Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, July 21, 1921, Page Page Two, Image 2

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    Thursday, Jmy
Thm. CunM-A Jnnrfml. SaJem. uregon ran.
- ttjl xiuj aii
i 1 InnL IUCWVS WUVCI W w lis b H -
Turner
Road Open
To Traffic
Salem
Open
Turner Road
For Trailic;
Mr. unrt Mrs. Bruce were Dallas
callers Friday.
Miits Tiny Weatherlll and Jack
Craig spent Saturday evening and
Sunday at the George Weatherlll
home.
MlM Klsie Kneehone and sister,
Mrs. Floyd Jones, were spending
the latter part of the weak in Dal
las. Mrs. Christina McNulty and
daughter, Margaret, of Dallas
spent the week-end vlsltlm; Mrs.
Armou Brown and friends.
Leaguers To
Gather Soon
At Jefferson
Work On SilvertonjYoudis Fire Oil
Road TO brarv
The Salem-Turner road will be
open to traffic today according to
an announcement made by Head
master W, Culver till, morning.
The Aumsville paving plnt oper
Bte1 by the county, has completed
tts end of the work wtallfr th. Sa
lem plant will have Its portion fin
ished within the next two days.
The pavement jut completed is
about IVft mil- long and
structed at a coot of $16,000 a
mile including the grading.
The Aumsvllle plant has started
to close up the gap between Aums
vllle and Turner of about a naif
mile and Is expected to have the
work finished In the next fire
days. Thia will give eonmuM
hutween Aumsvllle and Sa
il!. ,.ni within the city limits
of Turner, and about, ono-eight.i
. nt , mile near the boys training
chiwl where It was uecossary to
mnka n change In the road be
naiife of new buildings erected by
the state. After the work Is com
Dieted on the Aumsvllle and Tur
ner roads the plant will Work to
ward Hublimtty.S
The Salem plant when It com
pleles work on the Salem-Turner
road will close up the gap on the
Htlverton ri)Bd of 2H miles near
Howell Prairie.
The All. Angel plaut completed
two miles of paving- on the Salem
Sllverton road la.it week and hu
started work on the Woodlmrn
Mt. Angel road where a mile of
pavement will be laid Ibis season
The Scollanl paving plant Is
working between West Woodburn
and Woodburn and has yet about
a mile of the l!V-mlle stretch of
paving yet to lay. Just wl)a( work
this plaut will do after this etretrh
is completed has not been derided
by the roadmaster.
Ehortage of I and gravel
may hold up pa v Ink for a few days,
but it Is thought that the entire
paving program of the county
outlined for this year will be com
pleted. The paving plants employ
a total of 1 ISO men.
Palls City Notes
Kalis City, Or.. July It. Miss
Opnl Ward spent the woek-end In
Monmouth with her elder, Lew
ella
Mrs. Ralph Hall and daughter.
Barbara, were Dallas visitors Fri
day. Mrs. John Pfoff and chtdlren of
Mt. Angel motored over Sunday
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Drunks
Weatherlll.
ISTRIKEJ
Plans are rapidly being com
pleted for the opening of the Kp
worth League institute at Jeffer
son July 25 to 31, one of the two
conventions given this year under
the autplces of the Oregon con
ference of the Methodist church.
Last year was the most successful
of all years in the history of the
Kpworth League here, and author
ities have set the goal for an at
tendance this year at 500.
i Prominent among the leaders
Two y,e program at Jefferson are
...,Ja uiimber of local men, llev. Blaine
K. Kirkpatrick, pastor of the
First Methodist church; Rev. K,
E. Gilbert, superintendent of the
Salem district; Dr. E. C. Hickman,
president of Kimball school of
Theology; Dr. H. S. Hammond,
member of Kimball faculty, and
Alpheus Gillette, who was direct-
Bible
KaU car are suld to he Enoa Ah-. schools here this summer.
shore, Wilbur liywaler and Claude A number of these men are at
Gordon. All are believed to uetendlng the Institute for southern
working In the wheatflelds In Oregon now in session at Ashland.
