Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, April 28, 1920, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
90 PERCENT SOUNDING BRASS. f
Samuel Johnson in his dictionary defined catriotism as'
4N independent newspaper, the "last refuge of scoundrels" because of the abuse of the word '
Panlf. Trtiim.t Wint.i f K ' ' W4W vv.nu.-j UJW AL 03 A
If he lived today, he would prob-
.WEDNESDAY, ATu. i
tog co, ut sooth commercial street f cloak t conceal their rascality
Telephones circulation and Bust- ably similarly define that much abused word "Americanism'
o p,tv, ., P..M,.H., rw:h.?ch h? become the favorite slogan of political charletans and
viin.c-sCT:mjig ueiiiBgugues oi ail sinpes.
Candidates who have no convictions, proclaim "American-
o wiuov nun me .luungcsi junu vi conviction, as meir
xnose whose appeal is to the vicious and destructive
Entered as second class mail mat
ter at Salam. Oregon.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES IISWI
Br carrier 60 cents a month. By Iplatform.
uo m ixiunin. 1.23, lur inree . t , , , . - .1 1 ' -
months, 12.25 for si month, M prielements 01 discontent do so under the high sounding phrases
rear in Marion and Folic counties, if "Americanism." Those hwidino- fnr tha
and un-American vote, camouflage their proposals as "Ameri
canism." Those seeking to destroy American institutions and
inaugurate un-American class domination, proclaim their "Am
ericanism." Those opposing world peace and advocating pro
vincial isolation parade their "Americanism" as though it uw'
i a AUXinoiftr at n it,,...,! H. t TV - 1 - 1 b! J na i .
member oj associated pfiEss vu"uo"Ji mueeu u 13. ivepuuucans ana democrats and eveni " "Ul Ine 8un aown w,tn-
The Associated Pr i. i Socialists enshrinp thpmsplrps n-irh fKo roU A : ! out thanking- him in that way for
: ww
Jusewhers 5 a year.
Sir order of V. 8. government, all
(hail subscriptions arc payable In ad-ancs.
Advertising rfprostntntives W. I.
Ward. Tribune Bidg., New Tork; W.
a. Stockwell, People Oas bldg,
Chicago.
cms taws 1?
Y ARTHUR SCOTT
BAILEY
Iceland Seeking
Place In League
Washington, Apr. ST. Application
by Iceland for membership la the
League of Nations, news of which has
just reached Washington, will call at-
II lk11 V 1 VIII. 11.14V 1UII . U 1 111-. 1 1 mi , , " -11
1 finnrtu-ntl
Iceland Is now completely Indepen- marri.rt , lnos of the
I "
Spokane, Wash..
ity that Mrs. JamM r;
city may have been mapri " "
DAlene. Idaho, ln fw.
Huirt, held in Los
tioa wtth allegations ofv
indicated, it waa believed -Mrs.
Craemerg idenii,,.
. M Ui.
of Baaf,
tographs and
specimens
a James W. Cra,
noticed something that had not
caught his eye on his former, visit.
Hanging from a rafter, where the
slanting rays of the setting sun fell and Luxembourg.
squarely upon it, was a big bunch of
entitled to the use for publication of
am news dispatches credited to it or
not otherwise credited in this paper
and also local news published herein.
By
Washington, Apr.
al lnvestlRatlon
.shortage will
Americanism is used to cover a multitude of political sins,
political vagaries and political heresies. It is valuable alike to
me smug stand-patter and to the red radical. Most valuable of
an, pernaps, is Americanism" to those do-nothings and know
nothings, without political ideas or ideals, who await the edict
of partisanship to find an issue.
