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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1912)
iiiill lr . I TOL. XXII. SALEM OREG 9N, WKIKSIUY, SETTUMBElt 25, 1913. NO. 201. FOOTE WILL NEVER WEAR FOR IMG WILCOX BROKE THE LAW ONLY WHEN IT FAILED TO PROTECT HIM AND HIS YOUNG DAUGHTERS Tried to Have Wilcox indicted for Ruining His Oldest Girl, and Tried Again When He Accomplished the Undoing of His Second Daughter, But Failed in Both Cases When Wilcox Took Liberties With the Third Daughter He Killed Him Governor Will Pardon Him and Send Him Back to His Fam ily, Who Need Him. W. It. Foote, sentenced to 15 years in the state prison for shooting down Charles Wilcox, at Coqullle, who had ruined two of his daughters, and who had attempted to ruin a third, will never wear the stripes of a convict. The reason Is that Governor West will officially pardon him In a few days, and the governpr announced that much this morning, when questioned as to what his action would be with relation to the case. Questioning as to what the gover nor's action with relation to tlie case would be also elicited the further In formation that, while Foote was brought to the penitentiary here laBt Saturday, that he has never been an inmate of the Institution, but been In the custody of the officials pending action by the governor on his applica tion for a pardon, "Would you really like to know whnt I am going to do with Foote," asked the governor In reply to a question CHICAGO TORE Is Salem's Headquarters For the latest and best values in Cloaks, Suits Millinery, Dress Goods and Silks We are ladies', men's, misses' and children's furnishers in everything they wear, A so BEDDING AND SHOES. Come here and see how much lower our prices are than you have to pay elsewhere, NEW FALL STYLES AT The best and choicest ' values offered Suits DRESS GOODS We show the most complete line in Salem, Every piece new, Price, yard 25c, 35c, 49c, 75c and up 100 whether he would grant him a par don. Upon receiving a reply In the affir mative, he followed It up with the question: "What would you do?" "I would pardon him," chirped In one newspaper roportor. "So would I," declared still anoth er, ''and give him a pension In addi tion." "I am not prepared to say just now what I will do," said tho governor, I "but If you predict that Foote will soon be free, your shot will not miss the mark very far." After Foote learned that Wilcox had ruined one of Ills daughters, a girl of 18 years of age, he sought to have him Indicted, but he failed. When he learned of the ruin of the second, he again tried and again he failed. When lie found his aged wife crying her eyes out because she had learned that Wll- (Contlnued on Page 10.) m exhibition J lilt . in Coats, III 'J??M, and Millin- " PiT J r $ 7 ery, s$?' Ladies' Suits, $4.95, $6.90. $10.50, $12.50 and up Ladies' Coats, $3.90, $5.90 $8.50, $10.50 and up Trimmed Hats, $1.50, $2.50 up Extra Special Children's and Misses' 50c Union Suits ,all sizes; spe cial price 25c STRIPES AT COQUILLE Tlirriitcii to Clone Mills. Lawrence, Mass., Sept. 25. If the Industrial Workers of the world call an Ettor-Glovannlttl protest strike here, the textile mill owners assert today that they will closo down the mills. Safoty Commissioner Lynch has granted a permit to the In- dustrlal Workers of the World parade on Sunday. Joseph Ettor and Arturo Glo- vannlttl are held here on the charge of murder In connection with the recent textile strike. TERRIFIC TYPHOON IN JAPAN JIAM LIVES HAVE BEEN LOST AXD ntOPEItTY DAMAGE WILL 1IUX INTO MILLIONS-MANY VESSELS DKIVE.V ASIIOKE. (UNITED I'llERB I.HASni) Willi. Toklo, Sept. 25. Swept by a ter rific typhoon, which has laBted since Monday, Japan today Is Buffering the loss of millions of yen by floods In four of her principal provinces, Toklo, Osaka, Achl and Shoklku. Over land lines, which In most parts of the stricken provinces are pros trated, telegraphic reports are coming In of fatalities and losses, the extent of which can only be conjectured. Struck by the Btorm, scores of build ings are reported to have collapsed In the city of Nagoya, where 20 lives are said to have been lost Incomplete re ports from the north coast say that the torpedo boat destroyers Fudukl and Tachlbaria were smashed on the rocks and are complete wrecks. Two other navy vessels are reported to have gone ashore. More than 3000 people are homoless and an Infinite number are said to have perlBhed In the city of Vatsnta. In the harbors near Toklo many ves sels have been Injured by the storm. When delayed reports reach Toklo from the outlying provinces It Is feared the damage will prove more Berlous. EVERYBODY HAS TUBERCULOSIS AT SOME TIME UNITED MESS LHAHKD WHIP!. Berkeley, Cal., Sept. 25. That near ly every person who reaches the age of GO years has had tuberculosis at snmo time or other during their life time, was the assertion here today of Dr. Robert A. Peers, of Colfax, Cal., who addressed tho delegates of the league of California municipalities In session here- ' . i "Many people have tuberculosis without knowing It and are likewise cured without knowing It," said Dr. Peers In his lecture entitled "Sani taria and Camps for Tuberculosis." ALDERMAX .TONES XOT A CANDIDATE Alderman Jones, who has been men tioned as a candidate for chief of po lice, today, when questioned with re lation to It, declared he had no ambi tions along that Hue, and that he nev er had. "I am not a cnndldate for this of fice," he declared, ''and you may say for me I never have been. I do not know how It happened that my name has been linked with