Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, October 24, 1913, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    DAILY CAPITAL J0TWALf1iAtijJi OXZOOH, tEIDAT, OCTOBEE 24, 1013.
PLANS TO BOOST THIS
T
4
STRAIGHTEN YOU UP
It's a Pleasure to Wear
a Suit Like This!
Commercial Club Will Heed Some
Suggestions Made by Tom Rich
ardson, of Portland.
of
No Sick Headache, Bilious Stomach,
Coated Tongue or Constipated;
Bowels by Morning.
J 1 f
PAGE F0X7B'
SLOGAN FOE CAPITAL CITY
WILL SOON BE DECIDED ON
Arrangements to Take Care of Visitors
on Way to Fair and Return Will
Be Perfected.
A lengthy talk was given at the Com
mercial Club rooms last night by Tom
Richardson, of Portland, and plans were
adopted to boost Salem at the Panama
exposition in 1915. Richardson gave
the local organization some fine points
on advertising the city and the mem
bers of the club voted as one1 to follow
some of the suggestions mentioned by
the Portland booster and to commence
immediately to perfect arrangements
for a big campaign.
About the first steps that will be
taken by the Commercial Club will be
to induce every morchant and business
man in the city to use envelopes stamp
ed with a slogan for Salem at the fair.
The second proposition now up for con
sideration will be tho slognn to be
adopted. Much intorest was manifested
over this plan at the meeting lust night.
Would Inrite Visitors.
If Mr. Kichardson's advico is follow
ed out by the members of tho Commer
cial Club, soino arrangeniontH will be
mado for ontortaining tho visitors at
tho exposition who stop in tho city go
ing and coming. It wns suggested by
jvlr. Richardson that Salem offer those
passing through an invitation in some
'appropriate manner to stop off and
Get a 10-cent box now.
Turn the rascals out the headache,
biliousness, indigestion, the sick, sour
stomach and foul gases turn them out
tonight and keep them out with Cas
carots. Millions of men and women take a
C'ascarot now and then and never know
the misery caused by a lazy liver, clog
ged bowels or an upset stomach.
Dont put in another day of distress.
Lot Cascarets cleanse your stomach; re
move the sour, fermenting food; take
the excess bilo from your liver and car
ry out all the constipated waste matter
and poison in the bowels. Then you
will feel great.
A Cascaret tonight straightens you
out by morning. They work while you
sleep. A 10-cent box from any drug
store means a clear head, sweet stomach
and clean, healthy liver and bowel ac
tion for months. Children love Cnscar
ets bcoauso they never gripe or sicken.
visit a while in Salom and that the
Commercial Club get busy and mako
plans to entertain them. Ho stated that
many of the cities in the valley are
planning to extend invitations to east
erners who visit tho Panama fuir and
ho thought the proposition cno that
would havo a toudoncy to locate ,more
people than any other plan that could
-be devised.
Air. Richardson declared that what
Marion county and Oregon noed most at
this time is that class of people who
will till the lands ana raise crops. Ho
stated thut tho state of Oregon is short
of such help and that the sooner the
vacant acres could bo filled up with
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Scene from "The Lure," at the Grand Opera House Tonight.
homo seekers, tho better the country
would bo off.
Favor Publicity.
Among the other men to speak was
Secretary llyiion, Hal I'atton,, George
tiodgcrs, K. P. McCornack and John H.
Scott. All of the gentlemen were of tho
opiuion that the people of Salem should
take an active interest in welcoming
tho visitors to tho Pannnui fair and that
arrangements should lie made for their
entertainment. If possible, they bolicv-
ed, every easterner pacing through the
city en route for Sun Francisco, should
be shown over tho city and presented
with literature describing the advan
tages of this community.
NOTED ACTRESS IN LEADING
ROLE OF "THE LURE" TONIGHT
One of tho most gifted young ac
tresses on tho American stage is Beat
rice Prentice, who will be remembered
by playgoers of the Pacific coast for
Aided and Abetted by the House of Kuppenheimer.
We've gathered for your approval a collection of
men 's suits, the best in fabric, fit and fashion we have
yet seen.