When an American, born, reared and educated in his native
putuuo mo rtuiciiLttui&ia as a piaiiorm ior nrtirp v aw
Print Paper Probe
Set For Wednesday
Sab-Committee
28. Congresslon-
1 of the print paperihim with suspicion, for your true American needs no label and
bo started today bv a (.mven'r la . oA.,ar, V,: 1 ij... ftl - i ., . .
flubeommittee of the senate commit 1 , mo ivyuny. ine cnances are that he
toe on manufacturers headi by pen-1 a.ppeals t0 your patriotism to mask his political hypocrisy and in
ator Heed, democrat, Missourj. The I incerity, that he resorts to the shallow tricks of the demagogue
committee', plans Include inuuiry intofto hide thp. shnrt rnmiiii nf o nr,i;tinl l, .j il.i i.- f
mu-l'lUs, distribution and t.ric.-, Jirn I a . I""'"-" "U lliai MS "1UU
i-en.iing congronai actio,, ' Americanism" is 90 percent sounding brass and tinkling
.1 n yfirnthnl
" ui me sraie department in llwf v'
U(...i. .- ... ."I
cnutitiwii was jnvotjfa in CM-
llflfiKiin i.itlU 1.. .. J s
,i t-ir.rfin m Hfyijre retjnjval
of restrictions on exporfrom Ofniadu
or run- materluls.
Chairman porter
elgn affairs conuiill
vy lepiKsentniivei fiT the jiaper liidun-
IVv . . 1 ..
1 wiyn ttopretary Colby
and received atwuancivf that the suir
Kestlon of muklri reHlctioiis the sub
Jcct of dipIoijlHll correspondence
would l given ry,-ful consideration.
Publishers of leading papers will he
Invited to appear before the commlt
lee, S.'iiator Reed snld. InWtatloiis
are being sent editors in western clt
les.
Appointment of n commission to
seek 'removal of Cunndlan embargoes
n pulp wood was urged by Senator
Underwood, democrat, Alabama, he
fore the house foreign affairs com.
mlttee. Retaliatory legislation should
be enacted, he wild, If friendly efforts
luwnra mis end were unsuccessful
ALL'S WELL AGAIX.
CHAPTER IX.
After Rusty Wren had revived his
drooping spirits by eaUng heartily of
three dosen insects of different kinds
and sixes, he felt so cheerful that he brown tobacco leaves.
vu.uui ue.p uiniung a lew songs. Rusty Wren gave a chirp of pleas
it was almost evening; and he was ure at the sieht That was wher. he
must have picked up the bit of to
bacco that had clung to his tail
feathers and upset his wife's good
nature.
1 11 go right home and get her
and bring her here so she can see
this tobacco herself!" be said aloud.
'Then she'll know whre that .kmd
door of the m tnm i,ink n ..
.inH.,. V.. - 1" T " """ " lioor.
I T j r ",uuw WM open He did not say "which I brushed on--a
window through which Rusty had t0 tne fIoor..yfor ne never cou
flown early in the morninir. I'nlike u , ' ' " , u.,a
x.. . ." " " w ,U"B lnal ne ver aid sch
"""" careless things.
eaier.
nonr nm n, inn paMA. mbcm r- i n
. 1 i.ia Lruemar
Denmark voluntarily accorded Inde- who was her fifth j: ""nm
pendence to the island government in months after their marn fei
December 1 1 S. ing obtained seevrai Th W
Three other states have filed ap-; of her money. Se Mil T"4
plication for admission to the league, j make a will u his fav
me repuDiic or ueorgia, san Marino a lont automnhn. '
and Luzemboura'. I a
sinning so brightly all day.
Though it was 30 late. Farmer
Oreen still toiled In the fields; but
Rusty could hear Johnnie and old
dog Spot driving the cows down the
lane toward the barn.
now, above the wide
Skin Irritations
that Itch and Burn
old Mr. Crow,
in the least afraid to enter anv of the
farm buildings. Perhaps if Rusty had
Papeete Fails To
Become Big Port
Of rMid-Pacific
rapeete, T. H The prediction made
while the Panama Canal was In pro
cess of construction that Papeete was
o become the port of call for all traf
fic in tho Southern Hemisphere ns
Honolulu Is In the north, has failed of
realization.
During the war there were a num
ber ot troop ships nnd cargo steamers
Kolng to and from European wnt
r that put in for coal. Ilut since the
"lose of hlstllllles there have been
very few of any kind' of draft, that
nave caileit-only the jBan-FlnmHsco
Wellington mail steumers and n oc
casional cargo bout. .;
The Great circle route between
Panama and Austral In passes fur to
the southward of Tahiti and to the
wast ward In the barrier pf the Tunmo.
til (r Pnumotu) Arnhlpetago. There-
1 fore, it would lie iiecessiry for .
Mesmrr to lengthen Its yojage Consid
erably In order to call nt Vuppete and
there Is no object In'doUig so unless
t the vessel In short of coal or in tU
tress. u
The looal Island fleet of liilnr-lat.mA
trading schooners is being constantly
enlarged and thero are times when the
harbor presents a very animated np
pi'Simoe. - Much tiilk was heard some months
ngo of projected plan fur Improving
the harbor. Hut lis time passes and
there appear no signs of Intention to
Carry the plans Into execution, there
' lu i.i..t.ili... !... 1. ...... 1. . ...
... .i.. mH nm cuiiviruou mat nothing
win oe uon in the near future.
ine opinion frequently Is expressed
mat the ImIuiiiIm are , to be sold
by I'raiue to Knulund or America
-although, apparently no one has the
lightest authority for such an opinion
and that this Is the reason for the
failure to develop the port. The Chi
nese here generally believe It' and
many are seeking instruction In the
tOnellHh language. (,
y6i;ng taft for hoover.
Among the loyal supporters of Herbert: TW.v or ia T-i.1i-vi
en.JTaft, son of the former president, who. ar-porrlino- tr. th Tr.a
nom pan led .Haute Post, started the Hoover boom in Cincinnati. His brother
cnanes is an officer in the Hoover club at New Haven, and re
port has it that the ex-president is favorable to Hoover, also be
cause of his stand for the League of Nations. , ' '
"Having been in close association with .Hoover for two years
and seeing his work, I am convinced that he is the greatest man
among all the candidates and will make the greatest president,";
declares Robert Taft. "He meets every problem squarely, thinks
T-i'i. ""'eiuai principles wnicn apply to it with sound
ability, and takes the action required by those principles with a
nrnnoi' QllnnranA r,!. : .. 1 ! ' e r 1 1
r'"i"' mi jjiacucai uillicuities. , ,
"The Belgian relief, the food admi
European relief, were not only well managed by him, but the
rorr Maa P ..Mi. J.. ;.!i 1 , . . '
. j wu was iniuaiea Dy mm. lie has a know
ledge of government. His training in business methods as the
"rau 01 iarKe mining enterprises enabled him to run a govern
ftent department on business principles. He has proved his abil
ity to effect the kind of reorganization in the government denart-
iiiunin niiiit 13 du iiceuea touay,
"Hoover is a typical American, who started as an orphan
tarm boy in Iowa, worked his wav thrniich sta
r l'S l . ... "0" vvniuvivt wiiivciniLy
m California, and by own ability alone, finally reached the top of
his profession. His experience abroad has nniv t,o v..- T
i-;t..i.. a ! j . . .. - "" niuic
"iciicun ana more convinced that the welfare and
ueijr uut iwiion, ana 01 tne world, depend on holding closely
to the democratic principles on which tho tw ci. '
, - uittLua was
I
She moved aatdc then, "rnvv eh..
said.
founded.
Rippling Rhymes
I INTERRUPTIONS.
1 nave a hundre! tiiska i, minA v,j-.4 .e.. 1 t
have ,tha eight-day clock id The S
fion I'll havo? r T Pr?,ise in el0 te8; S
soon 111 have to swat the flies, and boil uncounted germs. And
so it makes me tired and sad when some one takes my time to
boost some nafpnt kw .i v,o -4.;i e j. JL,u"le 10
, - juu wat ituius ior a uime. un when
the agent comes along (you know how 'tis yourselves ') and
springs his old accustomed song concerning six-foot Shelves ud
when I see him from his crin hi loro-Q rJt .?. vHsl &m
of sorrow then t njnihc ;;r ' uia.w' ine cup
,1, . , . ; . J v "js"v vu ut; i law. ror 1 naVft rtlAnv
things to do; I have to fix my lyre, find patch up the defecSvX
that spoils the kitchen fire. I have to prime the cistern Z
t C, a i"l I ,Iiane8 .me lirea ana sick when I am asked
laws ! BOme 'hldy hick-there ought to be nine
been in the habit of tnVin
PJ.?"'!. C.rn !" would have thought 'said.
Well. Rusty Wren went out of the
window a good deal faster than he
had flown in. And, in less time than
it takes to tell it, he was perched on
top of his house again and calling to
his wife.
"I know now where the tobacco
came from!" he sang out. "Just
come outside and I'll show you. It's
upstairs in the carriage house!"
To his delight, Mrs. Rusty
ra in me
But she said
come out
seem a bit interested in tobacco any
mure.
iou come right into the house!"
she cried. "There's something here
inai 1 want to show you."
Rusty Wren whisked through the
"u.e in me maple syrup can. Home
had never looked quite so good to
him before, for he had not been there
since the middle of the morning. '
"What is it?" he asked eagerly.
His wife was sittinir on thi
i ---c 1.11.11 llfOL.
" mere was nothing new
house, so far as he could see
&ne moved aside then. "Look'
Cause Untold Tor
ture as Warm
Weather Approaches
disorders are called "skin
eases." But the real cause J?
disease germ in the blood, which
multiplies by the million, and
sets up an irritation in som,
tender location of the delSS
You can get some little relief
Many cases of eczema, tetter,
?im?'e!' .. e' ?nd,for the time bein7bv .,2
.ought. Mrs. Rusty answer- . eviuences oi a disorder- or scratchins the iWatI7,
sweetest tone imaginable, ed skin very often lie dormant 'but "vou i wniiiH I At ldska
tid she didn't want to' durimr the winter son an kJ I DUl u would not expect to be
Just then. And she didn't gl
r :Y5S.ef iy?.u e?pec cure from local r
In the
she
Inalita tha
cow barn r the .carriage house. But
. , ver aama8ed tlie crops,
and always helped them by destroy
ing a great number of insects that
hlY !tS 0( rowl"8 things, Rusty
had nothing whatever to fear from
ffiJL. 22 'armhouse-excTt
v, wi VUU1SV,
There was real)y
(low, beyond
me iap that i. lfi.-j
troPrWr,ar0Und the wat. dusty
room under the pv.. . ' " . y.
he cou.d find. Once he w
And, peering Into the nest. Rusty
saw a speckled egg there. It was real
ly a small egg. But to RuSty Wren's
eyes it seemed decidedly big
He was so surprised that he could
Lfl.8P!ak, fur M much 8 two sec
t?.e"' began t0 s"S-he
sjv iappy,
Though Mrs. Rusty kept very still
she seemed much pleased. And
strange to say, she never mentioned
smoking to her husband again.
She had something more important
to think about. .
approaches, and soon break out
into almost intolerable . torture.
As soon as you realize that
n no-vmicu sKin aiscnscs orig-
innte in th blood, and treat
them accordingly, you wm be
on the right track to free
yourself . of this annoying
trouble. . '
.!.
Just imatrine that trwe ia
steady blaze of fire in constant
plications of lotions.
or other remedies applied to the
skin, for the simple reason that
a cure must come from the
source of the trouble.
You must locate the headqoar.
x tJ?e .sease germs, and
cut off their base of supplies,
ine blood is saturated with
them, and they will set up their
attacks on the surfa fif
nefarious echook
arter a brick building?
fit itn O mnH t 11 a ,
ao in mi wnmpn I'm . .
wr. that it is that Instinct that makes ines , ah , lt&? mmTm M "ulld
. uuraoie to most women after . h-. ",. L , V. : L,lua compared to
mey una the man that they have
married are not flir Galahad, but Just
. vr,0 K1UWH,1CLI. '
"Again I was surnriao .....
There is so nuichmore.to her than i
iv.,.tt- , . : - " "uie
I had beea wondering If r could
bly give- John another ehnni-
"I'll'come forSv0ii 'hv r,.i k -.u
Alice, "and if you are feelinJ ...n
and the children." .
