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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1911)
. .. ... ... i - J n n 4 Pi1 Tfih. ''ifc. v f ( i i " :r " .li'VC v ' - , -v y -r rot -u SALEM, OKEGOV, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1011. XO. 37 SPE AK'ERc RUSK SPMNiS APO JUJL 1 11 RPRISE COiXllSSION BILL Ai THE COUNTY GOURT BONDING ACT FIRST BADLY DISFIGURED BUT AVOIDS SOLAR PLEXUS AND BOTH LIABLE TO PASS Highways Commissioners Concede Anything So Long as They Save the Right ot Appoint the $4000 a fear Commissioner to Boss the Work Jackson, of Portland Journal, Who Is lo Be a Member of the Commission, Is Backing a Washing ton Man for the Place. Kdna Cost Nat $1000 a Day. New York, Feb. 13. In his own words, "once more a ma,tri nionlal remnant, cast on cupld's bargain counttur," Nat Goodwin, the actor, is endeavoring to take philosophically the action of Referee J. C. Thompson, in de ciding against him In the di vorce suit Instituted by Edna Goodrich, hlB fourth wife. If Is estimated that Goodwin's 27 months of wedded life with Miss Goodrkn cost him $800, I The situation in regard to good road! legislation today Indicates the passage of two bills, a, state highway commission bill and a county court bonding act. In tSe latter bill, un. der the leadership of Neuner, of Douglas county, it will be left op lulonal with the county court .when calling a bonding election to submit to the voters a description of the highway to be Improved, or to make (he county bonding Issue general, without specifying where the highway shall be built. The highway commission bill has bewso hacked up and amended that there is very little of It left. There will be three highway commissioners, aai they are to select a man who will have charge of the state highways at J 4000 a year. It is understood that this pajty Is a Washington man of the name of Eldnidge, who has al-, ready been agreed upon and is backed by Mr. Jackson, of the Port-! land Journal, who is to be a member, of the commission. The state high- j ways commission managers were, ready to concede everything, in order j to save the commission and thp right to appoint tjjeir man at $4000 a year. Hti will practically nave no power or authority, as everything Is left to the county courts, and he w.ill have very little to do except hold down his Job with a secretary to do his work. State Banking Law. The hous did a. big morning's work passing a new state banking act. The vital change In this is that no new state bank can be established unt'l the existing banks In any town or city have deposits of five times .the aggregate capital stock of the banks doing business there. The board of directors must have at Uost two members who are stockholders, but not officials, who shall make an exam ination of the affairs of the bank Branch banks are prohibited In the future. The following is added to section 33: "It shall be lawful for any bank receiving deposits In compliance with (Continued from Paee-B, . Iluwda t. ! DtMlgCfl Soap. P;,rts, Feb. 13. If soap sta tistics given out today are cor rect, Russia is the dirties nation on earth, and England the cleanliest. America stands second to England. Statistics show that each in dividual in Russia uses only two pounds of soup iniiiually; In England, 21 pounds; America, 17 pounds; France, 15 pounds; Germany, 10 pounds, and Aus tria, 5 pounds."' '." ' ' BILL GIVES VOTERS SECOND CHOICE STOR, IS SWEEPING THE COAST Gale Hits a Mile a Minute on the Sound, and at Mouth of Co lumbia 80 Miles an Hour. Xew Woman In China. San Francisco, Feb. 13 Chinese predecents of a thou sand years are shattered here to day as the result of a demand by two Chinese "new women" that the yJlow race rise up, overthrow the Manchu dynasty and proclaim a republic, with woman suffrage attachments. Mrs. J. J. ling, a graduate of the Canton normal school, and Miss 6. Lou, a graduate of the University of California, sound ed the tocsin, addressing the Young China organization here. WILL GET PAID NEARLY $20,000 FOIt EACH JAY THE CHICAGO STORE HAS PURCHASED THE pit StolS;- of The Style Craft Store it is now on sale on the second floor over the millinery department, We- are selling out the entire stock at 5c, 10c, 15c nd 25c on the dollar, This is a chance of a lifetime to boy goods at such ridiculous prices; goods worth 25c for 5c, goods worth 50c for 1 0c and 15c, goods worth $1 ,00 for 20c and 25p, $5,00 hats for 98c, $15,00 suits for $2,50 and $3,50, flowers worth $1-00 for 10c and 1,5c, and so along the line with the- entire stock,. We bought ihe goods cheap enough so we can give you bargains, Come and See the Crowds SHIPPING HUGS HARBORS Kaxtcrii Oregon Is Swept by Bliz zard Accompanied by Know ami Low Temporal nres -West of the Mountains in Washington and .Ore gon" There Has Been a Fail of - Mixed Haln Mid Snow Itaromrter Indicates Storm Is Not Over. Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 13. It was an nounced today that Benjamin D Greene and John F. Gaynor, who have completed four-year sentences for de frauding the government in the Sa, vannah harbor work, must serve an additional 30 days each In default of the payment of a Arte of $575,479.90 imposed when they were convicted. At the end ofrthat time the men can go before a United States clerk In At lanta, take a pauper's oath, and go free. NEW SPRING STYLS IN Ladies' Suits & Coats iyi newest cmolmnt in li v,vuuviio Ml la dies' suits and coats arriving daily. We are keeping our eyes' opened for bargains and if you come here you can get them, We have a sharp buyer in New York'thafis 'sending us SlJits that you cannot duplicate elsewhere for the price. New Spring Styles $15, :J? $25 values,, for 8-50, $10.50, $12.50 and $14.50 NEW SPRING STYLES IN Imported 4 H.' Dress Goods zl and Silks We show the greatest line of imported dress'goods and silks in this part of the world, and at m'io.e.s t'at von will find harden. Heat, -They are now arrvng daily?- the 'materials and pat terns 'are very attractive, . New Spring Dress Goods yard 25c, 35c, 49c, 65c and up New. Spring Silks per yard 25c, 35c, 49c, 25c, 75c and up mi n W heater LlUCSlgO;: Store Salem Oregon LT...t", ri'XITKD 1'RKXM I.KARKD WI1IB.1 Portland, Or., Feb. IS. The gen eral storm warnings issued Sunday against any vessels going to sea, is still In force today ,and, although the gale has subsided somewhat, a falling barometer Indicates that the storm la not over, and may again re sume thu intensity that characterized it yesterday. A whistling wind, ac companied by flurries of snow ob tained In Portland today. The predictions for today are foV continued rain and snow, with but little if any change In temperature. Not a vessel left the mouth of the Columbia river yesterday,' and last night even the sturdy steamer Beav er, en route for San Francisco, re mained Inside until the blow sub sided. It was fxpected that It would depart this forenoon. At North Bend, Wash., at the mouth ot the Columbia, ' the wind reached 80 miles an hour ,and was accompanied by a cold rain. The ve. loclty of the gale varied in the North west, from 30 miles an hour at Blaine, nrnr the Canadian line to 26 miles n Portland. In the Straits of Juan de Fuca the wind started yesterday noon at a ve locity of 30 miles an hour, and before night had attained a speed of a mile a minute, this rate, continuing until early today. No great damage has Wen reported in the Northwest, and all seagoing vessels are n shelter. Eastern Oregon and Washington are In (he throes of a snow storm, accompanied by high winds, which apparently has nctalnld the greatest velocity at Baker City, Or., where It has reached almost the proportions of a blizzard. o Slitter (ot HIh Money. London, Feb. 13. Judge Evans to day awarded the estate of Dr. H. H. Crippen, hanged for the murder of his wife. Belle Elmore-Crlppen, to Mrs. Theresa Hunn, of Brooklyn, N. Y., a half sister of Mrs. Crippen. Crippen bequeathed his property to Ethel Clare Leneve, for love of whom he killed his wife. Judge Evans declared the will invalid today on the ground of public policy. . Fear n Iloxer rising. London. Feb. 13. Tbe foreign of fice today fears anti-foreign out breaks which may be a repetitlod of the Boxer uprising, are Imminent in China. Europeans are believed to be la danger. ASSISTANT II SECRETARY OF STATE BILL VETOED M THE (JOVEKMHl WHO OBJECTS TO CREATION OF AX OFFICE WITH EMEROEJiCY CLAUSEi-SA-8 IT WOULI CRE ATE (JOT ERSMEJi'T OF CLERKS. IT WILL REVOLUTIONIZE POLITICAL COriDITIONS AMD BREAK THE MACHINE Bill Is Made Up of Washington and Idaho Second Choice Features of the Direct Primary Law Its Object Is to do Away With Candidates Nominated by a Plurality and Pro vides That Where Three or More Candidates Are