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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1920)
PAGE SIX. 'WATS" LEAVE TODAY ON INVASION sufficient funds with which to pur- ' chase music r,d necessary equipr.ie I Imnpir thi. ?rm?rum nnmhera ar cai suios uy Jlipa tiuttmiv rfaific l I violin Svilo by Miss llarion Emmons, j la cello solo by Avery Hicks, readings ; by Uonal.l lavidson and Turfield Schindlcr and a cornet solo by Ira Cave. Mathews" Bearcat basketball team will leave at 4 o'clock today on their northern tour, playing four conierence Players Locate in Salem; Garner and Schroeder Stay THREE-FOURTHS OF GRADE GRADUATES GO TO 111 SCHOOL 105: Oregon City. McJIinnville. 8; Corvallis, . - l rniA Ui?l Tapltwin Medford. 6?: Kojue river near u.u . - 1 ,.. ttlii a' , D i . la ivc ti'uj - - The Neal Littler, owner 57: Ashland 50: Albany. 49; Astoria, cost ot aw'"" T"' .,,.,1 46 La Grande. 46; Rosebur. 46: The structure is of ".f1" Dalles. 3- Grants Pass; 35; Pend'.e- 'ftet over-all and is described by engl-, tl; Mars'd 31; Dallas. 21::neers in the highway department a. Klamath Falls. 20; North Eena, l;:one oi tne preui Bend. IS. Rf ensineerine in the entire northwest. The Descnuies river unugu v . Action on the proposed sale of water Seventy-four and hone-half percent : of the boys and girls of Oregon who j completed the eighth grade of school lust June entered the standard four- of the Salem chines, two with Whitman, one with . Cowling Alleys, has secured Fred Vniversity of Idaho, and one with w. j Garner and "Lefty" Schroeder as hall!year high gchoobj of the stale this 8. C, and two non-conference games, managers of his bowling alleys, and : hooj vear and of these 55 per cent with gpokane university and the Kits-; billard parlors. The two men are wllI compiete the full four-year high ville, Washington, American Legion j members of the Siilem baseball club j g,;noo course, according to a report team. and In giving them employment, Mr. jjust compied by J. A. Churchill, state Members of the squad who aceom- Littler la manifesting the general j aynerintendent of public Instruction. pany coacn aiamews are iu.iih , spirit snown by saiem ousiness men Wapato, McKitterlck. Jackson, Rarey. j (n providing positions for" Bishop's Irvine, Gillette, Austin and Canaan. They will leave at 4 p. in. over the Orrgon Electric, arriving in Walla Walla early Wednesday. The Bearcats will line up arnlnst the club members. Shroeder, formerly twirler for the Beavers, is well known to baseball i fans of the Pacific northwest. Xfiualnnnrlaa frtr two Crimes. 11HH-' I- I,... ntnnnn nn lnn.,ttn r.B.a. J - ' - - " la ninv lt iil9 LI 1 1 ivvai.ug i'ri ma. and Thursday nishts, and will at-1 nently In Salem, tvrnpt to stage a comeback. Although! TWO NEW BRIDGES Of STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM FINISHED Two new bridges have been added fo I Figures in Churchill's report show the state highway system, all ready aor that .308 students completed the 8tn ,fa giade of schOQl last June. Of these 6.182 are. now enrolled In the ninth cording to Information received at the grade. His prediction that 55 per cent siate highway department here. ; of these will complete the four-year , One of these is the John Day bridge Garner, Idaho state league infielder, course is based on the fact that S413 on the Columbia Kiver highway, just Columbia Kier n.s..ai H : , irri-otinn district hv ing satisfactorily als o according to re- Cr Irrlgatlon companv torts reaching the department. is a steel plate girder struc ure on con- cn crete piers wtih concrete floors, is j delayed by the board after a ZL o " fftS" UnZ luring Monday afternoon. Th, delay neignuornuou ui which will postpone further action for a Co (ronsnn nf Portland have the con- . . tract on the bridge. Indians bought liberty bonds worth Ji5,0Q0.O00. Breadfruit Is most succulent before Is fully ripe. the .Whitmaii team beat llamette two games here, and have the advan tage of playing at home, the Bearcats have Improved greatly since then, and may fin ing a surprise. Friday night tli- will oppose the fast American Le gion team of Kitzvllle, and on Satur day night should take a game from Spokane university, which will be seen l'cre In a return game later in the sea Bun. The biggest games of the trip will be Monday and Tuesday, February 9 anil 10, when the Beurcnts go up ;iiMint the t'nlversity of Idaho and Washington State college nt Moscow nnd Pullman, respectively. Nothing Is nvuHable as to the relative strength of the learns, but both schools are known Id have fast teams, and local followers of the Bearcats are anxiously waiting for t fie returns from these games. A tally was hold In the university chapel this morning In sending the team off in ihe tour. KRACKE IN SALEM Walter Kracke, well known on the Pacific coast and In army athletic circles as an A-l catcher -n ml slugger has arrived in Salem and plans to es tablish his home here. Mr. Kracke was a comrade-in-arms bver seas with Iilddte Bishop and several other members of the Salem Senator's