DAfLY CAPITAL TACK HUIT Vgar-End Sal in Every Department Women's TaM"d Suits and Coats Yo-FnH Sale at Half Price CITY NEWS, 4' V p ' ' I t' KHiin J Prices on Wood X 1 s-e our display ad. C. k. Spauld- Idk Logging company. 12-30-tf ' Ollgon's barber sbop 1 Gllflf n' cigar store t ! Cil'.on' baths open ell day Sunday X 12-4-w-t-tf i ; Surveying I i See McElroy & Smith about . ..'inni m 1 ft 1 1 -r- l ITI'I MilV JIM 4 . mvm.m JOVRXAL, SALEM. OKfcWJ. ' PRESIDENCY SENATE!. SPEAKERSHIP HOUSED l IllinPninrn i I'rlor to leaving NIL UNUtblUCU fiu,u hi. Hd i For Voiir Sunday Dinner, :l.e , ' Try the roast chicken et the Elitej KI.BiATlOX. rrnm rasje 1.) Cooking Jteccipt JogKcrs Received too late for holiday trad", t at bargains. See Elliott, printer, 221 j South Commercial street. l-4-3t ilj..-, journey lie tan tlic.se making Trior The Toui-iiiinieiit Of Roses, at Pasadena, California, New Year's Day was fin-, but not to be compared with a Hon Ton -c cigar a re that the presideu- n:i(e will net he doter tint a deadlock is I lie s. The lines are s'rictly and Sell- sur- i i reying and platting. ! Chicago store, balem. i ! Van IVlllt Wpll Offices over 12-9-tf-sat Tliey Are liy all. ners. .'!."', Try them. Approved Those Sunday c'pi ken din to be the best in Salem. Klite Cafe. Sdiiii-thine new. J i Thought tree primer. Manning's Implement man can f-usiiy Kvery machine Ctriihl Hut MUta ft Man Every Suit and Overcoat in This Store Now Reduced in Price Wfl'rfi nlftariiiff the decks now for the soring business. We're starting early because we want to get through early nad we shall sell a lot of these good goods; many :: Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and overcoats among them at prices which repre sent a big saving investigate. This Store is the Home of the HART SCHAFFNER MARX CLOSHES gincimmifAnn J 4 Try a Journal Want "Ad" for Results. The Happy For sale at House. One do the work of two. warranted. l-7-3t Moderate I'rices For good grooerii's vr'11 want, and J- M. Lawrence's grocery is the place to rtrt both. Corner V r- ry and S. Commercial. Chun Iicii'anc ns cy of tin1 - mined toil.iv uiatii'r stands. drawn Lei ween Bow'-Tltian in- and no chance of a compromise.; The speakership fight was given a, new turn by Abrams and Reynolds, toins over to Katon, and trying to take all of the Reynolds following with them. The claim is made that tli.- assembly I'acCon in Marion cour- mli?ed t tits to secure U,e cnmi- picfire taken 4 id I.ettcrN McC;.iiii,iant with the state and throughout tne ,1 to ininglo with up its composition. Portland, the ,dele- n..i.i;h to have a ,y a phot-igrapner. I'roiu Supreme Court. hi sail his arguinciH. ihat it had never 7 'IICIH had taken wintended t!at lioss the n oney (or which lie was indicted, of shilling for his own use. but that he allowed it to inlnule with the funds bank. He explained tnai a ld ,e 1 dc iy for ill. Mn-The st er.i and .!; iowint fui.' it (i : b' - to lliuT forbade a gen- .cdire- Series No. 2, of the Mutual Savings i & Loan Association, is now open and subscriptions for shares will be re- j celi'?d at the office of the secretary,' 275 State street. J. D. White, secre tary. l-6-2t Only 5 of tho ( laegctt Fruit & Gar den Tracts Left For Kent Good 10-room dwelling Cott-ge. street for rent to party. Phone 4111. Carey F. attorney for owner- .!b nianshm of ways and niVtm Irion county for themselves. vj,.ni Oreiron steelier I) is uimio o iv ,.. Rust.- unci Thompson, M " 4 f N-i Kinney going out of the tight. Rusk i iiiitablei Hu. snnlM-t of the Multnomah I v nn Martin, ideation solid, except Rushlight l-7-3tj who lt iB si,i,, will not qualify. In i dications are there will be no caucus. The (o nium mid White Swan Bakeries, under the same manage ment, are headquarters for wedding This is the beBt land on the mar- and party pastry supplies, iry mem ket today in small tracts. Located ' once ana Decome a regular cusiumei. only three mileB north of ' Salem. Price only $125 to $150 per acre. $100 per tract cash; $1.00 per acre per month. Derby Wlllson. l-6-2t Notice The annual meeting of the stock iolders of the Salem Fruit Union will be held at thfl office of the Union Saturday, January 14, at 10 a. m. C L. McNary, president, E. A. Arm strong, secretary. 1-7-41-eod Win a Writing Iek Learn how. See our advertise ment. Golden Rule Bazaar. Mn. I). T. Swart, proprietor, 271 Commercial street. An opportunity to invest in Al in dustrial enterprise Is open to you. Tli U. S. census shows average earn ings: Railroads 4.4 per cent; Banks, 11.5 per cent; Industrials, 15.1. Safe, conservative, highest references. George H. Paul, 225 Superior street. Salem. l-4-3t Step In When You Are - In the neighborhood of the Elite Massage and . Beauty Parlors, 301-2-3 U. S. Bank building. We treat permanently cure black heads, white heads, pimples, freckles, moth patches, red skin, oily skin, acne, pustules, large pores, red noses, red hands, sunburn, liver spots, coarse skin, dry skin. l-4-2t HOLLYWOOD THE GEM OF OREGON There have been subdivisions before, and there will probably be subdivisions after Hol lywood is sold, but there never has been a better one, and there never will be one quite as good as Hollywood, for the reason that no land in the state is as fine as we are offering for sale, This place is close to town and is divided into convenient sizes and is cheap, None of 7 Jumia' 'IUWBVe'i compaie wun its chief characteristic, which is the richness of the i.t ,ha ,.io,-ttnn will be fought out In "the onen house on Monday upon i pretatlon- orgauization of the legislature. The fight is being transferred to Salem. Attention I wish to announce that the Bronze tints of hair are now the popular tints in Paris and New York. We are the only people this side of Chicago prepared to do this work. Not a dye, not a bleach. Call and find out about lt. The Elite Massage and Beauty Parlors. Rooms 301-2-3, V. S. Nat. Bank building. ' l-4-2t Gone to "ewport Mrs. L. C. Dennlson and daughter left for Newport today, where Mr. Dennison is building a large school. They will be gone about five months. Proposition Worthy Of Investigation. Want to meet a few persons having from $500 to $1,000 to invest .In first class up-to-date Manufacturing enterprise with great possibilities. As we- have no competition, Interested parties can have lucrative employment if compe tent. Address Box 304, or call at Room 320, U. S. Bank Bldg., Salem, Ore. 1-6-tf ( lilekeii Fricassee For your Sunday dinner, 3."c, will m:,ke a palatable change. Elite Cafe. MONEY TO LOAX On Farm Property. Room No. 1, Tioga lluildlng. Salem. Oregon. Try the Elite Cafe For quick service, tion and reasonable dinner 35c. prompt attien prlce. Sunday "ABSOLUTE LIFE CULT." (Continued from page one.) S0I and productiveness, would not amount to much had not some or the big ranches been cut up into small holdings, It is the members of famies that count,., npt the number of actes that make up a country, HOLLYWOOD flfffirs hrvmnc ii a l-i Myihrir rl,il6 4 ldmi,,e5 Jusi anne outskirts ot Sa em, just a 1 east of the Fair Grounds, and at a price per acre far less than a cheap lot would cost, 0m&l&Tk has no equ&l in this or any other part of K i'2 UJ "tfe H &Fdfrs: ?sk any old-timer if he knows the h,. "hV mai! ana ne will tell you that vou make no mistnkn a mil MMM4M44444 Must be Sold in i 1 10 Days and the :: Owner Has In- :: ::stlHCted Us t0 :: :: : Make the Price! to Sell It buying