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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1919)
PAGE FIVE. Frank Ferguson of Amity spent MEET ME AT MEYERS Monday here as the guest of friends. AD Around Town Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Redding of National Tl Springfield visited in Salem Monday. J. W. Pixley of Eugene is in Salem today visiting with .friends. flHE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1919. IBIoms . 1 7 4 4 CURRENT EVENTS ' Fred E. Mangls has returned from a combined business and pleasure trip to Portland. Mr. Mangis went down primarily to root for Oregon in the football game last Saturday, and, a business supplement to the trip to look for a few of the men reported out of work in the metropolis, to as sist him in gathering his potato crop, Nov. 11 Housing mass meet lag T:3, Methodist church. Nov. 11 American Legion dance, armory, evening. Nov. 12 Commercial club membership meeting, 8 p. m., banquet and entertainment. Nov. 12 Shrinera theater party. Opera house, 8 p. m. Nov. 14 Monthly member ship meeting Commercial club S p. m. Banquet and enter . tainment- Nov. 14. Salesmen's club forms. Commercial club, 8 p. : FOR BALE Bet single buggy haj ness. nearly new. Phone 2501W2. ' 2T E. C. Simmons, a business man of Grants Pass, is passing the day in the capital city. . , Silvertonians, who are helping Sa' lemites celebrate Armistice day, are Joe Jennings and Henry Dale. The body of Herman J. Curry, 81, well known in Salem, who died in Portland November 8, arrived here this afternoon and was taken in charge by the W. T. Rigdon under taking company. The funeral for Mr. Curry will be held Wednesday at the chapel at 2:30 o'clock, with burial following in the I. O. O. F. cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Cooper of Cor vallis are among the out of town folk who spent Monday in Salem. Holiday dance Stayton Tuesday night. Miss Stella Hooper was among the JVrtlanders who visited in Salem Mon day. -It was James Elvin's night at the biff ball class at the Y..M. C. A. last night. His team won Uie game by a close score 10-9. And "Bob" Paulus won the game for 'em, putting four straight throws over the net. It was a close game all the way through. Sa lem's dignified business men are fast growing into prancing, jumping ath letes, and the game last night was one of the closest ever played on that floor. He comes from Kalama, ' Wash. does L. Stickler, a guest yesterday at the Bligh hotel. C. C. Porter and son transacted business in the city yesterday. They hail from Mill City. , Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Shilts, residents of Silverton, were in Salem yesterday looking up old acquaintances and vis iting with friends. Boosting with characteristic Ore gonian loyalty for the O. A. C. grid iron team, J. Hayes of Corvallia, spent yesterday in Salem. SPECIAL PRICE On every Waist No Reservations We intend making this an event to be remembered. Georgette, Crepe de Chine and all those new, dainty, exclusively designed Waists, from the best factories in America are all on sale. Extra Waist Special GEORGETTE SILK and CREPE DE CHINE .WAISTS of extra quality and work manship. Plain and lace trimmed $5.98 Don't delay on this special, this lot won't last long. Thomas Laird, manager of the Ger vais Drug company at Gervais, was a business visitor in Salem today. Dr. S. C. Stone can be found at Ty ler's drug store, 157 South Commer cial street. 2 6' Garland Brooks, 19, Hubbard, and Loveridge Axtell, 20, of Canby, will be tiled at 10 o'clock Thursday before Justice of the Peace Glen Unruh on a charge of larceny of an auto. The youthB were arrested at Cottage Grove by City Marshall Green Pitcher and returned here to answer for the then of the auto Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams of Sil verton spent a few hours in Salem yesterday, visiting with relatives. Lena Belle Tartar, teacher of sing Ine .182 Liberty St. N. Phone 334 or 1C1S. 267 H. H. Pomeroy, deputy state fire marshal, returned Monday from Bar low -where he had been investigating. For the benefit of the uninformed, Fort Benton is situated about fifty miles from Great Falls, Mont. H. M. Beeghby of Fort Benton, spent yep terday in Salem. Spokane Grocers Fight Rise In Potato Price; Ask Probe Spokane, Wash., Nov. 11. Because local grocers are held" up by farmers for $3 and $3.50 a sack for potatoes, they will wire east for supplies and which belongs to George ask the federal grand jury here to Hovenden of Hubbard. Both young probe prices. men pleaded not guilty to the charge yesterday when arraigned in justice court. . . Do your Xmaa shopping on Nov. 14 in parlors of Presbyterian church. 267 Miss Marie Bennett spent the week end in Salem. Miss Bennett, whose hem is in Brooks, is employed in a clerical capacity in the law offices of Oscar Hayter in Dallas. A meeting of all residents on North Fourth street will be held at 7:30 o'clock Thursday night at the home of T. J. Davis, 1555 North Fourth street. The session has been called by Ben R. Perkins who has been active ly identified with, a movement for the improvement of Fourth street. The home owners on Fourth street will discuss ways and means of paving the street 30 feet wide, and opening it up between North Liberty and Belmont streets, across the old woolen mills site. Henry Barr, a student at Columbia university, is the guest of his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Barr, 186 North 14th street, over Armistice day. TVorms N.TerwiUiger,llcensed lady em tnlmer with TerwiUiger Funeral Home, 774 Oaemeketa St. Phone 724. Hamilton JoVinstone and Wm. S. N. -tNash, Portland attorneys, ; were here Monday on business before the su preme court- . . The will of Louise 'Heinz, compris ing real and personal property valued at $4000, was admitted to probate yesterday. Charles Heinz was appoint ed executor of the will, and Judge Bushey appointed F. B. McAllister, E. R, Adams and M. G. Gunderson as appraisers of the estate. The heirs are Augusta Schmeltzer, Pomeroy, Wn; John Heins, Macksburg, Or; Charles Heinz, Silverton; G. A. Heinz, Mc Minnville; Emma Vlnacke, Canby, and Anna Heinz, Boyd, Or. The price jumped here without jus tification, the grocers say. Farmers claim that a large propor tion of the tubers are frozen and that this justifies the increase. QUIET IN FRANCE Paris, Nov. 11. Armis tice day passed quietly thru out France. Except for special masses there was no celebra tion of the first anniversary of the ending of hostilities in the world war. In Paris, Marshal Foeh at tended a mass at the Invalides chapel in behalf of war or phans. . . C ifc SC 5C (t c SC jg Extra Special Suit Sale This sale is a hummer. The Suits are moving fast, and every customer thoroughly satisfied. Our entire high grade stock of this Falls Quality Suits at EXTRA SPECIAL . Miss Ada Simmons of Portland enent the week end as the guest of rier mother, Mrs. Grover Simmons, at the tatter's home near Silverton. ' . The final account of the estate of H. P: Gray which was filed yesterday will be given a hearing December 15. Ethel Folger is the executrix and the only heirs and devises are Ethel Fol Eer and Gladys Palmer. . Miss Georgia Bewby, who was until recently employed at the Spa, has ac cepted a position as teacher at the Prlngle school. Miss Bewby assumed her new duties Monday morning. , On Saturday, November 22d, the Daughters of Veterans, of this state, will meet in Salem for the purpose of forming a state organization, of the department of Oregon. In attendance there w(l be delegates from Marsh field, Portland and Salem. An inter esting time is anticipated and Mrs. F. A. Elliott, president of Barbara Fritchie Tent No. 2, urgently requests all members to be present at the reg ular meeting on Wednesday evening at the armory, at 8 o'clock, in order to prepare for this important event. r Sergeant 3. B. Starr of Silverton Is a 8ae vis'tor today. Mr. Starr has Just returned from an extended trip in the east, where he visited relatives in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. - The trial of W. Harris, attendant at the state hospital, charged with as saulting a patient, Louis Jensen, will begin in justice court Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. Mr. Harris was arraigned yesterday and pleaded not guilty. He will be defended by Attor ney John Carson. It Is understood that his defense will be that Mr. Jen sen escaped from his restraint, arid that Mr. Harris found it necessary to man handle him to plaoe him under control. Judge Lawrence T. Harris has ac cepted the Invitation to deliver the memorial address at the annual lodge of Sorrow of the local lodge of Elks, on the first Sunday in December. The bodies of J. A. Larkin and Lo ren Murphy, who were killed In an auto accident near Dallas Sunday night, were brought to Salem by auto Monday night on their way to Port land, where they lived. 35. Ik Buchanan is agent in Marion ad Polk counties for the National Life Insurance Co., U. S. A. See him for a H return premium poHey on your life, it's the only kind. Phone 1332J far interview. . 87 Twenty years ago A. R. Willard ' owned a blacksmith shop on the site where the Bligh hotel now stands. To day Mr. Willard is a guest at the ho tel while looking up old acquaintances In the city. Tickets for the O. S. P. Melody minstrel show are on sale now, and may be obtained from the following places: Perry's drug store, George C. Will music store, Patton Brothers book store. Commercial bood store, Crown Drug store, Y. M. C. A., Cher rington piano store. Sharles Maxwell at the Oregon electric depot, is also selling them, and Alex Cornoyer, at the state house has them for sale. To morrow night will witness the -open ing performance, and judging from past years, the auditorium will be fill ed to Its capacity, and patrons, in or der to avoid the rush at the