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Title:
The daily journal. : (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903
Place of publication:
Salem, Or.
Geographic coverage:
  • Salem, Marion, Oregon  |  View more titles from this: City County, State
Publisher:
Hofer Bros.
Dates of publication:
1899-1903
Description:
  • Vol. 10, no. no. 154 (June 30, 1899)-v.13, no. 271 (Nov. 24, 1903).
Frequency:
Daily (except Sunday)
Language:
  • English
Subjects:
  • Oregon--Salem.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01202924
  • Salem (Or.)--Newspapers.
Notes:
  • Also issued on microfilm from University of Oregon.
  • Archived issues are available in digital format as part of the Historic Oregon Newspaper online collection.
  • Archived issues are available in digital format as part of the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
LCCN:
sn 99063956
OCLC:
42908771
ISSN:
2163-8527
Preceding Titles:
Succeeding Titles:
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The daily journal. June 30, 1899 , Image 1

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The Evening Capital Journal, Capital Journal, Daily Capital Journal and Daily Journal

The Salem Capital Journal was defined by moxie and determination. Making its debut on March 1, 1888 as the Evening Capital Journal at a time when Oregon’s capital already had several newspapers, it would outlast all its competitors. Will H. Parry, founder and manager, declared the Journal “the people’s paper.” He also boasted it was the cheapest, priced at one cent an issue. The Capital Journal came out daily, except for Sundays, and was forward about its Republican leanings.

The Journal changed hands several times, with the initial sale taking place just a few months after its founding. William H. Byars, the state surveyor general, and Martin L. Chamberlain of the Land Office bought out Parry. They turned over day-to-day operations to a young pressman, Frederic Lockley, whose instructions included "selecting from a bushel basket of clippings for editorials, writing an occasional local editorial, rustling what advertising I could, and keeping all employees satisfied by paying them as promptly as possible."

Only months later, the paper was sold to Ernst and Andy Hofer, whose approach tended toward the sensational. One Journal headline blared: “SUICIDE AND FOUL MURDER: Shot and poisoned by her paramour – Dr. Applewhite shoots – The Benton County Adultery Scandal.” Another read, “Policeman is murdered by pervert.” But the result was a lively product, often written in a narrative style packed with details. The four-page broadsheet ran blurbs about real estate transfers, births and deaths. It also printed a column of “personals,” noting the comings and goings of city residents. Classified advertisements--not yet a newspaper standard--were purchased by bakers, chiropractors, watchmakers, and tavern owners.

From February 1893 through 1895, the paper was known simply as the Capital Journal. In 1896, the Capital Journal became the Daily Capital Journal and by 1898, it expanded to eight pages. In 1912, Charles H. Fisher purchased the Daily Capital Journal from the Hofers.

By 1919, George Putnam, former publisher of the Medford Mail Tribune, became publisher and editor of the Capital Journal. Putnam was never one to back down from a local controversy; when donors tried to erect a bronze sculpture by Renoir outside the State Supreme Courthouse, the Journal proclaimed the work “Fat and Naked.” Putnam also routinely locked horns with the editor of the Salem Oregon Statesman.

However, Putnam may be best known for a series of editorials he wrote against the Ku Klux Klan in the early 1920s. In this era of highly charged racial and religious tension, the Klan experienced a nationwide resurgence far beyond its original home in the South. In 1922, Klan leaders in Oregon launched a campaign to seize control of local and state politics. For fear of losing advertising revenue and subscribers, many newspaper editors shied away from criticizing the Klan in print, but Putnam attacked the organization relentlessly. His efforts convinced business leaders in Salem to support the Journal over the threat of a Klan boycott. George S. Turnbull, historian of Oregon journalism and Putnam’s biographer, would characterize the Capital Journal as “Oregon’s most active and outspoken newspaper foe of this new expression of political and religious bigotry.”

The Capital Journal and the Oregon Statesman eventually merged into one daily, the Salem Statesman-Journal, in 1980.

Provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR