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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1911)
DAILY CAPITAL JOCRXAL, SALEM, OREGON. FRIDAY, JUXE 2, 1911. PACK FIT Experienced .Salesladies Wanted. Apply after 1 p. m JUNE WHITE BAYS EVERYTHING IN WHITE AT BIG SAVINGS All White Undermuslifls are now Reduced Linens and While floods are now Reduced Host Sensational Bargains in Embroidery New White 'Serge Suits are now Reduced jhjw mine naisis are now Kcduced New White Dress doods Now Reduced Fine Whit: Silks are now Reduced All Women's Neckwear Is Reduced Lace Knit Underwear Now Reduced Lace Curtains are now Reduced White Shoes Are Now Reduced White Gloves and Parasols Are Reduced All Infants' Wear at Big Reductions Men's White Shirts Are Reduced Men's White Underwear Reduced KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL Health is Worth Saving, nnd Some Salem Teople Know How to Save It. Many Salem people take there lives In their hands by neglecting the kid neys when they know these organs need help. Sick Kidneys are respon sible for a vast amount of suffering and ill health the slightest delay is dangerous. Use Doan's Kidney Pills a remedy that has cured thous ands of kidney suffers. Here Is a Sa lem citixen's recommendation. A. W. Lobach, R. P. D. No 1, Sa lem, Ore., says. "I was laid up for two weeks by disordered kidneys caused, I believe, by a strain. I tried several remedies but obtained no re lief, and when a neighbor advised me to try Doan's Kidney Pills I did so. The contents of one box made me so well that I resumed work. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me greatly and I am pleased to recommend them.'' For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents fgr the United States. Remember the"' name Doan's and take no other. o This Looks "Fishy." 1 DNITKD PBE88 LEASED WIRE. Minneapolis, Minn., June 2. The police here are looking for three men who held up J. V. Breen, cashier of the University of Minnesota, on the college campus and robbed him of a satchel containing $13,000. The emp ty satchel was found later. t "Kingwood for M e These words are on the lips of hundreds of Salemites today. The "psychological moment" has arrived in Salem. REV. BLACK IS OF CHURCH MILITANT THE SPIRIT OF CHARITY, FOR. BEARAXCE AND TCISX THE OTHER CHEEK, OT MOST PROMINENT FEATURE OF HIS RESIGNATION Asserting that he cannot maintain his self-respect as long as he allows ms name to remain associated with ono who through calumny and gross prevarication has maliciously at tempted to besmirch his character, and who has rent the Christian church asunder, Rev. B. C. Black sev eral days ago resigned as a member of the Oregon Christian Ministerial Association, and he has been advised that the resignation has been ac cepted. Culmination of Old Fight. The resignation Is the culmination of a fight which had its beginning last spring in the church, when Rev. Davis Errett, the present pastor, was re-elected pastor, and: he is the man referred to by, Rev. Black in his resi nation. Dissatisfaction seems to have been exhibited by a certain faction of the church as far back as 1909, and it began to boil when Rev. Errett, as the faction alleged, through manip ulation in that year, secured a raise In his salary of $500 a year. This was followed by a petition in 1910 asking him to resign, and, it was as serted, that he agreed to do so, on condition that the charges against him -were withdrawn, and did so, and so did his friends on the board of trustees. Subsequently the whole board of trustees resigned, and it Is then alleged that Rev. Errett through a nominating committee composed of his friends secured a re-election, and that one Sunday morning he took ad vantage of his opponents by having his nomination confirmed by the con gregation. While he received a ma jority vote, It was asserted by his op ponents that It was but 112 votes out of a membership of 600. The mat ter was then taken up with the min isterial association and charges pre ferred against Re.v. Errett. Among other things if was chpreiei thit he had used his influence as pastor on Miss Mclntire, an aged lady, to Induce her to buy from him Alaska coal stock at 50 cents a share, while the stock was on the market at 17'4 cents. It was alleged that he sold her $500 worth, and that it repre sented her earnings for years. It was charged that he had said things derogatory to Mrs. Sarah Riggs. but that when confronted he denied them It was also charged that his renten tion meant the tearing asunder of