there, lli? Jfns !te n lgz are goinS way before a car line will oass Hnllv it tw!d thCn thG '3nd the,e Wi" sel1 readi,y "wo and three timesVhat you canty" been stronger than religious associa tion. '. ' "1 Mrs. Ftdicia Rees and Mrs. Stephen Bridges, mothers of the girls, de clared their daughters were living In See's "school" with their full permission. "We have absolute life and cannot sin," the mothers explained. The girls' contention was similar to that of their mothers. "Nobody in the 'Absolute Life" can sin," they explained. "We believe such things as Mr. See believes. We cannot understand why the law should interfere," Mildred's father has not been won over by these arguments, and was angry when he learned where his daughter was and threatened to kill the leader of the cult. He alleges that See has hypnotized his wife and daughter. ,.. See is separated from his wife. In his school, which he called the Jun ior Commonwealth," he had a score of boys and girls ranging from 3 to 25 years. He is teaching them the principles of the "Absolute Life," which he says. was shown him in a revelation. i i he children, he says, are being 'purified and eventually will be be jyond the power to sin. I Hollywood Is Divided Into Five and Ten Acre Tracts . u.i j u"yibu 0,1 easy wins at 75 ocr acre md -m ee Hollywood, and you miss the best opportunSy presenL if you overlook this tract. Five tracts srtA hi we nave autos and rigs ready to go out at any hour, Phone and We Will Call Do It Now It costs you nothing to to the people of Salem j Portland, Ore., Jan. 7. Mona Roes, ;iioho name is connected with that of Evelyn Arthur Seo, fountain head ol the Absolute Life" cult, which Is being investigated by the Chicago au thorities today, formerly lived In j Portland. I According to friends here, the young women is 22 years old. She ieii i ortlnnd several years ago for Chicago where she joined her mother. 158 acres,- 80 acres cleared, on two county roads, only one-half mile from a good town on the main line of the S. P. R. R., black, sandy loam soil; plow ing now; no mud or water. Fin est peach and potato land in the vallqy. Lr.j-ge barn, al most new, holds 30 head ot stock, a 4-room new mill house In fine location, water piped to the barn. Fair house, sev eral outbuildings, new DeLa val cream separator, 9 good milk cows, one hog, chickens, hay and grain, some seed grain 2 registered driving mares and 2 blooded colts, top buggy M00, huck, mower, rock wagon and all farming implements. A fine trout stream running through the plac. Will make good terms. t Price $95 per acre with Everything echtel 347 State Street O ynon Telephone Mam 452 Ground Floor S.VYs STREET IS LKKT ; IV D.VNGEKOI S CONDITION Salem, Or., Jan. 6, 1911. !Ed. Journal: Referring to the city marshal's recent Instructions to the Police others to read up on the city I ordinances, this evidently has not I been taken very seriously either by the chief or his men. I refer to the nutnuee to trn.vel maintained by the ; Portland Railway, Light & Power Company on Chemeketa street, "in ; front of the city hnll.namely the ! large pile 0f gravel In the middle of the street, left night after night, without, warning lights. Yours, truly, GEORGE S. WHITE. Oregon Coffee House 134 N. Liberty Street. Light lunches tt nil hours, and th best 25c. meals morning noon and j'llrht. served L f c city. Give us p all and you will be a regular cup ome. YOVUS KOlt A GOOH MEAL. Olmsted Land Company 873 State Street BLY'S! t Big VAUDEVILLE SHOW Change of Program ? tomorrow passed in posit of the educational fund t Kos.s' offense consisted in al it to iniimle with the general of t, e bunk instead of placing loeial c'.'posit. and being una oav it to the state