. I The Capital Jtwnud, Deposed Urownea neaas Of Germany Smuggling Fortunes Into Holland Berlin, Nov. 24. One hundred mnlnent persons, including Crown Prlncens Cecllle, Prince Eltel Frled rich. Prince August Wllhelm, the 4ate Prince Joachim, Count Kado IlD and Prlncesa Wanda Radzlwill. 'wve smuggled to Holland money aggregating 250,000,000 marks, as serted Hermann Mueller, former Oerman chancellor, 'in the rcichr antag today. The former chancellor interpel lated the government about the Arm of Crusser & Phllllpson, bank- A Curious Monkey From South America It was asserted that the head of ttie banking firm had been enrolled in the German army and was on -good terms with the nobility and Chat the concern had "been known publicly as a special firm for the carrying on of contraband in goods and capital." It was said to have grown so large that it was able to buy nearly ten million shares in the firm of Kchloslnger, Trier & com pany, j "I ask the government," said the former chancellor, "what has been done in the case of the banking firm of Sinner, Coghland & com paay, which has been accused of smuggling. I demand that people known as smugglers should be se verely punished." Dr. Wlrth, minister of finance, said the public prosecutor had not concluded his investigation ot .e Sinner, Borghland & company .case but "that the banking houses men tioned were evidently engaged in smuggling capital out of the coun try. Find Home Lost On Return from Camp Meeting Tlitono Visit ti Or Vnv OA Mr I .nd Mrs. J. R. Lucas, who had been I Umpqua Sportsmen's league for Trout Hatchery An Umpqua Is Now Assured Roseburg, Or, Nov. 24. S. A. Kendall of Pittsburgh, Pa., arid formerly owner of the local water and light plant in Roseburg today donated sufficient ground near the headwaters of the Umpqua river to attending camp meeting ut Canby, .ajeturned the latter part of last week o find their farm home near here .si mass of ruins. The building was consumed by fire early one morn Jag last week. Mr. and Mrs. Lucas wrmre notlfeid of their loss ana rc tttrned immediately. The origin of the fire is unknown. JBt is supposed, however, that it smarted from the kitchen stove. Mte. Ralph and Mrs. Quy Lucas, fco have been 'staying at the Lucas Koine while their husbands are overseas in the service of the navy, ere in bed when the fire was dis covered and it was with difficulty hat they escaped In their night rlothes. William McCann, who had Ykeen employed to take care of the tttock during the absence of Mr smna Mrs. Lucas, had started a fire Jta the kitchen stove altd went to wfce barn to look after the stock. Me says he had Just reached the harn when he noticed the fire. The teuildlng was a frume structure with partitions of building- paper and In lew minutes was completely en wiopea in flames. The loss is -Heavy. the purpose of establishing one of the largest trout hatcheries in the state. State officials are said to have agreed when the local club' secured a nuitable site for the hatchery capable of handling from four thousand to five thousand trout each year, adequate buildings and equipment would be installed at once. mm r 1 BjJflfiX. ' WW ' Normal Notes Monmouth, Or., Nov. 24. Miss -weasie Mlllurd, supervisor or rhtl bren's work In the Portland library, WSsIted the normal Monday, she aqmite to the students at the chanel Hmur on the selection of books for wmuaren reading. Kivinu an inter catting and Instructive discussion of ae suDject. Later in the day she was prevailed upon to tell stories o the children In the training rhoQl and 'to the students In the fass in story telling. Nearly half of the student bodv and many of the faculty members MRU Monmouth on Tuesday to spend te Thanksgiving holidays with Mends and relatives In other parts or the state. Several members of the fuculty We teaching In Institutes this week. ...Among them are President Acker Mr. Gentle, Miss .Mcintosh