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The Salem News from Salem, Ohio • Page 1

Publication:
The Salem Newsi
Location:
Salem, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE WEATHER Fair tonight and Wednesday except snow flurries near the lake. THE SALEM NEWS. BUY A HOME HERE. if You Are Looking for a Place to Buy a Home Investigate vantages; Numerous. TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR.

No. 25.SALEM, OHIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1912. TWO CENTS. AI FRIDAY AND SATURDAY (SEE NEWS) REPUB1ICAN HAS MADE GOOD TAFT SAYS WINDOW-SMASHING TACTICS TOR NEW YORK SUFFRAGETS! THEY WILL ARGUE CAUSE THROUGH MORE PEACEABLE MEDIUM OF STAGE In Keynote Speech at the Tippecanoe Club Banquet the President Outlines His Ideas Campaign Issues This Year -Three Days in Ohio. o------------ -----------------------------------------------was less rather than greater than it had been in the presidential election.

The defeat of the Republican party same not from an increase In Democratic votes, but from a defection of Republican i Discussing his vetoes of the wool of the and cotton revision bills passed by congress at the special session last summer the President admitted that the wool schedule, the cotton schedule and possibly others of the Payne- Aldrich law were too high, but said I that unscientific revision was a much greater evil than a delay in securing real revision. Clevelaui, Taft three-day visit to Ohio began in Cleveland yesterday, and before he retired to his private car last night, the President had spoke on peace and arbitration, talked Ohio politics with some of the leading Republicans of the state and sounded the for the coming presidential campaign, Leaving Cleveland late last night, he a rived in Columbus early today for a 36-hour stay. Wednesday he! goes to Akron, leaving there in the evening on the return trip to Washington. At the chamber of commerce, where Mr. Taft spoke on peace and arbitration, came one of the surprises of the day.

As he entered the build- ElfUl Mffi MED HE COURT OBSERVED THAT HE DESERVED DEATH. MKS BEATRICE- MALE New York suffragettes have organized a theatrical stoca company, and will argue the merits of their cause through dramatic situations rather than by speeches. They expect to confine their activities to New York for the present, but later will visit states where suffrage amendments are pending. Among the real actreses they have enlisted are Miss Fola I.aFollette, Mrs. Beatrice Forbes Robertson Hale, Miss Vida Sutton, and Mrs.

Charles H. Caftln, the director, who was one of the Ben Greet players in England. Lisbon, Jan. Davis, aged 21, of Fast Palestine, was sentenced today to the Mans Field reformatory by Judge J. G.

Moore, having pleaded Davis's blow on tho head was the cause of his falling into the ditch, i sentence is for an Indeterminate period depending on his good behavior. ELECTRIC MEN GO TO COLUMBUS: PUBLIC MEETING WILL BE HELD ing James H. Garfield, secretary of suilty to manslaughter. His vioti.n SURFACE Of SALEM the interior in former President Roosevelt's cabinet, and generally acknowledged as politically was one of the first to greet him. Hello, Mr.

said Mr. Garfield. glad to see said the President, as he shook hands. Mr Garfield was a luncheon guest at the same table with the President, and the two men indulged in much conversation that seemed to interest them both. The political conference with Ohio loaders took place at the home of former Governor Myron T.

He rick. In addition to Mr. Herrick, Arthur I. Vorys and William H. Miller, former assistant attorney general of the state, were present.

Mr. Vorys said last night he told the President things never looked better politically for him than now. He added that the Ohio delegation would go to the Chicago convention instructed for the President. The big event of the first day in his own state, came in the evening at the McKinley day banquet, given by the Tippecanoe club, at the chamber of commerce. Addressing 650 Northern Ohio Republicans grouped about the banquet table, the President made a stirring appeal to the Republican party to stand by its guns and rest confident that it carried out the pledges it made to the people of the United States.

He declared he faced the future with equanimity and in the belief that the judgment of the country would prove him right in his opinion. He said in part: over the record of what has been done It seems to me that we are armed with the facts and with things accomplished sufficient to meet our enemy in the open field and to overcome him in the judgment of an Impartial umpire. It seems to me that the-e is no occasion for the Republicans of this country to fear the; Issue, with their knowledge of the progress that has been made in the last four years, with their adoption! of progressive principles indicated in their platform of 1908, and in the pro- was William Cain, of Tho history of lie ch-e as told in court on th n.krht of April 8, if I Lavi- and Cain were on their way, walking, freni Wa-hingtonvillc i to Ipertonia. Beth had been drinking and got i ito a tight Davis struck Cain ai 1 Hi next day was found lying fa downward in a swamp alongside the Y. O.

U. tracks. Doctors sey that he died of strangula- i In; i a prose, utor insisted that I TUESDAY Ulf Perhaps no better proof could have been asked of the fact that things were running smoothly in Salem Tuesday morning than a glimpse of the basket delivery in operation on one of our principal streets, whore ne enterprising young man had tied a string to a good sized basket mil of packages and started down the et, dragging behind him his im proviscd auto-delivery, without wheel or i miner. Other indications of eu's polished condition were in evi- also. Boisterous youngsters on ley hillsides coasted without any necessity of keeping in the beaten track, for everything was good going.

Pedestrians tiptoed around precar D. Davis, of the Salem Electric Light om and J. D. Dewees, ftf the Columbiana County Light which companies arc mak ing an effort to merge their interests in this city, went to Columbua Monday night to appear, ii is understood, before the state public utilities commission, before which tin be an open one, to which all public officials, consumers of light and power in large or small quantities and any others interested in the matter are Invited. Mr.

Davis informed the Chamber Monday that he probably would not return from Columbus In time to attend this meeting. President Eouburn, of the chamber, ey filed a pe- stated Tuesday that all who have the to consoll- best interests of the city at heart wlial mission is, should attend this meeting to present however, could not be positively as- their view regard to the proposed I s.lay. Anybody present will onsnli nibie interest is being mini-1 be given an opportunity to bo heard led in the meeting ot the Chamber, on subject and it is hoped by evening, at this means to more fully sound the which tn the light proposition will public pulse on this all important bo irmly di ussed. The meeting will matter. NINE HOUR WORK DAY FOR WOMEN LAW IS UPHELD BY THE OHIO SUPREME COURT BUTA GIVEN FREEDOM Sentence of Two Years in the Penitentiary Suspended for Salem Man Who Struck Theodore Docla With a Hatchet Thanksgiving Day.

Lisbon, Jan. DocJa was a wicked man, without any of Sihame. He deserved death, and the Lord took him. I think every fair-minded person will agree that the judgment was This was tho declaration of Judge J. G.

Moore, in passing upon the case of Vasilia Buta, of Salem, who had been indicted and pleaded guilty of assault with intent to kill in common pleas court today. Buta was sentenced to two years in the penitentiary, but sentence was suspended during good behavior. He was not able to speak English, and made a statement to the court througih an interpreter. Judge Moore reviewed the case as shown by the statements of the counsel and the prosecuting attorney. Docia had been visiting Buta's homo in Salem and taking liberties with his wife.

The husband protested, and on last Thanksgiving day Docia came to home with four companions and started a light. In trying to put him out, Buta struck Docia with a hatchet, min ting a wound upon the head. Several days later Docia was taken ill, and died 10 days after best ruck, at the Youngstown City hospital, of spiuai meningitis, which the doctors did not arise from the blow, as there was no indication that the Lruin was affected by the wound, WIRSCHING oiumbas, Jan. 30. (Special) I is corners, hind wheels of wagon qj MERRILL M.

COFFIN, Who is assisting Evangelist Woilara in a scries of evangelistic meetings at the church. Mr. Coffin is field secretary of the hotne at Amherst. and auto skidded merrily sidewise at eve-y corner, and presented the appearance ot a pig fighting through a fence before they righted themselves. Even the horses had adjusted thom- lves to the condition of affairs, and stood for the most part on three legs, with the fourth ready at any moment to stay their uncertain movements.

But the little white fakes fell rapidly, and the glamour and the it all will soon be gone. 10 supreme court today upheld liic validity of the Green nine-hour workday for women. This a limits the hours of labor of women employed onstltutlon of Olilo, and of Fourteenth to th tution of tho United Slat consV es. A NEW CO. FI PLANT the Green nine.hour law, because tho number of hours that may be worked must not average moro than nine a Second C.

M. B. A. Dance. A frieadly suit brought to The second dance of the series to be test out the act.

Anna Hawley, a Oo- He comes of a preaching given this winter by the C. M. B. lumbus milliner, refused to obey the it tacked were that it did not allow in factory, freedom of the right of contract, that workshop telephone or telegraph of- it was class legislation in that It five, nunnery or dressmaking estab plied to certain enterprises while moment, restaurant or in the dla-1 emptlng others coming under tribut mg or transmission of general class, and that it to teu hours a day and to fifty-four an improper a week. It is popularly termed specific grounds on which the act was Id That the Winx-hing Organ company low "as taken opt of thf powi rs of file state.

The state, in contending that law is sound, argued that it ap- the was police the was a ptious on two large tracts of land in or near the city the intention of erecting a new organ factory within the near future, is the information obtained by The News Tuesday. From an unofficial source it has been learned that this company expects to select one of the two tracts soon, buy tho same and erect a new and larger factory than the though not yet ordained met hall. family, and is a preacher himself, will be held Thursday evening in Calu- law and she was constructively placed under arrest. This procedure was resisted on the ground that the act under which it was taken was invalid. The common pleas and circuit courts upheld the act.

