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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1920)
1 October '26, 1920 Tuesday mbdhnI EVENTS nrf 27. Rotary lunch JTc K. Warern of Spo- addresses meeting. rt 28,-Eusenic clinic, mercial club, Marion S Children Bureau "rf 29 Entertainment I - Highland school by " 30 -Football, Sa- Jtfeh school vs. Jeffer- t BB1 II b" f ,,ort. I Rfsweetland Held. 2:30 v 2 Monthly meet. fcaPiial Post No. 9; TSilectlon day. ! Nov I. Lieuranoe Ut- Symphony orchestra. JTxT-Armiatice day . in ( (reeon. r. 12,-Hnrold Henry. ih'in and thea- hth an ti el, peni- .,. Music Bureau, 4 Nov. , nual ii-'l0liy M tenuary. Salem I high vs. McMinnville high, V Court House Notes j Marriage Licenses. j C. Simpson, 21, farmer Jeff er CiSll Harris. 17, Jefferson. James J . rfa.l. M. dajmnan. Tamer, and Naclina Layton, 16 "SUteBodt-n. .12. farmer Sa H, and Jennetic Tucker, 55, of IW Broadway, Salem. Hi .1. I II ' Elmer Savage and Robins va. C. V. Russ-11. probate Court rh..ri.K V'oigt estate Grace E, Motion. Inven. Daily Statistics I Died. DONALDSON - A ' ! r residence, Ml S. 14th street, Sunday. Octo- I ker 24, 1920, Amanda E. Donald lon, at the age of 37 years. She leaves, besides her husband, George J- Donaldson, a sister, Hiss Anna Hagstedt of Orange, N. J, and her mother and two other sisters residing in Sweden. Funeral announcement will be made later by Rigdon & Son who have charge of the remains. ItOHAJi At a local hospital, Mon day, October 25, 1920, Nancy uoran, at the age of 82. The body was shipped by Rigdon & Bn today to Portland where in terment will be maile. Thomas Meighan IN 'Civilian Clothes' JjAST TIMES TONIGHT Every man in ihe class knewlhe answer WEI0R HASKIUR I soul "'ONsome 8Ubjecta. rK'tthe barber's. tt his collar. Oared. GOT who,. I- T rleht h-gin screamed. Tb!r stopped Mm. w (Treat cmi P"1? often put. ."wcuin his mouth. CleARETTE. 'w . it . , ""u nun. fer. - WTrises. r PATTERSON At his home, 447 S. 16th stret, Monday, October 25, 1920, William M. Patterson, at the age of 80 years. He Is sur vived by two sons, John of Rich mond, Cal., and Kalph of Salem, and one daughter, Mrs. B. N. White of Salem. He was a mem ber of the A. O. U. W. The fu. neral will be held Thursday at 10:30 a. m. at Fox Valley, where Interment will be made. Higdon & Son have charge of the re mains. Tour chance of securing a daily newspaper by mall at $4 per year expires November 1. Subscribe now for the Capital Journal as sub scription rates are raised Novem ber 1. 260 Cabbage solid and well trimmed 1 cents per lb. delivered. Ward K. Richardson, phone 494. 257 Arrested by Officer Brown and charged with being in an intoxi cated condition. S. S. Ruggles was placed in the city jail last night. Ruggles is slated for a hearing be fore Police Judge Earl Race. Attention auto mechanics, open meeting Wednesday night Oct. 27, at the Labor temple. 257 Salmon 7 cents. Fitts Market. Phone 211. Never again will you have the opportunity to secure a daily news paper by mail for $4 a year. Sub scribe now to the Capital Journal as subscription rates advance Nov. t 260 Decorations from Al Kader temple, In Portland, have been used in the Derby building for the dance which the Shrine club will give tonight, it was stated. About 50 couples will be present, it is believed, Masquerade ball at Luvesley sta tion Friday October 29th. 258 Masquerade ball Dreamland rink, Hallowe'en eve, Sat. Oct. 30. Good prizes. Dance every Wed. and Saturday. Bungaiow orches tra. 259 If you have to purchase your season lyceum ticket, an opportu nity will be given you for the rest of this week. If you can only at tend two numbers you will save money by purchasing a season ticket. The course is the best one Salem ever had. The management is doing everything possible to make this the most enjoyable lyce um season ever spent. Tickets may be secured at Geo. C. Will's or Myrtle Knowland's. Mail or ders taken care of by Leslie H. Springer at 372 State St., Salem. Or. Seat reservations will be Fri day Oct. 29th at the armory 8 a. m zoe." Professor Colman of the dairy department at O. A. C. was the guest of the Kappa Gamma Rhr fraternity over the week end. He is a cousin of Ed and Robert Not sdn, members of the frat. Love, Jeweler, watchmaker, Sa lem. Take advantage of the Capital Journal's bargain day rate for mail subscriptions at $4 per year. Sub scribe now as price advances Nov. t 260 A man who told officers his name is R. West was given a free bed in the city jail last night. NOTICE 9 Republican headquarters 329 I Oregon bldg. Buttons, pictures, lit erature free, (paid adv). 