Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, May 01, 1911, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    rE six.
DAILY CAPITAL JOCKXAL, SALEM, OREGOX. MONDAY, MAT 1, 1811.
A HAPPY
HOME
IN REACH
Joy
AND
DON'T CHUM
ALL
TO BE HAPPY KEEP WELL
USE ONLY
BR. KING'S
NEW DISCOVERYBRouGHf
TO CURE
COUGHS AND COLDS
WHOOPING COUGH
AND ALL DISEASES OF
THROAT AND LUNGS phc. soc .nd $1.00
" 1 . -J SOLO AND GUARANTEED IV
Millions
J. C. PEBBI.
Arc You Looking
For the Best
Orchard Development
Proposition in Oregon?
We have it
Call and see us.
The A. G BOHRNSTEDT CO
304 U. S. National Bank Bldg.
SALEM, OREGON
Head Office, Minneapolis, Minn.
Branch Offices j
Miicleny and Creswell, Ore?.
GERMANS WILL
CELEBRATE THE
ANNIVERSARIES
SALEM CEK.MAX SOCIETV TO
TAKE PART IX CELEBRATING
THREE GK1AT OCCASION'S IX
rORTLAXI) MAY 11.
ii Firemen's Insurance Co J
:: i I ...
ASSETS
1 Itonds and mortgages. $2,485,850.00
I Stocks and bonds.... 2,399,572.50
T OHlce building 800,000.00
4 Cash on hand and in
' ', bank 72 823.82
Agents' balances .... 316,597.22
Interest 'and rent due
and accrued, and all
other assets 46,533.73
$6,121,382.27
Surplus to Policy Holders
LIABILITIES
Capital stock $1,000,000.00
I
Reserve re-insurance I
fund 2.037,952.60 t
Reserve for unpaid
losses and all other
liabilities 241,490.26 i
t surplus 2341,939.11 I
16,121,382.27
$3,811,939.11
C. H. WARD, General Agent,
f Pacific Coast Department 225 Sansonie St, San Frunclsco, Calif,
I E. HOFER & SONS, Agents
Zttl 1.5. Ml Bank, Phone Main 82, Salem, Ore. 1 1
t
argains
In Second Hand Vehicles
Two-seat rubber tire surrey, good as new $60.00
Top buggy, rubber tires, first-class order ' 40.00
Good top buggy rubber tire 30.00
Top buggy, steel tire ... . 20.00
S. A. Manning Implement House
IFOOT STATE STREET
At the regular monthly meeting
of the Salem German. Society a spe
cial committee was appointed to work
up an excursion to go to Portland in
a body on May 14 and take part in
the celebration of the 40th annlver-1
sary of the Franco-German peace (
Jubilee, the Schiller anniversary and
the Father Jahn birthday all in one
big program. The Helllg theatre has
been engaged and a classic German
play will be put on in the evening.
Large delegations will attend from
Portland and other cities In the state
The committee to sell tickets and
Wiork up the excursion are Messrs.
Deckabach, Humburg, Kehrberger,
Kaup and Heyser. Salem German
people and their friends are urged to
observe this date. A special car or
two will be secured from Salem,
leaving here In the afternoon and re
turning in the evening. It is desired
to make the turnout a large one, and
then secure the co-operatLon of the
German people of Portland for Ger
man day at the state fair.
May Buy Property.
The German society did so well
handling a piece of property last
year, netting 90 per cent for all the
shareholders, that It has been decid
ed to take up another deal, and op
tions have been secured on two pieces
and the intention is to set aside part
of the proceeds for a permanent
home for the society, with grounds,
in the form lof a Bmall park. The
ommlttee will report on May 21 the
result of their Investigation and rec
ommendations. By a co-operative
plan the 150 members will make a
success of whatever they undertake.
J. H. Ahlers, Chris Schumann, Heln
rlch Gestatler, Cheater Mee and
Louis Albrecht were admitted to
membership In the society. A wo.
man's auxiliary has been organized
with Mrs, Kaup as president.
o
Eugene is holding a special elec
tion today to vote upon the proposi
tion of extending the city limits.
Salmon fishing began legally to
day. The catch will probably be
larger the first few days than later.
It usually happens that way.
Eugene has just completed a
$100,000 gas plant, which will be
placed In operation soon.
Lebanon is preparing to hold a
strawberry festival that will stand
for a record for the others to try to
break.
Clatsop county Saturday turned
over to the state one half of her state
tax, $16,529.23.
A Portland man has bought all
the hops of the 1910 crop, and all
before that, in thd Sacramento val
ley, 40,000 bales in all, and shipped
them to England.