Miss Arbutnnot at Marion atlty institute In Salem; Mr. Beat- " at Eugene; and Miss Taylor at Jtattorln. Mrs. Dickson entertained Mr. Wekfton and a party of Portland nchers at the dancing party Sat asday evening. Miss Brenton entertained her Mhtter and her cousin of Corvallls 'Over the week-end. Buena Vista Briefs Buena Vista, Nov, 24. Paul Donaldson who has been living ere for some tlmo, having located There last fall, haa Joined the stand ing army and Is now at Camp Lew lb. Bd Harmon and Nelson Ander son were buying cattle in the vl wSnlty of Rickreall last week. Mert Snyder was a business visi tor in Salem a few days last week. Major Rose, manager of the Wlgrlch ranch of several hundred .eres In this vicinity, shipped 1200 tlcs of hops to England recently. Mra. M. N. Prathcr is visiting Wlatives and friends In Portland. W. 8. Allen of Newport was vis iting friends here several days last vseek. Fastest Planes In World To Compete For Pulitzer Cup Mineola, N. Y., Nov. 24. At tracted by the promise of new world's flying records, airplane enthusiasts gathered at Mitchel Field here yesterday for the first of the world trial events for the Pulitzer trophy race Thanksgiving day. Planes rated as the speediest In the world were entered in the preliminaries. Semenoff Force Lays Down Arms Harbin, Manchuria, Nov. 24. Units of General Semenoff's anti bolshevik army have surrendered to the Russian soviet forces, which they are said to have Join ed. It Is reported thm these units which made up a considerable portion of the force commanded by General Semenoff, killed their officers. Manchuria station, on the rail road beween Harbin and Chita, and situated near the Slberkin frontier, has been occupied by the bolshevlkl. The Chinese are preparing to resist any attempt to Invade Manchuria. A recent arrival from I South America is this 'spider monkey,' " .. i ' .'. .4 ii. Innn.nMar. so catieu Because Ui no wui like body and limbs. Its very long tall serves as a fifth hand or foot in climbing and the monkey is able to hold on to the limbs of trees as well with its tall as with its hanas or feet. nothing disturbed, and no trace of the parties who were saia to created the disturbance. Modern City New Paganism Edition, Minister Insists Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 24. "A modern city is a new edition of paganism." ' This characterization was made by Rev. John" F. Grimes, local Methodist Episcopal clergyman, sermonizing on "The World Con fusion in the Present Hour." "There is no Sabbath," he con tinued. "The show houses are crowded and the chttrches negleeted. "Commercialism has crowded the churches to the suburbs and the ranting agitator raven from a soap box on the corner where the church stood. "The immigrant of today conies only to capitalize for himself whatever America has to offer and has no sympathy for our laws and our institutions." Football Bally Staged On Street The biggest and best-planned ral ly ever held In Salem before an athletic contest was staged by the Willamette university student body Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. The parade, led by the 20-piece varsity band, marched down State street to the corner of Liberty, where songs and yells were Indulged in. Following the band came various symbolic stunts, suggesting Willam ette's first conference football game and the character of 'the defeat planned for the Missionaries. The men students were arrayed in pajamas, while the girls wore rooters' caps and carried Japanese lanterns.. , Buggy, Auto, Crash; Occupants Unhurt When an automobile driven by T. L. Sherer. collided with a horse and buggy, at the corner of Capi tol and Center streets Saturday, the horse's harness was torn, the car's radiator smashed, and one headlight was broken, according to Mr. Sherer's report to police. Mr. Sherer said he was traveling south on Capitol, and that the buggy was proceeding east on Cen ter when they crashed together. Nobody was Injured, he said. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY Former Salem Man Dies at Oakland Word has been received In Salem I that J. Conner, for a number of i years proprietor of the Willamette hotel, now the Hotel Marion, died I at his home In Oakland, California, on November 14. The letter con veying the news was written by Mrs. Conner t a Salem friend. Mr. Conner, who left Salem io 1908 was 75 years of age at the time of his death. He is survived by his widow and a son, Don, aged 40. During his residence in the Cali fornia city Mr. Conner was accus tomed to send floral offerings each Memorial day for the. graves oi a number of his friends, among whom was the late Colonel L. K. Page. Spain Suffers Bread Famine Madrid, Nov. 24. This city and its neighborhood is again In the grasp of an acute bread shortage. In the poor districts, bread lines half a mile long formed and the people remained for hours out side the bakeries despite the sharp ness of the weather. Efforts are being made by the government to improve the situa tion by issuing bread from mili tary bakeries. In the meantime or dinary loaves of bread are virtual ly unobtainable. Hungarian Crops Reported Failure Washington, Nov. 24. Prospect of a more serious food shortage in Budapest, in pjart caused by failure of Hungarian wheat crops, with continued use of stringent bread card regulations, was re ported to American Red Cross headquarters todjy by James t Pedlow, Red Cross commissioner to Hungary .It was siiid the great suffering would be felt by the middle classes whose Incomes have continued to decrease. Wednesday, N3fl i n r r j xy u l i i 2 ei u j a r r 1 m 1 .& 1 1 1 1 1 1 Vi .if f 1 1 i "t j tu ir aw i iir m ii 1 r sv Mia 1 w 1 1 jfv m 11. 1 II " ALL OUR WARNER ? ff ff W . ii corsets mm I Royal Family Cheered by Greeks Athens, Nov. 24. Princes An dreas and Christopher, brothers of ex-King Constantine of Greece, arrived in Athens today. . The princes were escorted by large and enthusiastic crowds to the palace from the dock. Prowlers Seen; . . Package Taken Complaint that two young men were prowling about the neigh borhood was received from 750 North 17th street Tuesday night at 10 o'clock. The men were seen to remove a package from a near by house, according to the com plaint. Officer White answered the call and reported thfit he could find Dallas News Dallas, Or., Nov. 24. F. I, teams of Amity was transacting sines in Dallas yesterday. James T. Guthrie, a farmer llv g southwest of Dallas, was trans- ing business in the cqurt house iterday. Sheriff John W. Orr Is going around squeaking like a spring root set- trying to crow, he having tpartlal I v Inst his volee as a result -of tad cold. Cqunty fk ik Floyd D. Moore has wceivrd the shipment of the new npllation of the Oregon laws re- tly compiled by Conrad Olson of rfland. 1 hese books were sent ' the secretary of state and will be Hrlbuted to all eountv officer the Justice of the peace in the nty, JAZZ CAPS WHILE THEY LAST, BOYS, THEY'RE YOURS FOR 35c HAUSER BROS. Salem, Oregon Before Thanksgiving Dinner let's go to the big football game, WHITMAN vs. WILLAMETTE We have TICKETS on Sale. Canby Radishes, a single one of which is sufficient for a gooU- slzed family, are being grown here successfully for the first time by a Japanese gardener, who brought the idea from his own country. Some of the largest of these weigh five pounds and measure from 18 to 24 inches. ALL OUR WARNER CORSETS 25 Reduction Warner Corsets are a strictly high grade line and every one is guaranteed. Pried are marked in plain figures. See the savings for yourself. $2.00 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to $2.50 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to $3.00 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to $3.50 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to $4.00 WARNED CORSETS, now reduced to $4.50 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to $5.00 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to $6.00 WARNER CORSETS, now reduced to Gale & Company Ann Btn'ias A lnrona 4-Via T nuraat w tlx A. x. itivu n i w aj o uuu uvn&av Commercial and Court Streets Formerly Chicago Store Store Closed All Day Thanksgiving An aa l' M..1K SUM a a . - m a at bm v . a a a a a a mm a a a v m m . , i i A ( III I O. 1 . V7 Ll r 11 CJL I V V 1 I 1 1 tl l! JLX avw- A Fact and a Remedy "Of the 3,000,000 widows in the United States over 65 years of age 1,000,000 lack the bare neces sities of life and 1,700,000 of the others lack its comforts." Many of these widows received life insurance money at the death of their husband. But sta tistics show that most insurance paid in a lump sum is gone in a few years. Assure YOUR wife a steady income through a Life Insurance Trust. Make certain that she is not among the majority tit widows, able only to purchase the bare necessities of life. Ask our Trust Officer about Life Insurance Trusts. Capital National Bank Trust Department Salem, Oregon Sells Barber KM Independence. Or., Nov. :'4. Fi lly deddini: 10 mow 10 Portland. .ML. L. Townsend ha diuposed of his fcarber shop in Independence which nas conducted ror man) years, Martin Peel, and has sold his lidence on the corner of Third A streets to W. R. Mailllc. Mr. I Mrs. Townsend expect to leave Portland the first of December. Peel came to independence a weks a ro and has been em- Mi in the Williams shop. Me ik possession of his new shop nday. Mr. and Mm. Townsend been contemplating this move time, AUCTION SALE 2049 Nebraska Ave. MONDAY, NOV. 29 at 1 p. m. A 6-room House of Furniture. Am going away, and want to sell eveything. ii O. W. GILES G. SATTERLEE Owner Auctioneer 2049 Nebraska Ave., Salem. Ore. Phone 1177 Lakeview The locat chamber of m merer Is to purchase a 0-acre et adjoining the city limits as a for tht construction of a $300. plant fur the Lakeview Box A imber company. A representa- vt the Pennsylvania Sash r company Is also here looking nr the ground with the idea of commending the erection ut a Ml fe,M factory. AUCTION SALE SATURDAY, NOV. 27th, '20 404 Ferry Street 2 Good Cows giving milk ; 4 head of Horses ; some Pigs ; a lot of Furniture, chairs, mattresses. Apples. If you want a real bargain, come to this sale. If you want an Auctioneer, SEE SATTERLEE at 404 Ferry St., Salem, G. SATTERLEE , Phone 1177 Auctioneer PREPARE For Colder Weather Our stock of Wool and Cotton Blankets and Cotton Balls is complete and, quite naturally, you expect to find bet ter values here than elsewhere. You will not be dis appointed when you inspect the goods. ... . 'V ' Blankets Just Received We have just received a large shipment of THREE PLY EXTRA HEAVY COTTON BLANKETS. You must see them to appreciate the value. Three Ply Extra Heavy Double Cotton fl QO Blankets, size 72x84 d'.0 Heavy Double Cotton Blankets, 1tA cn size 72x84 Wool Blankets, largest assort- tfft. CA TO fl" Q cn ment of colors, priced 0.tW &J.O.OU Double Cotton Blankets 2 to g2 Full Bed Size 3 lb. Quilted Batts.. $J and Full Bed Size 3 lb. Batts g, to J J 29 J. C. Penney Co. A Nation-wide Institution 297 STORES RETAIL AND WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR SALEM SALEM TERRITORY FOR VIM FLOUR LIFE OF THE BEST WHEAT EZIE TO ORDER -PHONE 186 OR 198 MTfin WE ivJMU W CJK Nil llTHKK. TrT.rlTTT?. WITH miO " 1 irmnT1 mmTin Tiff VJT m a w -T-, a . - . w ttatt Wli'li I FLOUR. NO OTTTCSTTfYWR A STT17.T1 mt m IfTflE wr TTAVR rot.t. Tnnp nv fm tpti?t hap of Vlja"" mm.Jt.mm. JL MXM ViAV JLJJIJ- W CAR ARRIVES ABOUT NOV. 29, WE WILL MAKE THIS SPECIAL PRICE FOR THE BALANCE OF THIS CAB FIRST COME FIRST SERVED. More Loaves for A pow $2.65 $2-65 $2.65 JUE$ $2.65 $2.65 If II M $2.' $2.65 OT $2.65 $2.65 "OOR $2.65 VIM LIFE OF WHEAT