' '' ' V'' 'sCkk wwwl " i Mi . 1 feSiiHBiPERUNnll HEAL MEDICINE , PSP5"s?i V v--f IJ:Wfr &3SHP' $$kHbMbbbbbbbbKsv . .-: Bk ill I p!0 "K BKBF''i "VK 111 J llfl lMI; ;W m vjwxssbbbbbEsIi PERUNA IS Air. Ooorgo W. Amory, 837 West 10th 8t., Now York I City, Now York, writes : "Somehow I havo alwavs had a m1tulloo nuratnstntlvor- I tlscd medlclno, but I want to mako ono decided oxcepltou in lavor of roruna. , I caught a cold last winter and 11 nottled In throat " and hood, dovoloplnc; a most porslstont oatarrh, which t Beomod to defy all medicines Until 1 tried Poruna. Boforo ; Ihadtiscd twolKtUoaIconsldoredmyolf ourod," ' ' ' -- ' 1 '9'f Those Who Slander Peruna Know Noth ing About It. M WKtSBSr : Vmory -I ! PEOPLE WHO USE IT ARE ONLY RELIABLE WITNESSES. Enthusiastic Testimonials This Page. THE on These Testimonials Were Given Out of Pure Gratitude For The Benefit Received From Pc-ru-na. &rrt if BfmMl Tubes. tWlfiR,BBlth,edltorof Tho I Emd, formerly principal of wimtron, Idaho, writoa : tMttm I laffercd with ca 4tth)itad brouchlsl tulc. iBUTiemedlti.butcouldund ijiliirottldglromsrollof. l-'I- KiWBrui. Three bottlos cured Jul well. I believe It will do tedwtultdldformo." Gained Thirty Pounds. Mrfl.AllcoJ.Ilordnor, 1311 Maplo Ave, IIurriHlmrg, Pa., writes: 'I havo found a euro in Poruna. I cannot recommend Poruna enough, and I alrio thank you for your kind attention to mu. I am as well ns could bo over alnoo I began tnkiug Peruna, and will recommend It toothers. I only weighed W pounds boforo taking Poruna; now 1 I weigh 125." Throat and llcaa. Mrs. L D. Hayes, 1M7 Druid Hill, Hal tlmoru, Md., writes: "Poruna is ono of tho best romodlos for grippe, cold In tho hoad, soro throat, nervous hondaohes, nud coughs that has ovor been discovered. Aftor tho unoof ono bottlo In my family I don't fool safo without Poruna In my house." , In a lator letter Mrs. Hay assay.? :'I anfnevor without a bdttle of Poruna In tho houHo. I find It good for most every complaint. 1 glvo tho children Poruna If thoy hnvo a ogjd und It always re lieves tlicin. I don't think I oould (lnd a bettor remedy to glvo my children." It Is so easy to crltlelzo things about which tho critic knows nothing. Take, for Instanoo, Poruna. Thoro aro plenty of people who aro willing tosay Peruna Is this and that, who never have tantod Poruna, and havo novor known anything about Its o (Toots upon tho human systom. Thoro aro pooplo who say, and proba b.ly bQllovo, that Peruna Is med an a bororago by somo pooplo. It would lM)thoeasloflt thing In tho world to show tho falsity of such a belief. Lot any ono who roads this go to tho drug storo and purehuso a bottlo of Poruna. If, after attempting to use It m i - as a boverago or to tako It In dooos suflloiont to produce anything like In toxlaatlon, If after putting it to this tost such a porson Is still of tho opinion that Poruna is a disguised alcoholic drink, ho will bo warranted In making such a statement. Praotlcally, Poruna cannot lo mo used. Any ono who knows anything about Poruna by personal use knows that Poruna Is a medlclno. Tho very label on tho bottle, giving tho prin cipal active Ingredients, furnlHhes in disputable proof that Poruna Is a modi al compound, Wo will bo willing to guarantee that no normal person can or will Ufo Poruna as a bovorago. If any ono thinks thU romedy cau bo no used ono trial will bo snnlolont to disabuse his mind. Poruna Is a groat and useful family medlclno. It Is used In' multitudes of homes. It has boinmio a standard rom ody for various potty allmonH In the) homo. J t Is especially useful for ollmatlo dlseasos. It la an oxoollent romedy for colds, It Is a wolMrlod rouiody for oa tarrh In all forms. Wo havo a multttudoof testimonial recommending It for colds, for bron chitis, for varloim affeollonn of the) respiratory and allmontary organs. This is well known to all who knotf Poruna by aotual oxporloHco. "Cures All Catarrhal