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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1910)
BIX DAILY CAPITAL JOCKXAL, SALEM, OREGON. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1910. 4 M AN AFTER ELECTIOfi VIEW. OF ROOSEVELT POLITICS One Paper Serves It Up in the Language of Artemus Ward's Epitaph on an Energetic Friend "He Undertook Too Much, and He Did It"--Newspapers Handle the Colonel as Though They Considered Hin Among the "Can't Come Backs" as a-Was. New York, Nov. 10. Comment ing on the result of the elections, the New York newspapers generally regard It as a rebuke to Theodora Ronaevelt and a death blow to. his ambition and bis new nationalism. The World Bays: "Theodore Roosevelt and new nationalism have gone down to their Waterloo. Mr. Roosevelt will not be the Republican candidate for president In 1912. When the World made Mr. Roose velt the Issue In this campaign, ho gaily accepted the challenge and spread himself over the political man from the Itocky Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean. lie elbowed Mr. Taft and the Republican administra tion aside while he conducted a sky rocket campaign for a third' term and his own political apotheosis. "Mr. Roosevelt has been speaking tor many weeks. Now the people have spoken and they have repudiat ed Rooeeveltlsin. And wherever Mr. Roosevelt has been Benton, he has been beaten by Republican votes. "Instantly a reaction set In, big with a threat of revolt, but the more he was protested with and opposed, the more headstrong and violent Mr. Roosevelt showed himself. He could brook no question of his Infallibility and bore himself as one whose word was necessarily a flat with the peo ple. The rudo awakonlng has now , come.. None' of Mr. Roosevelt's re flections today can bo more bitter than the perception that hla old sa gacity In divining the henrts of the people had failed htm so dlsatrous- iy. World Repeals Saying. "The World repeats now w'hnt It said time and time ngaln during the campaign. A Republican victory would have been a Roosevelt victory, and a Republican dofcat Is a Itoono velt defeat. When the Republican convention In 1912 looks for this . mysterious Moses whom Root has so eloquently described, It will not look In the dJroctlon of Oyster Buy." The nrooklyn Englo says: "Artemus Ward onco wrote an ep itaph on an Imaginary character, He undertook to do too much aud did It.' Mr. Rooaeve't undertook to do too much nnd did It, and the ef fort has for a ttmo at least undone him. The. result, education to othor men, should be so to the ex-TrosI dent. We are not sure that It will be. His disposition Is not docile Hla temperament Is with dlfllculty coaled. His ability to see, not In hi j stars, but In himself, the causes of dofeat and disappointment has, to be sure, not heretofore been tested, but the resentment or the man, even under hitherto unsuccessful opjHijI tlon, has created the belief that for the defoat which he has encountered tie will hold others responsible and hlmBolf quite free from blamo. Colonel Made Too Much, Of. r "Let Mm make no mistake us to the meaning of the verdict in thU state. In I ho up-HtateeoiuitleH tha drop of.Htlmson below Hughes' fig ures. Is thrico that of Dix below thi Chanler vote. Republican stayed at home. It was not disapproval Of belr party's candidate. Mr. Stlm on was rather above tliu average. They had no reason for tholr apa- ...... I : i All , patent inedlclnas cr medicines ad , ver tled la this paper are for sale at DR. STONE'S Drug Store The only cash drug store In Oregon, tM do one, and no one owes It; carries large atock; Its shelve, counters aud 'show cases are loaded with drugs, medicines, notions, toi let article, wines and liquors of all kinds for medicinal purpose. lr (Hone la a regular graduate In medi cine and has had many years of ex jmrlenoe In the practice. Consulta tions are free. Prescriptions art free, aud only regular price for med icine. Or. Stone cau be found at bis drug store, Salem, Or., from 7 til the morning uutll 9 at Bight thy, save that which Mr, Roosevelt' activities had afforded. "In this campaign It has been evi dent to all men that