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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1912)
' 3 ' DAILY CAPITAL JOUB511. SALEM, OREGOK, FltlDAT, OCTOBER 4, 1012. Pnite Two. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL E. HOFER, Editor and Proprietor R. M. HOFER, Manager Independent Newspaper Devoted to American Principle! and the ProKreo nd Development nf All Oregon rabllihed Kverj Evening Except Bundny, Hnlem, Oregon SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Invariably In Advance) Tally, py Carrier, per year .,.$5.20 Per month.. 45c Dally, by Hall, per year 4.00 Per tnontb..85c Weekly, by Mall, per year .... 1.00 Six montbi.BOc FULL LEASED WIIIB TELEGRAPH ItEPOHT WILL BOOST FOR OREGON EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION RE LIEVES IX FKIMTi'LE OF ONE HAND WASHING THE OTHER, AND THAT EVERY CITIZEN SHOULD ENTOIRAGE HOME MANUFACTURE. The following resolutions were adopted by the Editorial association at Its recent meeting in eastern Ore gon: "Resolved that we commend the mude-in-Oregon campaign of tho Man ufncturerH' association to educate the people- of Oregon to give preference to the products of the home Industries, We believe that the best bonus any community can offer to those who in vist capital In Oregon enterprises Is the assurance of the patronage of the home product. "Wo recommend the enactment of the Idaho law requiring that all state, county, city and school district print ing binding and blank books bo manu factured In tho state. "We recommend that tho expiration of tho term of the present state print er, tho office be abolished, and t hat all public printing be procured within the stale In tho open market, a system which will result In saving largo sums of money to the taxpayers, and In giv ing employment to commercial print ing establishments In all sections of Oregon. "Whereas, tho last general assembly enacted a law requiring railroad com panies to publish the local time tables of arrival and departure of all trains, and, "Whereas, tho governor vetoed the bill on tho ground that such a law was not necessary, as the railroad commis sion could make such requirements, and as no such order has been mnde and tho public Is thereby greatly in convenienced; "Resolved, that .wo request the next b glslature to re-enact such a law, that local tlmo tables bo published In all local newspapers of general circula tion at tho expense of tho railroad corporations. "The Oregon Stuto Editorial asso ciation wishes to go on record as con demning largo alluring clgnrctto od- ertlscmentB In newspapers, maga zines and bill boards, gotten up to ed ucate the young to use this pernicious form of nicotine poison. "Wo condemn the high-sounding and misleading advertisements of whiskey and other alcoholic liquors as detrimental to good morals, and disap prove advertising champagne-flavored chewing tobacco as Inclined to lead many young men Into formation of tills disgusting habit. "Wo believe tho tlmo has come when no decent newspaper should carry ad vertisements of the character termed "Manhood lost and restored," or of remedies having for their purpose the accomplishment of race suicide. "Wei demand slate regulation of bill hoards; to tho end that such advertise ments bo freed from all objectionable ftutures, and that the Tactile High way and all principal county and state highways be not disfigured hy bill boards or other unsightly monuments of commerce. "Wo recommend a state law requir ing that bill boards erected in any county, outside of cities or Incorpor ated towns, bo subject to a franchise tax nnd regulation by tho county lourts, Grandpa James lllakely, of Drowns ville, who will be within a few days of 10 yours old when he voles for Wll roil, November !, began voting In 1SI1G lor Jackson; he was only a little over a year short of being old enough to voto In 1S32. What a tremendous tli etch of time, measured In events A. S. Jones, proprietor Lee Pharma cy, Chlco, Cnl., says: "I have been tilling Foley & Company's medicines '.or years. Foley's Honey and Tar ( impound, I consider, has no equal i.i J Is the ono cough medicine I can i i:i:moml to my friends as contaln li' ; ri narcotics or other harmful I ropiitles." Sold by Dr. Stone Dniy I I nipany. Let's have duo charity for the Hull I '.i'irs; they're havlnir m'ghty hard i ' ('.ding these days. Only three months of 1SI12 left. How much good roads havo been built. IDE GOOOS lilt- . ; fV A BENEFIT TO RELIEVE DISTRESS A case of extreme want in the northern part of the city has come to the attention of the Women of Wood craft and with a view to alleviating the straitened conditions of this fam ily, which consists of a widow and six small children, the idea was conceived cf giving a benefit show at tho Wex ford theatre, which will be held on the afternoon and evening of October 14. It is quite likely that the crowd seeking admittance