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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1914)
THE SALEM CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15. 1911. BEFORE- AND AFTER- 3DrcxvrL y . Olirr Storrett you bONM on $12 pejz. CAWT live on n -axk Self ? f "Two Cam "Tham one'! FEB MCAVCJJ'J SAKE. B-KkOVT BP POKE ITS Too UATC MV OfAR Boy, vitAsfT VtKJR Aovica, I'll ASk Fort. gy heck" ip you oowi (WSlOt A vPAf 11 L EAT. MV HAT I f Af Aio . . ' (M tjONNA I HIM Too MUCH To 1 ' mt hg-n. Hosraer Behind the Bars" For p u I 1 i h ! 1 i 1 1 1 the nf fid.xvrf of Leon 1,. Meyers, the pastor of the Christum church of Silvorton, and others ns given him by Miss Mary Lasenon, the niienpo from tln Mt. Angel Convent, on Juno 2li, 111 IK. Mnry Lasenon will give i lecture on Friday afternoon to women only anil at night to both men ami womon, giving her experience in convent and showing why she was not nhle to be present to testify in tho Ilnsmcr trial, r.ot every mother, wife anil daughter hear her. Lecture will be at Hie Armory nt 2 p 111. and 7:3' p. m. Admission "3 .outs to each lecture. All Ainorlcnns tiuould hear her in the defensr vf free upeeeti ami press with justice to all cl.tHses. (Paid advertisement by Mnry Liiao-noil.) CANCER Positively an 1 painlessly removed In brief time 'without the knife or tnniiey refunded. Address, Hr. II. II. Homier, lion 2.1:1, North Yuliima, Wn., Dept. J. The siu-ioss attained at Astoria lift 'I'oosdny by volnuUH'r, workers on Hie "onrtiuvtion uf li fund lo the top of (liii'oiiib hill wus'sncli thnt in any are m favor of setting aside umother day, when the k i li w;i v cull be completed. POLITICAL CARDS EARL RACE Candidate for City Recorder Platform Efficiency .lustlco in recorder's court Kconomy In offiro expena-is tl'nld Adv.) L. M. HUM J tare or YICK SO TONG Chinese Medicine and Tea Company lias medicine which will cure any known disease, lftf South Hijrh Street, Salem, Ore. I'hone 283. NORWICH UNION FIRE INSURANCE SOCIETY BUROIIARDT MER EDITS .tmidtut Agent. 341 livi Itrwn Mr. Investor Look This Up argains Real Snaps If sold tins n !., I will sdl all or liny of the following properties lor less than niieiM'd value, fur ea li only; Two choice business lu'a Six ehi'lce residence lors. House and two lots. luisl SuVm. Throe houses in South Sub'tn Strictly modern It room house, ,.(,c lo bui is center, for less thin It could be built fur; lot worth I " til thrown In, For morn particulars see llei'htel i Hi unn, 'W7 Spite. Wo wrile liisiiriinri. We ran place your nni;iey on good real Male sci urity. Property looked fter for uon re-si- nVlttS. We ran rent your vsmnt lioune. Wo rail ovluuue your properly for what you wmt. l.lt Willi lis for ipnrk remlls. Bechtel & Bynon JI7 STATS ITREKT SPORT NEWS I ! HOW HE SUPPORTED HER. BRAVES' BACKERS BAGGED BOODLE Stalling Plays Hunches, and Points Out That the Team That Won vhe Tons In Selecting Plato Lost. FAN8 TAKE HIS HUNCHES ALSO Olibby and Chip to Meet This Month for 20-Rouud Oo. Baseball (By Hal Sheridan.) New York, Oct. lo. The llovul l(uot-( ers 01 isiisioii, .tin' h.iroii, arc sain co have rleniieil up thousands of iloll'ii" I iv the defeat of Connie Marli Ath lelics by the llotou Itraves. They U'lt llicir money down on the first day Hi.' series opened ami not !2 to I. Tin1 .outers put their money down imiuc illntcly after their arrival in Phil, delpliill ll ml following u stiiteuieut r sued ro the newspuper men by Mao :iier (leoro stalliiiis. "I luioiv," he sniil, "people will say I am superstitious, and perhaps 1 aoi, hut I. feel absolutely certain that Pus ton will lake tho series from the Ath letic because we lust the toss of the coin with Muck to see where the open uikr ame ol the series should In1 played, li is u fact that of