his energy far surpassed his sagacity. The Repub licans of New York have a profound dislike for his new Nationalism. With their quick intelligence, they say It Is but another name for n rapid and perilous augmentation of federal executive power, and bo made all too plain that his ambition hud reserved for his own hands the exorcise of that power." The Evening Post says: "We have no wish to rub salt Into any man's wounds, but it is plain In the cold light of the 'morning after that Mr. Roosevelt's course since hi return In June has been one lonf; series of blunders. On a supposition which his closest friends have sedu lously foBtered, - that his heart was fixed on the nomination for the pres ldency In 1912, It can only be said that he misread the situation utter ly, and acted like a man whos? famed political skill bad entirely de serted him. "His Initial error lay In a com plete misapprehension of the tempei of his countrymen. He seemed to be looking at It through an African mist or a London fog. It was amuz Ing that a man who had often shown that he had almost Intuitive know ledge of what the people wanted should have gone so completely astray. Colonel In Misled. "He wn probably misled by over zealous friends. They flocked to him at Oyster Ray, Informing him that the country was not only clam orous for his return to power, but was rluo for radicalism. Touring of the country followed, car-end har nngues, ostentatious Ignoring of tho president, nnd the mischievous Oaa wntomle speech. "This Is no partisan Democratic victory In the ordinary sense of that term. While it Is a defent for tho Taft administration and for the Re publican party, it is peculiarly tho defeat for Mr. Roosevelt and his 1912 ambitions. ' It was brought about also by hundreds of thousands of patriotic Republicans who still be Hove in the constitution of tho United States, who still uphold the supreme court and who will toloraio no third-term ambitions In any man whatever party nnme masks his pre tensions. It was brought about by the help of Republicans who wero dissatisfied with the record of tha Taft administration and tho Aldrlch Cannon revision of the tariff. ' The Times says: "To Theodora Roosevelt, tho dlsauter tliut has bo fallen his party and the sweeping character of 4ho Democratic victory, are In a large measure duo. As to day ho contemplates tho fearful wreck of hlB lately vast political state, as he sits him down to nuioo like other conquerors, on the fearful j ruin he bus wrought, we hopo he will bo duly and profitably Impressed by the great difference between hl measure and his friends' moaBure of himself and the country s measure of him taken In this campaign nnd Indelibly recorded yesterday. Had Mr. Roosevelt been a man of first- class capacity, ns he has always tak en himself to bo, he could never In so i-hort a lime have brought him self from so high to so low a plaoa lit tho country's esteem. "Republican organizations and Republican newspapers have made so much of him t h.t the disposition of voters to make less than little of him will deprive them of the educa tional power alike over him and over themselves. H is a brilliant man without wisdom, a versatile man without divination or Judg ment, tin ingenious and Incisive man, but without tha study of causes, lto U a victim of his own slnetllatlng but not acntlncnt qualities. "This must bo said at the expense of nn ex-governor and an ex-prea!-dent who received the homage not only of governments, but of peopled! the greeting not only of Empires and of Republics, but of continents, and who deserved what he gladly re ceived from them and what thov were glad In full measure and run nlng over, to tender to him." The livening Telegram says: " consideration of the lessons taught by the elections are apt to be tire some, but the silent vote of yester day, country-wide for Democracy, Is fur too significant to be passed un noticed. It shows that when things get very bad, people chango thm. It h how a that the high price of pro- li-lons u more than a minor tsauv It means that favorite sons, while good hunioivdly tolerated for a while, may go' too far. It means that no man on horseback