260 W tlh aciHouiledgmttt to K. C. B. ONE DAY he had a tube. OF RADIUM and he told. THE 8TU DENTS all about it. AND FINALLY, by mistake. INSTEAD OF the tube. HE PULLED out one. OF HIS cigarettes. AND ASKED the class. "WHAT IS the one thing. WHICH DISTINGUISHES. B THIS MARVELOUS substance. FROM ALL others on earth?" AND THE class roared. "THEY SATISFY." XTHAT is It you've always wanted V y a cigarette to do? You know the answer. Chesterfields do it they not only please your taste, they tatiify! It's all in the blend a -e-cref blend of fine Turki"" ap'' ,kv mestie tobaccos. It puts Chts er flelds where none can touch them for quality and value. A treat to our trade! That's what we will make it! 256' Oury Hisey, Donald Lockwood, Glen Campbell, Albert Logan and Perry Sloop were guests at Laus sanne hall at -a Hallowe'en din ner party Sunday evening. Hallowe'en entertainment High land school Oct. 29, 8 p. m. 25( E. H. Pixley, a local insurance man, returnedto Salem last night after spending the week-end visit ing in Ilugene. A store at Ballston ma rahhaA of several pairs of shoes and pants according to word received from Sheriff Orr yesterday by local po lice. Police are searching for a man whose description was sent by Sheriff Orr. Youths of 16 to 18 years who desire to enlist in the army may do so when they can present a certificate of consent, signed by either parents or guardian, accord ing to a war department telegram received by Army Recruiter Chas. Davis, Tuesday. The Marion county children's bu reau announces that it wishes to have brought to the baby clinic Thursday afternoon, a tew babies who are under the age of six months, and babies who are suf fering with malnutrition or are not normal. The bureau can not ex amine any more children, than are at present registered for the clinic, who are more than six months of age. Dr. C. TJ. Moore, child special ist from Portland will address the mothers from 3 until 4 o'clock. After spending the week. end vis iiing in Portland. Mr. and Mrs Cenrgo K. Rodgers and daughter, Miss .Margaret Rodgers, returned to Salem yesterday by automobile. A maroon-colored automobile was stolen yesterday in Medford and the thieves are believeel to no heading toward Salem, according l urnrrl fnnnlvpri hv local officers yesterday from Don Miles of Med ford. A verbal complaint that an au tomobile which, according to police records, belongs to Albort Stein, boch, 565 North High street, has been driven with glaring head light:;, was made to police yester day. John Slattery complined to po lice yesterday that he was nearly run over Saturday ntght by an au tomobile which, according to the belief of police, is owned by o. K. Spa aiding. Superintendent of Schools Geo. Hug, J. C. Nelson, principal of the Salem high school, and several other local educators went to Monmouth today to hear a lecture delivered by Dr. W. C. Bagley of Columbia university. Invitations to be present at the Monmouth nor mal school were tendered all of the local teachers. No classes were held at Willam ette university Tuesday afternoon, students and faculty attending the unveiling of the Jason Lee memor ial In the legislative halls of the state house. Those connected with the university occupied reserve sections, and sang college songs previous to the opening of the service In honor of the founder of the university. Flection day will not be a holi day at Willamette university, but Armistice day will, according to a decision reached by the faculty Tuessay morning- Mrs. 'Alice Dodd. Misses Emma Shannafelt, Charlotte cirolsan, Ed tut Gilbert, Klsie Gilbert, Sybil Smith and " Lurillc Tisker were guests of the Sigma Tah fraterni ty at dinner Monday evening. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PA V SILK HOSIERY Announcement Our Entire Stock Which is very complete and carrys the best makes of Women's silk Hosiery in satisfactory weight and shades of Black, Havana Brown, Taupe, Grey and White. Including Phoenix Silk Hose Is now offered at the new market prices. We anticipated the fall in silk Hosiery prices and have waited to buy our stock at the new reduced prices. Our entire stock of Hosiery has been marked at the last big cut in prices and is NOW back to the low level. Alwavs remember that this store is awake to the market conditions and for that reason realizing the rhanee" that are bound to come, we advise you to buy conservatively and to PAY AS YOU GO. 1. & w The Capital Journal, Salem, Wash-Woman Elopes. Taking Family Motor St. Johnsbury. Vt., Oct. 26 Wo men