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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1912)
'"LT CAIT" Tft7R5At. 8ALEM, OREiitiN. T.ESDAY, ' FEBRCACT 18. i12. page rm r" if "mmv --- ' i jw i hi hi n IP17RPIT ECIALS 10 per cent Discount on Women's Purses Cross Bar Handkerc'efs 2 for 5c Men's Suits Values to$ 17.50 $9.85 Men's Suits $7.50 $5.00 All Linen Handkerc'efs 5c Each Good Percales 7c 15c Hosiery 2 pair for 25c Blankets and Comforts 101 Less Get the Original and Genuine uonuGirs MALTED ILK Tho Food-drink for All Ages. . For Infants, fhvalids,and Growing children. PureNutrition, upbuilding the whole body, lnvieoraleatheniinino mnihfnJili .nl IfoH milk, mailed gram, b powder form. A quick lunch prepared ia a minute. lakenoiubstitute.AikforHORUCK'S. Uot in Any bJilli Trust Women's Suits $25 values $19.50 2 days only Dress Skirts 20 to 33 1-3 per cent Less Corset Covers 29c Each Great Embroidery Specials Come and see them Women's Suits about $25.00, now 10lo LESS S1TS5 CONFESSED TO FORGING THE MILL Oakland, Cal., Feb. 13. Mrs. Har riet boralne Frazer De Vine has con fessed that she forged a will by which ike would inherit the bulk of the estate of the late Mary L. Swain of Berkeley, and also the adoption pa pers by which Mrs. Swain was al leged to have made her a legal heir, by pleading before Judge Ellsworth this morning. She was arraigned og an Indictment returned against ler last Wednesday accusing her of forging the will. Stie asked proba ,tlon and Judge EllBworth gave her two weeks' delay for an investiga tion. Mrs. De Vine decided to make a titan breast of it after Chief of Po lice Vollmer, of Berkeley, and As sistant District Attorney Hlnes had ell extended conferences with her B ; r. ' i in the county jail. A peculiar fea ture of the case is that after admit ting her guilt to the officials, she persisted in declaring her Innocence to her husband, Robert De Vine, who is assistant manager of the Pullman works at Richmond. SIX HUNDRED THOUSAND COAL MINERS TO STRIKE UNITED rilEHS I.HARKD WHIG.) London, Feb. 13. All hope of averting a general strike of 600,000 coal miners In Great Britain was abandoned when 12,000 miners in Wales and 32,000 men in the Not tingham mines notified .their employ ers, as required by law, that they will quit work February 29. The employes of other mines like ly will serve notice tomorrow on the operators of their intention to cease work on the same date. let Six More IndcltnieniN. New York, Fell. 13. The state su preme court convened here today and Justice Seabury, who la presiding, will probably decide within the next few days whether Isaac Harris and Max Black, proprietors of the Tri angle Shirt Waist factory, will have to Btand trial a second time for man slaughter in connection with the fire In which 147 employes, mostly girls, met death. Seven indictments charging man slaughter were brought against the owners of the factory. Recently the defendants were tried on one of these Indictments and the Jury returned a .verdict of not guilty. The six re maining Indictments still stand on the records. 0. A. G. GLEE CLUB AT THE GRAND The Corvallis Gazette Times ' is loud in its praise of the O. A. C. Glee Club and the Mandolin Club which is part of of It. Speaking of the club's appearance at Corvallis re cently It says: r 'JEach number roundly applauded and an encore insisted upon in some Instances two and even three ; is the record for the O. A. C. Glee and Mandolin Club concert at the Opera House Saturday night. And this tells only half the story. The program wan par excellence, mado .up of music worthy of artlBts and an au dience of cultured taste, and though much of it was difficult, the Glee and Mandolin Club did more than make an agreeable noise; the club sang with a splendid volume of tone, mod ulated at times to a whisper, and with an expression and interpreta tion that made the selection a fin ished work of art; and the Mandolin Club played with a snap and bar; liiuiiy that was delightful. The concert was a Biiccess from start to finish, much the best work ever done by the O. A. C. boys, and the same presentation will please any audience encountered on the state tour begun today. The usual vaude ville Btunts were conspicuous by their absence, but in encore numbers the boys gave some high-class humor ous songs that enlivened the pro gram to Just the proper extent. The Gazette bIbo gives special mention to the individual members of the club, and while it perhaps did not mention all of th members, It is excusable in the neglect, for it ex hausted language and comparison, and pralseful phrases before it got half way through the list. The O. A. C. Glee club always among the best of the college aggregations, with Its latest additions and the superb man dolin club la no longer one of the best, but Is the best. At the Grand tonight and all Salemites should be there, especially if they have boys of their own. COMPANY (iOES BVCK ON AGENT'S CONTRACT Confronted with the proposition of having to pay a Judgment calling for a balance on an excursion ticket issued to him over a year ago, Garhard Wes- els, living five miles from Lebanon, called on the railroad commission to day and submitted the matter to it, trusting that he might obtain relief, but the commission stated that it was powerless to grant it Wesels and ,hls wife a year ago bought a tlckei at reduced rates from Gottenburg to San- Francisco. Re