Is needed here It Is a rebuke to Roosevelt THE PITIFUL ENDING OF A GREAT CAREER t COUNT TOLSTOI RENOUNCES THE WORLD AN- WILL END HIS LIFE AS A RECLUSE PRAC TICALLY IN SOLITARY CON-FIXEMENT. fnntTicD muss i.iasp.d wihk.1 St. Petersburg, Nov. 14. The spec tacle of Count Leo Tolstoi, self-exiled in hla old age, has sent thrill of pity throughout the land of the czar. Every aid Is being given the countess Tolstoi to induce her husband to for sake his plan of becoming a recluse, and entering upon a living death. - The great Russian novelist Is In seclusion In the convent of Keyelest, one of the severest monasteries In the world, refusing to see any of the messengers sent by his family, and obtaining consolation from his daugh ter, Alexandra, who Is a nun. The amanuensis of Tolstoi Is with him, and, rumor says, the count plans, In the winter of his life, to journey to Canada to Join the colony of the Doukhebers. Reports that Count Tolstoi has be come reconciled to the Creek church, which excommunicated him after his most famous work, "The Resurrec tion," was published, have not been verified. The Countess Tolstoi and her daughter seek to have the count return to the home which his depar ture has made desolate. "The countess Is not exactly as rep resented in the press," said a prom inent Russian diplomat today, "She loves publicity, and was co flattered that, like many a woman whom Tol stoi and Ibsen mercilessly dissected she became tired of her reflected glory of being a great man's wife, and grew autocratic and assertive. Then the grand old man Of the forest found himself hampered at the closing of his life with cramped and confined details, and he has gone back to na ture, with primates as firm as they have been throughout his wonderful llfo." All doubt that the count's flight I from home was contemplated was set at rest today by one of Tolstol'j daughters, who declared that her father made every preparation as though he Intended being regarded henceforth as among the dead. , j "He has refused to return or com municate with s," she said dolefully. She Is stricken with grief, and has llttlo hope of Inducing him to return. "He has taken this step because he believes It to be one more advance in his conception of his duty nnd a higher life. Ho Is assuredly In his right mind. We who love him know he hnd no need of living a kindlier, holler life than ho has done for these many years. His life has been sim plicity; his nature whclly above the ordinary plane of humanity. To know him was to adore him. "Now that he Is gone wo an ut terly broken hearted, and our home s mndo desolate." Thnt Count Tolstoi looked not to the onrth for hla reward was shown HER PHYSICIAN APPROVES Taking Lydia EPinkharn's Vegetable Compound Rabattns, Maine. "You told me to take Lydia K. i'inkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver mils before child-birth, and we are all' surprised to see how much good it did. My rhysi ciiiu said Without doubt it was the Compound that helped you.' I thank you ior your kindness in ad vistas nie and trlve you full oerinisHion to use my name in vour testimonials." Mrs. II. W. Mitch ki,t Ilox 8, Sabattus, JJe. Another Woman Helped. Grnniteville, Vt. " I was pafsinp throughthct'lianjreuf Life andsuflcred from nervousness nnd other annoying symptoms. Lydia K. Pinkham'a Vcrv tableCompound restored my health and strength, and proved worth mountains of gold to me. I'or the sake of othei suffering women I am willing you should publish my letter." Mrs. Charm Haul-lay, Ii.F.JJ., Granite Vllle, Vt. Women who are passing through this critical jieriod or who are suffer ing from anvof those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of tho fact thnt for thirty years Lydia K. I'inkham's Vegetable Com pound, which Is mndo from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female Ilia. In alnioBt every com munity you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia 12. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound. 1M mm MRS. CRIPPEH IS NOT HERE SAY THE PINKERTONS ! (ONITSD 7BESS UUBBD WIRI J Seattle, Wash., Nov. 14. William A. Plnkerton, head of the famous detective agency bearing his name, Is In Seattle and was moBt emphatic In his declaration that the reports of Belle Elmore-Crlppen being stl!l alive, ' are all canards. "We handled the case in this country for Scotland Yard," said Plnkerton, "and furnished a consid erable part of the evidence upon which Crlppen was convicted, and we know that Belle Elmore-Crlppen Is not in this country." Plnkerton Is the son of Allan Plnkerton, the founder of the asso ciation who provided safe escort for President Lincoln to Washington In 1861. The increase in the price of leath er has made shoes pinch more than ever. Home Builders, Attention Why act InsMTI a home llfeoiln g and cooking iem, making as worth ' rnlng, 100 per cent hoter than an) other gas. Safer than electricity. We light sto. halls, churches, factories, etc. Also do tinning and heatlug and plumbing. All w k aranteed. A. L. FRASER Phone 136. The Celebrated Lennox Furnace. ZE8 State Street Try a Journal Want "Ad" for Results fETC JUIKilNG BY APPEARANCKS Of course everybody does that, an Laundry Work can't be Judged any other way. Everything subjected te ur artietlo treatment cornea out clean as a polished surface, as cleat as crystal and as r-vlght as a sum mer's day. Article washed proper ly last twice as long and look twea ty times better thaa goods badly laundrled. We make cheap labrla masquerade for something better, BAI.EM LAUNDRY OO.. ' Phene 85. 186-106 (tooth Liberty Si. A rori'LAR VERUICT Rased on Evidence of Salem People. made Grateful thousands tell It . How weak backs were strong ; Weak kidneys made well Urinary disorders corrected. Salem people add there testimony. They gladly praise Doan's Kidney Pills, For quick relief and lasting cures. Salem evidence Is now complete. Salem testimony Is confirmed; Reports of early relief substantl- i ated. Cures doubly proved by test of time. Let a Salem citizen speak. A. J. Wood. 7,33 N. Front St., Sa Iem, Ore., says: ."About two months ago I began to suf er from kidney and bladder trouble. Tho kidney secre tions were too frequent and painful in passage, causing me much annoy-.! ance. I had often heard Doan's Kid ney Pills highly -ecommended and thinking they might prove of benefit, I procured a box at Dr. Stone's drug store. I can truthfully say that the use of ono box freed me of every symtom of kidney complaint. I strongly advise other kidney suffer ers to give this remedy a trial." The above statement was given ---- Sulidliolil.Walcli fea 1 (ITo be Giveaway NLX f FREES! I To Either the Lady or Gentleman who;Brings to our Store f in Person or byLrroxy;Only f The first correct count of the greatest number of ways in which (tie plirane "RARR SELLS FINK JHWKLRY" can be read, from the Illustration beneath, commencing with the center, taking the large "B" I as the starting point. Jan. 30, 1905 and was confirmed on recontly by bis refusal to accept thoiNov, 20, 1909 by Mr. Wood. He Nobel peace prize. That ho didn't 'said; "The statement I gave In 1906 seek pecuniary reward was also publicly recommending Doun's Kld- Bbown by his refusal to copyright an j unpublished novel, for which ho was: offered an lmmenre sum,' Money car- rled Biieh sllxht weight in the eyes of ha great writer that he objected when j his wife's son raised the rents of the; tenant's on tho son's estate. , ney Pills still holds good. This re medy curod me of kidney trouble and I have had no re' urn attack." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Fosler-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, solo agents for the Un ited States. Remember the :iauie Doan's and tnko no othei'. o State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior member of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business of Portland, Oregon, in me iiij or roiouo, county nnu county state aforesuld.and that said firm will pay the sum of ONK HUNDRED DOLLARS for each aud every case of catarrh that cannot bo cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHUN BY. Sworn to bofore me and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of De cember, A. D., 1886. I A. W. GLEASON, I (Seal) Notary Public. ! Hall's Cutarrh Cure la taken Inter- j nally. and acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of tha system. Send for testimonials free. , V. J. CHENEY & CO., 1 Toledo, O. : Sold by drugKlsts, 76e. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stlpatlon. s Rentiers A woman is always changing her mind. Jeuners No, when she decides that tho wants a new gown. o . A Man Wants to Die. Only when a lacy liver and slug gish bowels cause frightful despond ency. Hut Dr. King's New Life Plllt expel poisons from the system; bring hope and courage; cure all liver, stomach and kidney troubles; imparl health and vigor to the weak, nerv ous and alllag, 25c at J. C. Perry's. Boyce I wonder what makes 3 dog howl when music plays. Joyce I don't know, unbss the munic awakens the fleas. When a coW becomes settled In the syteui. It will take several days' treatment to cure It. and the bent remedy to use is Chamberlain' Counh Remedy. It will cure quicker than any other, and also leave the vnein In a nniursl and healthy con dition. Sold by all dealurs. New Incorporations. Tha Growler Publishing company, is the latest publication to have launched upon the news field of Oregon, which tiled articles of incorporation with tho secretary of tho state today. Tho principal olllce and place of business Is located . In Portland, tho capital stock Is $5,000 and Ihe incorpora tors of record are William Glad stone Steel, Alfred L. Parkhurst and Leslie E. Crouch. Other now corporations having filed articles today were: The Cen tral Orchard company, of Hood Riv er, Oregon; capital stock, 1100,000; and Incorporators, C. R. Bone, O. M. Scott and J. H. Middleron. The Hot Springs Copper company, of linker City; Capital stock $2,000,000. Incorporators: Burt Gorman. Fremont, Ohio; G. E. Crane and J. N. Hart, of Baker City. YRELEWEJ enineJewelery! RELEWEJ EN I Fl NEJ EWEL.tR ELEWEJ eni FsFi.neJ EWELE LEVEJ ENI FSLS Fl NEJ EWEL EN I F S L L L 5 Fl NEJ EVE Nl FSLLELLS Fl NEJ EWEJ WEJ e EJ EN EV IFSLLESELLSFINEJE J E EN N I I F N I EN J E EJ WEJ N I F5 LLEoRoELLS f I NE I FS'LL ESRRRSE L L5 F I NE FslleSrrarrSellsFi N 5 L L E S RRABA R R Se L L 5 Fl FslleSrrarrS ELLS F IN I FSLLE5RRR5E LLSFLNE Nl FS LLESRSELLS Fl N EJ ENI F S L L E Nl F S L L 4- The old. old story, told times with out number and repeated over and over again for the last 36 years, but it Is always a welcome story to those In search of health There Is nothing In the world that cures coughs aud colds as quick as Cham berlain's cough Remedy. Sold by all dealers. Some men start for the doctor when they have a sick horse. Oth ers feed well, care well and drive well, so they never have to go to ttu doctor. Croup Is most prevalent during; the dry .cold weather of the early winter months. Parents of young chlljren should be prepared for It. All that Is needed Is a bottle of Chamberlain's eoiiKh Remedy. Many mothers are never without It In their homes, and It has never disappointed them. Sold by all dealers. EVE J EN I LE W EJ EN FS L I FS EL E V E J ENI F releweJeni YRELEWEJ EN ELLS L LS F LS SF Fl I F I N I N E N E J Fl N E J EWE E J E J EV EW E WE L E L E L E R E R Y The above puzzle may he read up, down, across or at right angles. BRING ANY DOUBT TO US. Should there arise any uncertainty In your mind as to the various features of the puzzle, we will gladly furnish complete and definite Information provided YOU WILL CALL AT THE STORE. It should be mentioned that In the correct spelling of the word "jewelry" there are but two "e's" the additional "e" has been added purey for the purpose of conformity in the puzzle and the requisite illustration. Answers must not be sent'Jby mail This disqualifes the contestant. If cannot come yourself send a friend piace your answer In a sealed envelope bearing your name and address ana the date of the delivery V your solution. Clerks employed at the store, together with their relations, are barred from entering the conteet. We reserve the right to solely and impartially decide this contest, which Closes Saturday Night, December 10, at 9 p. m. Tha watches, nestling in their plush jewel cases, are to be seen in our display windows. Bairr's Jewelry Store i Gorncr State. and Liberty Streets