will be much larg er than can be accommodated nt the V exford and If this should prove to be the case the overflow will be taken core of nt Ye Liberty. A fine pro giam Is being arranged for tho occa sion, which will undoubtedly fill the house-many times over. Salem people have never failed to do tholr share toward contributing to the worthy needy, and in this case It looks as If the usual spirit will bo shown. Tick ets will bo on sale at the principal business houses of the city and it Is understood that a house to house can- J vass will be made by the ladles of the lodge, starting within a day or two. j With so worthy a cause as this It is j thought that a large amount (of money can be raised In a short time and the management of this popular theatre and tho Women of Woodcraft are to be commended for the generous spirit shown In doing this piece of mission ary work whero its benefits will bo received by some of our own citizens. SAFETY Plfi TAKEN FROM GIRL'S LONG Portland, Or., Oct. 4. Ten Inches below the throat, a three-Inch safety .ln, which had been swallowed by Wilma Wade, 12 years old, of Sum mervllle, Or., nnd had been In her bronchial tubes for six days, was last night recovered in St. Vincent's hos- pltal by two Portland physicians in an operation which is thought to be unique In Portland. N0 record of the recovery of a safety pin under such circumstances was found in medical Journals devoted to such operations. Wilma Wade, who Is the daugher of a Suiiimervllle rancher, was seized with im attack of laughter last Friday and in tho Indrnwlng of her breath as she laughed, tho safety pin, which she was holding in her mouth, was drawn back Into tho throat. It was closed, cllowlng It to pass Binootlily down the thorax and Into tho bronchial tubes. After a number of homely remedies had been tried to remove tho pin, the girl was brought to Portland Sunday and taken to St. Vincent's hospital There the operntlon was performed yesterday. A tracheal bronchlscope was used to locate the position of the pin, a light bulb, mirror arrangements and a tube being let Into the bronchial tubes through a suture cut In the throat Into the thorax. With a medical hook the pin was drawn into the tube ard so out of the passages. The pin was nt ybout tho seventh rib and was lodged crosswise in the pi.ssage. An X-ray photograph of tho girl's throat was made to locate it. Tho girl suffered llttlo from the oper allon and Is expected to be discharged from tho hospital In a few days. Some Dill Pickles A couple of cucumber In tho real estate- office of Parker & Wareham, adjoining tho Capital Journal office are evidence of the richness of the soil and an Indication of what It will produce without straining. Ono of the Incipient pickles measures 13 Inches In length, 15 Inches around Its stomach and weighs four pounds. The c llur Is 15 Inches long, measures 12 Inches nt tho waist lino nnd weighs f r,r and one-lmlf poundsj They were grown on John F.ihrey's place, four miles south of tho city on the Jeffer son, road. Woodrow Wilson and William II. Tuft ngree in one thing that Theo dore Roosevelt is a victim of continu ous and Irrcmdlablo brain storm. THE VALLEY DELIGHTS IOWA BOUGHT AN ORCHARD TRACT "A PIG IN A POKE," RUT IS MORE THAN PLEASED, NOW THAT HE HAS SEEN IT. Dr. Frank Carroll of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has been In Salem three days looking over the valley. He bought one of the famous Hohrnstedt orchard tracts in the Waldo Hills, as the kids say, "unslght and unseen," nnd now has gone over every foot of the tract, and is pleased with his buy. In fact he Is quietly determined to come out here and make his home. This, after seeing the famous irrigated valley of Central Idaho, where, at Council, 17 sections are under water and in al falfa and fruits. He also went through the best Irrigated valley properties of 1 1) tali, and with the same result. He I is stuck on the Willamette valley, and loud In his praises of the Bohrnstedt properties. 'I am plensed with my buy, more than well pleased," said the stalwart and genial young plll mlxer. "I have been on the constant go here for three days, and never felt so well and hnd such a good appetite in my life. There Is nothing disap pointing In it. I am happily disap pointed at every turn. Put me down for a Willamette valley booster for tho rest of my life." Journalism as a Study. (From Seattle Post-Intelllgoncer, September 16, 1912.) No field of activity In these modern times offers broader opportunities for useful and helpful service than tho field of journalism offers. Jour nalism Ib a big fact in modern life; sometimes it seems that we do not fully appreciate the power wielded by tho press of the country; It Is a power not always wisely used; It is net always used for the good it can do; but In the main the newspapers of America are clean in most respects ami do more good than harm