It was contended by those wrho assailed its validity that it was in conflict with the Bill of Rights of the BILLY SUNDAY REVIVAL SYSTEM HELD TO BE INCOMPLETE BY CANTON MINISTER reasonable exercise of the police l)resent one now located in the power, that It was not discriminatory! The officials of this company have merely because certain persons tlian one in ylew in classes to whom it might have applied I Uuilding another factory, It is under- wero not included in its operation, FirHt of company has that It was purely a police regulation, intended solely for the protection, help, safety, morals and welfare of the community, and to permit women to work in the establishments enumerated in the act more than fifty-four hours a week is dan- geroua to the public health, safety, morals and welfare. Canton, Jan. A rector of the St. posais of the administration since that 1 S( rmon on After de- revival system aimed only at is but the ligious life. time They must, if they would serve Sunday night the country well, discriminate between what is really progressive and useful and what is utterly at variance with sound, constitutional govern- conomical poliey.

Let us vs in behalf of the grand andintr by the constitu- by the rights of liberty the individual and feat many times in ae of sound consti- ic party haa mis- of the 19L0 election from its victory that the Ftates must abendon the prin- mental and take new vov old party, st tion, standing and property willing to fat behalf of tutional govt Dem taken the res and Uni iared Billy Sunday's omplete in that it inversion, which he darting point of is important but it of df cat ocrai ond very Higby of protection and set up that of tar for revenue only. Democratic friends are mistaken. The election of 1910 was not a declaration in favor of a tariff for revenne or free This-is shown by ie act that the Democratic vote is system that is, said; ars to have no sacramental life, culture of the spiritual All of his s( rmons end with conversion, and all his system leads only to conversion, which is but the first in the religious experience; St. Paul points the way to the two succeeding steps, and the slow and patient work of the church not enough, and not look be to say the least, he declared. Rev Sunday a conception of the of the growth Ml W.

Higby, verts with spiritual life, and expresses Episcopal conviction that the revival alone annot do it hen he openly says it wouid be a blessing to many of the converts perhaps if death could take them fresh from the revival. That is the hardest criticism of the system I have heard, and it comes from Mr. own lips. It absolutely acknowledges the incompleteness of the revival method, and also the fact that Sunday has absolutely no conception of the sacramental system of religion, held and practiced by the majority of Christians In the worid Life Tragedy of Country Girl Told in Court 'Room Jan. will never go peniNnt ary by any act of aid Judge James G.

Moore, sing sentence upon Clara Bailey for the ki.Iing of her J. Arthur Campbell, after the 1 had guilty to man- ter Monday rnoon, is up to contimiedl tho is tne nee of the you be incarcerated In the penitentiary for three it sen fence suspended as long as right and obey the laws, not do so, the eertence of court will have to fulfilled, but won he your own i rougfLt to a termina- to' mirstem is based on kck ia! sins, while co is based upon the 01 devotional life com- bu ind strenuous work, vo revival hammering the the syst cultivation of bined with bard "Each is important; but Jet no one imagine for a moment that tho revival system can take the place of to cultivate the next step, the pro- the church, and let no one imagine of which may fill a life-time. fo- a moment that the revival is Mr. Sunday apparently has little complete in itself, or that conversion faith ia the church to fill its con- is all there is to religion. trial the cond degree, for wag indicted, would plead noon hour, but her attorneys, W.

F. Umes and Char Speaker, went to conference with the prosecuting orney and aft. or rnor delay, rcaebd a conclusion that he prisoner instead of standln for murder in which guilty to manslaughter arid throw herself upon the mercy of the court. The tragedy occurred at Wcllsville, Fcptemher 21 last. The do: leading to the killing wore recounted by her counsel.

Attorney Charles S. aker. He stated that the prisoner had grown up in the country, mother- but innoemo until the time met Campbell. 21 a rial -hat promised to be inter-! her affection, ng and hard fought. The prisoner wben she was but 16 are.t i i court shortly after the (Continued on Fourtu cuh long been anxious to locate Its plant away from tho noise of the railroad and other as this almost onstant noise, and the close proximity of the plant to it, is a decided ti raw back In tuning and accurately testing the pipe organs built by the company.

Again, it is known that The Dernlng company, whose factory adjoins the organ factory on the north, has been cramped for more room and desires to utilize the ground now occupied by the organ factory In an expansion of its rapidly growing plant. of the tracts of land on which an option has been taken by the Wirsching company, is situated near city on the northwest, so It is understood. As soon as the site has been electt'd, the company expects to have plan and specifications prepared for a new and modern factory. Uplift persons assert that a man Is not fit to be a husband until he is 35 years old, but few men are able to escape that long. WGATBEB POPECASt.

Prepared by H. W. Weiujterber tanm it at the Co. ortlee. Continued cold and snow tonight and Wednesday.

flurries.

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About The Salem News Archive

Pages Available:
228,531
Years Available:
1906-1977