Running the Voter Must Express His Second Choice. Governor West this afternoon sent into the' senate a veto message against Senate Bill No. 135, creating the office of assistant secretary of state. This Is the Bowerman b'Hf, and the governor states It Is uncon stitutional, as an amendment ' to the constitution Is sought to be made to provide for this office. The bill In the opinion of the governor seeks to cre ate a state government by clerks, and the governor thinks there would 'be just as much need of giving the same powers to the chief clerk of the state treasurer, or any other state official. It would put the chief clerk of the secretary on several state boards, ' but does not validate the acta of the chief clerk, In the past when the sec retary of state has been absent. The office of secretary of state is created (by the constitution,, and only the purely ministerial acts can be dele gated Instead of all the functions of the office as is undertaken in the bill. State officials could thus be al lowed to stay away ' from the state house and delegate all their duties to a clerk and 'draw the pay the state allows them. As .this bill creates a new office, the governor thinks It should not contain . an emergency clause. A new bill Is being prepared for introduction to overcome the objec tions In this bill. o FIVE MINERS KILLED BY I RE MATURE EXPLOSION Hazelton, B. C, Feb. 13. Five men were instantly killed and two others severely Injured at noon Sunday as the result of a premature explosion In the small tunnel of the Grand Trunk Pacific railroad company mine near Kitselas, B. C, according to in formation reaching here today. The men' were working at the far end of the tunnel when a box of powder left sear them out of the tunnel n thaw out, exploded.' Speaker Rusk today under suspen sion of the rules put through his bill to provide a second choice at prim ary yelectlons for all offices for which there are three or more candidates. It Is made up of the Washington and Idaho second choice features of the direct primary laws, and In those states the second choice has enabled the people to get out a much better class of candidates than under the single choice in Oregon. This bill If enacted Into law will do away with having candidates who are nominated "by a 'plurality, and who have not behind them an ex pressed majority of the party they represent. The bill provides two squares at the left of each candidate 'where three' or more' are running for the same; office, and the- voter most express a first and second choice or his vote on, that division of the ballot will not be counted. It also provides that ha. .cannot vote first or second choice alone. Here;- are the provl slnns ol' tiie bill introduced by Speak er" Rusk. '' ' .... Rusk Second Choice 'lUII. A bill- foran act'to require a" ma jority vote at a primary election to nominate; to require, voters to ex press their, first and second choice of candidates in every case where there I are more than twice as many candi dates than there are positions to be filled In any one office division of the ballot. To provide for the manner of 'printing the ballots and for canvass ing first choice and second- choice votes, and making returns of the same. i Section 1. Hereafter at all prim ary elections a majority ot all votes cast for nomination In each office 'division shall be necessary for nom inating a candidate by a political par ty In such office division, i Sec. 2. In every case where there are more than twice as many candi dates of one political party for nom ination to a particular office as there are positions to be filled In such of fice division of the ticket, each voter shall be required to- ideslgnat 'On his ballot for each position to e filled .by nomination one 'person for 'his first choice and another person for his seo- .ond choice of tbe several candidate,) () Sec. .3. .Wben printing the ballala ior a (ifiiimrj eieuntm iqei e iiHkii.oa left opposite and -Id th; leifc jjf atatt upon the same lino as, the nmne of each 'candidate''" In etfch4 '6ffl'ee''"dfvfV slon two separate blank Pieces en- -closed by rule work In the form of a (Continued from Page 4.) i ; Don't Take Chances on Your Hat Get the Best THE ROBERTS " '.' , , Best $3.O0 Hat on Earth We Are Now Showing the Spring Style? Salem Woolen f Mill Store i t , . t Special on Shirts 95c and Cog : ,1 'f i