cently the railroad company wrote him saying the agent did not have a legal right to sell the ticket, and ask ing him to pay the balance of $03. This he refused to do and the company sued him and obtained Judgment. ARIZONA IS UNCLE SAM'S VALENTINE Phoenix, Ariz.. Feb. 13. Without ostentation or display George W. P. Hunt will be inaugurated first gov ernor of the new state of Arizona here tomorrow. The day wa pro claimed a public holiday by Gover nor Sloan, and already Phoenix is filling with visitors for the ceremony. A salute of. 48 guns will usher In admission day. In the morning a civic parade, without military fea tures will be the first official event. After this Hunt will walk to the capltol, where Chief Justice Edward Kent of the territorial supreme court will administer the oath. The evening program Includes an unique inaugural ball. The dancers will make merry In a huge open air pavilion. The ball will be informal no Invitations have issued, and it will be free to all. ; n' PAID IN FI LL AT THE GRAN) SATURDAY 17. George C. Tyler, head of the the atrical firm of Liebler & Co., con' gratulated Eugene Walter on the technique of his play, "Paid in Full," which appears at the Grand, Satur day, Feb. XT. "But it. has no technique, whatever that IV replied young Mr. Walter. "Technique and all those theories of construction that have hedged the drama for time beyond reckoning, I tried zealously to evade. I wanted to see if normal people, who spoke and acted like human beings, under actual conditions, couldn't be made entertaining on the stage." As Mr. Walter now draws a princely sum each week in royalties, from this play, there would seem to be some truth In the old adRge anent "The proof of the pudding." dyr.elabrn aturdaaln,woay shr h h N At V V i 1 V . -x V:' r Am s .0:.. U 'j w V I !. HAPPY THO MAI1I1IED? There ire unhappy married live, but a large percentage oi these onhappr homes ire due to the iltnesa of the wife, mother or daughter. The feelings of nervousness, the befogged mind, the ill-temper, the pale and wrinkled face, hollow and eiroled eyes, result most oiten from those disorders peculiar to women. For the woman to be happy and good-looking she must naturally havu health. Dragging-down feelings, hysteria, hot-flashes or constantly returning pains and achesare too great a drain upon woman's vitality and strength. Dr. Pierce', favorite Prescription restores weak and sick women to sound health by Regu lating and correcting the local disorders which are generally resoonaible for the above distressing symptoms. I sutTerwl g-roatl for a number of years and for the past three years was bo bad that life was a misery to me." writes Man. 11. F. Lick over, of Ul.ica, Ohio, Koute 4. "The doctors told me I would have to go to a hospital before 1 would ever be batter. A year airo this winter and sprinir 1 was worse than ever before. At earh period 1 .offered like one In torment, 1 am the mother of six children. I was so bad fur five months that I knew something must lie done, so 1 wrote to Dr. R. V. Pierce, telling- him as nearly a. I could how 1 suffered. He outlined course of treatment which I followed to ths letter. 1 took two bottloa of Favorite Prescription' and one of '(olden Medical Discovery ' and a fifty-cent bottle of Smart-Weed,' and have never suffered much since, I wish I could tell every sufferina woman the world over what a boon. Dr. Florae's medicines are. There Is no use wasting time and money doctoring with anything else or any one else." The Medical Adviser by R. V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y., answers hosts of delicate questions about which every woman, single or married ought to know. Sent frit Mrs. DicitovKR. on receipt of 31 stumps to pay for wrapping and mailing only. V v 'J 1$ re L. 1 jfain-v ;.i w".i-iH-adaci The 0. A. C. Glee and Mandolin ( lull at the Grand Tonlsrlit. Try this test in a "Wear-Ever" Aluminm Utensil lcar ew at'id o aiiU into a unctpm. Macs eswr a to w in mi mifaoaf sfrrruif tsf At milk boil ifatn to oM-oaarftr pint . n mUk will not U scortW. TTllAT'S because aluminum is a better distributor and re tainer of heat than other mate rials of which cooking utensils are made. t You can cook quicker and you therefore save fuel. " Wear-Ever" utensils are made without joint9, seams or soldered parts from thick, hard sheet alu minum. They have no coating to peel, crack or blister. They cannot rust, cannot form poison ous compounds with acid fruits or foods, and they last a generation. Let ua supply you wills, tha ona-quart sample saucepan advertised ia magazines ana snow yon otner utensils bearing the "Wear-Ever" trade- mark. " Wear Ever" Ware makes heavy house i keeping Light. "WEAR-EVXR." lTA.CU.Cal Visit our kitchen-ware department and in spect the complete line of "Wear Ever" Aluminum now on display there. rjasja t I- ' ' s -s-M--Ma III tttM4tttMMMtMfMltMt.MMtMt4MttMM4t4m4tmutttstUs 4- 4 4 4 a a itsmiimi. 4 r44H ttttHMMttttf Oa Ao C ,Glee MasicSolisi Qisbsl GRAND OPERA HOUSE i :: 40 College Men in Songs and Skits GOOD MUSIC. SNAPPY CHORUSES. Come and Hear Harry Lander's Only Rival 9 Curtain at 8:30. Prices 50c, 75c, $1 .00. Tickets on sale at Box Office j ... ...AAAaaaaAAAAA a. j. a A.mun..AHA.ii..A,t. ....... ....... .......... ...... 8 ft l&UAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA, tjttttttttttttttt 1 1 . AVUUUUUt HtfHmmtmttttwmttttTtwi i ' ' T ..-- i-. i 1 o 1L I lit t: