DAILY CAP! TAT, JOUIlXAIi, SALKSr, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 1B08
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PURNITURE
For beautifying your home an inspection of our stock will fully
demonstrate the fact that rare discrimination has been exer
cised in selection. We have assembled collection f fi nc fur
nature and interior decorations unequalled in beauty, elegance
and distinctiveness-- collection from which the most elaborate
schemes of home decoration may be evolved.
Horse Show Special fj
A handsomely framed picture of Pha-
?kenc Hnecnc Qcimrhlrfc itcirxirr4 lira
window.
Regular $5.00 value,
Special today -
. $3.00
6oaCarts
Have nu a bnby in your
home? Then you nodd
a go-cnrt: Wo'vo got
such a handsome lino of
mts that you should
hau no troublo In got
tlm? sultod. Agents Tor
'ho celebrated Sturgevi
folding go-ourc.
m$ Off Q3L
slPelBR'!TflBi.
Beautiful
Portiers
In alt tlio latest crsu
tlous. All BhndoH ami
stylus In high cIusb do
signs nnd novolty stylos.
Vory excoptlonnl values
nnd n vory Inrgo variety
to choose from. Buy
now for tho price 1
rlglA.
VIJDOR PORCH SHADES
porch lltted with Vudor shades affords tho privacy
I an onolosod room with nil tho opon air freshnosa
ff a grape arbor. Vudor porch shades nro mado of thin
flat stripes of blroh wood flbro looaoly bound by strong
tin twin In a lookstlteh wenvo; thoy nro sUilnod In
soft, pleasing colors and will not fndo or oracle off.
CARPET SALE CONTINUED
Ovv'lng to' tho unprocecontod succoss or our enrpot
sale wo havo decided to contlnuo samo for ono wook
longor. Lndlos, do not fall to avail yoursolvos of this
exceptional offor a wo aro now Bhowlng valuos tlm.
you cannot afford to let pasi by. Tho prlcos will aston
ish you.
NOVDW
in
II
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uiltI ml mm. , Jm
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fF0Ri) VMvnitSITV
5fixmPaKe Eight )
Uir r members of the
" ao aappeufd -to be lu
- .ourt at the time, and
f Thee mon wore
r' and promptly r,x-
-vuiraeat iody waa as-
r TbrM mpn h. m.
P.I, mu UUU1U1IV
.7 "'"""l efora a hun-
r Aa aR I have inlri be
V D v Palo n0 did not
;!r ia or tk follow.
i0 M Dlt.ll.l Pniit tine
P1 1 -, fne ,f ..u ...i
m ir f,r was RKy.
-u marcaUiK through
' u pxpreeeed his
r '' it K.J .,..
' ' ,f R the
I a x ..f about tan mln-
Mr l a
.'roregmg went
Kl: '" lfc thftse
"tM ! 'vwy and
In a committee.
lUr I-. l11 int it
fftmK was
called at onco, and thawo hundred
and forty-seven men who wore Jn
tho parado signed n paper stating
that thoy wore equally blameworthy
wJth the twelvo men. Thoy stated
In a gontlomanly-like manner thai
they thought that the aotlon of the
committee was too severe and asked
for a reconsideration of tho cases of
tho twolve men, and further that. If
this ware Impossible, tho whole two
hundred and forty-two should , be
troated alike.
No Stanford man who signed tlii
petition Is vain onough to attaoh any
heroic significance to the not. They
simply wantod to seo justice doue.
and said so In a polite and dignified
manner; and as the statement of
Chairman Olark intimated that In
sults had boen offered, the petition
ended with a slncore apology for
anything objectlonablo that might
havo ooourrod. although tho signer
stated that thoy did not believe that
any insults had been offored.
Six hundred other Btudents who
attended the meeting signed another
.petition asking that the men be re
InBtatcd. Instead of meeting these
'statements In the manly way In
which they were offered, the com
mittee posted a notice saying that
they had prima facie evidence that
iwo hundred and forty-seven mnr
'men had participated in 4ho parade
'and that they would be examined
Another student body mooting
was called nnd, although 8tiudnt
sontlmont was at the boiling point,
ono thousand men voted unanimous
ly to sond In another apology to tho
committee, regrottlng each foatuio
of the parado In detail, namely, the
trespassing on Prof. Clark's prom
ises, the marching through the M
brary, and the gnthefTng In the Me
morial court. In this apology the
action of tho committee was not evon
mentioned, and no demand wm
made In rogard to the re-lnstntemeiit
of the 12 men. ThU oonervatle
action Is the moro remarkablo. whoii
it is considered that nearly ovory
prominent student In tho university
bad oxproesed hi wllHngnoea to
withdraw from the university and
give up his ontlro college career
rather than see the twelvo mon In
tho power of tho committee troalwi
with such unmorltod Injustice and
severity. The veteran ooaoh, Jamoa
P. Lannagan, In this meeting char
acterized tho aotlon of the commit
to as the worst thing that had over
happened In any American univer
sity. nut Chairman and his committee
Ignored this apology, stating that,
although they were glad to receive
it. It would have no effect upon their
action and Intimating that a dlrotA
apology without any demands or
reservations would be more to the
point,
Tho two hundrod and forty-soven
thereupon handed In a direct apol
ogy, without domaudo or reserva
tions, over their own individual dig
natures; previous to this the 13
men had alroady apologized, but
they, also, added their nnmert to the
apology of tho 247. Now I want to
ask you people who have been the
victims of Oretfonian, editorials,
"Dooj this look llko anarchy?" And
I aek you again, "What should you
oxpect from the committee nftor you
had done all this! After you had
apologized three dlfforont times fur
something which you folt called or
no apology In the first place? Would
you not expect the Committee to
nioi )oti half way at loast?" So did
wo.