the nine winners of the losii to decide where the open int! itnnies fhoiild be played, seven have been losers in Lie world's series since lliuo. "In IIIO.'i the Athletics won thu toss Out hist lo the llinnts, ami ill PHI and lust yeiir lite (limits won the toss but were lieiitcn In (he series. In P.HXI the t ill s won the toes but they were badly beaten, "In the next two years the Tiriers won ihe toM bin were benten each time liv the Cubs. The Pirates hi HUM) won ail the way throue.li, and Ihe Athletics in ll'lil, did, but they are the excep tions to the rule following tho toss Hps. " The iiew.pnper boys have dubbed me "lo ' hunch ' manager, nnd I reckon I hey are riuht." Potroiksy and Murray, Hun l-'rri iii-iseo, Oct, to. Sailor Mil l'etrusl,cy and " Kitthtiun Hilly" Mur ray will meet here In a li round bout nlio.it the middle of November, nceord ini; lo iiiiiiiiuiicemcnt here today by Miitchinnker Louis pnreute, represent iiit( Prumoter Kddie (linuey, A deal with the two miildleweiidits was closed last mulil. nlthiniuh for n time It tip pcarc'i they would be unable to uot together on the weiuht ipiestion. They liuillv iiijiced to make lll pounds at II o'llock, Strike Out for Jimmy, Chiiiwo, Oi t. I.V - Jlniniy Archer, uue id' die slur cnbdiers of the Chicuuo Nnti.iiutl lenuue club, was out on bail tii'liiv on a limine of assault preferred bv (icnii;e Wiillson, nued "!l years, n luu miiuiitiirtiiier, Woltsuu suvs Archer stunk him at tho inso of Tuo,n 's triitue between the Cubs and Wh.le Hm, Archer said Woltson an uoM'd Mrs, Archer but Wolfsou denied I lie Inn ue. Clahby and Chip. Sao Priincisio, Hi t. 1,1. - .liininy Club bv, i I ll-iuimuiid, llld., and (leoi'ije I Inp, of Neocttstle, Pa., inittdleweii(hts, will meet here the latter pait of this miinlli in a J11 round bout, All oh sliieloti e.e'e swept away yestetduv when l hip iiiJieed to woltiht III Kl l.'iS at li o'clock, the hour mid pouudaite inline, I bv I lulilic, Piouioter .lames W. Colliiilh already hns wired trans portntieu to clnlibv and bis iiuiuniier nnd wus expected to mi Hie date ot the limit some time today. It ptobably will be singed on the evening of Oc tidier :in, Two S raps Tonight, tni Prnuiisco, I'd. II,- Two I'll round bouts between liuhtweiuhts will be slaved nt I'alv I ily loni(hl by Pro uolcr .lune. V. I oiftolh. In Ihe first "Kiithtimi Hick" livlnnd, of Nan Praucini'o, nud lied'' Watson, of Los Angeles, will meet In a tx'lnrn inatcli. The !st time out they met In four round bout and the referee rendered a draw decision, nlthoniih a inaiorily of the spectators tluuiKlit llyland won. A short bou win follow the Watson llyUnd alulr ami then Milburn Hnylor, of Indlniiipelu, will clash In SO round hunt with Kddie Mov. Haylnr la said to he of chsmpiouship calibre and he look on this inalrh with Mov butt to shew fan l-'rniieic fans what he ran Pacific Coast League Standings. W. L. I'ct. Porthin.l lull 7S ,.ri7(l San Francisco I "It W) ..ri4S Los Aneles 107 III) ,.r4.'l Venice Hill -' .5:1.') Missions Sli I III .4: Oaliliind T 74 l.r) ,:i71i Yesterday's Results. At Oaklnnd Portland 4-7, Onlilnml II. A( Sail Francisco-Venice 5, San Francisco 4. At Los Angeles Los AiikoIvs I.'i, 11 is sions 1, HARVEY'S LITTLE JOKE ON WILSON Colonel Tolls a Casual Story Which M.ikos the President Roar. San Diego, Cal., Oct. 13. After testifying thnt while her husband, Henry A.tScheideinan, now pastor of a church in Pasa dena, pursued - his theological studies, he "allowed divine rrovideiice to take sole charge of her support," Mrs. Alice Schcidcman was grunted a di vorce here by .lodge Sloune. The charge was desertion. KILLING OF MALES DESTROYS FLOCKS ) BURNED AT LAUNCHING. Washington (l, '.) Cor. New York Mail. Tli"re are those who would hove given no small sum to h.ivo