Tra MiBitHini;jiHMiiBiiiBiMiiiMiiainiiwiiaiiiniiaii,Aiiiaiii ¡ ■ il i 0. N. G. I 1 I SM OKER I M E A N S KINO O F A L L PEACE TIMF REO GROSS FACES hJGE TASKS War Task Not Finished-Public I ,1 8 Fast Routs And we are a Kexall Store. Please note the most excellent line of itexall Rubber Goods in our south window. Guaranteed by the King of All to be well worth the money or every penny back. F R ID A Y . N O V . 21 Health Problems Must Be Solved By Red Cross The American Bed Cross, according to a statement just issued from Wash­ ington, D. C., believes that its first duty is to finish its war task, one hun­ dred per cent The Red Cross must also continue to tarry on even more effectively than in the past, its estab­ lished system of National and Inter­ national relief, in mitigating the suf­ fering caused by famine, fire, floods, and great national calamities. It must also render every necessary service to the Army and Navy, and must con- Suwtell, California, where Mrs. Dornsife goes to pay her unnual visit to her husband who is at the Old Soldiers Home there. She ex 1 unue the work undertaken prior to pects to be absent for about six the war in tin field of nursing and weeks. First Aid. ------- The responsibilities of the Red “ Home of the Grafo noia” ^ The Civic Club held a business Cross are greatly increased as a result session at the Library Wednesday 0 " ie lessons tau n t by the war, the I E R F E C T SER V IC E P U R E DRUGS afternoon. Plans are being made statement continues. Higher stand- ^n oB iiau iB u iai]iaiiiaim iiw !B iiB iiaitn u 4 iiin iiiM iiB iiiaiiB iiB in in iin iiH iiB i(«ii f or a reception for the teachers Tues- 8rds of responsibility have been set to prevent ni" dless suffering and loss day evening, Nov. 25. The members of life. The Red Cross, with its tradi- Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Chown spent i»f the Club and their husbands are j tions and its established organization, C IT Y A N D C O U N T R Y the hosts for the evening and the | Wjn ai,i jn maintaining these stand- several days with friends in Mc­ committee lias decided to eliminate anis by co-op rating with all recog- Minnville last week. Tripp writes fire iiisurunce. | Williams’ D I Hungry Man g I and Thanksgiving The Thanksgiving Dinner is never a joy unless it’s cooked right and it can’t be cooked right with poor utensils. Before this Thanksgiving D ay comes, you. Mr. Man, see that “ M other” has everything she wants to prepare the best dinner of the year and if there’s anything lacking you' come right to this store and get it. See our assortment of roasters and carving sets. Ihem from the formal invitational | nized agencies engaged in conserving \ human life and happiness. Activities already authorized include the en- couragement and support of Public Health Nursing, educational classes in dietetics, home care of the sick, and First Aid, the extension of Red Cross i S U C C E S S O R TO C R A V E N & H U F F H D W . CO. Home Service, an increased Junior g program, and co-opcration in develop­ lia u iB ilB llB JlIB N IB IIB IIB IIB IH H IIB M n iB IIB IM IIB IIig d lW IW IIB IiB liB IIB IM tllB iU ing community health centers. War time developments have given list Every one whose name was on The Newt Jones' have recenti) ' Blankets and quilts at Moore & the club roll last year is considered purchased the iiaroid Fitchurd farm Walker's. I member now. and are moving onto lite same. Rev. C. T. Cook went to Jefferson NOTICE. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Baun returned Tuesday. home hist Friday from a six week's Owing to the high cost of feed, I O-Cedar Oil and U Cedar mops at visit at their old home in Pennsyl- titter Nov. 15 Clover Leaf Dairy i vania. Moore & Walker s. milk prices will be: Pint $2.25 per I month; Quart 14c. and 50c. where Miss Genevieve Cooper is in F,n A bargain in a used piano at sold by gallon. All bottles not re- gene attending die annual home Moore & Walker's. coining of Oregon U. She is an turned 15c. each. EDW. BECKEN, Prop. Mr. und Mrs. K. C. Fldridge were alunmis of the university. Phone FG122. Portlund visitors this week. Tlie funeral of “Grandma” Sulli Notice of Dissolution Ira Mix and H. Hirsehberg cele­ van was held at. the Catholic church Morula,' morning and huria! took brated in Fortland Tuesday. Notice is hereby given that the place in a Salem cemetery. firm of Smith A- Smith has been Mrs. John Krause returned Wed­ dissolved, Oliver Smith retiring. The Hi School yungsters dispen nesday to her home in Aurora. The business will he conducted in sed pie and hot drinks to celebrutors the future under the name of Smith Tuesday. They applied their prof­ Moore & Walker have just receiv­ & Son. All accounts due Smith & its to paying for a basket ball. ed a ngw line of framed pictures. Smith are payable to Smith & Smith. Dated November 14, 1919. Midi the Thanksgiving dinners Mrs. Snowie Kurre has been visit­ SMITH & SMITH. are spoiled by using poor cooking ing friends in Independence this utensils. Make up your mind to week. get new onesthis year of Willard E. 1 H£ SCOUT WHO SUCKS “ U B SURE 2 C SCRT SRVCE. Y? Craven, Hardware. You may talk o f your scouts who arts I B-leeve IT 2 R A GRATE F1L- strong on ths hike. Salem Journal: Mr. and Mrs. LUMI" Who are there on the trail, In the woods and the like; George Conkey, prominent Inde­ You may have all the signalers, eagles pendence residents, were in Salem Mrs. O. A. Macy and Miss Marga­ and stars. ret Dunsmore Macy celebrated here yesterday. Mrs. Conkey underwent First-aiders, athlete« and «a-siou tin g tars; a minor operation at the Salem hos Tuesday. But If from all scouts you will give ms pitul. my pick. I’ll fasten my choice on the scout whs Mrs. C. A. Lochridge returned this will stick. Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Kirkland were evening from a visit with Portland called to Portland Monday morning There’s a job to be done. It’s a tough relatives. one, I fear; on account of the sudden death of tt may take a week. It may take a year. Who’s going to do It? Here comes tho 0. N. G. Smoker Friday night, Mrs. Kirkland's sister, Mrs. Swift, chap. Nov. 21. Eight fast bouts ali^ady who had recently come west from He takes off his coat, he throws down hie cap. Minnesota. scheduled. A ten pound boy was born today The Ladies Aid of the Christian in Independence to Mrs. Charles church met at the home of Mrs. C. Richardson. O. Sloper Thursday afternoon. Apart from tho regular routine work Mrs. Kyanize floor enamel makes old made the aftenioon most pleasant floors look like new. For sale by with her homey hospitality and Moore & Walker. light refreshments. Miss Burroughs of Portland was Mrs. J. Dornsife, accompanied by the week end guest of Miss Devore her brother-in-law, N. Dornsife of at the Swope home. Dallas, will leave tomorrow for hooks at the job, shuts his jaws with • click— bellows, that’s him, the scout who win stick. Problems arise ss the Job goes along. Nothing works right and everything’ s wrong Whon things look tho blackest some scouts will say: “ Oh, gee, what's ths use?" and then beat It away. But aoms sns lights on through the thlo and the thick. And we find at the end the scout who will stick. —The Cave Scout JOYOUS MUSIC AT C H A U T A U Q U A Sierra Serenaders Come W ith Big program on Last Night Ths Sierra Serenade!-* brink splendid, joyous music to the t'hnutauqua Festival These charming and talented young ladle* have been one of the outstanding successes among musical companies of the East for several years and their appearance on the Western Festival* is of more than ordinary Importance. Their programs are of in- finite variety; orchestral number*, readings, songs. Instrumental solos, duets, costumed selections. It is an un­ usual company which pleases unusually well. Every number, whether vocal or instrumental, is rendered with all the finish and musicianship of which true artists are capable. WILLARD E. CRAVEN HDW . ; every community in the United States BIG BRIDGE AT ALBANY a recognized and organized center of IN ITS LAST DAYS Red Cross activity through which the peopie of that community may, it' they wish, serve themselves, with all the advantages of national leadership, na­ tional standards, natfbnal and inter­ national contacts. It rests with the peo­ ple of every community to determine for themselves just how fully they have need of a movement which under the associated Rod Cross Societies is to express the effort of the peoples of the world to free themselves from needless death and suffering through neighborly cooperation and service. You're in mighty good com­ pany when you belong to the Red Cross. So long as there’s sickness, suffering, disaster, the Red Cross must stand by! The H. C. of L. hasn't hit Red Cross memberships. They’re still a dollar. If nine million youngsters be­ lieve in the Red Cross, it must have the right idea. Albany—The big steel bridge across the Willamette river at A l­ bany is doomed to go, five years from now, according to a member of the Linn county court, and the new bridge will be lower down the river. Like the Town Every Chautauquan, so far, says this a pretty good town. AT THE ISIS NEXT WEEK TELL US WHAT YOU W ANT IN JEW ELRY The two episodes of “The Lost Express” on Monday night. The added attraction is Mary Miles Min- ter in “Social Briars.” Suppose you We will try our bsst to were a pretty girl with a graceful figure and a wonderful voice and pleaso