Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, May 09, 1913, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    PAQE THREB.
DAILY CAPITA! JOURNAL. SALEM, OKSOOH, FBXDAT, HAT , 1913.
That Corn Is a
SPORTS
BAITING CAGE FOR
Arrangements Made at Ball Grounds
So That No One in Vicinity Will
Get Injured.
rrosieots for a great ball game Sun
day, when the Weonas, of Portland, a
fast aggregation, will meet the Selem
Senators, are good. The Senators have
been turning out in great shape during
the week for practice. One night 17
men were on hand. This is more than
double the number that turned out last
year, and shows the increased interest
in baseball here.
Manager Baker has constructed a
batting cage for use in practice. An
other will be built for visiting teams.
The cage is constmcted in such a man
ner that balls cannot go back, over or
to either side of the batter, and the
result is he must send out hits, and
those on the benches or in the vicinity
are in no danger. Fouls are impossible,
the wire netting extending over the
batter.
Manager Baker has received a com
munication from the Westorn Bloomer
Girls, requesting a date hero. He will
endeavor to arrange for a game during
the chorry festival. Mr. Baker's sister,
who is now visiting him, saw the team
play in a Michigan city, and the crowd
was larger than that attracted by a
league team. The girls play good ball,
and are different in every way from
the Boston Bloomers Girls, it is stated.
JOLTS
American League.
KH.E.
Cleveland 3 8 0
Boston 2 3 1
Batteries Gregg and Carisch; Bedi
cnt and C'ady.
R.H.E.
New York 17 1
Detroit : 3 8 1
Batteries McConnell, Schulz and
Sweeney; Hall and Stanage.
R.H.E.
Philadelphia 6 9 1
St. Louis 3 8 5
Batteries Bender and Thomas; Ham
ilton and Agncw, Wallace.
R. H. E.
"Washington 5 7 3
Chicago 10 13 1
Batteries Groom, Gallia, Boehling
:and Henry; Russell and Schalk,
Many things are well done that are
not worth doing.
MMMMMM
It li pointed out that while President
Wilson is considerable of a baseball fan,
he can never qualify as a regular until
he has heaved a cushion.
There are quite a few who think
there is not much in Ty Cobb's prom
ises to behave. Cobb is naturally a
rough-neck, and it would kill him to be
anything else.
ChriBty Mathewson fails dismally to
make good the predictions of certain
scribes that he would show a falling off
in .his twirling performances this sea
son. Talk that Gotch and Zbyszko will
meet in San Francisco for a mat Battle
fails to arouse as much enthusiasm as
a proposed encounter of fourth-rate
prize-fighters.
ft ft
Jess Willard has five sparring part
ners in Lis quarters to get him in shape
for his battle May 17 with Gunboat
Smith.
The question of raising the ban on
Manager George Stovall, of St. Louis,
suspended for spitting on an umpire,
will be considered tomorrow at a con
ference. Luther McOarty, heavyweight cham
pion, has received offers from Promot
ers Coffroth and McCarey, of California
asking him to meet the winner of the
Smith-Willard fight.
The iirigated slant saves many pitch
ers in the game, who othorwise would
not last 10 minutes, according to Frank
R. Kitson, former Detroit and Brooklyn
pitcher.
University of Oregon defeated Uni
versity of Washington at baseball yes
terday 0 to 1.
Salem boys are contesting today in
the high school meet at Eugene. The
events and the Salem mon scheduled to
participate are as follows: 100-yard
dash, B. Ford, M. Fruit, A. A. Bynon,
G. Brown; 20-yard dash, B. Ford, M.
Fruit, A. A. Bynon, G. Brown; 440 yard
dash, M. Fruit, C. Carff; 8S0-yard run,
C. Sarff, J. Rowland; mile, J. "Row
land, E. Wright; 120-yard high hm-dlcs,
B.. Ford, G. Brown; 220-yard low hur
dles, B. Ford, G'. Brown; high jump, I.
; Fruit, B. Ford, M. Fruit; broad jump,
1 1. Frnit, B. Ford, M. Fruit; shot put.
B. M. McClelland, R. Williams; discus,
TS. ' McClelland,' R.v Williams; relay, B.
Ford, M. Fruit, A .A. Bynon, G. Brown.
Fry Fish b
Cottolene
BARGAINS
4-room houso, $850.00, North Salem.
8-room modern house, fruit and ber
ries, barn, $2000.
$6500 takes ideal home, 20 acres.
1 acre in berries, new house, $1800.
220 acres, well improved; $22,000.
SEVERAL GOOD BUYS IN PRUNE
RANCHES, HOP RANCHES AND
BERRY TRACTS.
6-room house, big lot, Yew Park,
$1250.
5 and 10-acre tracts, close in.
1- to 5 aero tracts cheap.
CITY LOTS ALL PARTS OF SALEM
7 acres, close in, 5V& acres in berries,
bonao and barn, $3200.
Several business chances, restaurant,
rooming house, grocery store, candy
store, pool hall, cigar stand, hotel.
SEVERAL STOCK RANCHES,
CHEAP.
4Vj acres, 2 houses, on car line, fine
garden tract, $0000.
7-rAm house, 3 lots, close in, snap
buy, $4500; terms.
10 acres bearing Italian prunes,
42750.
WHAT HAVE YOTJ TO TRADE?
LIST YOUR BARGAINS WITH US.
WE SELL FIRE, LIFE, ACOOIDENT
INSURANCE.
4, 5, 6-ROOM HOUSES, INSTALL
MENTS. Acme Investment Co.
A. B. COOK, Manager.
Thones: Office, Main 477; rosidonce
Main 2487. '
Opposite Court Hons. 540 State St.
National League.
W.L.Pct.
Philadelphia 10 6 .625
Chicago 14 9 .60!)
Brooklyn ....12 8 .600
St. Louis 13 9 .591
Now York 10 9 .526
Pittsburg 9 12 .429
Boston 7 12 .368
Cincinnati 5 15 .333
American League.
W.L.Pct.
Philadelphia ...13 3 .833
Cleveland . 15 6 .714
Washington 12 5 .706
Chicago 14 10 .583
St. Louis 0 14 ,391
Boston 7 13 .350
Detroit 7 15 .318
New York 3 10 .158
Gold Medal, 1
London,
The best of tea
from the best of
land for th best
drinkers.
la Ikdad. AMlita ngi.
All Hlgfe-Claaa
Grocer
Order TrUl PtdafS
TO-DAY I
You can fry fish in Cottolene,
and use the remaining fat for
frying potatoes or other food.
The odor of the fish will not be
imparted to the other fried food.
Cottolene is not alone economi
cal for the reason that it can be
used over and over, but also be
cause it is richer than butter or
lard, and one-third less is required.
It is twice as economical as but
ter; much more economical than
lard.
Cottolene makes rich, digesti
ble, tasty, healthful food. Does
not make food
greasy, and is
free from indi
gestion.
Cottoiaoa is never
sold in bulk al
ways in air-tight
tin patls, which pro
tect It from dirt,
dust and odors. It
is always uniform
and dependable.
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
11 IH AN AXE
of
Pacific Coast League
W. L. Pet.
Los Angeles 21 13 .61S
Venice 1 17 .528
San Fruu isco '. 18 19 .46S
Oakland 10 IS .471
Portland 14 17 .453
Sacramento ....14 18 .438
Yestorday's Results.
At Sacramento Sacramento, 4; Port
land, 1.
At San Francisco Venice, 7; Oak
land, 0. (Stopped seventh inning; rain).
At Los Angeles San Francisco, 5";
Los Angeles, 2.
Willamette Notes.
The freshmen girls are selling class
shields, pillow and 'varsity emblems,
to assist in filling the fresh treasury.
"Brick" Harrison, '12, captain of
last year's baseball team, also a grad
uate of the local high school, has been
in the city the past few days visiting
old friends and inspecting the 'varsity
and high school ball teams. He is now
in the employ of a Portland whole
sale grocery houses.
The froshmen and the sophs are plan
ning an interclass track meet and in
intcrclass baseball game.
A third tennis court is being added
to the list of tennis facilities available.
Student work under the direction of
the omnipresent Dr. Sweetland turning
the trick.
A red hot fight for tho managership
of the Klosho Klub is on today.
The commencement program contin
ues to be a matter of mystery, Dr. Pat
terson stating last evening that all he
could say lii regard to the graduation
exercises was that they would probably
take place on Wednesday, June 18.
The Philodorian litorary society re
cently elected the following officers, to
serve the final term of tho year: Pres
ident, ,T. Stanford Moore; vicopresi-
dent, James Corpe; counselor at law,
Thomas .Tefferson; secretary, Charles
Hull; assistant secretary, 1 fains Schrad-
er; treasurer, Harvio Tobio; sergeant
at -arms, Burr Tatro; reporter Russell
Betts.
A number of the students went to
Oregon today to attend tho junior
week-end festivities.
DRIVE AWAY DEVIL WHEN
LEE WAY IS BURIED
Lc Wsy, Chinese, was buried in Odd
Fellow.i cemetery yesterday afternoon.
Incense was burned and fireworks dis
played, following the usual Chinese cus
tom. Lee died in poverty and a collec
tion was taken to give him the proper
burial. His little effects wero placed
in the cemetery furmico and burned, af
ter tho burial services.