been within hearing distance while President Wi! son Hinl Colonel (ieorge Harvey were couveising in the White House. Mutuiii trieuds iiM'd to sny tluit it was as goed ns a play to watch the flashes Ihul spring from u crossing ul' those two keenest ot luiiids over a luncheon ta ble. Official ctlipictto forbids divnlgei of prcsjilcutilll couverslltions, but ll friend of a friend of a priniiient initiate ul' Hie White House says thai a little1 bird told hun that .Murk Twain's name came up in some connection, and Colo- , nel llnrvey remarked eaiisually thsti there still live persons who h.id never heard of the grout humorist. Tin' ' presi lent found this almost incredible.' "Oh, yes," the colonel continued. Only yesterduy, here in Washington, I met mil h a one, He wus ail ofticc seeker. He declared positively he hud never heard of Mark Twain, I asked him about Tom Sawyer. Nu, he hi"t ' never heard of him, either. Nor ItucK Finnf No, never. Nor Puild'uhcu I Wilson f 'Oh, Lord, yes', he e.jiiciilnled, ' I voted for him. ' ' i Ami the nresident 's rnnr of deligli' 1 did not diminish in the least when the, eoloue! continued soitly, "'And, he iidd 'd, wistfully, 'that 's all Hie good j it d me inc. ' " Thnt the law which forbids the kill ing of Chinese pheasant hens un.it lim its the daily bag of the sportsman to five China cocks during the open sea son, designed for the protection and perpetuation of the breed, is slowly but surely working to the ultimate exter mination of the nmle of the specie and finnl extinction of the breed by leav ing the atiitc with a big supply of hens, without power of reproduction, is the concensus of opinion or sports men all over the shite n net a petition will be made to the next legislature ro. remedial legislation. The question will probubly cunio up for discussion ut the next meeting of the fish and game com-, mission tomorrow. The fact that the present law is con fisctitory instead of protective in the roper sense ot tne term ts home out Trieste, via Havre, Oct. 1.1. The new Austrian dreadnaught which xvas to have been launch here this afternoon was myster iously burned today. With it, six new torpedo boats were bbdly damaged by fire. Fourteen hundred employes of the shipyard were just engaged in the final work preliminary to the luuuching when it was dis covered that both the dread naught's hull and the scaffold ing about it were burning. The t lames spread with great rap idity and had done their work of destruction before it was pos sible to get them under control. It was deemed certain that spies started the fire. fss-) Need Newspapers, They Admit "Our company can adveiriseNtJeif products nationally until it is blue in the face; can" not produce results for the local dealer unfce advises prospective customers where the ma-, , chines can be bought in his particular territory." Late Yesterday --- .-, At Home. Tho pope nppoliftcd Car dinal .Merry Del Val secretary of the congregation of the holy office. At New lock, A passenger on (he steamship Finland, .Miss Christiibel I Piinlihiirst, the Knglish snffrniictte, ar rived in America incognito, At New York. It was nnununced that the ."li,iluo,0(iil fund Southern (V tho farmers of the vallev who state I '"'. I'hiuteis have been raising that, owing to the rapid depletion of J'" ""'""'e tho cotton crop was assured. tlie nmle birds, hundreds ot nests are plowed up during the breeding sensoti which coutnin whole settings of un hnti hed nud unfertilized eggs, The number of uiihutehed eggs that have been found by the farmers in their .