We don't claim a thing for them but' we leave it
to you. Come in and look them over. If, after seeing
them, you can, by any twitch of conscience, be with
out one, we'll not coax you. The maximum of wear at
the price for 5
Twenty-five Dollars
Others at $15 to $35
The Toggery, Inc.
167 North Commercial St.
Copyright 191 3 The Home of KuDoenheimcr
her appearances hero as leading lady
with Robert Edeson, with whom Bho
played in " Strongheart" and "The
Call of the North." She is again to
be seen here at the Grand opera house
tonight, as the girl in "The Lure,"
George Scarborough 's much-talked-about
white slave drama. Miss Tren
tice haB a reputation, not only for such
strong emotional roles as those just
mentioned, but also for characterization'
of widely contrasted types.
Perhaps the most intensely emotional
impersonation of her entire stage life is
that which she is now performing in
"The Lure" the character of the in
nocent young girl ensnared in tho toils
of the white slavers. Tho scene in
which she is brought to bay by them
is said to be remnrkably thrilling.
Tho remains of Mrs. Clara Konison,
who died at a local hospital October 21,
wero buried yesterday in Lee Mission
cemetery. The funeral was held from
the Lehman & plough undertaking parlors.
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lie
HOPS
.boric
and How
.nurse -or
the
Peop
it
THEY CANNOT BE GROWN BY A
CONSCIENTIOUS PEOPLE COMMITTED TO
THE DOGMAS OF PROHIBITION
by
can
Prohibition
Punctured
GRAPES
GROWERS OF THE GREATER
PERCENTAGE OF GRAPES WOULD HAVE
TO UPROOT THE VINES
o
NE of the greatest factors in
the creation of the wealth and
land values of Marion county
has been its consistent and ever
improving hop crop. Both in grade and
in quality it has brought to this section not
only the money that has builded the homes
of farmers, and the business blocks of
far-sighted citizens, but has gradually
gained for the product, because of its
from municipalities and creating political
conditions more pernicious than was pos
sible prior to the time that the assault up
on brewing and distilling passed from its
state of a fad on the part of a few to the
fanatical fancies of many. It has set in
er to give heed to the alarmist with dire
predictions if appetite is to be continued to
Over .10,(1(10 men, women and children
labored in the Hop F'iolds of the Wil
lamette Vnllov during the three week
season of 111 111, closed hws limn a month
ago, and wore paid over if I, 1(10,00(1 for
their work. Hops are an ingredient of
1 r, and practically find no other pur
pone for their use. If Prohibition were
to prevail this commodity could not be
grown by any cniiscicni Ions mini in
this section or city. I in yon, by your
votes, want to destroy this industry!
1'iil tho good people of the City of
Salem ever stop to think that almost
70 per cent of tho crop of Hops grown
in the Willamette Valley is marketed
in and from this centerf It means a
great volume of lusin?os passing
through the local banking channels,
Over "0 firms and individuals engaged
in handling this business maintain of
fices hero, n ixl most of them have fam
ilies and homes here. Do you want to
drive them out of business, and make
their homes valueless?
Uy tho records in tho asessors offi
ces of tho counties in tho Willamette
Valley during the past year 27,000
acres were planted to Hops. Most of
theso acres and their vines could not be
bought today for less than $500 each.
If they wero all of nob. value, just
think of what Prohibition would do to
over 13,000,000 worth of real cstatof
Tho equipment would be worth noth
ing, and the land for other purposes
would bo worth loss than $100 per acre.