and If that could be said of the average citi zen It probably would satisfy the re-' qulrements of our imperfect civiliza tion. Tho establishment of a department of journalism In the University of Oregon following a similar and rea sonably feucoesssful experiment in the University of Washington and the assignment of Mr. Eric W. Allen, who, for a number of years, has been con nected with this liewspaper, to the new chair in tho Oregon university, shows that the ieople in this section of the country fully appreciate the power of the press, and that they are anxious to realize the maximum of its power for good In modern society. Mr. Allen is a young man of fine capacity; he has had practical expe rience in newspapor making; his Ideals are clean; he is keen to the opportunities of his new position, and it Is certain that Oregon's leading educational Institution will reap a fair profit ns a result of his services. Somo people overdo doing good; they do some good nnd got puffed up nnd become Impracticable and non sensical. Tried GETSIT, the New Corn Cure, Yet? Sec How Ensj It Drives Awny Corns. 4 "GETS-IT Will 'Get' Every Corn lou've Got!" At Inst, d real does-what-lt-says corn cure. Nothing like it has ever before been known. Every ninn nnd woninn who has corns, callouses, wnrts or bunions, ought to try "Gets-It" nt once and fee how mnrvelously it works. Quit shaving your corn with a razor. You may draw blood, and cause blood poi soning. "GETS-IT" is remarkable because It never Irritates or turns the true flesh sore or raw. It can't It is as safo as water. Stockings won't stick to It. Corn pains stop. The corn or callous bhrlvels up, comes out. Blessed relief! "GETS-IT" is sold at druggists nt 25c a bottle, or sent on receipt of price to E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago. Sold In Salem by J. C. Terry two stores, D. J. Fry, Dr, Stone Drug Store, Crown, Drug Co., Red Cross rhnrmacy, Opera House Pharmacy, Capital Drug Co. MAf ft to.o it V. 4- 'I WRITES OF TEDDY AND HIS WAYS LA FOLLETTE PRINTS FIRST OF A SERIES OF ARTICLES GIVING HIS VIEWS OK ROOSEVELT AND HIS METHODS. tUNlTID MESS LBAHKD Willi. Madison, Wis., Oct. 4. Resuming publication of his autobiography, which was interrupted last spring, Senator Robert M. La Follctte, in La Follette's magazine, today prints the first of five articles which are de signed to round out his story, and which deal vitally with the present national campaign, and the part he played In the early stages of the pro gressive movement. La Follette plans to tell his story under the following captions: 1 "Why I Became a Candidate for President." 2 "The True Story of the Cam paign." 3 "Why I Continued as a Candi date." 4 "Roosevelt Never Really a Pro gressive." 6 "His Record." "Roosevelt," La Folletto Bays In discussing the colonel's record, "has merely been a rhetorical radical." Ho declares that on June 27, 1010, when he visited Roosevelt at Oyster Hay, the colonel said of Taft: 'Sometimes a man makes a very good lieutenant, but not a very good captain." "In the light of subsequent events" says La Follette, "there can be llttlo doubt that when Roosevelt left tho White House he had WIG firmly In mind. He returned from Africa to find that many changes bad taken place me progressive niuvi-iiit-ui no i found far In advance of him; ho neith er understood It, nor was he In sym pathy with its manifest purposes, In so far as he comprehended them, He deliberated for a tlmo as to whether he would stand with the administra tion, supporting Tnft for re-nomlnn-tlon, or seek to identify himself with the progressives or straddle. He straddled. 'It left him nwakwardly stranded In the election of 1010. He halted to take account of stock. Events were rapidly transpiring, It was evident that the Taft administration was los ing ground day by day. The congres sional election of 1910 forecasted dis aster for the Republican party In 1912. "Roosevelt was still looking to 1916, and as the political situation de veloped In the following year, In his political philosophy, which is always personul, Taft's renominatlon and de feat in 1912 fitted admirably into his plan. "Then came his tour in the spring of 1911. It fired his blood. There was tho old-time crowds, the music, the cheers. He began to think of 1912 for himself. It was four years better than 1916, and four years counts In the life of a man turned 53; a world of things may happen In four years. "Rut every one saw the uncertain ties of 1912. Roosevelt clearly saw them. He could take no chances. He could not afford to become a candi date against Taft and fall, "Why not put forth another man, and feel out the Tnft strength? If It beenmo apparent that Taft could not be beaten for tho nomination, a con test would nevertheless weaken him, nnd make his defeat in the election more certain. If it became clear that Taft could bo beaten in the conven tion, and furthermore