Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1913)
DAU7 CAPITAL JOUBKAL, SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1913. Page FIt Economical Buyers are Taking Advantage of the Greatest IIThe State January White and Clearance Sale Library EVER GIVEN BY US Beautiful new embroideries table linens, bed spreads, curtain BcrimB, knit and muslin underwear are being sacrificed to secure room. BOOM WE MUST SAVE FOR THE THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS' WORTH OF NEW MERCHANDISE ON THE WAY HERE BUY NOW AND SAVE MONEY. mm mm ttMmmttH 12.75 and $2.50 Woolen Shirt Waists $1.95 J Embroidery Flouncing! Mens and Boys CLOTHING $3.60 and $3.00. Black Silk Skirt Waists $1.95 27-inch wide and ALLOYER EMBROIDERIES, Extra ' Special. AND 58c. t t OVERCOATS 25 per cent less 50c Curtain Scrims I Boys' and Girl's 37c. BEDSPREADS GREATLY REDUCED IN TRICE Men's Golf and Negligee Shirts 76 Dist. School Shoes; ro .... VALUE 4 $2.50 values .1.35 '. MEN'S $1.00 f200 value9 x 59 1 Outing Flannel Night T $1.75 values $1.39 Shirts, 78c Women's Suits and Coats 1-3 to 1-2 Less FURS 1-4 to 1-3 Less Now Open SUPREME COURT OVERRULED THE HOUSE MOTION AND A BIG ROW ALL READY FOR SPROUT ING WAS HAPPILY ENDED. SHOWS HOW HARD IT HITS EXPRESS COMPANIES "The Supreme Court of Oregon Is the boss of the state library and will continue to exerclBe this function," said Chief Justice McBrlde today, rel atlve to the row started by the House yesterday when It adopted a resolu tion calling upon the sechetary of Uate, custodian of the Capitol, to keep the library closed during the sessions of the House. "The library is open today as us ual," continued the Chief Justice, "by the order of this court. However If at any time persons using the library make u.inoscssary noise which is dis turking the House sessions we will order the library closed. "The Supreme Court will therefore take no cognizance of the mandamus suit filed here by Attorney Lord. The Supreme Court is boss of the library." Thus comes to an end what threat ened to become a lovely big state row started by the passage of the HouBe resolution, and in which both Washington, Jan. 24. The total number of parcels post stamps printed and distributed up to date is 339,500, 000. Prior to January 1, when the now service was established, 153,292, 455 stamps were issued. In the first three weeks of the system'a operatlou. 186,207,545 stamps have been supplied to postofflces. The Bureau of En graving and Printing Is being forced, in order to meet the demand, to print the stamps at tho rate of 12,000,000 a day. The total value of the parcels post stamps distributed to this date is $18,-011,120. DODGED OFFICERS TO PROTECT HIS HEALTH united frkss leased wins. Richmond, Cal., Jan. 24. "To pro tect my health," is the reason given by the Rev. Frank Horn, former pas tor of the First Baptist church here, who is in jail today for dodging the officers who sought him ou a de sertion and bigamy charge. Horn is accused by Eva Mae DeTorvea of San Francisco of marrying her under the name of DeTorvea In September, 1910, while he had a wife living in Everett, Wash. When first accused, Horn declared it was his "twin brother" who mar ried the woman. He sticks to this story. rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT Turkey's New Cublnct I'N'ITED MBBS LEASED WIllB. Constantinople, Jan. 24. The new branches of the legislature, Governor .Turkish cabinet was completed this West and other state officials, and the afternoon as follows: Supreme Court would become in volved. Following tho action of tho House, At'orney Lord of Salem yesterday be gan mandamus proceedings in the Grand Vizier and Minister of War Mahmud Shefket Pasha. President of the Council of State- Said Hallm. Minister of the Interior Hadji AIM Sunreme Court mrnlnst the ntnta 11. 1 Minister of Foregn Affairs Tschu- brarlan to force that official to keep ' ruksula Mahmud. the library open. Following this pro- Minister of Justice Ibrahim Pasha, cording, Speaker McArthur and other Minister of Finance Rlfaat Boy. House leaders pot together and mndn Minister of Public Wrorks Bezaarla arrangements to stand pat. They , Effendl. planned to havo a bill Introduced In Minister of Pious Foundations both houses and rushed through for,11"'1'1 Pasha. the Governor's signature, providing! Minister of Agriculture Djolal Ef for the closing of the library during fendi. the Houso sessions. 1 Minister of Posts Oskicn Bey. Saturday HALF-PRICE Sale Boys Suits and Coats For Saturday only boys' knlcker bocker suits ONE-HALF PRICE. They are full weight, all wool and good pat terns. Ages 11 to 16 years. $5.00 suits $2.50, $0.00 suits $3.00. All wool overcoats. Sizes 8 to 36. $5.00 Coats, $2.50 $7.50 Coats, $3.75 $10.00 Coats, $5.00 $15.00 Coats, $7.50 BIG BLANKET SALE Salem Woolen Mills Store I Liberty mid Frlnglo Notes. There will be a box supper at Sa lem Heights Friday evening. Hoyt Cupp visited Salem Wedncs day. Sterling Mlzo of Liberty visited Sa lem Wednesday. John J. Drono Visited Salom last week. Mr. Tompkins and Mr. Frod Grabon horst visited Salem Wednesday. Mr. Fox of Liberty visited this neighborhood Wednesday. Mr. Crozler and daughter, of the Sunnysldo district, visited Salem on Wednesday. J. R. S. To Centralize Moving Pictures. UNITED 1'IIESS LEASED WIHB. Olympla, Wash., Jan. 21. To put all moving picture operators under con trol of a commission, and forco them to pass an examination before being allowed a license Is the plan proposed by Representative Hurd, of King coun ty, in a bill introduced before the house today. Madame Nordica May Ctime The world favorite prima donna, Madame Nordica, may be secured to sing in Salem If the Salem people will express their desire to hear her, by subscribing Immediately or tele phoning Main 1295. Provided the required number of subscriptions can be obtained by Sat urday evening, the tickets will be sold at the low rate of $1.50 and $2.00. But the declBlon must be made by Monday, or else Salom will not be able to secure this artist. This Is a great 'opportunity for Salem, and everyone interested in tho growth of Salem muHlcnlly and bo clallw should encourage this excel lent concert Subscription papers will lie found nt music Btores. lemnnn, McFcely and Company, Ltd., of expensive merchandise with a total value aggregating upwards of $5000, tho police have arrcBtcd F. C. Col- jthrust, night watchman, alleged to be Die chief pcrietrator of tho thefts, and seven bartenders around town as receivers of tho property. Tho thefts have, according to the management, been going on for n long time, and the arrcxts have only followed after careful observation and Investigation by the. cleverest city de tectives. All the cases will be up for trial before Magistrate Shaw Monday. ANTI-CAPITAL PUNISHMENT BILL IS INTRODUCED Olympla, Wash., Jan. 24. After de laying the introduction of tils bill for nearly a week, to be sure he had made It hole-proof, R6presentatlve Gobs put his nnti-capltal punishment bill be fore the house today, which provides life Imprisonment at the punishment for murder and treason. He introduced a third bill cutting the pardoning power of the governor. If the latter bill becomes a law, no prisoner sen tenced to a life term will be eligible to parole until he has sorved 20 years. BEAUTIFUL, WAVY, LUSTROUS HAIR IN A FEW MOMENTS GIRLS I GET A 25-CENT DOTTLE OF "DAXDERINE" AND TRY T11IS ALSO STOPS FALLING HAIR DESTROYS DANDRUFF. HELPED TIIF.MSELYEH TO EMPLOYER'S PROPERTY UNITED rilEKH l.HAfKD WlllK.1 Vancouver, B. C, Jan. 24. Follow ing tho gradual disappearance from tho largo wholosalo wiirehouso of Mc- Yonr hair becomes light, wavy, fluf fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus trous and beautiful as a young girl's i after a "Danderlne hair cleanse." Just try this moisten a cloth with a little Dnndorino and carefully draw It through your hair, taking one small strand nt a time. This will elennso the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and Jin just a few moments you have dou bled tho beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once Dnndorino dissolves every pnrtlclo of dandruff, cleanses, purifies and Invig orates the scalp, forever stopping Itch ing nnd falling hair. But what will please you most will bo after a few weeks' use when you will actually see new hair fine and downy at first yes but really new bnlr growing nil over the sealp. If you enro for pretty, toft hair nnd lots of It surely get a G-cent bottlo of Knnwlton'B Danderlne from any drug gist or toilet counter, nnd just try It. However, after they had got into touch with Chief Justice McBrlde, they decided to back down In view of the fact that a stoto law provides that the library shall be open while the supreme and circuit courts are In session. Minister of Shukrl Pasha. Public Instruction ARRESTED ON REQUEST OF GRANTS PAS OFFICER Roosevelt liutls In. UNITED P1IESS LEADED WIHB. New York, Jan. 24. Gertrudo Bnr num, chief organizer of the White Goods Workors' Union, calold at the Outlook office today and conferred with Colonel Roosevelt regarding the garment, workers' strike. She pro- duced documentary evidence of dls- At tho request of the sheriff of trosslng conditions. Colonel Roose- Josephlne county, Sheriff Esch today velt is expected to make a statement placed under arrest Earl G. Gardner, this afternoon. of Rlckrenll, and Is holding him pend- Strike loaders appealed today to ing the arrival of the Southern Oregon Mayor Gnynor and Police Commls- offlcor, who declared by phone today sioner Waldo to punlBh two policemen that he (Gardne) Is wanted in Grants accused of clubbing girls. A big pa- Pass on a stntutory charge. rade of the strikers Is plnnned for Gardner clnlms to be a private de- next Monday. tectlve and when searched today by ' ' Sheriff Esch a 38-callbre Colts nuto-1 . Twelve Sailors Drown, matlc was found on bis person. Tho Groat Grimsby, England, Jan. 24.