DUeases." Mr. I, W. Klghtllngor, Cambridge, Nob., wrJtost "I don't havo any more) troublo lu my throat, and havo tyot had a hoadacho for four weeks. roruna la tho very iftodlotno for Ca tarrh. Thoro la no medlolno llko It l tho United States, for I kayo trlod a good many boforo using Poruna. I will kcop It In my houso to guard agalnHt oatarrh, aa It cure all catarrhal dlsoasos." ' is I1ISH AT r TIME hand nnd writo autograph lottora to their clients. A Chlongp girl, MIhs Rose Fritz, now holds tho world's championship for typewriting spood. Although the oxhlblu of now dovlcet I Practically all tho timber lu tho region at tho hondwators of thi Mississippi rlvor 1ms boon cut. Tho I vandalism Is accomplished and now I It will bo "(oast or famlno" of wator .for the Mississippi rlvor and tho n"d sywoms wore Intorostlng, tho i transportation Intorosts that hopo to 'ororaost position wns glvon to cou- navlgatolt. In tlmo tho rosorvation M8ts ,n reporting spoeonos in ?-mm-wlll be roforcsted but In tho mean- "to rolnygwhloh in campaign year time tho wibllc will nav hVnvllv for 800,n8 niproprlnt. Ah soon as tho I its failure to stop tho raid on the 8noech wn concluded tho typewritten :tlmbon. by which tho b!g plno lum- co'),oa of u woro dlatrlbutod In the ber Intorosts grew somo "swollen crowu, to me amazomeit or an wno MrN KI?ria(F fortunes." At tho time ho Morris ,,u not Knmv l rapmuy with wmon '"Ml llUUrVL.blll becamo offoctlvo. allowing tho court records uro mado overy day lu -- ! lo of' 9C por cent of tho standlns lho yoav' timber on tho Ohlnnowa Indian ros- LllTi:nTKUOFTIM.,orvatlon tnere was offored for sale TAX DODflKRS, 62C'760,000 feet, nnd tho actual cut 018 AND mavv.op to January 1 of this year waj ttERESTlNa THINGS 539,.001,908 feet, board measure. Q Till! rn.v. .. There Wna natlmntn1 in ha n tntn! nf I ",912.7GO,000 feet of timber on tho -- s reservation but the "lumbermen" In rS 19 Sttamarle ,h lTnitod States forest service nt imker of me. Chi- css ,ako has reported that all esti mates overran about 50 per cent: pretentious ostate nud more are gottlug thorn. In tho wooded qttloU m-nr Darlington, Ills., II. I. Miller, lirualilant nt tlm PlilfMiim X". I.'ilctnrli Illinois railroad, nnd Spoueor OtlH:nrt of world that Is founded on Steps havo bi-on takou by suporln tondonts of Chicago schools to use ns sMpplomontnry run dors n volumo of Orok myths which glvos also tho U'Tads .. " wjurm mo 0. " French ,, that January 1 thrm romninnri tn ii ... Population Is ,. cut only 275,000,000 feet, already The apparent vanishing Into thin nlr of $70,500,000 of stock certify catas In Chicago stock yards com panies ownod by J. Ogdon Armour, Louis F. Swift, Edward Morris and othor millionaire packors is an In played In this city. Presumably ody of tax ovaslon which Is now being playod in this olty.t Prosoumably tho stock Is In existence but whan tho personal proporty assessment lists for Chicago wero mado out, not as found for taxa- somewhat plquod the J,Hut.oB of W3ft" h0ld When tho lumberjacks comeione cont of U w 4 mcrtMlne IU h I O.lt Of tho woods this nrln nni.t,on- Thls 80rae !'lrBitA o... . !...i ... .. . ... Irnnntv nRRftRsnrfl. but tholr nnnov- w.. 7""e8 in 1571! -i mo logs aown the stream to . , . , rr".0o0nut5. n... fm. teraatlnrr fitnrn. !. ..! . "B,fai and was."v ,osl t8 "sponge," for the rains ad saows will not be held back by forests, to seep out slowly through te luinmir. LJBJ4, " il J Coasted t ik rjr, ' m..womaa and a Vixn.. 1 r B I v. . I WMhei 1. ,. Ilia. J . ." Ji . . naa latrefiAj k..... .. . anco heightened to genuine alarm when an Investigation In Now York failed to roveal the stock. New Jor sey taxos nothing but tho original is sue, so no help was found thero and now the assessors are wondering whether tho stock Jumpod Into the havo purchnsod 1C00 acres of land for $100,000 and will spend 1100, 000 upon home's of moro or less bu colic slmplolty. To inako a lako, 40 acres will be axcavatod und flooded. Stables, gargagos and housos with "thatohod roof offoots" will help In bringing tho sylvan solitudes up to a point of tho "happy naturalness" deslrad. What change has bean wrought In iftko or what happened to it anyway. irM thecfMT'c metnpas of tho United Meanwhile J. Ogden Armour, whose ". in...,. ,n,ioll9 uy tne u?e of shorthand nml nrsnnnl Hh . "n n o .,.