doors, are advised to . purchase their tickets at any of the down town agencies. Irving Koerflin, aged 8, was slightry Injured last evening when a ear driv en by Phillip Jaskoski struck him. The accident occurred at the inter section of State and High streets, and was Immediately reported to the po lice. The lad suffered only a few bruises and a cut upper lip, and young Jaskoski was absolved of all blame by eye witnesses. Up to Saturday night 15 counties in Oregon had subscribed their quotas to the Roosevelt memorial fund, muii- nosnah county had subscribed slightly HMOs. Except for the difference in the first initials, one might mistake R. J- Kahn of San Francisco for a certain prominent Salem business man. Mr. Rahn inscribed his name and place of residence upon the register of the Marion hotel this morning, and then proceeded to assist the town in cele brating the greater fourth of July, If one listened closely enough to the conversation of ones neighbors, one could learn the name of a new town in Oregon nearly every day. Most maps fail to tell where Rex, Or. is located, but C. C. Thomas of that town, who is In Salem today, insists that It deserves as much notice as any other town in the state. - Grand Opera House Salem, One Night Wednesday. Nov. 12 Coming in all its completeness, headed by America's greatest ac tor, Howard Walton Tully (James G. Peedeyer, Mgr.) Presents Guy Bates Post In the season's greatest dramatic hit The Masquerader Prices $1.00 to $2.50 Reserved seats now on sale Opera House Pharmacy at Formerly $45.00 Formerly $65.00 soldto Y Soldto XTRA SPECIAL XTRA SPECIAL $29.85 1 $39.85 Formerly. $85.00 Formerly $125 Soldto Soldto ... XTRA SPECIAL XTRA SPECIAL $59.85 $&85 riewWaMCoat jjjrnniummtniuiiimiumiimmu wwmu mum ' illltlllUUtUWIIIIIiliiiWtliUWlUUII.KIlHrV ;'' YOU CAN ALWAYS DO BETTER AT JJL v llooouioocos Who Always Does Better By You On the Bargain Rack We have gone through our stock and put the broken lines on the Bargain Rack , V LESS ONE-THIRD Tomorrow's Big Sale Economy Square , FANCY LACE SCARFS 18 by 50 inches They are beautifully made, of ex cellent quality material. J ust what you need for the dresser. Girls don't overlook the "Hope Chest.". Tomorrow Only 69c ! On November 8 there had been reg istered in Oregon 82,141 automobiles, against 63,302 at the same date last year. - dies PAUIJIfE FREDERICK IN A DAUGHTER OP the old sorra-' COMEDY SPECIAL MUSIC As confident of success In the com ing football classic at Eugene as Oregon was before the game last Sat urday in" Portland, J. L. Fisher of Corvallis, is spending the day in the capital city. W. E. Frailer of Clackamas, wh was transacting business In Salem yesterday, was called suddenly to Eu gene this morning, by the death of a friend. Mr. Fraaier will return n the near future to wind up his unfinish ed affairs in the city. C H. Dunning of EUensburg, Wn., is spending armistice day in Salem. John Paulson and son, registering from Seattle, Wash., are guests tooa at -the Bligh hotel. W. T. RIGDON & CO. Undertakers t68 North High Street One of the most prosperous little tn in Polk county. Is Perryilale. ',F. C. Lynn of that city, who visited I here yesterday, is ready to prove the fact to anyone wh" v's v"'" Salem La Who desire" Footwear possessing STYLE, FIT and QUALITY are coming here more land more for their Shoes. THE MAXINE : SHOE Meets every requidement of the woman . who r1tvssps her feetsmartlv and at the same time economically. . : . ; Buster Brown Store Shoe! 125 N. Commercial Street Join the Red Cross IN HONOR OF ARMISTICE DAY The first anniversary of freedom for the world and low prices for Salem, the People's Cash Store will be clos ed all day today. ' BUT DON'T FORGET our big sale of Underwear and Stockings. It means 25 per cent profit to the customer. 'cash store ml m f . 9 I Drv Goods 11 Tfie PnpmiiimStnm ff HafcShoe I - y mW w r r . PHOttE 453 Join the Red Cross NOW mm it British Air Ministry Frees 100,000 Pigeons Used In War London. The air ministry Is releas ing Its gallant - pigeon war-workers, nearly -100,000 strong. Just now while grouse shooting is in full swing sportsmen are asked not to point their guns at any pigeon that Is not bevond all Dossibility of doubt a wild one. During the war the carrier pigeons saved the Ufa of many a soldier and sailor and authorities say it would be a tragic pity If any of these gallant helpers should survlve'the risks of war only to be killed by their friends in times of peace. If UJ STATE g STREET 1916 Chalmers, first elsss saeekaB ical condition, eleetrie lights, start er, all leather upholstered, 850, Oscar B. Gingrich Motor & Tire Co. 371 Court street. Phone 635 8 Di.CB. O'Neill . OPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN LackH&ish Dank Duildin Trffe c5Z?f art fnone625v Sa!em0r. SPECIAL . Good 5 passenger car will trade . for what have yoq U. S. GARAGE Phone 175J B64 Ferry St BUY REMNANTS AT THE Remnant Store 251 North Commercial i