Tomorrow-A Letter Prom Helen.
Ol.f) VIOMN M AftK.
Huraiigo, Colo, p. W. IMttmnn of
Purango has constructed a violin from
wuoa saia to be 1,000 ye.trs old. The
wood wag excavated from Artec ruins
near Astec, N. M., by Prof. Cnrl Mor
ris of the New York Ft.it Historical
society.
LOVE and MARRIED LIFE
By the Noted Author
IDAH McGLONE GIBSON
Af.Hi.; I'llAN'tiKU HIOIl MIND.
After I had read Dob's letter my ey
es filled with tears. I sincerely pity
Hubert, but, oh, I pitied Helen much
more. With women's Intuition hIi hud
sensed Robert's feelings toward his
children. Hhe knew that in the buttle
f Immunity agslnst natural laws poor
iiuinun ncings always lost.
I wonder If Allee knew that Ruth
was nere. as tf to assure me on that
matter Alice came in nt this moment.
wiylng: "I did not tell you, Catherine.
that Ruth (liylord and the children
are In town, I saw them yesterday.'
"How is she looklngT" I asked.
"I think she has grown old, but the
babies are perfect little angels, ttuiie
asked libout you, and I told her that
you would come and see her very soon.
In new water mains throoB-iwmi .h.18"1' wuied pleased that you would do
City. jthls, ns she knows you are such a
Ktrawherry crowem In the mil. ""'' lr,ma r H"le" Someway I do
olte valley are being offered 15 cents not n,lnk QU,t 0,w",' with
Echo has Jet a contract tor putting
pound for their 1S0 Crop.
3
. -.''
it -""... .A
In C'ite o" th' awful priors. ,sr1i!ro':
In .. 'I i M i llll HI ( ifllUillUII o cwi tiling
in 1 ! J. '.f b:'.lil t llc:4lil .4 lltlTitU'l';
: "'. it r !.. ny a ti.iy saf
i ' lit I , ( , , i n ' .,
l,.-'-ir . r'l'.!i. .'.
the idea of making her children all In
all as she used to be."
All Wrong to Separate.
"Kuthcrlno, I guess It Is nil wrong
for a man and his wife to separate tl
there are children."
"I guess you are right, Alice," I
said as I quietly put Robert's letter
back In the envelope.
"And you Ml ill think that you will
not go back to John?" said Allee. This
seemed to me a little Irrelevant.
"How can I?" I asked. "Nothing has
changed since last night, and you
yourreif said then that you did not see
how 1 could live with John after the
way he treated me."
"I thought perhaps the letter you
have Just been reading, mluht have
rhu nitcd your mind a- little."
"How did you know what was In the
It tler?" I asked ourtuusly.'- "
"I didn't. only know that you have
iK't.n rending a letter from Hobby
;lord, and I cm not imagine his
wilting to you unless he is dlsalfcfled
In n( way. or Helen Is dissatisfied,
with the life they are living. I knnvt
he wants you to patch tip something."
"That's purely a women's Intu'totn.
Alice, because Pohhy might have w rit
ten to me a dosen other subjects."
tut he wouldn't hase written a
long letter." !
Wry Ji'Alnu of TIh-iii. j
yiitiHim-jia, now oi'servui vou ace.i
VVfllt if you most kui'W; itoMiv tells i
nu hn, know. Until and the children!
rc in'iif, anil he want me to g,t ever;
ml tu t- "'s!,,. children. Von kenw thr
l y- .-.. I !.r:;, to K :,!; and i.t.e U
very Jealous of them. She will. Hot let
them go to him even for a day "
"I expect that is Ruth's way of get
ting even," remarked Alice.
"Ruth never struck me as being the
kind of a woman who would want to
get even," I answered.
"Oh! My dear, we must all want to
got even when anvnn. k
... .--.i.' iiuno Ug una
when we act a rh... t 1...-1
h mem
.-..v n are very apt to find out that
we are human and not angels "
y wnnU1 the'children
does he? He used to try and do every-
....... . Bt v .om tJ)e
was married to Ruth."
"Well, he la very anxious to see
hem now. And I rather think, Alice
It my buby hud lived Bobby's letter 1
..v uuiuenoed me greatly but
a it Is. I have no one to think of but
"And John,
ly.
Interrupted Alice gent-
Why should I think of him? Tou
"ay. yourself, that he has never thot
of me. Last ht vo
Indignant at hint us I."
"Yes, I know, but I th,,i,. . ...
about It last night, n.v desr . T
vauieriue. lhi it ,.
John go now he will go straight to Ell-
m . . J , , An" hat mean
his finish. '
my oenr. if 1 have to take
... n.orai support of every man
who hlnks he la In lov with some un.
worhy woman. I am itr.14 r .......
have my hands full."
Little DofS Gltovn Tail .
"You won't have to do that at all
Katherlne, but don't you think that
1'VU could become the moml .,,i.... 1
" -".'I.'"
Hang The Professors
And Exile Teachers
ir.um me Portland Journal.)
- Happily all salein Is not like Judge
vy. utnerwise, the state capita!
would soon be put on wheels, which of
course, would be a mistake.
Judge rt'Arcy was also a snpb nt
the Marlon county Taxpayer's league
and there attacked the school millagei
bills, which acti. .... . . '
, .rijuuiateu Dy
the balem Commercial club, the Balem
m nlT'n " C'Ub uM 0ther Su,e
ganizationc.
There the Judge also enunciated his
"M-.Mua aocirine "We do not need
' , uul"18 lne boys and girls; they can
educate themselves if they are made
of the right kind of stuff."
It is a bright Idea. We have all
been mistaken. Wa ought to hang all
V professors to aour apple tree and
exilo all the teachers to Siberia. Col-
piesiuents ought to h hoi, ....
" wa na shot ln the cold
gray dawn as publio enemies. But for
presence of the teachers and pro
fessors every American child would be
an Abraham Lincoln br a Peter D'Arcy
self educated In the hard s.ho,.i
self denial.
All members of school hnnr.L
be electrocuted as conspirators agalns,
the public safety, as disturbers of the
f"":e Hnu " I" collusion with the for-
i 01 peruition. As to school books.
"y are me product of the Imps of
tiaraness and should be consign
ed to the flames. ' .
All the children n'eed Is a lite of
.Ti.H.T.i t...- v., .
- c ."r u Aivy. A prominent Il
lustration In the book could be a pic
ture of the judge with one foot en the
ea and the other on the land while
Peter thundered in fervid oratory 1
Public Forum
To the Editor It ls ,a,piv
worth while to take exception to the
reports politically, but the writer
feels that he ought to reply to a state
ment published in the Capital Journal
of April 28.
The article to which I refer was
on page two. and under the head "Ru-
"-Wet. Exhibiting Little Inter
ests In Coming Election." by H V
Browne. It ls so nninshi., . ' . 1
thot t . .,1 .... " '"voirect
ant. . ,y Ialr t0 the contest
ants to report that I have .
ZZ.r?u ,CanVM of entire
, ""u sure that it Will re
quire more than a heavy vote in si
em to cause the present incumbent in
other candidates: The ZB Tg t?
timent i, decidedly aglnst tl eth rd"
term Idea, even In county office.
M- W. ROWLET.
- " - vuuo,iMlV I . . VUC
contact with voiir fpnrior oUn SKin as ionir as thev
v ajikai , . " Ut
and you can form some idea of ,the ,bloa. no matter how much
the pain that must be endured locaI treatment you take.
oy me aniicted. For the mil-! ' .
lions of tiny disease germs that i a 2jio J, VkL J
occiu to ourrow tnru the skin ueauneit applied u
each one carrying a torch of flM "f tto Bkl"' wlu
ure, cause pain that is almost
unendurable.
SPi l?e .constant Plea of those
Sure
Relief
aniicted is the oft-repeated
Mucsuon, now can 1 find relief
from this constant torture'"
Not palliative, temporary re
lief that causes the terrible itch
ing to abate for awhile, but real
genuine relief that shakes off
the shackles of the diseaso nnd
resores the skin to its former
iicamiy condition '
And temporary relief h the
must, mar, can ho ovnant-A .
i ... vaviicu xi uin
local treatment, such as oint-
saives, lotions, etc.,
which is one reason why these
diseases seem to hold on with
such tenacity. It is not because
they are incurable, but because
injj are imnrnrtui x-j
that they appear to be so stub-
ml . iu 80 anncuit to cure.
lhe fact is thov on
tfvl PPrqperly
T ,, se me. trouble at
tacks the skin and all the pain
and discomfort is confined to
the surface of the skin, these
the sor
not eliin.
Innte the germs or the disease
from Uk blood, and until they
arc eliminated your skin will t
never be free from the itching
and burning discomforts . , .
If you want genuine relief,
then take a treatment that goes
right to the seat of the trouble
and removes its cause. Such
remedy isr S. S. S., the reliable
old blood purifier that cleanses
the blood and routs our verm
of disease.
S. S. S..ha3 been used success
fully in some' of the worst cases '
of, eczema and other skin troub
les, and it can be relied unnn to
cleanse the blood, S. S. S. is also
a splendid tonic and system
builder, and it builds up and
adds new vigor to the whole
system.
Go to your drugstore and cef
a bottle of S..S. S. today and
begin -the right treatment for
skm diseases. Then write for
free medical advice about, your
own case. Address Chief Medical :
Advisers 183 Swift Laboratorv.l
Atlanta, Ua. -Adv.
i 1 555?
I" m s
on It
IHDIGESVOHl)
Bell-ans
Hot water
ure Relief
ELL-ANS
INDIGESTION
FOR
"DKADY for instant use
v in oa cookstoves, oil
heater or lamps.
Aaiyonr rfeaer
tor Ptwl Oi7
ss -harmi ag
ntfeeoaamioai:
Slcdrd (Ml Ct
(CsMiHBli)
DID YOU EVER STOP TO THINK
That the eyes you now have are the only ones you will ever
have? Better take care of them-in time.
DR. A. McCULWCH, Optometrist,
204-5 Salem Bank of Commerce Bid'
i
m E n Ai lir
III
Jil
II i'
Qrig!natgrJ
Waited r.
!n XS33
Tlie name, "Malted MOi,"
devised by Harlick, has bcoa
oppropridletl by others.
Only by lhe Oitin Hoi lit k process,
which imitsiors !o n rfpmJuc. axi
the full food value snj Cavct of
Malted Milk b obiuind.
i ne n!m.-iu r-rr ' ' m cvr. .-. h.-,
t!iii.l ci tc-iM Avon! tr
"It Will Surprise You"
says the Good Judge
When you learn how long
a little of the Real Tobacco
Chew lasts.
How long it holds its rich
tobacco taste.
The real satisfaction.
The money saved.
Any man w.ho uses the
Real Tobacco Chew will
tell you that.
Overmire Steel Coflstrncfion Compafly
I nirsa We bTe to ,or 'mmedlat Shipment
oSy JJ P to 60 foot length
V. M. PLATlsS. to 9i iJ! tachea' P o 0 toot tongOis.
s TASK, HuLwiB S2Sf thtrlc. . w
a, xii.Ghi KXrJOLsud MARIXE STKKL MATES, etft
Manufacturers of Tanks, !let S(aokg pip brlrated mttt.
taltot buildings and Bridgea
WWer SUVet na Hawthorne AWM, OREG05
Phone East 8721
Offics
45 i Court Si
Sales
r
. dots 4
Hiht 679
les
Put Up In Two Style
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
AD CUT is a long fiae1jt tobacco
i
EMPEY TDAN9FFD
w.i nnu turn DISTANCE HAULIfiG
WF mS0 OR HOUR
WE STRIVE TO PLEASE OUR CUSTOMERS"
LADD &.BUSHI
BANKERS
Established 1SS3 r IV
General BanHag Businea'
Office Hoars frcm 2D a. m. ta I p. eu
!
i