The Columbia is rising slowly, and
the continued cold weather and
backward spring all through the
Northwest gives promise of unusually
high water, as the snows are not yet
melting and running off. '
Meftollua will be the end of a di
vision of the Deschutes railroad. The
company has purchased the necessary
grounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Tooze, of
Falls City, celebrated their silver
wedding Saturday evening.
Astoria Saturday let contracts for
$54,105 worth of street paving.
Seventeen medical students of the
U. of O. will graduate tonight.
Mrs. Louisa A. Emery, 81, and
last of the early settlers of the Ump
qua valley, died at her home at Coles
valley last Wednesday.
The Leona Mill Company's plant,
at Leona, burned S'urday. The loss
Is about $60,000. A short piece of
the S. P. track was injured by the
tle9 burning, and trains were de
layed several hours. Several box
cars loaded with lumber were
burned.
H"44 4M
The Bosom Sets Flat
T
The stud button holes exactly meet, the neck band does not
bind on your neck; button holes exactly meet buttons, no
bulging front, In fact a perfect fit it we launder your
shirts. . It is done with our new STEAM PRESSES, which
do not mb or burn the fibre, but MOULD the cuffs, neck
band and bosom to a PERFECT SHAPE. Try the new
work. Vlaitors welcome.
Salem Steam Laundry
130-MHI South Liberty Street
Pbome 2A
MY
DAUGHTER
WAS CURED
By Lydia E. PinkhamV
Vegetable Compound j
Tialtimore. Md. "I send vou here.'
vitu the picture of my fifteen year old
uaugnier Ante, who
was restored to
health by Lydia E. !
Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound. She
was pale, with dark '.
circles under her(
eyes, weak and irri
table. Twoditferent
doctors treated herj
and called it Green;
Sickness, but she'
irrew worse all the
time. Lydia E. Pink-1
ham's Vegetable Compound was rec
ommended, and after taking three bot
tles she has regained her health, thanks
to your medicine. I can recommend it
for all female troubles." Mrs. L. A.
Corkrax, 1103 liutland Street, Haiti
more, Md.
Tlundreds of such letters from moth,
ers expressing their gratitude for what
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
Eound has accomplished for them have
een received by the Lydia E. l'inkham
Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass.
Young Girls, Heed This Advice.
Girls who are troubled with painful
or irregular periods, backache, head
ache, dr.ffging-dovn sensations, faint,
ing spells or indigestion, should take
immediate action and be restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound. Thousands have been
restored to health by its use.
Write to Mrs. Pinkbnm, Lynn,
Mass., for advice, free.
IT'S THE OLD
HOMESTEAD
TONIGHT
"The Old Homestead," the mas
terpiece of New England rural
dramas, is now in the twenty-fifth
season of its success. It is still
owned and controlled by the veteran
author-actor, Dertman Thompson,
though the old gantleman seldom ap
pears in the play nowadays. He Is 77
years old, and Is taking a much
needed rest these days in his splen
did summer home at West Swanzey,
New Hampshire. He takes a deep
Interest In "The Old Homestead,"
however, and the company never
starts out on a season's tour without
having been thoroughly rehearsed by
him. No 'one Interested in the thea
ter should miss seeing "The Old
Homestead" this season, for the play
will probably not last forever, and
time slips past with a whirr these
days, and the changes are great as
they are unexpected. And no one
who holds the theater as vile and
contaminating should miss seeing
"The Old Homestead," or they will
lose their chief argument of what
might have been. If you belong to
the first class, you say you have seen
It before, even twice before you may
bo sure you will enjoy it as much at
the third time; If you are of the sec
ond set, you say that you have heard
that originally "The Old Homestead"
was broad and unseemly, then all
more credit should fall to him who
has lifted It out of the mire and
cleansed and purified It. It is one of
the plays that can be recommended
to all sorts and conditions iof men,
and, while this advice is an old story,
It naturally follow in the wake of
this classic among heart-plays. "The
Old Homestead contains the beet
comedy, the purest homely sentiment
and the sweetest breath of natural
ness the stage knows. Grand opera
house, tonight.
Prices, $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c.
PILES CURED IX 6 TO 14 DAIS
PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to
cure any case of Itching, Blind,
Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to
14 days or money refunded. Fifty
cents.
j : ' -
i
"And If jou want i green boase, why, paint It gretn." Scene from 'The
014 Hvtnesteid."
t WI Pay You
I Read! fe
Some Deals Recently Made in Salem.
A lot was sold at the comer of Ferry and Cottage streets for $6500, It was an old
house, but in good condition.