the office. Any way, I am not a candidate, for I have troubles enough of my own without seeking that office." It Is equinoctial storm time, but the most uncertain thing In Oregon Is weather. If you must write love letters It b safer to use postal cards. The Championship Gnniog. . New York, Sept. 25. To sottlo playing dates and other details relative to the world's baseball championship series, scheduled to begin October 7, the national commission mot here today at Pelham Manor, the home of John T. Urush, owner of the New York National League club. Chairman AuguBt Herrmann declared his bollof that New York was tho logical place to open the sorles. The members agreed that the chlof problem to be solved Is preventing scalpers from getting tickets, WILL FIRE 1(1 BLAST In Making Cut on the Eugene & Eastern Near Monroe 5000 Pounds of Giant Powder Will Be Used in One Blast. WILL RUN SPECIAL TRAIN To Place the Explosive 120 Five-Inch Holes Have Been Bored, and In These Two and a Half Tons of Dy namic Will Bo Flared, mid All Ex ploded lit Once by Electricity Probably the Biggest Blast Ever Fired In the Jiorthwest What is believed to belhe heaviest "shot" ever discharged In Oregon, or In the Northwest, is that which will be used to open the big cut near Monroe, Benton conty, on the route of the new Portland, Eugene & Eastern electric railway ,The company finds the ne cessity of making a 2000-foot cut, which averages from 13 to 33 feet In dopth, and from wlilch 27,000 yards of earth and stone mostly rock are to be removed. The entire mass will be broken out with ono shot, for which D000 pounds of powder will be used, and It is believed that the ex plosion will be easily one of the fea tures of the year. It is assuredly one of the big things In railroad building of modern times. The powder will bo placed In 120 holes of a five-Inch di ameter, and the entire mass fired at tho same time, probably through the use of an electric battery. In building Its new line from Monroe to Eugene the P. E. & E. Is seeking a uniform grade, which accounts for the excavating of the cut. The earth and stone to be removed from the cut will be used In making a fill Just south of It. The date for firing the great shot, which will bo easily heard for many miles, has not been set, but to ac commodate the hundreds of people who know about It, the railroad will run lis first special train from Albany and Corvallls. The fare from Albany will be $1.70 for tho round trl p, and $1 from Corvallls. Every precaution for the protection of the men who fire tho powder, as well as for spectators, will be taken by the company. Already much discussion Is being Indulged in as to how the big charge of powder will act when It Is fired. Some contend that It will make the real estate of thnt vicinity shake and tremble, while others say the 27.000 ynrds will shoot up Into the air In fine particles. Some contend that, fiere will be a deafening explosion, while others argue Unit the report will be comparatively mild. Anyway, Benton county real estate will be on the move. Killed by Mistake. Huntington, Ore., Sept. 25. A friend's mistake In supplying Farl Merill, a workman at a gypsum plant a few miles from here, with disinfec tant, Instead of brandy caused Mer rill's death, according to a message received here today. Merrill had hurt his hand, and to ease the pain took three or four swal lows of the disinfectant. "It don't taste good," he complained. He died in a few minutes. AT 0 no IOC! OF In Incuhutor Class. Marshalltown. Ia., Sept. 25. Captain D. K. Ewalt, aged 73 Is today rejoicing over the birth of a daughter, augmenting his al- ready largo family and making the 18th child. The mother Is 39 years old and Is the fourth wife of Captain Ewalt, a farmer living three miles west of Albion. Altogether the new baby la the 25th child of the combined par- entage of Mr. Ewalt and hlB pi es- ent wife. The latter had seven children by a former husband. VIOLATED THE LAW OF THE ROAD ' UNITID mCSS LliBID WMS.1 Tacoma, Wash., Sept. 25. Dccause he violated the state statutes govern ing right of the road, while obeying tho city ordinance covering the matter II. L. Brown, an expressman who sued the Puget Sound Electric company for $16,500 damages will get nothing. This is the decision of Judgo Clif ford, who today non-suited the case. Brown, driving an automobile deliv ery in attempting to avoid a team, swerved sharply to the loft and was run ino by an lnterurban street car. The delivery car was wrecked and Brown received severe injuries. The court ruled that the city ordi nance stands for naught when It con flicts with state statutes, which re quire vehicles to turn to the right In passing or avoiding other traffic. REPORTED KILLING OF AMERICANS DN1TED PRK8S LIARKD WIRI. Washington, Sept. 25. Naval offi cials hore doubt the truth of a report from Panama that 29 American blue jackets have been massacred by Nlc araguan rebels at Leon. Nothing con firmatory of the report has boon re ceived. Admiral Southerland, com manding the Nlcaraguan expedition, re)orted recently that there are 400 marine at Leon with Ileutenant Com mander U)ng commanding. While no confirmation of the re ported massacre of Americans has been received here, great uneasiness Is felt over the certainty thnt, if the news is confirmed, an American oc cupation of Nicaragua will follow. Leon, which Is a city of 35,000 pop ulation has been the stronghold of the rebels In all tho recent troubles here. FIRST GAME FOR CHAMPIONSHIP NEW YORK OCT. 8 New York, Sept. 25, Tho first game of the series between the New York Giants of