which enter into the creation of beer, wine
or liquors of any kind whatsoever. It is,
therefore, pertinent to ask: Do the Hop
Growers of Marion county want to go out
of that line of production, which has giv
en them and their neighbors so great a
percentage of wealth? Equally of con
cern to them, but in a more remote way,
quality, a world-wide fame that today riv
als the yield of Bavaria and Hungary. The
utility of this staple is practically confined
to the making of beer, and the better the
quality of the hops the better the beer,
hence the Marion brands have gone to
making good beer. In the preachments
for the ideas of prohibition there is no pause
in the propaganda that indicates there is
to be a consideration for the commercial
motion the notion of many that they can
advertise themselves to fortune through
other products. One national producer
and advertiser of a cereal product endeav
ors to convey the idea that every drinker
of coffee (and the world is full of them)
is going to the demnition bow-wows if
they don't desist,and turn to the concoction
which his questionable conglomeration of-
Tlie money earned in the Hop Yards
of this section the past sonson will
clothe many a boy ami girl this winter,
who had tiie opportunity to work dur
ing tin' vacation period. Followed to
its logical conclusion tho growth of
Hops would have to cense, if the Pro
hibition Idea wore to become a legal
fact. On tho fathers mid mother of
this city want to lend aid to the per
nieimiN propoitio:i tliut would destroy
this grout and legitimate Industry here
and eloherot
Tho Hop crop of this valley for the
venr just closed amounted to practical
ly ,12,0110,000 pounds, as near as pres
ent computations make it, Hnscd up
on the market at this time, it has pro
duced over 7,5lHl,lHiO, and over ",
0110,0(10 of that sum will have boon han
dled In Salom before the final bale
has gone to it mart. This business
make the greatest payroll in Marion
county and the City of Snlein. Pro
hibition means that this industry must
be win'd out if wo adopt it hero, and
purvoo living under its nefarious doc
trines In conscientious way. .
be satisfied than it is to seriously consider
the clamor of a self-advertiser, who has a
substitute for coffee.
But the conditions are such that provide
there must be a response to political us
age, and a "campaign" is on. It is not
only a disturbance of business that follows
these periods, but if they were allowed to
fasten their tentacles upon every commu
nity at one time, would bankrupt the pro
ducers. Just think of what would happen
in this world of ours, if by Universal Edict,
every phase of brewing and distilling could
be made to come to a halt. The commercial
wreckage would create a chaotic condition
that would involve the civilized nations of
the earth. Such a state is possible, but
highly improbable. In the meantime the
How about the vine grower who sold
or made his grapes into wine it ml the
orchardist who made his apples Into
cidorf How about the cooper that
made tho barrel to hold the liquor; the
niaWtcr who made tho malt; the glass
worker who blew tho glass, for if it
were not for the drinking of alcoholic
beverages, two-thirds of nil the glass
industry in the world would not bo re
quired to operate.
is the Idea which would nullify the pro
duction of the grape or the rye and the
corn crops of other centers. For be it re
membered a law-making system which
makes the prohibition of any kind of bev
erage possible, may, in all reason, go just
another step on its way and say unto Mr.
Producer: "Thou shall not cultivate the
hP v,fe or the grape vine, becaune of
what it is possible to work them into."
interests involved, not any more than there
is for the tastes and appetites of the great
laiety. The assault has no ending in its
ramifications. It is taking away revenues
fers. This nation has not become a people
of nervous disability by more than a cen
tury of coffee drinking. Neither has it
lost its vitality and its greatness in all
things through its moderation in drinking
stimulants. On the contrary, it has accom
plished more than any other of the peo
ples of the earth, and it is, therefore no wis-
lint the Hop grower Is not the only
one who is to suffer, if this Mvies of
intolerance i to become organic. Tho
orchardist who gets a fancy price tor
his lloyal Ann cherries that go into
Mnrlschino liquors, will have a much
lessoned revenue, if, perchance, he has
ai.y at all. And what applies to the
cherry grower will apply to the pro
ducer of prune and poaches that wore
in demand for the creation of brandio.
How about the niBiiufaWiiror of Ice
machinery, bottling ami other machin
ery, for If It were not for alcoholic
beverages, the world could got along
with less than half of those now in ex
istence. tno can hardly cite a single
industry or business, but whnt directly
or indirectly derives some pecuniary
benefit from the drinking of alcoholic
bevcrnges.
disturbances continue over restricted ter
ritory, and with varying results. From an
ethical point of view any community which
commits itself to the Prohi Idea, cannot
consistently and conscientiously continue
in the production of those ingredients
Vole X Against Prohibition
This space has been purchased by the
S4LEM WELFARE LEAGUE
It purpose is to give to the voters of Salem ,,.
biased statement and fact, regarding the effect of
I rohibition, free from emotional surrounding. We
,; . omer tnnu the general
.......... u, mm ami lis lionli n. '
JOIIX I). TI' FIX Kit, 8ooretarv.
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