Washington. The cases of Camel This year is the first that two In
and Hand will bej,delayed until the stitutes have been held In the
other boys can be apprehended. state, due to the rapid growth of
Both Camel and Hand, in state- the work In the Oregon conference
ments to Sheriff Levi Chrisman, last yeur.
denied that tbey or any one' In The dally program at Jeffer
their car fired at the Katz' carison has been announced aa fol-
8 Evening evangetlatlc
dresees, K. C. Hickman.
: 15-9:30 Prayer groups.
10 Taps.
ad-
Katz Auto; Two
Caught, Freed
The Dalles, Or., July 21.
of the boys charged by Alma Katz
of P6rtland with having fired on
tils automobile on the Columbia
river highway between Hood Klver
and The Dalles, have boon arrest
ed and released on their own rec
ognizance. These boys are lloyd Camel and
Clayton Hand. Three others who
were In (he car which passed the!r Of the daily vacational
or that they were carrying flrc
arme. They said they threw gravel
at the car when Katz refused to
turn from the center of the road ta
permit them to pass.
District Attorney Oalloway re
fused to comment today on the
boys' cases. The boys are alleged
to have fired on Katz and, others
of his party, who included Mr.
Katz and Colonel and Mrs. John
Leader, British subjects. When
the boys were not prosecuted by
Wasco county officials Colonel
Uader appealed to the British
vice-consul In Portland and de
manded that action be forced.
lows:
Daily Schedule
6:30-7:15 Morning watch, E.
B, Gilbert.
7:30- Breakfast.
8:30-9:10 -Bible study, Blaine
E. Kirkpatrick.
9:15-9:55 John Wesley jun
ior (home missions,) Thomas
Gallagher.
9 Junior league methods, lyirs.
Minnie Marcy Bates. Sunday,
school methods, A. Gillette.
9: 55-10; 25 Recreational dem
onstration, M. A. Marcy.
10:25-11:05 Life Service class,
E. C. Hickman. Methodism, E. S.
Hammond, Advanced junior lea
gue methods. Mrs. Minnie Marrv
Slade District ate.
The State irrigutlon securities) 1 1 : 1 0-1 1 : 35 John Wesley jun
commlsslon was In suasion here to- ior forelgn missions.) Carl O.
day to certify 1100,000 of the Doney. Kecreatlon and culture, J.
bonds of the Slide irrigation dig-i0- Spencer. Evangelism, W. 8.
trlct, located on this side of thi.:Gordon
Certify Bonds of
Snake river neur Weleer, Iduho
The Slide Irrigation district,
which comprises about 1400 acres
of what is held to he exceptionally
good land, already is In operation.
It woa coustructtMl this spring.
JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY
1 1:45-12:26 Kpworth League
methods, Blsine E. Kirkpatrick.
12:30 Dinner.
1-3 Best and interviews.
3-6 Recreation.
6 Supper.
8:45-7:45 Social hour.
7:45-8 Community sing.
Fairfield.
Talrfleld, Or., July 21. Mr. am
Mrs. M. J. Mahony and Miss Nellie
Marthaler spent last week sojourn
ing the Lincoln county beaches.
Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Parker an.!
sons visited with Mr. and Mrs
Rodney Grafton and Mrs. M. D
Jameson in Portland, Sunday.
Those who made the trip to Wil
hoit Sunday were Mr. and Mrs
t Frank Mahony and family, Mr.
and Mrs. B. J. Miller and little
! daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Tuttle, Mr. and Mrs. John Imlah
and family, also Mr. and Mrs
Duke Balweber and Mrs. Zeller
; and son Archie.
I Mrs. Ivan Stewart returned to
' her home in Corvallls after an ex
i tended visit with home folks.
i Gideon Parker of Los Angeles Is
a ?uest of his brother and family
S. F. Parker.
Mrs. J. C. Shepherd and daugh
ter, Esther, of Salem made a short
I visit last week with her sister,
Mrs. John Imlah.
Harvest will soon be in full
swing in this section as some of
the grain is being cut this week.
State Rifle Match
Plans In Preparation
Preparations are now going on
In :he office of the adjutant gen
eral for the stnte rifle matches of
the Oregon national guard to be
held some time in August on the
Clackamas range and where a
team will be selected to attend the
national shoot at Camp Perry,
Ohio, in September,
Five men will be selected from
each national guard unit In. the
state, making about 15 contestants
tor state honors. It Is expected
that the Salem Company will stand
hlh in the shoot due to the rec
rord made during the annual en
campment at Camp Lewis In June.
