t THE OREGON STATESJlAJf: S.1TUIIPAV. JAXUART 20. 1018 8 r i -1 r1 i "" .- 1 1 - FIVE AUSTRIANS ANNOUNCE THEY I WILL SURRENDER Italians - Then '' Send Boat Across River to .Bring' Back Officers SCENE OF FIGHT VIEWED Ground Strewn With Relics of -: Battle Described by Correspondent ITALIAN ARMY .HEADQUAR-? TERS IN NORTHERN ITALY. Jani 24.; The colonel of a regiment ' around Capo File .on the old Piave, near Venice, "where desperate fight Ing has- been going on for the last Ilea' days. took a the oorresponaeni ver the fighting ground today. The .visit Included the shell-torn remnant of Capo Slid and . thcce actoss the river oy pontoon to a large area on the east back which was the ene my's Special domain until a few days ago, when h? was expelled with heavy losses and his two linos of de- ' fense were . transformed .into Ital- ian front lines. : ' ' The trip was made by a military automODiie up me iiooueu arc, where a steam tti g took the visitors; through the Sile canal. The : visit gave an opportunity of observing the unusual conditions in the semi-aquatic region. ' Entering Capo Sile, a cluster of - stone bouses, a church' and school facing the river, were found to have been literally blown but . of exist ence, .not a roof or wall, or hardly a vestige remaining, and only the outlines of former walls appearing above the waste. The ground was pfoughed up by heavy shells and a heavy cannonade, was still going on, with shrapnel bursting overhead and the steady whirr of shells directed against the bridges. , f Debris Covers Ground. Crossing the pontoon,' the coldncl led the way over the battle ground. which was littered with Austrian hel mets, belts and debris of the fight It was necessary to pick ; one's w7 with caution, over the grqund, strewn with hand grenades still unexplod ed. v -. " One of the enemy trenches, , just taken, showed evidence of a fearful hand-to-hand l struggle. pne new roadd gnfte- of Austrians, with; a wooden cross, showed how they had AeroplanelYrecked Against Wireless Tower CANCER CURED 7 m n DAYS - Miss Margaret Russell,' 1135 N. Fifteenth SL. Salem, Or., explain wondqrful cure. To. those afflicted with can cer: I deem it a great privi lege to be able to testify to the absolute cure of cancer on . the side, of my nose from which . I suffered for three years. ; :. y. '..",--- 0 Only Jtly, 14, 1316, I ap plied to Dr. S. G. Stone for treatment, lie applied a paste for four days and then a sim- pie ointment, in just eleven days after the first treatment the cancer fell out. The place soon healed and is now sound and well. . .'".,' - Miss Margaret Russell." S. C STONE, M. p., Stone's Drug Store v North '' Commercial Street 211 Salem, Or. nione 35 'onsultation and Advice Free. , 'yjk'v (aBW3w ' " I . M M -XI:. L nth "x y - - -1 r ' V y i' rp "A iy V " x -1 1 " . i - - - it J ' ' v ' trf y j 11 ii These unusual photographs show British aeroplane wrecked in a 200-foot wireless tower in England. Running at the rate of fifty miles an hour out of dense fog the plane squarely struck the tower, and stuck in it. The longer photo shows the great height of the 'collision while the smaller gives a close up view. The operator was thrown to a wing where he lay unconscious till help era -climbed the inside of the tower and rescued htm. buried the dead' alongside the trench es and then bad been compelled to leave them. i,-... : The enemy's first line trenches ran along th east bank of the river, wllu a heavy ' barbed wife entanglement oil the river's edge, and the second line of trenches was 200 feet further back. ; Italian soldiers were working in all of these trenches, setting up their two front lines on the east bank and a thrld line on the west bank. The trenches were rerjj shallow, owing- to the watery, region, and; a nor mal height was secured by sand bag earth words. i ;s - ' - :' Trees and Bushes Levelled!. . , Tree and bushes had been levelled as with a scythe , by machine gun and rifle' fire. The enemy still kept up an intermittent rifle fire and the i "ping" of" bullets was constant from his left, though the colonel said thati "".'cer, they probably will cap tnre yog." - . , Boat Brines Prisoners. . If they capture me, my captain," nswered Morelll, "order our men to open fire on us," and he took the -lost and brought back the prisoners. Coming through theSile canal by fug, a pontoon was observed with ;uns swung in a turret. The navy is ising these Improvised batteries with god effect Big tows of barges and ?ondoIas were bringing supplies, as the land roads are almost impassable with mud. and are often submerged. Crowds of peasant women and chil dren are being used along the roa'ds shoveling; gravel, in an effort to make the route passable. - Dispatch" riders had abandoned the roads and were pushing theirvmotor cycies across the fields. . Women al so are working in the fields and two were acting as gravedlggers In a small graveyard, where soldiers' graves were being marked with crosses. There were ' troops along the route of all conditions but chiefly of the sturdy younger classes. ! ; IRRITABLE NERVOUS Was Condition of Indiana' Ladj Before Beginning to Take Ctrd-4, the Woman's ) Tonic ' Kokotno, lad. Mrs. H. Hanketneier, of this town, says: ' "I look so well, and sm so well, that it does pot seem as if I ever needed CarduL But I was not al ways this way ... I think I have taken a dozen bottles . .. before my little girt came. - . I was feeling dreadfully bad, had head ache, backache, sick at my stomach, no energy ... I was very irritable, too, and nervous. , . I began taking Cardui about 6 months before my baby came. As a result all those bad feelings left me, and I just felt grand, just as If nothing at all was the matter, and when the end came I was hardly sick at all. 'Since that 1 have never taken Cardui at all . . . It has done me good, and 1 know it will help others, if they will only try it Many women have written grateful let ters like the above, telling of the good that Cardui has done them. Why should it not help you, too? ' If you suffer from any of the ailments so common to women, and feel the need of z safe, reliable, strengthening tonic, we urge you to be gin today and give Cardui a fair trial. Your dealer sells Card-u-C EB-10 Hard Ckla People whose blood Is pure are not nearly soUkely to take hard colds as are others! Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the blood pure, and this great medicine recovers the system after a cold as no other medU cine (ioes,if Take Hood's. 1 RECEIVERS FOR ROAD ANNOUNCED 'Against Railway for $36,500,000 the enemy on -the right had lapsed, T-..-a . U.. into silence and that patrols were , vumpouy ua vidim out rcconnoitering. : ) : The officers recounted to the cor respondent' a number of stirring In cidents of the fight. In one case five Austrians came to the -river bank and called out that they wished to surrender, but could not cross the river as they did not' know how to swim. They asked that a- boat be sent to them. An Italian officer sus pected treachery, but turning, to his men, said: "Who ; has the couraee to take a boat over to those men!" i "I, f captain!" came -Wie answer from the ranks. It was the voice of a yonog soldier named Morelli, for merly: a gondolier at "Venice. ' " "You take your risks," warned the - Itesklence Phone, 2X3. m , ' ITion 101. Ilepubllc Trucks. Goodrich Tire. Overland Service. All Accessories Mt Angel Garag CROWE & BC11 VEIDKIt . ryoprietrs. .It. Anel, Of. Storage and Repairs. 'A .-') toil 'tHnti':k,f ' This Repair Directory gives the principal places whern an articla can bo repaired, and should be preserred in verj home ju a readj guide. - 0TOVJB REPAIRnro PatiafaeUon cuaran. Ud. 4i years xpr- lenc. Salaa Peace mm4 SB Court St. Phon Hi. ; The professional baseball players need not worry about exemption from military service. - If Uncle Sam decides that he wants them ha is going to take them just as readily as either of. the big baseball leacvu v, iuIJ t! -ft a player from Jhe bush Isague in. prganlzed baij WATT SHIPP COMPANY ISA Sontb' Ooamerclal trlnr Tcnnla Rackets la our owst she QEOR9K a Wl Lli i - Repair all Make of Sawing Machine Bnppllea, Needles m M IMI. 483 Htaf Bfanect, EtJtm, Orcrm 31 DFATO, Jan. 25. Alexander R. Baldwin of San rFancisco, vico-pres-ident . and general attorney or the Western Pacific railway, and Udward L. . Brown, president of the Denver and Rio Grande, railroad, - will be named receivers of the Denver and Rio Grande railroad tomorrow by Judge Walter H. Sanborn of 8t.Paiil sitting in the federal district court here, he announced late today. This announcement was made at the close or a lengthv conference of attorneys pf the Equitable Trust com pany of New York, the Elliott Prog and Switch company of East St. Liouls, 111.- and ! for the Denver and Rio Grande with the court In cham bers. Th$. court announced In open court earlier in the day that it would name a receiver for the railroad and asked that counsel suggest names. Mr. Baldwin was suggested by the Equitable company's sounsel, that company having been permitted, to intervene in the -receivership suit brought against the railroad by the Elliot company, tand the Elliot com pany suggested Mr, Brown. Counsel for the railroad company approved appointment of , Mr. Brown. The Equitable company, which ha? a judgment against the railroad for about $36,500,000 and the Elliot company, which has .a confessed claim for 117.00&, each asked that a receiver be appointed. Russian Army IN BAD SHAPE Men Inexperienced and Un disciplined Resistance Held Impossible , PETROGRAO, Jan. 24. Major- General Boneh-Bruevitch. chief of staff at the Russian front, paints a gloomy picture of the condition of the Russian armies in a report to Ensign Krylenko. the commander-i I chief. The army organisations are utterly demoralized, he says, the of ficers , are Inexperienced and the maintenance of discipline is impossi ble. The only possible salvation for the army, the only chance fev offer ing an effective resistance. Tie de clares, is for the varMis sections of the army fb fall back to their natural defenses and .undergo thorough re organization s - of the - units under tra'nM leaders., -.- THany parts oft the western front are entirely open. General Bonch Bruevitcn - reports, at numeroos places there being only 240 infantry men to the mile. The reserves are refusing to t relieve the men in the trenches and the soldiers are deserv ing in masses. Communications are broken and-few .horses are available. The wire entanglements hae been de stroyed to facilitate fraternizing and the exchange of commodities with the German, armies. At many, points, adds the . chief, of staff, fortified points har? been destroyed, making resistance utterly Impossible on the lines as at present located, even with good troops. Various branches of the Staffs must soon cea3 work, he declared, because of the disordered conditions and the economic life of he army will thus be ruined. MERS EXPEL I. W: W. FROM ORGANIZATION e Resolution Favors Govern ment Tattg Over CoaP Mines ia America- DRAFT LAW IS UPHELD No Special Privileges Asked m'Helping Win War for Democracy The largest bell in England s the big bell of St. Paul's Cathedral. known as .'"Great PaUl." Its diam eter of nine and a half feet and it3 weight close on seventeen tons. Germany Strong Bat , r Made Serious Mistake : ' '. ' 1 r". IHCAGO, Jan. 24. Germany is just a strong today as she evey was, Ueutrnint Andrew Naismith of tho Canadian field artillery, told 15P0 delegates attending the convention of the Vocational Educational asso ciation of the middle west today. ( "Germany has made two mistakes which mill cort her the war, ho w ever," he added, "In the first place she failed to mobilise enough men to accomplish -her purpose In the be ginning, and secon-Jly, she started too late her attempt to crush France. We have Germany staggering at the present time and now is the time to drive home and drive homn hard.M - The man to whom the world owes the perfection of ; the .' locomotive, George Stephenson, grew to ipui hood vjt any schooling. ' EMS MOT WATER J W TOO DESME A ROSY COMFLEXHOH Say we cant help but look better and feel better after .an Inelde bath. To Ipok one's best arid feel ono'a best is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fer mentations and poisonous toxins be fore , it is absorbed into the blood. Just as 'coal, when it burns,, leaves behind a certain amount of incom bustible .material in the' form of ashes, so the food and drink' taken each day leave in the alimentary or gans a certain amount of indigesti ble material, which IX not eliminated form toxins and poisons which are then sucked .Into the blood through the very ducts which are, intended tt sucft in only nourishment to sustain the body. . If' "you "want- to see the glow 4jf healthy bloom in yonr cheeks, to see your skin, get , clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in if. which is a harmless means of washing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys "and bowels, before putting more food into the stomach. Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or ; pallid com plexion, are those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches." bilious spells, acid stom ach or conjeti patio cv ehoold -begin this phoepha(ted hotwater drinking. A- quarter pound . of limestone phosphate costs very little at the ilrug store but is sufficient to dem onstrate J hat Just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organ. - - .. . - - INDIANAPOLIS, In, Jan. 25. After expelling Industrial Workers of the.' World from membership In the organization, if there are any, the United Mine Workers of America today went on record as favoring the taking over of the coal mines by the government on condition the union men had the right to make collective bargains. They asked no special privileges In the operation of the se lective draft; opposed conscription of labor and adopted a "war resolu tion", declaring the coal diggers to be in full accord with President Wilson's announcement to make the