-i..i.iu i... i ..in.. .... t... since the "hen protection" law went! At .Millville, ( nl-News was re- into effect until the danger of tilt i- ',J,1V1'' uf """"dornb e property da ge mute nnd certain extermination hns be-! no."Kh ,"" "f, l"u .v tornado. neiie.eii to ue snnsin count v s first. At San Francisco. It was announced Clarencu K. Stone had been appointed genernl traffic manager of the Uri'iit Nortiicru Pacific Steamship cumpuny, with hcnibpiarters in Sun Francisco. This is an extract from a letter being sent out by a large manufacturer, who believes he is a national advertiser. lie is spending thousands of dollars for advertis ing and yet he admits that if the dealers do not in turn use their home newspapers it is lost money. The lesson is obvious. THE DAILY NEWSPAPER IS THE DIRECT ROUTE FROM PRODUCTION TO SALE. No advertising campaign national or local can succeed without the newspapers. PORTUGAL MAY ONLY HELP IN AFRICA Lit iilnii, Oc,t. 1.1. Nothing further li ii I been heurd toduy concerning Por- tuuiil' plans relative to the war, ' Sli mid the Portuguese lend their aid, lo th" lliitish, il wus expected it would be limited to South Afncn, and this, it was said, would no) iiecessm ily menu war with (leriuaiiy, as techuicnlly it I wnol 1 nmoiiiit only to helping in the! supptessiuil of a revolt. Cnpetown inessiiges said todii.v thnt it wus not believed Iheie that (leneinl Mull' the liner ndi.d lender. Iiu.l n' following of mole than luuu, conic pronouncedly apparent to all who have occasion to observe trie effect of the law. It is also a fact (hut, lit present, the female pheasants outnumber the males in pioporlion to ubout id to one and, after the first few days of tho open season, the hunter who bags the limit of male birds it either exceedingly lucky or has to resort to the very iiii- I sportsmanlike and unlawfut practice of ; "potting" the birds in the liclds from tho public highway. The conditions have become such that hunters, in dis- 1 appointed desperation, have begun to throw respect and regard for the law I to the winds and shoot nt everything j that Jumps up in front of them regard less of sex or consequences, This is '' especinlly true with the rnrmera who enjoy hunting and have developed epi cuiean tnsli'B for the deliciously tooth-1 some incut of the Chlnn pheasant, nnd wliii, nil hough they do not have to pnv license to hunt upon their own land, ! demand their quoin of the game which feeds nnd lives upon their labor. State tliiine union Kvnna ami the game commission huxe no o"fco ill i the mutter, iilthuiigh they mny realise j the injustice nnd evil effects of the luw, but lo see to Us strict enforce- J tit i n t until changed by the legislature,' but they are being besieged from all' sides with complaints and kicks from sportsmen mid inriiiers alike until they realize that something must be done lo relieve the situation before another season opens. They are nlso offered diveis solutions to Ihe problem, all of which nie being preserved In the files of the depnrtmcnt nnd In memory fur future use in finming their reciimmcn dutious to the Icgislutiire. between Millville and Hour creek, la us are home, even though country. BANKERS ASSOCIATION I MAY MEET IN SEATTLE1 determined effort to secure the couven runuiiig. W ill in hi Law, a vice president of the association, will be elected nresident I lib hmoiiil, Vb Oct. 1.1, That either I Hiis afternoon, .lames K. Lynch, of tlx At Washington. Then) being no Seattle or San Francisco will capture ','r"1 National bank of San Francisco lliiliaii-Aiuericnn naturalization treaty, the IHIM convention, with the ehiinces ! W'H elected vice president this aft the state' department held native Itnb favoring Seattle, was the belief here ernoon, and will become president of liable to military service at toduv of the deleuates to the enliven- the association In 1!H,1. naturalized In this tion of the American Hauliers' iissocia- The last business, meeting of the coif i lion, Los Angeles