of St. Johnsbury's first fami lies received a severe shock when they teamed that their favorite washwoman, Mrs. David R. Corbett aged thirty-two, had disappeared in her new automobile, and that her chauffeur, Frank Douse, was also missing. Mrs. Corbett had taken her daughter, Arvilla, aged eleven, her, leaving her husband, David R. Corbett, sixty-two, and their other two children. The Corbets sold their farm about a year ago and had $1,8000 In the bank. Mrs. Corbett got the auto mobile craze. Her husband bought her a new $1,350 machine and after taking many lessons, decided he was not capable of driving a car, so he turned his job over to Frank Douse, a husky young mem ber of the locaj fire department. The advent of the Corbetts into motoring circles did not disturb Mrs. Corbett's activities at the washtub, for she continued to do from eighteen to thirty washings a week for the elite of. St. Johns burry. She said she liked the exercise and it afforded her so much more money for gasoline. After her morning exercise at the tubs she was often seen In the afternoon with her chauffeur, Douse, motor ing through the White Mountains or taking tours across the northern border into Canada. One morning Corbett's young wife bade him good-bye as he left for his work at a local factory. When he came-home at noo,. sis oldest daughter told him her mother had departed with two suitcuses, the automobile and her chauffeur. Mrs. Corbett had also drawn $533 from the Citizens' Savings Bank, where the dwindling Corbett fortune was kept In her name. An added mystery to the disap pearance is the fact that Miss Lil lian La France, a polite blonde, who came here a few weeks ago from Morrisville and who was known to be friendly with Douse, is also missing. She told friends she was going to New York and might not be back. "I'm done with women," was the aged Mr. Corbett's declaration to-; day. My wife and 1 gat aiong uu until we bought an automobile. Since then things have gone from bad to worse, I never wan to see her again, an.d I don't want any thing to do with any other wo man. Goods to Briton Must Be Marked "Made In USA." London, Oct. 26 American man ufacturers importing to Great Britain are warned by a notice is sued by the American Chamber oj Commerce in London that all arti cles sent .to this country for sak must be. plainly marked with the. words, "Made in U. S. A." This :ulc, the Chamber of Com merce points out, does not apply to American goods enly, but to all foreign products and is one of the provisions of the Merchandise Marks act of 1887. Articles not bearing an indica tion of the country of origin are liable to seizure and confiscation, and the importers are being caused serious inconvenience by the fail ure of American manufacturers to comply with the regulations Car, Moor cycle, Meet; None Hurt A motorcycle rider whose name is not known was hurled from his machine when he collded with an automobile driven by J. R. Hinkle, Oregon Farmer Strike Boosts Wheat Prices Skyward Chicago, Oct. 26. Wheat prices made a sudden ascent today and trade authorities ascribed as one of the reasons a falling off In of. t'erings from the southwest appar ently due to the "farmers' strike." An extreme advance of 10 3-4 cents a bushel took place, December de livery touching $2.1014 as against $1.99 H 'o $1.99 3-4 at yesterday's finish. Subsequently the market scored a sharp ascent, influenced by word 1145 N. Fifth street yesterday, ac cording to Mr. Hinkle's statement to police, Mr. Hinkle says the motorcyclist was looking back of him when the crash occurred. Nobody was In jured. Runaways Sought By Police Here Leo Zelinski and Gabriel Gehr man, route 9, who left their homes Thursday evening and came to Salem on bicycles, are believed by young elinski's father to have run away from home, according to police. The lads, it is said, left their wheels at a local store. They are about 18 years of age. No trace of them has been found by police. Prune Publicity Opens In Gotham On November 15, the first post er released as an advertisement for Oregon prunes in New York city will be displayed on elevated and subway stations of the metrop olis, C. I. Lewis, manager of organi zation, the Oregon Growers' asso ciation, asserts that this advertis ing will introduce the association's line of "Mistland" prunes. "This will be an epoch in the Oregon prune industry and will waken 3,000,000 people to the true worth of the prune, the best pro duct of Oregon's orchards," states Mr. Lewis. Car Turns Turtle In Crash In Fog; None Is Injured An automobile driven by B. J. Fischer turned turtle after it had crashed into a machine driven by C. S. Bowne on the Turner road near Aumsville yesterday, accord ing to the police report. The occu pants of thee ar were badly shaken up butn obody was injured, it was stated. Air. Bowne stated that he was moving north and that Fischer whs traveling in the opopsite direction when the smash. up occurred. The fog being dense, the Fischer car struck the left wheel of the Bowne car. Neither of them achines was badly damaged, it was said. An automobile found abandoned ina ditch at the farm of one Mrs. Briti'arr, near Fairfield, which po lice believe is the property of G. K. Rami, of Portland, is being held in this city. Recently local officers were no tified that Rami's car had been stolen, and the license number of the machine found here corre spond! to that of the one lost. Portland authorities have been no. tified. WANTED This community to know that we are open for busi ness, and that we will pay the very top prices for all kinds of junk. Western Hide & Junk Co. 323 Center St., Salem A T THE BIG STORE Every Department is contributing to make this Event Worth While for every shopper. Every Day we shall add some "New Special" to the many we have prepared for this BIG EVENT BABY WEEK. A Big Money Saving Event COMPARE OUR QUALITY No Exceptions, and you will that exporters today had bought more than 1,000,000 bushels. The market closed strong 9 3-4 to 10 not higher, with December $2.09 V, to $2.09 3.4 and March $2.02 to $2.02 3-4. Later corn made a decided fresh gain. The close was nervous, 1 to 2 net higher with December 82U to 82 3-8. The "strike" or stoppage of sell, ing by farmers was announced some time ago by officials of the United States Wheat Growers asso ciation as against continued cutting down of prices until It was con tended the financial returns to growers were below the cost of production. Yesterday was the day set for the "Btrike" to begin, but no arJ ket effects were noticeable until to day. Medford School Suspended from Athletic Union The Medford hlifh school has been suspended temporarily from the state athletic association, ac cording to announcement made here today by J. A. Churchill, state BABY WEEK at the BIG STORE Miller's Millinery Section will contribute for this Baby week A MONTH-END SALE ON HA TS LOT 1 Every Pattern Hat $15.00 This is an event or passed styles ation. Make your selection now. THE HOUSE ot GOOD GOODS superintendent of public instruc tion and a member of the board of control of the athletic association. Suspension of the .lackson coun ty high school from state athletic activities followed a meeting of the board of control here last night, when the Klamath l'alls high j school submitted evidence tending I to indicate that the football team lot the former school, in a game I wh the Klamath Kails high school eleven on October 8, allowed sever al players In its lineup who were not eligible because they wore more than 21 years of age. The charge also was made to the board that one of these, players was en. tered In the game under an as sumed name. Because the Medford high school athletic authorities were not pre pared to present all their testimony at the hearing of the board here last night, they were given a rea. unable to make satisfactory replies questions propounded by the in vestigators. Should the school be unableto make satisfactory replies to these interorgutions the order of suspension will be made perma nent. Besides issuing the suspension order the board also forfeited the Medford-Klamath Kalis game to the latter school. Medford won the contest by several points, according to evidence placed before the hoard. :gKl Every Hat in the department has been placed in three Lots LOT 2 $10.00 you cannot afford to every Hat offered MILLEF Good Goods. usT and PRICES with any others, find Our Prices Lowest. Page Five Public Forum To The Editor: Vote No on me. ure 305. I think this is a pernicious mea ure. It proposes to burden an ii flustry of great merit with tax. and requirements and rod tape f;h;. would legislate it out of 'ousines and deprive many earning modei ate salaries of a healthful fooct this measure becomes a law, hn. we any assurance that the pri. of butter will not advance 4ft'( Voters read this measure an read Section 6 carefully. WORKING MAN. Salem, Or., Oct. 25th. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT , w Lefs Go! Let's All Go! WHEN? Watch Further Announcements I LOT 3 S5.00 miss. No old stock is this season's cre GOOD bo c on I r - I GOODS GOODS AT CIGARETTES - T-