Hut Chairman Clark Ignorod all
these apologia? absolutely. He gave
oach man an examination of two
minutes. All seniors and Juniors
who admitted that they woro in ne
.wholo parade were suspended, all
sophomores had ten hours, or cred
its, added to their requirements for
graduation, and all freshmen, fivv
hours. Those who wero In only prt
of the parade, and thore who pre
ferred to "crawl" at the last mo
ment by saying that they partici
pated only in a minor way, wero not
considered by tho committee.
Is it any wonder that tho best
men in the university declared that
I conditions under this committee
wero unbearable, and advocated a
general walkout? This policy, how
over, was voted down in tho last
studonb body meeting by a consld-
orablo majority, who brought forth
scomlnly conclusive nrgumonts that
tho students could do moro good for
their university by remaining and
fighting tho mnttcr out, Uian by
withdrawing, and I wish to sny r.t
this point, on behalf of a largo num
ber of bravo, unselfish follows who
havo boon accused of backing do vn,
that thoy aro not to be placed In the
same category with "crawlers," and
that U required moro courngo on
their part to remain undor tho pres
ent conditions than to withdraw
from tho university.
Another thing which prevented a
general oxodus was tho oleror man
ipulation by tho commlttco In dC
vldlng tho men Hi to classe; senior,
sophomore, cct., suspending somo
and fining other In university cred-
Ub. This proccedur' however un
fair, mado many of tho men who
woro not suspended willing ito re
main in tho unlvorslty and thaulc
Ing God for tho chnnct to work off
their conditions, Btnco by leaving ho
university these mon would loso not
only their wllolo Bomestors work,
but also tho additional houra thoy
woro fined.
Tho Doard of Trustees has said
that thcro Is no appeal from tho no
tion of tho commlttco olthor to ho
Procldeiib or to tho trustees. IVtt
thoy havo declared that, although
tho commlttco has acted within t.s
power, If, aftor examination, tho ac
tion of tho commlttoo was unjust,
tho constitution oC tho university
will be amended so as to prevent tho
committed' from acting unjustly
nguln.
I Bhall draw no conclusions to my
urgimonl8. Wvorythlng I havo
statod Is abBolutoly corroot, and If
tho roador cannot see that tho no
tion of Chairman Clark Is not only
unjust, but criminally outrugoous,
I havo nothing fnrthor to Rny. It I
not alone tho suspension of tho 41
upporolnssmon In Itsolf, nor yet the
filthy Biulrch with whloh Dr. Jordan
nnd his fanatical commlttoo have
blackened tho fair nnmo of Stanford
Tho studonUj can stand It, knowing
that thoy havo notod 'rightfully and
manfully and that thoy havo done
nothing for which thoy nro ashamed
Tho university can atnnd It, for It
will gindunlly rocovor from tho mire
of public opinion Into which tho
President and his nurrow-mlndol
tools havo plunged It. As Profes
sor Fnrrnud oald when, he huccm
fully plondod with 1000 InconHod
and righteously Indignant ntudonts
not to loavo their unlvorslty. but
mthor to submit to what thoy con
Bldorod Injustice "Plpnso Clod, Stan
ford shnll live forever."
Tho studonts ran stand It. and tl
unlvorslty onn stand It, Tint It in
not so with the parouts of many of
tho mon on whom this committee's
malicious axo hns fallen. Thoy Imvo
road what Dr. Jordan has said In
tho papors. They do not know his
I delta nor the mot hods ho has usod
to bring about this erlvls. nnd thoy
cannot bellovo that ho would .my
thing which ho suroly knows aro
not truo. Thoy road from colored
press dlnpntnhos nnd from nbuslvo,
mallKiinnt editorials llko thomj of
the Orogonlan, that a "moiiBtrois
demonstration upholding drunkou
ness" has occurred nt Stanford.