also wns mulling addition will be held today. rju Sime Ihe Instiillal ion of Nvssa's new water winks ivaily this.vear the town tins become nntnble fur fine lawns. SI reel improvement is now In order, audi a contract for eight blocks of cement j walks has just been awarded. With I'niiihie Hoi ns, of Oakland. Hel with Piniikie Huiliis, ot Oakluiid. Ilej li a clever boxer but is said lo lack a puui li. I The Limit of rk. 1 SI. Louis, Mn i let. .lin k liilluii, of Indinniinobs, claimant of the mid ! jdlcacight champion. hip, was held by 1 'the I'olice todav on a clinrge of obtain j . log inonev under false pretenses in cou- I licet! in with Ins scliedulc-l contest ben bis night with lleoige iKiiorkuiiti I ltiowo of Chicago, The bout was stop ped during the fouita round by the j referee, who declared t n,, coolest, after he had warned the men in the tnird round thai the fight whs "too j tamo" and ordered lliem tu "go to It. " ! It developed toduv that the fight 'promoter hd given liillou 7.1ii In ad vance and ho was arrested after thej fourth round, spending the night in a prison cell. Hiown was not nrr'iited. s h had not been paid an thing in advance. JAPANESE SAILORS PERFORM DARING FEAT Scuttle, Wnh.. Oct. I V-A story at the during of three Japanese sailors who hiavcd death 10 blow up three Herninn flouting mines off Tsinglaii hist mouth, reached Scnltle veslerdny, with the arrival of the. liner Vohohamn Muni, of the Nippon Yiisen IxaVha line. The sailors wete from the dapancse destroyer Kagern, which arriving off Ixngero, found the water heavllv inliicd. An attempt bv Ihe vessel's eutniunnder to blow up the. mine wns iirnneressfnl. The commander decided In launch a bout, a fen I thai would endanger tils xessel, because of the heavy fire from Ihe Herman forts. The Ihree sailors then stepped up sad Volunteered to do'tiny the mines. Promptly llicv leaped overboatd, and swimming In the mines In Ihe fnee of volleys of shots which fell around them, Ihev attached devices which male It ivussihhv to explode the mines at long range, Yhey returned to their vessel In safetr. "Europe At War" A New Book Just Out A complete Atlas of Europe. A complete Compendium of all im portant facts involved in this greatest struggle of history. A com plete series of brilliant pictures showing the armament on land, on sea and in the air of the fiercely contending European Powers. TT0 YTV v."MSl V73 r M. lo, IK We know a spinster who thinks I husbimd is better late than neiet, -1 IM The latest and most important publication upon the present terri ble situation in Europe. More Than An Atlas It contains all of tho Maps of the European Powers and a great Map of Europe, all in colors. But it is more than an Atlas. It is a great collection of famous pictures showing the terrible Armament of Europe. It shows pictures of England's famous Dreadnaughts of the Sea. It shows Germany's great dreadnaughts of the Air with which she is striking from the clouds. It shows all of the famous Leaders of Europe who are back of this War. It has other pages of all the im portant facts pertaining to this War and written by noted men. Given Free to Subscribers This handy and useful Atlas will be given free to subscribers (old or new) of the Daily Capital Journal, who pay for three months' sub scription at one time at the regular rates, delivered by carrier. Mail subscribers (old or new) of the Daily Capital Journal who pay one yeais subscription at the special rate of $3,00 will bo given a copy of --- m -'--- 1 - t"T 'i -- 1 1 -T t 'I ' ' "1 '1 f I J 1 If T " !'' -" t 'i I ' ' ' 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 T " 'ill' r i"Tt i in rrTTi iigiiiiip ii imiii m i V ' , - , ''.'''it ( " ' T '' ' . " - t y .-.,,r-mmw f , ., . ,, , p mmmmmMmy--. , ri :.ti .Jti . 4