the church. The ministerial association evi dently did not bei'ieve the charges, for it upheld Erre't, and then followed the resignation of Dr. Black, one of the leaders nf the opnnsing faction. Hlark Is Bitter. "I cannot retain or maintain my self-respect,' says Rev. Black, In his resignation to the association, "as long as I allow my name to remain associated with one, who. by cal umny, gross prevarication and grovel ling expressions has maliciously at tempted to besmirch my character and rent the church asunder until it lies bleeding in shame and der'sion, and who has ignominiously failed to approach even the shadow of the ped astal of the high ideals of the Chris tian profession. And inasmuch as the ministers of the Christian church of Oregon uphold the traducer ini cal umny, vituperation and villainizing practice, and that by remaining with them, by the high courts of reason and right thinking, I would be con sidered particeps criminus. I hereby withdraw from your association,, and ask you declare accordingly.1' MEDFORD LETS CONTRACT FOR BIG HOSPITAL GARY ASTOUNDS. (Continued from Page 1.) rrviT.n riiEss t.fasf" wit 1 Medford, Or., June 2. The con tract was let today for a 100-room hospital, to be constructed upon the site furnished by thp Medford Com mercial club to the Sisters of Provi dence. The building will cost $130, un nr, it to tn h rnmnleted by De- ctim'ber 1. The hospital will be the largest institution of Us kind Detweei San Francisco and Portland, and w 11 represent an investment of nearly $200,000. "The American Iron and Steel In to visit America. The result was that a meeting IS3 been called for July 5 and 6 in Brussels. Represen tatives of the steel making countries of the world have been invited to at tend. It will be suggested, unless I am convinced that it is legally and mor ally wrong, that the steel makers of the world form an association simi lar to the American institute. I have no Wish fntentlnnallv tn vlnlatn i, law, nor to do anything not for the best interests of the nennle. Thoao are the sentiments of myself, and the meniDers or tne finance committee of the United States Steel corporation." Chairman Garv rjiIi! that th into- national association proposes to dis cuss the moral, ethical and social sociological questions of the associa tion's connected with steel making. The American Institute, he said, was formed after the panic of 1907. The United States steel corporation then owned GO ner cent nf tho try's steel business, and now owns su per cent. After the panic, he said, business was demoralized and manufacturers believed the demorali zation could be prevented if the steel business were made solid. i..t li. a ... "Under the law we had tiBiee wun competitors to maintain prices." Gary testified. "However, we believed we had nn rlu-i.t r .,..' ceed to the destructive competition usually following such depression and meaning that many manufactur ers would have been driven into bankruptcy. I invited a number of steel manufacturers tn n rilnnoi- on,i suggested that they could prevent general demoralization If oah v,o.i a disclosure of all the circumstances of his business. "We have not controlled th nrl- of steel and can not dn sn i v,vn never believed in fixed prices, nor In changing prices by common consent. Neither do I believe in fixing prices by ruinous competition." Uarv told the rnmnilttno tVixt i, - , UIUL U,7 thought the cornnratinn rnnimlii more than 50 per cent of the availa ble iron ore supply. The companv does not make armor plate, he said. Itisdon Works to Close. San Francisco, .iiinn (? Th tjio don Iron Works, recently purchased by the United States steel corpora tion, will be closed .Tune 9( poi. dent Augustus Taylor of the Risdon woras in a statement today said that the shutdown would be indefinite. The steel cornoration rtrentiv at tempted to purchased the Moran Shipbuilding works at Seattle. ; O . TKDI) YIlREAKS INTO PRINT OXCE MORE New York, June 2. Pointing out what he terms radical apd vital de fects In the Sherman anti-trust law, Theodore Roosevelt, in the Outlook today, writes: "The decision in the Standard Oil case has brought out many proposals for altering and amending the anti trust law. "As construed by the sumpreme court the law accomplishes a certain amount of good, and it has been a good thing to obtain the decision that has been obtained against the Standard Oil company. "The anti-trust law was framed on the theory that it was possible to turn back the wheels of progress in indus trialism, and in an age of