that he (Roose velt.) could win the election against a Democrat, his restored confidence, resulting from the tour of 1911, mnde him reasonably certain that he could displace tho candidate put out against Taft, stampede the convention, and secure the nomination for himself." At this point La Folletto closed the first chapter. In the second install ment of his story, W be published next week, La Follette will deal with tho rapid growth of La Follette's can didacy for president. - tTM tv ttM f SAVE YOURSELF There is no reason why you should always be a slave. If you are desirous of saving yourself or a friend from a drunk ard's grave, you cannot afford to overlook the opportunity offered at the Hot Lake Sanatorium for the cure of the liquor nnd drug habit. Hot Lake mineral baths prepare the body for the treatment and then sooth the nerves and actually remove the desire for the liquor or drug. Hundreds of happy homes In Oregon and Washing ton today bear, witness to the efficiency of the Hot lake treatment. One week will in most cases effect a cure. Sometimes longer Is re quired, but not often. The best of care Is given the patients. For full InfcrnHtlon," address Hot Lake Sanatorium, ISSCi WALTER Pres. Candidates' Cards For Marshal. The undersigned hereby announces his candidacy for city marshal and chief of police, subject to the city pri maries. D. W. GIBSON. For City Recorder. I hereby announce my candidacy for city recorder at the primaries Novem ber 4th. Platform Courtesy, correct records of proceedings, law and evi dence. , EARL RACE. 9-13- Charles F. Elgin, Candidate (or Nomination Office of CITY RECORDER To the people of Salem: I desire to serve a second term, and submit my official record as my recommendation. Samuel 0. Iturkhart. Candidate for nomination for office of City Marshal. It. A. Crossan. Candidate for re-election to the of fice of City Treasurer at the primar ies to be held In the city of Salem, Or., November 4, 1912. Chns. W. II rnnt. Candidate for City Marshal. My promise; "I will protect you under the laws and cinch you If you break them." For County Recorder. H. K Clark, Independent Democrat ic candidate for the office of county recorder, the candidate endorsed unanimously by tho Marlon County Democratic committee nnd the Inde pendent Taxpayers League. Platform: J Courtesy, strict economy nnd reduc tion of taxes. 9-25-tf Notice to Taxpayers. Tho county board of equalization will convene on Monday, October 21, for tho purpose of examining nnd equalizing the assessment rolls of Ma rlon county, Oregon, and will remain In session six days. All persons de siring to protest assessments on said rolls must do so according to the fol lowing provisions of the law; "Petitions or applications for the re duction of a particular assessment shall bo made in writing, verified by oath of tho applicant or his attorney and be filed with the board during the first week (t is, by law, required to be in session, and any petition or appli cation not so made, verified and filed, shall not be considered or acted upon by the board." F. J, RICE, Assessor for Marlon County. 10-1-lOt-dly Saved by Ills Wire. She's a wise woman who knows Just what to do when her husband's lifo is in danger, but MrB. R. J. Flint, Drain tree, Vt is that kind. "She insisted on my using Dr. King's New Discov ery," writes Mr. F. "for a dreadful cough, when I was s0 weak my friends all thought I had only a short time to live, and it completely cured me." A quick cure for coughs and colds, It Is the most safe and reliable medicine for many throat and lung troubles grip, bronchitis, croup, whooping cough, quinsy, tonsllltls, hemorrhages. A trial will convince you. 50 cents and $1. Guaranteed by J. C. Perry. When a woman drives a horse, why dees she whip him with the lints? Sick headache is caused by a disor dered stomach. Take Chamberlain's Tablets and correct that and the head aches will disappear. For sale by all dealers. , CASTOR I A lor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature SC. FIERCE and Mgr. ill w M Ladies', Misses' and Children's New Fall Suits and Coats now priced away down Ladies' Suits ..' $4.95, $7.50, $10.50, $12.50 Misses' Coats $3.50, $4.50, $7.50 Children's Coats - $1.98, $2.50, $3.50 1 'ISr? Dress Goods and Silks If you want to buy the latest Dress Goods and Silks at the right prices, come hen. We are headquarters, Price, yard, 25c, 35c, 49c, 75c and up Boys' ri .1 lotning Priced the low est in Salem SUITS $1.98 $2.45 $3.50 Big values iil fir vamsxcjsaaosx 10,000 Yards Now on sale at CHICAGO STORE SALEM, OREGON New Fall Trimmed The latest Shown Prices small $1.50 $2.50 And up like the picture mmm OSTRICH PLUMES on sale $1.95 $2.50 $3.50 Hats Ladies' and Children's Winter Underwear Now on sale at cut low prices Misses' Union Suits .....25c Ladies' Union Suits 49c Children's Winter Under wear 25c of Domestics the lowest prices .