yon. If yon cannot a long-haired country Sunday school superintendent wanted you to wed find exactly what yon and become one of the village gos­ want in onr magnificent sips, and suppose there was a way you could escape such a fate, even stock, we will bo glad to though it lay over the rocky road to secure it lor yon. Or if yon Hroadway and—oh, see the picture! Priscilla Dean, who comes Tues­ have ideas ol yonr own for day night, has made a crook play all her own. “The Silk-Lined Burglar” making up something orig­ is its name, and action and suspense inal, let ns help yon. We arc its keynotes from the opening iris to the final fadeaway. There's can manufacture it for yon a real safe-cracker, who has made in our own shop. We spec­ monkeys of the police; there’s a rich young society girl who needs ialize in fine diamonds end a safe-cracker in her business—what ever that may be. There’s a young diamond jewelry and carry Secret Service agent who is at his a beautiful assortment at wits’ end how to stave off the ruin of his professional career—until the popular prices. girl and Blackie solve the problem. “The Hoodlum", declared by critics to be the greatest character success in Mary Pickford’s screen history will be seen on Wednesday and H A R T M A N BR O S. CO. Thursday nights. From flunkied luxury to gang chief of alley throng JEWELERS A OPTICIANS is a rich girl's comedy fall and Mary loes everything from A to Z on the Salem Oregon way down and up again. As a snob Amy Burke is converted into a star crap-shooter, a nimble-fingered po­ tato peeler, the official style setter ciphered the system and we follow­ for tough girls and the most kindly and humanitarian person in the ed directions. Needless to say, we cannot divulge all we know, but tenements. Replete with novel are able to say that Captain Du­ comedy situations, and softened by the romance of Amy and a tene­ mont’s real name is Major Robert ment “towel thief", "The Hodlum Warwick and he is involved in a is one of the most interesting and thrilling plot with Wanda Hawley in “Secret Service.” Upon viewing funniest of attractions. There will lie a pucked house on both nights, this extraordinary picture you will it being expected that everybody in immediately realize how Captain south Polk county w ill see this Dumont's machinations in the Con federate telegraph office imperiled picture th whole city of Richmond for he Friday night Ethel Clayton in Men, Women and Money." The was a Union spy. As for the code Dr. Livingston Farrand, the great­ dory concerns a young and unso­ message, call at the box office when est authority on public health in Amer­ phisticated girl of the Middle West you come to see “Secret Service ' ica. served in France as the head of Sunday aftrnoon and night (Nov. the fight against tuberculosis. He now who becomes iniatiated into the 23.) and it will be explained to you. ways of the smart set and from i reeds Henry P. Davison As head of the American Red Cross. Dr. Far­ then on is a slave to that kind of rand recently visited Seattle, Spo­ life until she is finally awakened Notice That Certain Street Improve kane and Portland and conferred with and finds beneath the glitter and ment Bonds Will Be Paid representatives of Red Cross Chap­ glamor of society lies a dark cur­ ters of Alaska, Idaho, Oregon and rent which sooner or later pene­ Notice is hereby given that there Washington. "The Red Cross faces trates to the outer surface and en­ is sufficient funds in the Street Im­ problems in the post-war period more gulfs its victims. Miss Clayton is provement Fund of the City of In­ serious, if possible, than the problems of the war itself. Not a great amount jifforded an excellent opportunity dependence, Oregon, to take up for of money, but the membership and lo display her emotional talents as payment and cancellation Bonds heart- cooperation of every American ; 'he picture abounds with highly Noe. 10. 11, 12, 13 and 14 bearing citlsen is what is needed to help the dramatic situations. date December 1, 1914. Red t’r .-s to solve these problems. The big show of Saturday (after- That on December 1, 1919, each which threaten our national vitality, non and evening) consists of Bessie of said bonds w ill be taken up and and whi h. unless solved, will rob us Hariscale in "The Purchase Price", cancelled and paid in full, principal of the frehs of victory." said Dr. F a r i a comedy and the Ford Weekly. and interest to said date and there­ rand. “U B SURE 2 C SCRT SRVCE. after said bonds will cease to boar "The Red Cross is the Gospel in Y? I B-leeve IT 2 H A GRATE FIL interest. LUMl 'Upon receipt of this myster­ Dated November 1, 1919. boots." ious message our code experts de- C VV. IRVINE, City Treasurer,