-. "l'. . lVDU'rlai.n ..... u. 1... it. 1 I - m4 .t. 1 wa wa ouunii ui iuu wiuiiii-' fortune Is supposed to range any whora from $25,000,000 "Mlsfro uTJvJ'k 8 t0 b0th at the nat,onal up Irports to pay taxi on $40,000 ulu:l But inV!! I ' 8how ha,d ,n Chicago Inst, of aesowable property. A still moro lvtur.. .. "wel? an anntiol iit In tkln .1... I i,.. i . V!' 10,'4bu.hJi.! bUrs and N8W York" In thVhe rich Is found In the i ..M. .H WmM)1,w1 eonteets a young man covered , Green, presldeat of " t- i -- wiih uunors ana s nee is or Hiseulc '. w Hfei.whit n.o ...i.t. .. -. .... ... . i, tv '. h- whb iimrKs j7i nis uy- "eraoKer trust, " ?.. . mm Wn 1kr lvn.nn..ll. 1 .... ... I. . .. . . -o vi-onnmi h.i oy ma King a . nae a palatial ; J! ho I h. "0Br to record 'f iti : - .v " "Ht..Ufxioruu- V h avtk, ,Vfc.Twhta.M-: . - i.iki.- . -- '!t. 1, """S. A .. . NT r uZ 1 bl.v . - wnt v hour economy among case of A. W. the National company, tho so-called Mr. Green, who has a palatial homo on Bast Fiftieth That the monby il'irry hns proved a stimulus to ommlgrntlon, coloniza tion nnd aotlvo Invostmonts in land had mldwlntor corroboration In tho announcement hero that tho Cana dian Northern railway had sold a tract of 100,000 uore In tho Saskat chewan plains wost of Saskatoon, a cash transaction of practically a mil lion dollars. ThU land was pur chased by J. F. L.U88 of St. Paul for a colony of Germans from Iowa, Ne braska and Kansas who will removo in the spring to occupy a portion of the tract. Specific casos like this are numorous in this city which Is tho headquarters of many colonization movements In connootlon with this the romment was made by Davidson & McRae, general agents for tho Canadian Northoru. that Immigra tion to western Canada will bo heav ier this year than heretofore, the moaey pinch In tho United States having Increased investments In real estate In Canada as In the United State. It Is the exporionao of rail ways of Canada that tight money and unfavorablo Industrial condl tlon. stimulate orrimlgration to the new agricultural regions of western provinces. success of commoruo deponda upon tho rnllrnadH. You cannot oxpoct successfully to appeal to tho country when you continually, from cnprlco or whim or desire to gain somo ad- itioso inythh u kind of thing which vantage, and often without any ma- lllustratos how tho old" three H ' mot hod of oduontlon has boen modi fied. That Chicago, so long consid ered prosaic and commercial should tako u load in perpetuating tho folk lore that Is classic and in teaching somo knowledge of nrt along with the "threo It's," Is an Intorostlng oommontnry on this cosmopolitan city. Waltors or foreign birth In the rostaurants of this olty know moro about music and art than most na tive-born Americana do; Inborora from Austria and Gormnny aro fa miliar with those things which aro a olosod book to Amorloans, nnd the foreign-born population of Chicago, It should be romemborod, Is over G00.000. Tho Prangs of New York havo for yoars urged the value of art .knowlodgo as a means to divert and stlmuluto the minds of people away from Inevltnblo questions of tholr nnteo. terlnl increase In your rovontioa dis rupt nrrungemoutH which hnvo boon In offuct for years." This demand of tho shippers Is slgnltlcaut, coming ni It does on the heels of tho American Rnllwoy association' report that rallrond oqulpmont representing moro thnn $460,000,000 of capital Is now lying Idle on account of the In dustrial doprojslon. ' o . How It Hprcntlrf, Tho first packago of Dr. I.oon bardt's Uem-Rold that wns put out went to n small town In Nebraska. It cured a case of Plloa that was considered hopeloss. Tho nows spread and tho demand prompted Dr. J, 8. Loonhardt, of Lincoln, Nob., tho discoverer, to pro paro It for genornl use. Now It Is bo lug sent to all parts of tho world. It will oure anv cane of Piles. Sold for 1.00, with absolute guar- brood and butter and wages. It re mained for a wostorn od'icator, Chas. E. Mann, formerly prosldent of the Illinois State Toachors' association, to produco tho hook that was con sidered praotloal for publication by the Prungs and marks the adoption of education of this kind. or 2C42 words in half anjetrsat and Is the head of a company His nearoat competitor, a. with SS8.000.000 rfssoesable stock young woman, produced 2001 words, held In Chicago. Is stated to pay a personal tax or exaotly $28. SO. This la no more than Is paid every year f H won a prize of $100 In gold and trip to Europe, where he will com- la the world's championship by scores of men who are not la tho i '-'"tkVBL in i.rhnnnn Tn tannin,. .Ka .. . a. i-- . fi.iHi.. ...- !! n -w. i."i,muu wiw magnate uiaaa. wur.uiuiij- iia- ... . "w eonservatlsra has barred the tlon. as practiced In Chicago, 1 l .. Ete- 1 &U .L i. . w resit. ... . " "- " i..:!1Mmv..v l,,r irom 8rae of the big. wondorful social leveler. . - . "" v-.uanirg u j ,i T fl4d m,I.7 ' 'uo aoposuora sun oeing tur . ai. w"c.8Uhd with tha ..in . .u. Is a i4 jttJ7 i.twBut8rs- In many ot th8 law offlces r-,iea to. the p..f.nv. i ... ... . .. In emulation of the New York standard of country house and New BITTERS 'liKEaS,,8h barrl8ter8' w,tn Infinite port cottage, somo of the Chicago I aoor. still scrawl their briefs by millionaires already have some very ebbbbbmbJbsi Keep the t u in u c li htrong and active by an occasional . . dose of tlici ltittcrti and 4hus prevent Kirk Hadaclu, Heartburn, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Coldj. and Grippe. A movoment for co-operation bo tween the railroads and tho shippers of tho country as the only way to eolve the railroad problem hud Its origin last week in the offer of Chi cago shippers to meet the railroads part way. In return the railroads were told that they must cease think ing of their property as personal, private property and should refrain from doing things which affect tho rights of shipper without confer ence with them. II. C. Barlow, the executive director of the Chicago association of eornmorce. who voiced Uiaee views on behalf of the ship pers did not stand on ceremony In telling officers of tho western railroad syatoms what they would have to do "If tho railroads are to be savod from thoniBelves," he said, "and If commerce and the railroads aro to bo saved from tho mob, co-operation between the shippers and tho rail roads is necessary. The success of tho railroads depends moro upon commerce, infinitely moro, than the Dr. Loonhardt Co., Niagara Falls, N. Y., Proprietors. Sold by Dr. 8. O. 8tono. Salem. o- Hobby Questions, The laundry gets the ctothos each wook And brings thorn book again. My mamma says thoy manglo thorn, Why don't tho olothos oomplaln? St. Louis Times. Practical. "This man n it r hank linj done wonderful things with flowij' "Has bo brung vpalet dotfn to n nickel a bunch?" "No." "Thau wot good Is lit to a f1Ir wo's In luv?" Kansas City Journal. Th SwIm 4 Hi Flww Ob me! I saw a huge and loathsome sty, Wherein a drove of wallowing swine were barred, WIiojc banquet shocked the nostril and the eye; Then spoke a voice, "Behold Ute source of lard!" I fled, and saw a field that seemed at first Ono glistening mats of roses pure and white, With dewy buds 'mid dark green folUge nursed: And, as I lingered o'er the lovely sight. The susamer itrstxe, Uut cooled that fttflllfrllBSSfBBl flfTStllSB HSIBBBS1 ps IStnSJf Wubrsered, " aWsvold Use source of COTTOLSMfti" u. til m :-3 m i" t.' .'t j :i -I" 'A! ?'