In after years some society buds be
come wall flowers.
Henry Lee Moore, a Life Termer in Mis
souri Prison Said to Be
Guilty.
UNITED PRESS LIM8ID WIBI.
Leavenworth, Kan., May 8. Twenty
seven axe murder mysteries which havo
occurred in tho last three years in Mis
souri, Colorado, Kansas, Iowa and Illi
nois are ascribed here today to Henry
Lee Moore, a life-termer in the Missou
ri penitentiary, by M. W. McClaughry,
a special agent of the department of
justice. Moore was sentenced for kill
ing his mother and grandmother at Co
lumbia, Mo., in December.
The murders laid at Moore's' door in
clude six at Colorado Springs in Sep
tember, 1911; three at Monmouth, 111.,
five at Ellsworth, Kan., in Octobor,
1911; two at Paola, Kan.; seven- at Vil-
lisca, Iowa, last June, and four more at
other points.
JOHNSTON'S SURRENDER.
(By Rev. Thomas B. Gregory.)
General Joseph E. Johnston, with the
lost armed force (of any importance)
of the Confederacy, surrendered to Gen
eral W. T. Sherman 48 years ago on
April 20, 1865.
On the 18th of April Generals John
ston and Shermau (they wore lose
friends, by the way, and remained such
to the last) met at Durham Station,
N. C, where a conference was held
which resulted in an agreement.
Johnston telegraphed the proposed
agreement to Mr. Davis and was by
that official ordered to accept it. Iu
the meantime, the Washington authori
ties (Presidont Lincoln was now dead)
rejected the basis of agreement, and
Sherman notified Johnston that in 48
hours he would resume hostilities
against him. This was on tho 24th. On
the 26th Sherman had another confer
ence with Johnston, at which he con
vinced him that further fighting would
be "murder," and offored him the
same terms that Grant had given Lee.
With Buch understanding, Johnston sur
rendered. Sherman's original terms, as offered
to Johnston on tho 18th, were in strict
keeping with Mr. Lincoln's purpose,
and it is certain that had tho groat
president lived they would nevor have
been countermanded. The surrondor
would havo takep place upon that
broad, noble basis, and the "10 years
of hell," known as '.'Reconstruction,"
would nevor have disgraced our coun
try's annals.
. Sore 'Gonner,' Now
"HETS-IT" the New-Nan Corn Cure,
Gets Any Corn Sorely, Quickly.
You'll say, "It does beat all how
quick. "GETS-IT" got rid of that corn,
It's almost magic!" "GETS-IT" gets
every corn, every time, as sure as the
sun rises. It takes about 2 seconds
A cynic may be one who has discov
ered the bittornesB in stolen sweets.
MOVING VAN BOGEY.
. J
Every head of a family (Ireads
this timo of tho year if ho has
planned to move and tho moving
van and all the annoyance that
comes with it, tnltos on the mien
a hobgoblin presents to a child's
imagination.
This is not as things should be,
for moving into another house or
flat in this day of sciontifie ad-
vanccment should bo ono of the
simplest matters in the world.
Tho nuto truck and the service
of the big moving companies
should mako moving in 1913 al-
most as much a pleasure as an
excursion into the country.
Spring is upon us, and with it
comes a long list of desirable
houses and flats to rent. All that
tho mover need do is to uso the
means that modem progress has
placol at his disposal and the
moving van bogey will disappear.
Ono of these moans and por-
haps tho most efficient, is tho
Want Columns und all that is 41
needed is just to give it one try-
out to prove its value.
Aiiply a Journal Want Ad. to
tho moving van bogey and it will
vanish at once.
'
"Never Conld Bo This BoforA "GETS.
IT Made Every Corn Vanish Like
Mugle."
to apply it, the corn shrivels up, and
It's gone! Ever try anything like that!
You never did. There's no more fuss
ing with plasters that press on the
corn, no more salves that take off the
surrounding f esh, no more bandages.
No more knives, files or razors that
make corns grow and cause danger of
blood poison. "GETS-IT" is equally
harmless to healthy or Irritated flesh.
It "gets" every corn, wart, callus and
bunion you'vo got
'GETS-IT" is sold at all druggists'
at 25 cents a bottle, or sent on receipt
of price by E. Lawrence & Co., Chica
go.
OREGON STATE INSANE ASYLUM.
Notice to Contractors.
Sealed proposals for the furnishing of
labor and material required for the full
completion of five separate and distinct
buildings (aggregating in cost about
(20,000) to be erected at the Asylum
Farm, located about five miles south
east of the city of Salem, Oregon, will
be opened by the board of trustees in.
the governor's office at 2 p. m., Thurs
day, May 8th, 1913, at the state capito
building, Salem.
Plans and specifications may be ob
tained at the office of W. G. Knighton,
architect, capitol building, Salom. Con
tractors will be required to deposit $25
for the five Bets of plans as a guaran
tee tht the plans and specifications re
ceived by them will be returned to ths
architect in good condition on or be
fore the date sot for oponing of bids
On return of the five sets of drawings
and specifications the money will bt
refunded.
A certified check for $2000 must aa
company proposal and drawn to the or
der of Ralph A. Watson clerk of the
board of trustees to guarantee that bid
der will enter Into a contract and exe
cute the required bond; same shall be
forfeited to the state of Oregon if
award of contract is made to bidder and
he or they fail to entor Into a contract
and furnish the required bond within
ten (10) days from date of award of
contract.
Proposals shall be made only on form
furnished by the architect. The right
is reserved to accept or reject any or
all bids or to waive any informalities
in bids. R. A. WATSON,
Clerk of the Board of Trustees.
Salem, Oregon. 4-21-lSt
Saturday
Specials
l -7Z7
Saturday
$ Specials
BED SPREADS
Crocheted bed spreads, hemmed ends, 90x36 inches.
Special $1.39
KID GLOVES
W omen's and misses' kid gloves, odds and ends, broken
lines of colors and sizes.
Special, 89c,
FANCY SUITS
Big slaughter of fancy suits. Over 75 to select from, all
wooi materials; every one a new spring model.
Regular $25 to $50
Your Choice, $14.75
QUALITY POPULAR
MERCHANDISE
tllmTMT11t.CT KTWtrjl 3TATC "t CQUQT
PRICES.
A Progressive Century.
The twentieth century has given us a
satisfactory treatment for rheumatism.
The American Drug and Press Asaocia
tion, of which we are niombors, are man
ufacturing a preparation called Meritol
Rneumatism Powders, from a formula
adopted by them aftor medical exports
had pronounced it one of great morit.
Give Moritol Rhoumatism Powders a
trial. They are guaranteed. Capital
Drug Store, exclusive agents.
There are always battles of some
kind to be fought.
Poor appotlte is a sure sign of im
paired digestion. A few doses of Cham
berlain's Stomach and Liver Pills will
strengthen your digestion and improve
your appetite. Thousands have been
I In. n of! I, .,1 Vnr tnlrinrt Omiia TnKUi Bnl.l
by all dealers.
Journal Want Adis. Bring Results.
Prehaps none of tho industries will
be "rninod" aftor all.
WITHOUT NARCOTICS
FOLEY'S
HONEY akdTAR
COMPOUND
STOPS COUGHS CURES COLES
For CROUP, BRONCHITIS, WHOOP
INQ COUQH, LA GRIPPE COUGHS.
HOARSENESS and ALL COUGHS and
COLDS. It Is BEST and SAFEST toe
CHILDRBNsnd for OROWN PERSONS.
The Genuine it in a Yellow Package
DR. STONE'S DRUG STORE.
I Big Surprise for Marion and Polk Counties I
HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR OLD CLOTHES, BAGS AND RUB
BER. A
Ws have a big stock of pu ys, boxing, saws and al' kinds of tools
and machinery. Also chick netting and hog wire. Bargain prices.
Everything from a needle to a piece of j;old. Ths house of a half of
million bargains.
II. STEINBOCK JUNK CO.
233 State Street.
Phone Main 284
1913 MAY 195)
L.SIMITIWITIFIS
I PI I I 1 2 3
LU2 13141516 17
181220I2J222324
CHICHESTER S PILLS
'y!v TDK DIAMOND II It A N,
am.
LaiIIi-sjI A alt four I truest I at f'if
--nil in ma n i uuld m
twir, msIH wllh It Inn h
Tabu no ihfr- II it ef your
irriitfsiNU Atk f'f I II . IIKM.TFR
IMA MON 1 I1KANI I'll.l.N. fof aa
year known! HI,Sft. AUiTs MrlUMsj
SOlSBlfDP'JGGISTSiVEKYWHIHf
The Appearance of a Well
Dressed Man
Depends upon tho laundry ho patronizes. Ho may purchaso the best and
latest shirts, collars, tics, hoslory, etc., but unless his laundry knows
how to wash and Iron thorn, so they kocp their natural finish his ap
pearance dwindles down to tho mediocre. It is our business to so handle
your laundry that It is not harmed in any way. Our facilities and ex
perience is a guarantee for supernr laundry work. Givo us a trial
wilh next week's laundry, Wo are sum you will appreciate our efforts.
Bend your OOOO clothes to this GOOD laundry.
SALEM LAUNDRY COMPANY
136-166 S. Liberty Phone 25
MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS
By Gross
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