combina tion to put a stop to the combina tions under which business was car ried on. . "What is urgomtly needed is the en actment of drastic far-reaching leg islation which shall put the great In terstate business corporat'ons like the Standard Oil company, the sugar trust, the steel trust and the like, at least as completely under the control and regulation of the government in each r-nd every respect as the inter stae railways are now put. RAM) CONCERT AT MARION SQUARE TONIGHT The Salem Military band will give a concert in Marlon square this even ing, beginning 7:30 p. m. The band hns nrennreti nn esneclallv fine uro gram. Including a number by the Ye Liberty quartet. Program as follows: March, "Under the Double Eagle (Wagner.) Selection, "Time, Place and the flirl fHoward.) Cornet solo, selected; Ward h. ! Fisher. Ballet, Robyn. March. solos for Messrs. ward. Mllintuiin I "The Shoe for a Gentleman"! Johnston Murphy We have lasts and patterns designed for the young men especially, but we specialize in J. & M. Shoes on lasts and patterns for the conservative business and professional men, who desire ease and style combined with durability. and dress wear made on combination lasts to I the feet of men who "Never Can Get a Shoe ! that Fits". Patent tan calf, tan kid, French kid, calf : and gunmetals in but ton and lace, low or high. 6 'If .1 ; 1 fit Shoes for street : Oxfords $5.50 Sold everywhere in the U. S. A. for $6.00 High shoes that are sold most places. for $6.50 and I $7.00 we sell for $6.00. Our cash selling system en ables us to do what others cannot afford to. Ye BOOT SHOP HSFt n T..tt.ttTt ; Read The Journal Ads carefully. Our advertisers are offering great bargains every day. "Flight of the Birds" 'Colonel Stuart", Burton Weldon; and Sel- This advertisement is written for the man or woman who has a lit tle foresight coupled with good Judgment and enough common sens, to know a good thing when he or she sees it-a person of J decision and actlon-with action enough to snap up property wnen the price is such as to show that It .s cheap. KIXGWOOD PROP. ERTY is In this class, for the improvements are included in the price of lots, which range from '1275 for choice Inside home sites, to $650 for the best corners. SEE KIJiGWOOD before you pass Judgment and select your future home. CAPITOL TRUST COMPANY Owners and Developers Bechtel & Bynon, Sales Agts. -r.iUAnfl Main 452 "DON'T WORRY MEETING" Of th Prepress Leneiie of Lincoln, Folk County, Oregon, Saturday Evening, June 8, The regular monthly meeting of the Lincoln Progress League will be a discussion or uib uiwi ..i - the farmer and his wife wun imieiy suggestions for bettering conditions Some of the subjects discussed will ...... j Wnrrif Mb" "WOr- De: weeua umi. " - ries With Wings," "Orchard Pests that Worry Me", "The Thing that Worries Me Most", "Worries I Sel dom Mention", "Worries mai nun Me", etc. . , t The discussions win ut j .wu iva iicunl nnntfl nf liter- sperseu wim Hie --- ary and musical selections, and the program will be followed by a straw berry and ice cream supper. Millionaire Suicides. rtuniTD nuts T.ASrT WIMO Chicago, June 2. Herbert Kull man, mlllionalro from Benecla, Cal., killed himself in the Sherman hotel here today. His body was found in a room, a ounwi Luiuuftn I am Insana Cremate my re mains. May mother and God forgive me" read a note pinned to the bed clothing. . . A moinier, oruuir uu tern Hve in California. Kullman was president of a tannin company. Tn tcrmlsstoii. Quartet. "Kiss Me, My Honey, Kiss Me (Snyder), Messrs. V. Ellis, H. Ki lls Knowland, Snyder. Overture, "Poet and Peasant", Suppe. Idyll, "Mill in the Forest," Kilen berg. Two-step "Aggravation Hag, Cobb. March, "Stars and Stripes, bousa. These band concerts are becoming very popular. The last one was at tended by great crowds of Salem neonle. The music is enjoyed thor oughly and tonight there will no doubt be a large concourse prearui. There is an effort on foot to have a hotter bandstand and more lights about the grounds. Berry Hallocks Have the latest folding bal lock. Also, berry crates. Prices right. Corn Corn is now the cheapest feed for the chickens. Both whole and cracked corn. Try It and see the results. Free delivery. ' . . D. A. WHITE & SONS 255 N. - Commercial Street. Phone 160. Salem Oregon Dependable Furniture At Dependable Prices From a Dependable Store We have everything to furnish your home. Carpets, Ranges, Linoleum, Draperies Get our prices on your estimates Imperial Furniture Co. 177 Liberty St. Salem Ore.