Thoy learn that tholr boij has par
ticipated In this monstrous, anarch
lotto parado, and thoy finally loom
that ho has been nusponded from
collogo.
They do not know tho facts, And
aro not In a position to know them.
Thoy do not know that thh purndc
was not seriously connected with
any plinxo of any drlklng problem,
thoy do not know that lr was ontere.i
Into In n spirit of harmless levity
and that It d'd nojinrm to anyone
JThoy do not know that a largo mini-
h or of the participants wero total
nbotnlnors and that nonw of tho par
ticipants wor "bons flglitors "
They do not know that tho mnjorty
of tho faculty mombors aro on tfav
Bldo of tho students, nor that a sll nt
edict has gom forth from ,th
"throne" forbidding any facitJr,
mombor to uphold tho causo of the
studonts on pain of losing his posi
tion. Thoy know nono of thes
things, and It will tnko a long tlw -to
txplaln them. I havo Scon letters
to men who woro In this parade
from pnronts who havo saved anJ
stinted and denied thomsolvos, that
their sonB might hnvo tho bonoflU
of n collogo educatlon; and tho un
called for and undeserved plctniro of
their blasted hopes and brolcea
hcartJ hns made my blood boll, an
I havo wondored what Juntlco It '
that allows such things to happen.
This it In that Is tho worst out
rago that Dr. Jordan and his under
lings hnvo perpotratod. I do not
doubt that Umo will soon rcraedr
their wholo disgraceful blundor, that
tho places of responsibility will eooa
bo filled with professors who aro
mon and not fanatics, and that tho
good nnmo of Stanford will bo quick
ly purgod from tho stain that has so
unnecessarily and unjustly fnllon
upon it. Yours slncoroly,
JAMES W. MOTT.
- o
REMEDY
EASILY
PREPARED
Is Especially Valued By tho Elderly
People Who Suffer
YourHotPipes
UHEN the hettr mn put
" hot plpti through th
house In place of stoves he
thought it was something
new. But nature put hot pipes
all through our bodies to keep
ut warm long, long ago.
Scott's Emulsion
send heat and rich nourbh
ment through the Mood ail
over tlte body. It dees its
work through the Meed. K
gives vigor ts the tksues sad
U a powfW flcsh-BWifetsr.
A well known authority Btatos
that thoro aro moro.casoH of kldnoy
troublo horo now than ovor before,
whllo recant roports show that Tnoro
pooplo succumb each year to omo
form of kldnoy dlsonso than any
othor cnu.
When thoro Is slcknoss, cxnmlnt)
tho urlno. HhoumntlBm Ib only a
symptom of kidney troublo. It Is
nothing moro or loss than oxcees.T
urlo acid In tho blood, which tho
slugglBh, Innctlvo kidneys havo fall
ol to sift out, loavlug It to decom
pose nnd Rnttlo about tho Joints and
muscles, causing Intonso suffering;
frequently resulting In doformlty;
often reaching tho heart when death
onttuoB.
Pains across tho back, froquont,
painful nnd suppressed urination nnd
othor oymptoms of wenk blnddor am
not tho only signs of kldnoy trouble;
many ensos of stomnah dlsoase,
headache, pain In tho honrt, Inactive
liver, etc., nro but BymptomB; tho
cnuso of which can bo trncod to
feoble, clogged kldnoyii.
Tho physlclnnn for tho InBuranco
companies always carefully oxamlno
and roport on tho condition of tho
urlno. It Is a qortnln slKn of sick
ness or health of tho human body.
A tost of tho urlno should bo mado
by every man and woman nt least
onco oach yoar. A nlmplo tCBt 1b to
void a flinnll quantity of urlno In a
bottlo or glass and lot It stirhd over
night; next morning. If thoro is a
reddish brick-dust sodlmont, or whlto
floeay eiibstnnae prosont, olthor con
sult Domu reputable physician or
tnko a good vogotnblo troatmont.
Tho following proscription la rocom
nionded highly In thoso onsen, nnd If
doslrnblo tho sufforor can mix It at
homo. Any good proscription phar
maoy has tho IngrodlonU, whloh nro
harmless and Inoxpenalvo: Com
pound Kurgon. ono ounce; Kllud Ex
tract Dnndollon. one-half ounce;
Compound Syrup Sartaparllla, throw
ounoos. Shake well nnd use In ten
spoonful doses aftor oach moal and
at bodtlmo. Where any of tho symp
toms enumerated ubovo nro present,
good reunite are suro to follow Im
mediately tho uso of this slmplo proscription
BlittMl'lM""
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P. B. Wallace !
AGENT j
.a t r " "i "'""' ""'
TO OWNERS
OF HORSES
The undorslgned la prepared Co
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Pair Qrouads, Or.
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