when his in- lou failed. Ho had been guided lecisiou iu the Forty-second Ore-1 he sail, which held that this "hue. and was ignorant oi a statute passed in iaui ihbusiub law and that while ignorance of the hiw was no evcuse. he hnd acted wili.in the lav; :.c .inline to his inter- -as any layman would in terpret it. He then cited the fact that the 12 jurors who convicted Ross had signed a petition for his pardon the last signing within the last few days; that Ex-district- Attorney Manning had signed a letter recommending that It be granted and that so had District Attorney McNary; and finally that four of the Judges of the supreme court who had sustained his convic tion In the lower court had written a letter jointly saying that there was no moral turpitude Involved in the of fense and that Ross had reason to be lieve that he acted within the law when he committed the crime of which he was convicted and that Jus tice King wrote a personal letter reit erating the views held by him In his dissenting opinion, and favoring Ross. He then called attention to the mon ster petition, containing over 2,000 names,' and representing men of every walk In life. if ;g Mayor Simon Comes to But. Mayor Simon, of Portland, was the next man to come to the bat and he spoke eloquently of the life of Ross. He had known him from the time he set foot upon Oregon soil known him as a man of integrity, and honor, a man of his word. He took the same view of the law as McCammant and maintained that a pardon should be granted. Ex-senator Fulton followed with considerable ot a discourse on the law, his views coinciding with those of McCammant and Simon. He had infinite respect for the supreme court, but before this decision, had he been asked if that was the law, he would have replied in the negative. He closed with the eloquent appeal that should Ross be compelled to go to prison and serve out his sentence, that the "shame would be on the state of Oregon." J. E. Werlein spoke along the same lines, so did Harrison Allen, and Judge McGinn. The latter did not di rect his remarks so much to the law as he did to the times which prevailed when Roes was Indicted and convicted. We have all in the past, he main tained, been guilty of the same offense of Ross it was a general understand- I ing that bankers might take the state's money and let it mingle with i the bank's general fund and take in terest upon it; and it would not be fair now to single Ross out and make him serve time in the penitentiary when others were allowed their lib erty who had been equally guilty. itev. ijuuert and Rev. Foulks, the latter Ross' pastor, spoke in behalf of the convicted banker, voicing the view that he had already been pun ished sufficiently without having to serve out a sentence in the state prison. OrcKoniiin to Be Silent. ( Mr. McC:-mimant"eoncluded the n marks Iti behalf of Ross.: In present ing1 the petition to the acting gover nor, in his first argument, he too occasion to assure him that II. L. I-itiock, of the Oregonian, was th lain man to sign it, and that he had been authorized to slate from hi;:,, that, in the event the pardon -m ,'ra.iited, that the Oregonian would nol criticise the action of the acting Rovernor. He also stated that he had been given the same assurance by its managing editor, Edgar Piper, and when it came to the closing he took ..... u, une tne governor a few more assurances, among others th-it he would feel happlor every day ol .us ii ie wnen lie thought of it a snted the pardon. toss ii Gentleman. After giving the acting gowrnnr this assurance, he proceeded to in form the acting governor that Ross 'fi a gentleman a man with a very (sensitive her.irt. Some dr?ad Inear jceration In prison becausn Itriepri, tliem of their ntieriy, out uohh, d, . ing of a sensitive heart, had suffered i: ere than tha; suffered all tl.- pniis that a human soul is capahl,. (.!' suffering by being Indicted hi.. convicted, iiiul that punshimn, , : lone, should be sullielent without ;., imposition of any olh r. I'anloi, Ii Only Hope. lie also stated in his crnc,idhu l. marks that Ross' last hope of fr. -(loin lay in a pardon. The caie '.: ; l.een taken before the suprerre - t ,.r the Tinted States on a writ of re. iow, he stated, hut he gave it. as !iU opinion that, us soon that i.,i. t convened, that the wr't woulj be i -lissed. and that, unless a pnrdcr. I. sued, that Hoss would have to Horn et:! the live-y.,ir sentence inipo.-, . Governor Impassive. Throughout the hearing A-l' Governor Bowerman sat imnnf;i""ir listening to tne argument, mere was nothing to indicate that he w..s y more impressed with tlv r.rrr.v if wealth and Influence before him, ami the case itself, than he would have been In (' tV crv:'i(!"'o rT'" ! n filled with a bunch of laboring men, and the case Itself that of some poor and obscure criminal. He listened with courtesy to each speaker ,hut :;ked no question, and when the last had been heari announced that he would pnss on the case in the after noon or in the evening. It Is quite certain this afternoon that. Governor Bowerman will not act upon the matter until Sunday even ing, and possibly not until Monday morning. NFW TOItt Y. FIVE ACRES of first class land close to Salem on good road, . for $375 ; $lf0 down, balance to suit. Beet tel & Bynon, 347 State Street. FOR SALE A Good bargain, '8 lots and 8-room house, partly finished. Price $1450; terms, Twentieth anil Lee street. Phone 728. l-4-eod-3t SATISFACTION GUARANTEE-! Whenever you buy your meat from us. We carry a full line of choice fresh, salt and smoked meata, and make a specialty of pure lard. V. C. Rush, successor to Edwards t Long, 1815 East State street. Phone 1926. l-7-Kt FOR SALE Two counters, cheap. Jim Gordon, 341 Center street. l-7-at WANTED A man or a man ami wife with about $150 to Invest in a good money-making proposition. For information aiddress "X. X.," care Journal office, city. 1-7-lw THE HOME REALTY CO Room 7. Murphy Block, offers 4 acres, good house, barn, fruit, ,t0., .far $160 rental per year, one-fourth cash, balance quarterly, In 4iirth Salem. 1-7-tf NEWLY FURNISHED front room, ground floor, with electric light and use of telephone. Phone Main 139ri. 1247 State street. ' l-7-3t 'i FOR SALE Three nice youngi R.' C. R. I. red roosters. Cheap If taken soon, at 2398 Trade St. ' ' l-7-3t WANTED Two or more boarders; pleasantly situated; good board at reasonable prices. Give us a trial. Address W. F care Journal, l-7-3t TWO ROOMS, FOR RENT-rrDurlng legislature, 246 South Cottage street. ' l-7-3t FOR RENT New, close in strictly modern 6-room fiat, at a reason able figure. Bogert & Spn- No. 2. Hush Bank Bldg. l.-7T3t BAKERIES. . , W HITE SWAN and .German Bakeries for highest grade bread .and pas tries. Wedding and party orders a specialty. We make daily deliveries. 319 N. Commercial, phone 903; or 12th nnd Chemeketa, phone 961. 1-7-tf Guaranteed Attraction if l,i Norwich Union ' , Fire Insurnace Society. l'.rank Meredith, Kesidcnt Agent. Room 13 Bush Bank Blk. Salem. Or. OoHpqp UnHfjrtqVinq pa-hrs. Modern in every detail. Lady assist ant. Corner Cottage, and Chemeketa. Phone 721. MONEY TO LOAN THOS. K. FORD Over Ladd and Bush Bank, Salem, Or w.ttm,m..WWW4 The Armstrong Nursery Company E- T. ARMSTRONG, Manager. 124 N. Liberty Street. Saet, 0reg0 Fine Nursery tt... .. ruH,Kat and. Ornamental Trees, ShrubB i Roses. We have X X f and o agents. Wrect to planter. Phone 867. X MM ' '4 I