world safe for democracy and, de manding the "unrestricted right of working men and women to organize and deal collectively with their em ployers." . , : - There was no expressed opposi tion to any of the resolutions and they were adopted in most instances by a unanimous vote. '', The delegates take great prlee in the service flag, containing 19.286 stars hanging over their heads in the hall, "and some of the resolutions brought out the fact of the areat number of mine workers now in the military service. ; . . The I. W. W. were expelled ty the adoption of a constitutional amendment making them Ineligible for membership. " v . . The war . resolution , recited that no statement of words is needed to prove that the "great armyfcf njen" the union. represents are loyal to the government and that the miners are in full accord with, the principle of making the world safe- for democ racy, "forcefully , and eloquently" announced by President Wilson. The delegates to the next conven tion were instructed to prepare . a resolution wherein the "war aims of American labor" will be definitely set forth. 4 i , ! The resolution on the selective draft stated. that the miners stand ready and willing to do their share, in supporting the government in the .war and for themselves ask' no spe cial privileges." Just Eeceived New Shipment J MES'fflOlS "Eedfem make, best quality waihable kid, in black,, whit , Khaki, Grey, Brown $1.98 Pair ; - Our Prices Always .The Lowest ' - GALE &' C!0.-: f , Commercial and. Court Streets ' : n Formerly Chicago Store , Phone 1C72 BIG PROJECTS FIELDS OF COAL IN EAST DIVIDED Fuel Administration Takes First Step Toward New Zone System WASHINGTON. Jan. j 5. Dlvi nion of the country's bituminous coal fields into twenty districts as the1! first step toward Instituting a zone system of coal distribution is under way by the fuel . administration. Boundaries for seven of the districts, all cast of the Mississippi, already have been established and Fuel Ad ministrator Garfield has j named a representative in each. With the aid of the railroad ad ministration the fuel administration next will define the consuming dis tricts, each to b supplied from one of the producing districts, . .A joint committee working on the problem probably 'will announce a definite zoningplan within a" few days. - Distribution by zones - has ; been successfully tried out in England. Fuel administration officials say. it will work just as well everywhere, saving thousands of miles of trans portation and insuring the speediest possible movement of coal from the mine to the consumer. It will elim inate to a great extent cross-hauling. generally conceded to be one of the most uneconomic practices in the coal industry. ! - The district representative In ev ery instance wlfE be operators or men familiar with coaT production. jEThe consuming: districts will , bo formed as nearly as possible along state lines. Producers in a district ARE PROPOSED Washington : Promoter Asks Water Rights for $6,000, OOOOutlay Two applications for permits to appropriate public . waters, which combined represent a proposed out lay of $6,000,000, were filed In the office of the state engineer yesterday by II. 2. iicGowan of Pacific county. Washington. The applications as for a year In which to prepare plans and specifications of the proposed projects, and it is believed that the initial step that has been taken is in preparation for possible legislation in c tigress throwing open. the pub lic waters to development. , One application is'.to apprt?riate the waters of.the "Deschutes river to the extent of 450o cubic feet a sec ond. The proposed project is In Sher man . and Wasco counties, the river forming the boundary between "the two counties, and the purpose stated in the application is hydro-electric Dover and transmission for manu facturing purposes and general use.i A dam which is being planned .would be 118 feet high, 800 feet. long at the top. 300 feet long at the bottom, built of concrete masonry with wasteway. Theestimated cost of the project is 12,000,000. . .. ' The other application states the same purpose. The, project proposed is In Jefferson county and would re fjnlre 350l cubic feet a second. The pMIniated'dlmensions'of the dam are 236 feet' high. 420 feet long at tho- top. 90 feet long at the bottom, and built of reinforced concrete of the overflow type. Qhe estimated cost of the project is $4,000,000. composed of . D. A. Harris, TL Fitzpatrick and Mrs. C. F. Uric. Harry Payne, -who has been f ering with a bad ' case of rL. tistn, is improved. Mrs. W. D. Horner spent Thu in Salem as the .guest of her ar DALS III REAL EST. Mary E. Coudy to E. M. I tract 6, noudy Gardens, ;12 t 11200. - . ' ' -State Hank of Hubbard to J Bershberger, tract iT, Dlmlck i: atead tract; S711. ' E. M. Pierce to State Bank of I bard, tract 6, Goudy Gardens; $1 7os' fi and' Susan Urodie to V and C-H. Bang, B. acres on C Oregon City road. - W. H. and kavlna Drake to n. Sorenson. section 30-6-1W; 211' Virginia Cooke to Alice S. IV 5-8-1W. , Ujtura E and J. JC. Ellis to I Coleman.' lot 1, block 22,Yew I Annex addition; 11000. Julia Lemmoni to Georse I mons. 4. acres. J : : F. A. and M. G. Boyinrt Henry Saalf eld. lots 14 and 15. t I, Melwood addition. - ' T. C. and A, Hoffman to "Ci and Bertha Wells, lots 7. 