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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1911)
1 (HfHWdK VOL XM. SALEM, OREGON, SATVItDAY, JANUARY 14, 1911. No. 12. STILL RAGES It HATOBA r MERCURY DROPS TO 5? BELOW ZERO STORM GETS WARMER IN MONTANA SHOW BOUND TRAINS MOVE SOUTHERN PACIFIC OPEN Intense Cold Prevailed Through out Manitoba and Alberta Northern Pacific and Other Snow Bound Trains Are Freed -Many Engines Fighting Snow Died and Are Being "Towed Into Port" TodaySnow in Some Places in Mon tana Was Piled Higher Than the House Tops by Fierce Gale imitu riucss uuscif" wm.l Winnipeg, Man., Jan. 14. Intense cold from the Great Lakes to the Rocky Mountains prevailed again yes terday and last night, and to sunny AHfii again falls the record of the roldt temperature. According to today's dispatches at Edmonton, It was 53 below zero on official regis tration, which has never ben equaled since Christmas evening, 1879. Prlncs Albert registered 50 below lero. The snow storm which has raged In tie Crows Nest Pass for the last lour days continues unabated . and trains are st'll tied up- The storm Is the worst in the history of the pees, lad the temperature is 20 below zero. Mlef parties are leaving Kernie to tarry assistance to any one who may wed it. falling, the thermometer rose rapidly, and the wind, which has piled snow higher than the house tops in some plaices, gradually died down. It was predicted that train, service would be resumed by nightfall, and the stalled trains on the Great Northern and other roads probably will get through tomorrow. Owing to the intense cold, several engines have "died" while shoving snow plows and relief trains to get them out of the way were sent out today. The side tracks at Essex are rilled with these engines and trains. Oollpwd in Jail. Albany, N. Y., Jan. 14. Mrs. Edith Melber, confessed mur- dress of her son, George, 4, col- lapsed In the jail at Rochester today, when officers called for her to bring her to Albany. The womwi, overcome by grief and remorse, became hysterical, and it was found impossible to re- move her, as had been planned. She was placed under the care of physicians and the Jail matron. She will be brought to Albany tonight, if her condi- tlon la such that she may be moved. Groat Northern has been opened for service for the first time since Sun day None of the passengers suffered' injury from the cold, railroad otll- clals say. AVaHlilntcton (W ."Kreakjr." Olympla, Wash., Jan. 14. "Washington will push the com- mission plan of government one step farther it a bill, Introduced yesterday in the legislature by Representative E. J. Wright, of Seattle, 1b passid- Wright's bill puts the counties of the state under commission govern- ment. Five comjraJssioners, elected at lrrge, and all subject to recall, will take the place, of sheriff, auditor, ' treasurer and all other county officers, accord- ing to the bill. GREATEST 17AR SHIP i Storm Over in Montana. . Killspel, Mont., Jan. 14. After oeartjaweek the blizzard which has tljni of breaking today. Snow ceased Marooned Passengers Rescued. Spokane, Wash., Jan. 14. At the office of General Superintendent Brown, of the Great Northern rail- ' road, it Is announced that through ! passenger , trainB Nos. 3 and 27, stalled in a snow bank at High Gate, Mont., since last Sunday, were re lieved this morning and will arrive at Spokane at 1 ti'clocTt this afternoon.' Weather'7 conditions In Montana had moderated, and the main line of the Trains on S. P. Are Free. San Francisco, Jan. 14. Trans continental trains, stalled in the Hier m Nevada mountains by the stonr of the last few days, have been released, according to officials of the trans continental lines affected, and will reach San Francisco late today or to morrow. Eastbound trains are. leav ing San Francisco on schedule. Storm conditions in the mountains have im proved, the railroad officials repori, and It. is believed that trains can now be run without interruption. The track, banked with snow and blocked by the collapse of snowsheda,. has been cleared, It Is said. Six trains on "the Southern Facilte and one on LAUIIIEB Uncle Sam Floated Today the Biggest and Most Powerful Battleship Ever Launched by .... Any Nation. : (Continued from Page 5.) CLEAMMG SALE) No discount given at the Chicago Store, Come here and get our rock bottom prices and see who is entitled to your patronage. No schemes or misrepresentation here, but honest, reliable merchandise offered at prices that no house on Pacific Coast can beat. Clearing Prices on LADIES' COATS, SUITS and CAPES It is not profit we are looking for now but selling. Don't buy a suit or coat in Salem until you get. our prices. All this season's new est garments, highly finished and tailored. $8.00 Capes now $3.50 and $4.90; $10, $12.50 and $18.00 Coats now $4.50; $5.90 and $8.90; $18.20 and $25 Suits now $7.50, $8.50, $9.90 .and $12.50. DRESS GOODS AND SILKS IteSf1?