the National league and tho Boston Hed Sox, of the American League, for the world's baseball championship will bo played In Now Ycrk, October 8, according to plans announced here this afternoon by the National Baseball commission. The second game will be plnyed In Boston, October 9. The Boston team will be undor tho management of' the league to which It belongs, the same condition prevailing 'n the management of the New York club. Each team will control the sale of tickets in Its own town, The big trusts want regulation, pro viding the regulator li their friend. flFVIS TARIFF ED BY THE HIESI'DEDT IF RE-ELECTED INTIMATES CONGRESS WILL DE GALLED IN SESSION FOR THIS WORK Points Out That Roosevelt's Proposition to Control Trusts Would Create the Most Monstrous Monopoly the World Has Ever Known Criticised the Recall of the Judiciary, But Spoke Very Favorably on Woman Suffrage- Asserts That He Alone Is President, and Is Responsible for All Acts of the Administration. UNITED rsiia LB18F.I) WML New York, Sept 25. Unoqulvocally promising Immediate revision of the tariff downward if he Is re-elected; Intimating that a special session of congress for such revision is his plan, and flatly denying statements made by Governor Woodrow Wilson, that he has been badly advised, President Taft here today Issued a statement of his position, which Is regarded as his most Important plea for support at the polls In November. "I and I alone am responsible for the acts of my administration Is the way the president answers allegations that he has been "handled" by any one. He stamped as entirely without foundation the view of his activities which was based on the late Senator Dolltver's epigram that "the president Is an amiable gentleman entirely sur rounded by people who know exactly what they want. " ' In outlining his position, and that of the party1 he represents on the tariff question, President Taft said: :,Tnrlff., Should Be Revised. "The policy of tho Republican par ty on the tariff question Is not to shut out foreign manufacturers, but to pro' tect democratic manufacturers and keep American worklngmen . em ployed. The' tariff should be rovlsed, so far as Is necessary, to keep prices from being exorbitant, and so that the manufacturer shall secure only enough protection to pay the scale of high wnges, which ought ot obtain In this country, and at the same time se cure reasonable profit from business "The public may rest assured that should the Republican party be re stored to power all legislative branch es will be sure that all schedules In the tariff of which complaint has been made, will bo subjected to Investiga tion. Monstrous Monopoly. "The proposal of the third party candidate to control trusts through federal regulation would create the moBt monstrous monopoly In the his tory of the world. This power would prove 'much more autocratic than that possessed by Caesar or Napoleon. An unprincipled man, with such power as that proposed by the progreBlsves in his grasp, could perpetuate h.ls au thority, perhaps under legitimate forms, until It would require a revolu tion to shake loose his grasp. President Taft cited figures of ex ports by American manufacturers last year, and contrasted, theso figures with those of lfflifi, the last year of the Cleveland administration, when the WllBon tariff law was In force. "This would seem," President Taft said, ''to he sufficient reply to (lover nor Wilson's talk about the Payne tariff law being a straight Jacket for American Industrial energy. The Payne law has no more to do with the advancing cost 'of living than the latest Installed Atlantic citble. On the contrary, It has enabled American workers to meet the high cost of liv ing and maintain their families In comfort. Denounced Congress. President Taft denounced congress for passing the woolen and cotton bills, which ho vetoed, adding: "With the election of a Republican president and Republican candidates to congresB, tariff revision would pro ceed Immediately along lines advocat ed by the tariff board." Asked If he meant by this that an extra session of congress would he called In the event of his re-election, the president answered: "I think my statement Is sufficient ly exnllclt." "President Taft flatly denied that there has been any Intervention by, ' his government In the Nlcaraguan rev olution. He asserted that American marines had been placed there merely to protect American lives. As to Woman Suffrage. Regarding the woman suffrage move ment, President Taft said: "'Suffrage Is an Issue to be decided by each state. There can be no doubt but that whenever and wherever a ma jority of women Impress upon fath ers, husbands, sons and sweethearts that they want to vote, they will bo given the right to vote. This Is an la se too noble, serious and sacred to be used by a political party merely to catch votes. I believe women are capable of . as wise use of the ballot as men." President Taft criticises, the recall of the Judiciary, and expressed him self In favor of Immigration. He de clared that the attacks of 'Samuel Gompers upon bis administration were "as erroneous as claims that he had delivered, the entire labor vote to Bryan-four years ago." -' He Alone Responsible. ' "As to Governor Wilson's statoment thnt I have been misled by bad advis ers, I wish him and everyono else to understand thnt I have boon and will continue to be president In all that the title Implies. I am responsible for ev ery act. of my administration, and have no burden to shift to the should ers of others." 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