- gun was loaded and ready for busl- Thrown from a capsized lifeboat nf ness. Just what the exact nature of tor their vessel hud foundered at tho tho charge against the prisoner is month of tho Humber, 12 of tho crew could not he learned by Sheriff Esch f tlio bark Akda wero drowned, ac- thls morning, but Gardner will be cording to tho story being told today hold In the county jail, nevertheless. by three survivors who reached here, , , Those survivors clung to tho upturned Turns Over Again. boat nnd drifted for 12 hours. UNITED I'HBKS LEAKED Willi. Tncoma, Wash., Jan. 21. Willis Tav. Sunnjslilc School Literary Report, lor, the alleged boy accomplice of Pot- The Sunnysldo school had Its twlcc- er Miller, the nccused burglar, who is a-niontli literary Friday, Jan. 17. under armed guard, by order of Do- After an entertaining program Hid tectivo Captnln Tennant, is in the em- quest Ion "Resolved, that there Is moro ploy of the Seattle Tnxleub company, pleasure In pursuit than in possos- of which Tcnnant's brother Is part slon," was debated by Dudley Tuy- owner, nnd has turned slnte'B witness lor nnd Stella Winner, affirmative, in the present trial of Miller, In face anil Cecil Pearson and Dorothy Tay- of nn affidavit made by himself, fa- lnr, negative. The negative won. vorliiK tho defense. TUB SIWN'YSmH REPORTER. GAUMONT WEEKLY This Is the most Instructive weekly ever shown in Salem. A STORY OF THE CIVIL WAR A stirring feature In two reels PUDDEN-FOOT PETE A slnp-stick comedy that makes a hit. VAUDEVILLE REED AND EARL Comedy singers, talkers nnd dancers. ROXIE AND WAYNE A Comedy Skit. THAT COWBOY FROM TEXAS A Big Laugh. THE B L I G H TODAY AND TOMORROW A ItIG MATINEE DAILY ARE YOU INTERESTED I t In Boeuiing good land at a small price? $5.00 per aero and up. With tho opening of spring a great rush will be made to secure Biinie o tho low-priced land now being opened to settlors by tlio Oregon ti I Western Colonization Co, For Informal Ion see H. S. BELLE 121 North Liberty Street. Phone 875. Salem, Ore. n 11 M ti M 11 ti ii ii ri it ii ii M .f& SXSOtt of Holding a Successful Auction Sale i The season of Auctions is now here (and during the next few months many thousands of dollars' worth of farm property will be sold at public sales in The Capital Journal territory, depend on various circumstances and conditions, but they will depend largely on how the sale is advertised. A sale insufficiently advertised cannot possibly produce the best results, succeed unless weather prevents. The prices at all of these sales will A sale well advertised will always I U THE NEW AND THE OLD WAY. In the old days when circulations were small, and it was impossible to reach all the people through the newspapers, it was necessary to use auction bills. But that day is gone by. Advertising is so cheap and so wonderfully effective, that the auction bill has became a back number. , In this territory the use of advertising Rpace In The Capital Journal has superseded auction bills, just as it has altogether superseded the use of bills by mer chants. ! I ' i ' , Why Is this? . i oniiiiMiiiMwmmwi REASON WHY. The Dill reaches only a few hundreds; the Capital Journal reaches thousands of readers. The Dill covers only a limited section ; the Capital Journal covers a large territory thoroughly. The Bill is seen only by the people when they are away from home. The Capital Journal goes into their homes and finds them. The Dill is not seen in bad weather, because the people stay at home; that is just the time The Capital Journal is more carefully read. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL FIRST IN ADVERTISING. The Bill makes the busy man stop when he is in a hurry, in the wind and cold, and maybe take out his spectacles. The Capital Journal finds him at home in a comfortable chair, leisurely reading his paper. The Dill must be tacked up and distributed a day or two of hard work for a man with a rig. The Cap ital Journal distributes the same information to nearly every house all at the same time, without trouble or extra cost. THE GREAT AUCTION PAPER. Remember, it is not enough to simply put your ad. in some newspaper. It must be in a paper that reach es the People You Wish to Interest in Ymir Sale, and - THE CAPITAL JOURNAL PRISE. FIRST IN ENTER- one which covers the Whole Territory. It is astonish ing how fur men will go to attend a sale and bid on some particular property advertised; these are the very man you want to reach, for they come to do busi ness and not from curiosity. YOU HAVE ONLY ONE CHANCE. Rear in mind that all your goods are going to be sold in One day, and on that day depends whether you make or lose perhaps several hundred dollars. A few dol lars' expense is absolutely nothing at all compared with the importance of advertising your sale Right. You Cannot Take Chances on Scrimping on Your Advertising. --' THE CAPITAL JOURNAL HOME. FIRST IN EVERY THE CAPITAL JOURNAL FIRST IN NEWS. I II II 11 H II 11 u u n 19 n n ii M II II 11 II 11 11 n is ii mm II II M 11 11 M 11 M 11 H ti 11 u