-' : stlowin9 in Sa'em and at the WsshnL mhm but the newest Dr&?Jlks. Hd 25c, 35c, 49c up. Clearing Prices On Ladies , Misses and ' Children's Coats and Sweaters ) What we are after nowW n: i x:i. I is selling, nui piuius 1000 Sweaters now or sale. Children's $1 Sweaters now 49c. Misses' $2.50 Sweaters now $1.49. Lad es' $2.50, $3.50 and $4.00 Sweaters now $1.25, $1.49, $1..98 and $2.50 Clearing Prices on Sheets, Blankets, Pillow Cases, Com forts, Towels, Crashes Nap kins and Lace Curtains Blankets pair 39c, 49c, 75c, 98c and up. Comforts 69c, 75c, 98c and up. Sheets from 49c up. Pillow Cases from 8 1-3 cents up. rw am h IS CHRISTENED "ARKANSAS" She Is 602 Pert Long, Beam at Water Lino When Loaded 1)3 Feet, ninth en 20,000 Took, Has Six Turrets and Carries Twelve 12-Inch Guns and 25 -1-Inch . llifles She Must Show a Sperd of 30 Knot I'udeir the Contract. dmitid nma ltjsbd wiu. Camden, N. J., Jan. 14. The battle ship Arkansas, the largest Dread naught afloat,1 was launched from the ways of the New York Shipbuilding company at noon today. Without a tremor, the giant vessel slid from its rack whc-i the ways were dropped. It settled easily into the water. Secretary of the Navy Meyer, As sistant Secretary ...Winthrop and a delegation of Arkansas congressmen attended the launching. The Arkan sas was christened by Miss Mary Ma con, daughter of Congressman Macon. The battleship Wyoming, a sister ship, will be launched' soon. The Arkansas is the first 26,000 ton battle ship authorized by congress and ex ceeds in size any other battleship ever built. It will be surpassed, I however, by other dreadnaughts now being built. According to specifica tions. It must make 20 knots an hour. The Arkansas is 562 feet long over all; Its beam is 93 feet at water line under load. ' It was built to develop 28,000 horsepower In Its engine room. Turbine engines were Installed. The ship will carry an armament of 12 12-inch guns, mounted in six tur rets. Except for the torpedo tubes, these big rifles constitute the entire armament. It will be provided with ' 25 1-inch rifles to be uss-l in repelling torpedo attacks. The contract called for the com pletion of the Arkansas by May 2". - GAVE HER BOY CARBOLIC ACID LEFT HIS BODY LYING IF THE To Make Governor "It." , Olympla, Wash., Jan. 14. Washington will have the short- est state ballot of any state in the United States If a bill Intro- duced by Representative Wright, of Seattle, is enacted Into law. Wright would have only the governor and supreme court judges elected by the people, all other state officials to be np- pointed by the governor. The governor will be subject to re- call, his bill reads. This bill follows the suggestions made In his annual message by Governor Hay. scrap over the election of speaker, and is trying to make up his commit tees just as nothing had happened. He will give chairmanships to some of his principal opponents just a few and will give places on promi nent committers to opponents not too many, but some. Rusk will uot play baby politics, but will try to be something besides a small politic'.m His friends believe he has It in hln. and. all the hollering will not aflect him very much. If he finds a man Is unfit for a place he will not ep point him, even though he was '.villi him. The Eaton proposition to take the naming of the committees awmy from tho cpeaker was not made an issu j in the election of speaker, and members who voted for the proposition, on Its merits will not Vote fort Mbndtiy as an anti-Rusk dose. '.That js the alti.a tlon today, but before Mondav j;iie dove of peace may desewnd, the inwfi ent leaders get what they claimor foi, and all be satisfied. The charge that Thompson and-Husk made a deal has foundation, , but no more than the chaise that Reynolds entered Into a deal with Eaton. Abrams aiid Rey nolds did try to transfer all the Votes cf their, frit nds to Eaton, ind some refused to go oyer as Ubiiy and Steelhammer. The speakership election always Involves trades, anil only a political prude will pMend otherwise. Eaton is too able a m:in to lead a hopeless fightj unlms he is contending for a reform principle, nnd In that event he will get credit for I 'ie sincerity and purity of purynso ti v.i'fch he is entitled. riAn. bSV, OclV. tSt uu. J Per yd 25c, 35c, 49c, and up.. The ktater Clearing Prices on Domestics If you want to see the greatest stock of high-class domestics priced at the lowest prices in Sa!em. pome here. 1 0,000 yards of percales, prints, chali'es and outing flannels now 5c yard. 15c double width percales now 8 1 -3c yard. CHICAGO STORE Salem Oregon INSURGENTS ' MAY: MAKE LAST STAND BL'T HUSK STANDS l'AT AM) READY TO COVXT NOKKN HE WILL RECOGNIZE OPPONENTS AND WILL NOT I'LAV PERSON AL lOLITICS. GAVE HIM POISONED WATER WHEN HE ASKED FOR A DRINK HE DIED LYING IN HER ARMS "Unable to Find a Home for llim," She Said, "I Determined to Kill Him When He Asked for a Drink I Gave Him the Acid and He Drank It Because He Had Faith in Me He Choked a Little as He Drank, But I Held Him in My Arms, Then He Slipped to the Ground, Lying as Though He Was Asleep." President Selling and Speaker committer Monday. It is expected that the Eaton followers will try to carry a resolution to take away from the speaker the appointment of the committee. This plan will be voted down, and then tho committees. will be named just the