8 a. West Woodburn: 8300. it M. XJ. Smith to C. A. Bear. 2W; 1613. - ; The Bolsheviki can sell pea Germany,, but can they deliver, goods? Columbia State. r Thendara Club Auxiliary Is Doing Excellent Work RICKEY, Or., Jan. 25. Members of the Thendara Red Cross auxiliary met with Mrs. Dr. Moreficld at th-3 Cottage farm . Wednesday and spent the day sewing." So far this month this auxiliary has turned out 114 pieces, consisting ;of firty baiulage. forty ten-tail bandages and' twenty four pairs of drawers. Those sew ing Wednesday were the Mesdames I W. D. Horror. E. J. Whitney. Louis DicKoian. a. k. Auiranc. jonn cap- linger, K. F. Wheeler C F. Grimm and Emiel Aufranc. , Robert Wheeler and Fred Dlek man have enlisted In, the government service to work in spruce camps ani leave Sunday for Portland, where they will be assigned to their caip. E. M. Burke spoke Wednesday night at the school house in the in terest of the Armenian fund. A com mittee Was appointed to solicit funds. MOTHER! GIVE CHILD "SYRUP OF FIGS" IF TONGUE IS-COATED if Cron, ; Feverish, Slck Bilious, Clean Little Lirer and Bowels.' ; Children love this "fruit laxative," and nothing else cleanses the tender serving a specified cdnsuming dis-J , A child simply will not stop play trict will be permitted to eell in no other district. If a consunrfne dis trict through Its state fuel ad minis-J . i . . . . ' . "1 iramr Hcmnnos more coat man al lotted to it. consumption will' have to be curtailed unless the 'national administrator decided temporary or pe;aanent , arrangements are neces-:; sary. To prevent a situation arising ftcxt winter, similar to the one that has just forced a ; shutdown of in dustries, fuel administration officials.) pian to create in. the summer re serves -In every consuming center.,. These would not be touched except in cases of emergency and then theyj wouia pe repiaceq ; wncn tne emerg- encr was over. , Reports early today Indicated that rising temperature had brought con-, siderable improvement jn the coal transportation situation In the east.: but. snow and high winds developed J later, and delayed traffic to some eatent. j..,. Port Snn11ghe.,tbe Engli&h village noted as the seat of the coap-mak-irvg Industry, has furnished .4,500 men to the English military service. Ihg to empty the bowels, and the re sult K they become tlsrhtly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stom ach sours, then your Ifttle one be comes cross, jhalf sick, feverish, doesn't eat, sleep or art naturally, breath Is bad. system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach ache or diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! ; See 7. If tongue is coated, then give a tea spoonful, of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the con stipated waste, sour bile and undi gested food passes opt of the system, and you have a well, .playful child again. v Millions of mothers give ''Califor nia Syrup of Figs" because It Is per fectly harmless; children love It, and it.never fails to art on the stomach, liver and bowels.. ; v Ask your druggist for a bottle of "California Syrup of Figs.- which has full directions for babies, chil dren of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. He war of,- counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Refuse any other kind with contempt. SAVE' $$$$$$$ SAVl Closes" Out Entire S!::'. of Crccerias Regard! I of test OnkHiH, cloelnx out price t - IS pounds for ...... .": 3rtr. pkg. Aibe" atN clfiftln2 cwut zrice ... "c llrnttmn worth $1," closing. . out price . ... , . . . . 7."" IlumfonI linking PowuVr, ckwlnff out price, 1 poun4 can for .......... 1M11 . rirkle. closing , ot prior," gl. (bring pail) 40c IVrb Wbito SHi, closing otst price, 11 bani-L..... Oliio llcst Grado. Bfatchc,. closing out price, ig. JJOc GIoa Starcln closing oat price, a?4 lbs. for t . 25c 48kt,H closing out price -5 cans for , ......... Sc J So. X5 Comiunl, ; ck'" 1 '.. out price ifl If you neI groccrkw buy here at cloving out priee- Stre and Fixtures for Rent 'Kveryl's tJroccr" 53 N. Comerclal fctret S f -.