The half block on Front street between Cenetr and Chemeketa is contracted at $34 000
and $10,000 for the skating rink corner, '
I he Higgs lot on Court street, 55x133, has just been sold for $8500, or over $1 60 Der
front foot,
The Steeves estate lot on Cottage street, with two houses, next to the Alberts flats
sold for $6400, '
These transfers made within a short time all show the way property is going, Good
investments are to be made today,
The Kenilworth changed hands for $10,000, the buyer being a Portland Man,
Willamette Walley Farms.
Bird Rose and C, M, Harris have sold their 767-acre farm near Harrisburg for $47,50
par acre to H, Nirschel They bought this place less than six months ago for $22,50 per
acre,
More Railroad Development.
The Oregon Electric has surveyed recently from Thrall across east through Aurora,
and' is preparing to tap the country between there and Silverton, The Southern Pacific
has options on the Jackson ranch of 200 acres, east of Hubbard, and there is a strong
reason to believe that Hubbard will become a railroad junction,
Values of Orchard Lands.
W, S. Farris has just sold his 60-acre orchard near Hood River for $45,000 to C, A,
Chapman, of Bend, Oregon, Only 35 acres is set to trees and five acres bearing, and 15
acres in strawberries There is not an acre in the Willamette valley around Salem that
can be orchardized but is a bargain at $100 per acre or less, and will increase to
cf4UU in tive years
Buy a Home in Mountain View.
There are still choice bargains in the Mountain View property These large lots are
positively the finest suburban residence property offered for sale in this city that are on a
15-minute car service, and bound to increase in values in the next few years Do not fail
to investigate this property, and terms will be made to suit any purchaser who wants a
home in the choicest residence district of the Capital City,
Letter to Man Up North.
Followng is a letter sent to an Alberta man ,'who wants to buy a fruit farm and come
where fur coats are not needed:
"I have your letter of April 13, and have not answered as soon as I might have because
I wanted to get some reliable information, and, as it now happens there is something of
fering, "I have a fine farm -that can all be put into fruit land, and you can get it' on easy terms,
and it is the nicest kind of fruit land, and will raise prunes,and does rase them, and there
is a prune orchard and apple orchard on the place,
"This ranch can be got for $95 per acre, and when it is set out to apples prunes or
peaches it will be worth $50 per acre more each year, Land.all around it has been or
chardized and sells for from $300 to $500 per acre, There is no better opportunity for
an investment ,and you could sell off land at these prices as soon as you get it set out and
under cultivation, I know of no better investment that a man can make than to buy one
of these old ranches on the Willamette river, where he can get water transportation
for his crops, and only two miles and a half from 'the Oregon Electric Railroad the Hill
Ine from Salem to Portland, It woud make you a fine productive home, grow grain, hay,
dairy products, nad as fast as you can plat it into fruit you can sell off at two to four times
what you pay for it, That is the way this country is going, I am sending you a lot of
farmng information and want to add that there are a number of people herefrom Saskat
chewan, and ten acres here are worth more than a thousand up there for productive
ness and satisfaction as a place to live,
"We go through a whole winter frequently without frost, and ' have no crop failures,
Our country and city are prosperous ,and after living here 22 years I came from Iowa
I can honestly .and heartily repommend the country to any man who wants a home and
prosperity-.
SOME GOOD BARGAINS
Eight-room house, fine lot 79x160, on car line, in best residence part of city, fruit trees
and fruit, modern improvements ,$5000,
Best 20-acre prune orchard, in full bearing, one-halfmile from Rosedale, $6000,
Well established manufacturing business, one-fourth cash; easy terms on balance,
$20,000,
Brush farm, fine fruit land, in Liberty district, 22 acres, 2 1-2 acres cleared, good
house, $2200,
Finest improved fruit farm and residence on Garden Road for sale on easy terms,
$10000,
Half-acre tracts on South Commercial Street, close in, on easy. terms, $600,
Three first-class 50-acro tracts one fine road .near church and school, per acre,
$1 00,
Five-year-old prune orchard, half-mile beyond end of car line, sold in lots of two
acres or upward, to suit purchaser, all .but first two acres, $500 per acre, ,
R- R-Ryan place, 20 acres, 11-2 miles east of city, fine house, two large barns,
$1 0,000 i
.Half block. Twentieth and Trade streets, corner lot with house, $1200; three lots,
$800 to $1 000
Best five acres, with orchard, house and .barn, little timber, ideal little home lot, with
$1500 improvemnets, close to city, $2600.
Good house and two lots corner Liberty and Mission, price .including paving and
sewer $2000,
.Four choice building lots, two facing Liberty and two on High streets, $800, Spot
cash. All good, new buildings on the block Lots large, 75x141, and all sewer as
sessments paid -
Money to loan, I have $1000 to $1200 to loan at seven per cent on first mortgage,
I. HOFER-& SONS
Room 201 U. S. Bank Bldg. Phone Main 82