same. Speaker Rusk is not afraid to connt noses, and bis followers are standing Arm. He sayit he has forgotten all about the THE SALEM FIRE BOYS DANDIES DEPARTMENT, IN SPITE OE HAN DICAPPING CONDITIONS, III I) SPLENDID WORK IN COXTKOLL ING EARLY MORNING KIRK. The Capital Journal wIhIiih to say a word of commendation In behalf of the boys of the Salem fire department for the way they extinguished the fire last night in the feed store building of Mr. Thielsen. The bulldliiK was a laxge frame building, dry as tinder, and the fire had been burning briskly for somer time before the alarm was turned in at 2 o'clock thin morning. Fire hydrants were frozen and pave ments were like glass with ice nnd snow. In spite of this tho men were at the scene a few minutes after the alarm wus turned In, raid, hard work, they got the frozen flr hy drants in working order, and com pletely extinguished tho flrn, although it had been burning fiercely for about an hour in a building full of hay and feed. If It had not been for their prompt and efficient work tho large garage adjoining this bulld'ng, and separated by only a foot of space, would undoubtedly have taken fire. As it was they kept the water playing on It and saved It. Salem people read about fire de partments In other cities, but few of them realize that Salem has one of the best fire departments of any city In the United States. i ' tyOTlD Mill LIABIO WIU. Albany, N. Y Jan. . 14. Prostrated with grief and remorse, Mrs. Edith Melber, confessed murderess of her son "George, four, 1b in the care of the matron of the jail here, The woman was brought today from Rochester, where she was arrested and where, the police allege, she told of having compelled her son to drink from a bottle of carbolic acid. District At- torney Sanford will urge that the case be tried speedily and the grand judy was asked today to Investigate the boy's death at once and return a mur der indictment against the woman. The boy's body was found In a swamp near Schenectady. There, Mrs. Melber told the police, after a struggle to find a home for the lad she gave him the poison. The boy was tired and thirsty and asked for water. His mother told him the bottle contained water and he drank It .. When she could. And to hdtne'ifof her baby. Mrs.-Melber sobblngly told the .police today, she decided to kill him. - "I bought carbolie acid at the Lewis drug store, and then went to the swamp," she said. "My mind was In atwhlrl. I did not knoW what I was doing. I wanted my boy to be happy. I did not see how it was possible to make him so. Everybody seemed against me. I thought If Oeorgle were dead be would be better off. I did not take time to consider the matter twice. If I had I couldn't have done such a terrible thing. "When he asked for a drink of wa ter I decided it should be given then. I knew death could end his suferlng. I ' gave htm the acid, He choked a little as he drank, but I held him in my arms. Then he slipped to the ground, lying as though he were asleep. He looked so peaceful. At first I did not think I had done such a terrible thing. Now the inhumanity and unnaturalness of my act crushes me. . "Why did I do it!" .. Mrs. Melber said that after ahe bad killed her baby ahe went back to Schenectady and resumed work 'In the home of Mrs, J. F. Bartlett She told evasive stories tg relatives In ex plaining the . disappearance of th baby. After she -was arrested Bhe told the police that she had sent. the. boy to George .Teller a cousin who lived in Cleveland. . She dented that she killed the child . . so. that she could marry again. Mrs. Bartlett says that the woman showed no affection for the child, .lte-1 often whipped Georgle Mrs. Bartlett '' said,' and declared ! the baby Inter- . fered with' her life. ? ; . , LACDF1D CLOSES AND OH LID "Take me soniewhore's east of Suez where the best Is like the worst; Where there ain't no ten command ments and a man can get a thirst." So sang Kipling on one occasion and so far as the sentiment expressed is concerned so .sing the card sharp ers and the men with the aggressive thirst in the city today. They may not couch (heir sentiments in as ex pressive language may not frame them into verse for thoy do not feel poetical but they are there Just the samo for the lid is on In Salem today and standing on It with the avowed Intention of keeping it down are May or l.Hchmuml nnd Chief of Police Hamilton. It probably 1b not on as tight yet as thoiie officials would Ifke. From beneath It from time to tlmo there will probably bob up the head of some offender but when It does there will come down upon It the strong arm of tho law nnd before many days pass by It will be ham mered down tight. Table Deserted. It was nut until last night that the curd sharpers attached any slgnlft- ( Continued on Pago 4.) KNEE PANT SUITS The value of traffic on thi Columbia river Increased $3,200,000 (n 1910 over tbv same period of 1,90 9. . Heavyweight all wool, sizes 9 to 16 years, Regular vta $4,50 to $7,50, NOW $1.50 Don't let your boy go without warm clothing, when you have such an opportunity as this, Boys' Overcoats One-Half Price Salem Woolen Mill Store