and expects to play through the season villi the newly organized Salem club. Manager Bishop believes that in Kracke, he has secured a good mitt partner with Catcher Jack Hayes. Kracke played for years with tiie fast Marysville semi-pro team and made a good record while playing on soldier teams in the service. Salem High School Concert Will Present Good Talent The High school musical depart ment, consist Ing, of a 80-plece band, a live glee club and a 20-plnce or chestra will be presented In conceit, Tuesday, February 10 at t'no High m-hool auditorium. Professor C. A. Davidson, instructor of music and head of the department will have charge of the program which will In clude sterling vocal and Instrumental numbers. Headings and clever Inter pretations will lie Interspersed be twn main program Items. Tho High wclimil musical personal Is represen tative of talent this year and a well liuhiiii'od evening of entertainment Is promised. Admission of 25 cents will lie chaigsil in an effort to unwind Canine Population of Spokane Shows Decrease boys and girls are now enrolled in tho completed by the Portland Bridge j-th Spokane, Wash., Feb. 3. Spokane's canine population has decreased in the last two years from 5,000 to 2,000 ac cording to J. M, Harris, superintendent i Albany, 344;- Medford, 331; Astoria, senior classes of the standard high schools of the state. Including the number who enrolled In the ninth grade of the non-standard high schools of the state, statistics show that 80 per cent of the boys and girls who completed the eighth grad last year are now attending high school. The total enrollment for the current school year in the standard high schools of the state is 21,989. Outside of Multnomah county the five counties in the state with tha largest enrollment are listed as fol lows: el Lane county, 639 boys; 718 girls; total 1257. Marion, 653 boys; 671 girls; total 1224. Clackamas, 546 boys; 552 girls, to tal, 1098. Linn, 481 boys; 687 girls; total, 1068. Yamhill, 39 boys; 481 girls; total 870. Following is the total high school enrollment in districts of the first class throughout the state: Portland, 6291 ; Salem, 625; Eugene 558; Corvallis, 446; Oregon City, 365, pany at a -cost of approximately $28,- 000. The structure consists of two spans of 126 feet each with 300 feet of approach. The Rock Point bridge across the Why Pyramid? Ask Amy Drnavlst Haw Repeated Sales Have Made Pyramid the Recogalxed Treatment. 43.00J acres of soldi andT tuttes. t Kedwon: Sale of the water by the r., ton Irrigation comM 1 entra10. ly the central Oregon irZ? t tnct whose members cST company is not able to ! water now neded by land,. 18 der contract without Tnder I further contracts. Underti . j Fresh Revolution Breah Out In Honduras, Rm Mangua, Nicaragua i-ITV " a period of 90 days was taken on the has been a fresh revolutloiu"" recommendation of State Engineer, bi-eak in Honduras, accordilvL,,l' Percy A. Cupper who explains that an vices received today. The nL . attempt is now being made to perfect j ists, which are headed by DobI???' an arrangement whereby operation Membreno, former vice pr6n' and control of the central Oregon pro- j F.onduras and Dr. Nazario &7 ject will be taken over by the central have suffered a heavy d(. iT" Oregon irrigation district recently or-etnment forces and now an) ganized and composed of the owners of toward the Nicaraguan fronuW1 SEND FOR FREE TRIAL. Mailed free in plain wrapper. It gives you relief, net a 60-cent box of kennels for the Spokane County Humane society. During the war? Mr. Harris said, to propaganda directed against the sup porting of useless dogs, 2,000 of the animals were done away with here. The normal loss of lives among dogs here Is about 40 a month, due to auto meblle accidents, he stated, and this number Is Increasing annually. 322; McMinnvllle, 321; Roseburg, 309 Baker, 302; Pendleton, 295; The Dal les, 288; La Grande, 275 ; Ashland, 205; Grants Pass, 203; Klamath Falls, 197; Newberg, 193; Marshfleld, 175. Bend, 155; North Bend, 111 Dallas, 108. Enrollment In the senior class Is listed as follows: Portland, 1095; Eugene 119; Salem Ton Have No Idea How Wonderful Pyramid Is Until Vou Try It. of Pyramid Pile Treatment of any druggist. J3e relieved of itching, protruding piles, hemorrhoids and such rectal troubles. A single box has often been sufficient in one nitjht. Send coupon for free trial. Take no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PIBAMID PRtIO COMPANY. MiPrramld Bid;., Marshall, Mich, ninfllr wrjfl tne a Free sample of Pyramid rilo Treatment, iu plala wrapper. Kame Street,... City state Born in 1839 Dr. Caldwell Still iii His Office Daily Wonderful vigor of lie founder of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Millions now use his famous prescription Physiciang know that good health depends largely upon proper digestion and eliminatum and that much sickness results from constipation. No one knows this better than the "family" doctor, the general practioner. DR. W. B. Caldwell of Mon ticello, Illinois, was and is a family doctor. The whole human body, not any small part of it, was his practice. More than half his "calls" were on women, children and babies. -They are the ones most often sick. But their illnesses were usually of a minor nature colds, fevers, head aches, biliousness und all of them required first a thorough evacuation.They were constipated. Dr. Caldwell in the course of 40 years' practice, for he was grad uated from Rush Medical College back in 1875, had found a Rood deal of success in such cases with a prescription of his own contain ing simple laxative herbs with pepsin. In 1892 bo decided to use this formula in the manufac ture of a medicine to be known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and in that year the preparation was first placed on the market. The picture of Dr. Caldwell that ap pears on the package was taken in that year. The preparation immediately had as great a success in t he drug stores as it previously had in the doctor's private practice. Today the third generation is using it. Mothers are giving it to their children who were given it by their mothers. Every second of the working day someone some where is going into a drug store to buy it, for Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is selling at the rate of over 6 million bottles a year. Its great success is based on merit, on repeated buying, on one satisfied user telling another. There are thousands of homes in this country that are never with out a bottle of Syrup Pepsin, and the formulator of that prescrip tion is fortunately living to see its wonderful success. Women, children and elderly people are especially benefitted by Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. While it is promptly effective on the most robust constitution and in the most obstinate cases, it is mild and gentle in its action and does not cuuse griping and strain. Containing neither opiates nor narcotics, it is safe for the tiniest baby and children like it and take it willingly. Every drug store sells Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin. Keep a bottle in your home. Where many live someone is sure to nfed it quickly. ill , 111 TO MM iff DR. W. B. CALDWELL TODAY Born Shelbnrllle, Mo.. March 27, 183) Began the manufacturt of his iamout pro scription in 189 In spite of the fact that Dr. Cali well's Syrup Pepsin is the largest sellinj liquid laxative in the world, there being over 6 million dottles sold well year, many who need its benefits haw ' not yet used it. If you have not, send your name and address for a free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 5" Washington St., Monticello, Illinois, m ... . . : : :.: - - ; . H i S ruRi.rTT' VMS. jntiri The Entire Stock of Paris Bros., Shoe Store Sold to Us Our time is limited to pay for same, and we are now sacrificing entire stock of high grade Men's, Women's, Growing Girls and Boys' SHOES in order to meet our OBLIGTIONS. You can' buy real leather shoes at this sale at prices that are uncom parable. MEN! There will be such well known brands of shoes on this sale as Florsheim, Buckingham & Hecht, J. E. Tilt And other well known brands. A visit to this store will convince the most sceptical shopper. We have the shoes to fit any foot. BE SURE AND COME! f- x VN. AT. . r. ,--r wi v - Regular $12.50 gun metal calf skin shoes, Goodyear welt o"k soles, all leather heels. EXTRA SPECIAL MEN! ATTENTION! $7.00 Men's Weinberger Milwaukee tan work shoes sacrificed at EXTRA SPECIAL Men'i army DRESS shoes in cherry brown Keith Konqueror standard brand. Regular $12.50 at this sale $7.85 DO NOT MISS THIS One line of men's calf skin English shoes with finest soles, sold the world over not less than $10.00, go at $5.85 HERE IS ANOTHER ONE $7.50 Men's gun metal button shoes t this sale $4.85 Men's mahogany English shoes, snappy last, $12.50 values at $835 Men's army shoes will stand rough: wear. Gen uine Munson last, regular $10.00, now . $6.35 Men's vici kid shoes, med ium toe, Goodyear welt, oak sole dressy last, reg ular $10.50, go at , $7.85 Men'E leather lined kan garoo, broad toe, comfort last, shoes, regular $12.50, sacrificed at $7.95 Men's 16 and 14-inch high top shoes, values up to $18.00, to close out . . $10.85 1G-5C FLORSHEIM shoes. All sizes, sacrificed at $11.35 Postpone ycur household du- .. a .1 1 lies and come to this TQ IT MEANS MONEY TO YOU. I ft, JAnK $10.00 LADIES all kid shoes. High Cuban heel $6.88 $12.50 beautiful new grey all kid Goodyear welt, cov ered heel, go at $8.88 $2.59 Spats, sale price 51 77 $1.50 fiber Silk Hose :.98c $200 fiber Silk Hose $1.33 $3.00 Pure Silk Hose si R8 SaajajMSaaMaaasssaMmn T -"-" OUR WINDOWS TELL THE STORY $10.00 Ladies brown kid Goodyear welt leather Louis heel with brown craventted top, now $12.50 White Nubuck. French heel shoes on sale Latest styles in Ladies pumns and oxfords w patent, gun. mtalv m etc., at reduced prices PARIS BROS. STILL RETAIN SHOE REPAIRING SHOP "" PERNER-COHEN COMPANY DISPOSERS OF SHOE STOCK OF 0 ire rT! On m iLDiiiDSn ki i sDK cm mm m . r Expert Fitters At Year Service