JOURNAL WANT AD;9 PAY
it
For Throe Generation
Bove Made Child-Birtn.
sler By Usiag
VOTIIIv
Whitb pot Boom 1 1 oh Mothmhooo ant ml fpit
BRAoneLU HtautAT Co . Deft 9-D. Atlanta, fiv
Return to Belfast
No Indication of Rupture
In Peace Parleys, Claim
Belfast, Ireland, July 21. The
return to Belfast of Sir James
Craig, the Ulster premier anil the
members of his cabinet from Lon
don, must not be taken as a rup
ture of the negotiations, It was de
clared here by Colonel Spender,
secretary of the peace delegation,
on its arrival here. It 13 thought
that the delegation will be recall
ed to London next week, ha de
clared. None of the cabinet members
would have anything to sa for
publication.
Eamonn DeValera is regarded
by the Ulster unionists as t vision
ary, and the feeling in unionist
circles here is that no discissions
among all the parties concerned in
the Irish settlement will lie possi
ble until he considerably modifies
his position.
Stand Is Approved.
When Sir James Crai? faw the
republican leader in Dublin before
the recent Irish parliamentary
elections he Ulster premier is de
clared in unionist quarters to huve
heard a long disquisition on an
Irish republic, and uuionhls here
expressed belief today that "Jr.
DeValera had expressed himself
similarly in his interviews Wit!
Premier Lloyd-George.
The attitude of the llster pre
mier and his colleagues, as ex
pressed by Sir James in bis state
ment made in London last night
in which he declared Ulster was
lotermined to maintain her pres
ent status, with her own parlia
ment is cordially approved y the
Belfast unionists in general.
"There was never an other out
come of the negotiations possible,"
says the Belfast News-Letter, "ex
cept in the minds of those who
would have sacrificed us on the al
tar of a false peace. We shall
have nothing to do with any set
tlement terms that infringe upon
or diminish the status of our par
liament, and we base that altitude
on the same ground as DeValera
makes his claim to self detenimia
tion." On the other hand, the Irish
News, which voices tho tier's of
Joseph Devlin, national!?:, says:
"If the six specially chosen li
ster counties are to self-determine
themselves into ruinous conflict
with the rest of Ireland, why deny
the claim of any county to sell de
terminate itself out of association
with secessionists. Th claim in
sisted upon by Sir Janus faig is
-,on all fours with that put forward
by the southern state ot me
American republic sixty years a?o.
That is a true and exact parallel
The formula that Ireland Is like
unto the secessionist states has
been abandoned."
Millions Now
Dead Will Live
Again
ftLrsniro no u
... . -
may souna, they m tr1
Crow's Feet, Wrinkles,
Enlarged
Oclirhrf.1 New
riniuiiaf
- a - A'iK V Ml
i'ores
rclirhrf! New JIJmJ&-.
v.Bl.ai d&sJF mJft!
Jontiinlng 'K' Jrfc
Buttermilk 1(1 vWMr
Mm f'B til
Improvement nil -"
w Money Beck LA ' l
Cigarette
To I In ihm
dellolous BurUy
tobacco flavor.
It's Toasted
Thrift in Shaving
requires an
Auto Strop Razor Set
BOO Shaves jruaranteetl from
each dozen blades. We will
lend you an Auto Strop Set
for SO days FREE TRIAL.
No deptait necessary. No
oblifration to buy. The Auto
Strop Razor Set saves you
time, temper and blades, and
rive the greatest satisfac
tion to be had from a shaving
device.
The only razor in the world
that strops, shaves and clna
without taJtinfr apart. If you
lire out of town and cannot
get into our store, poet card
will bring the razor to you.
Tyler's Drug Store
157 N. (sal St. Phone 35
Two targets, both by
the same rifleman. One
with a clean, smooth bar
rel, the other with a barrel
which had been "pitted"
by the priming in the
cartridges.
The priming in most
cartridges leaves a rust
attracting residue. This
rust digs tiny holes all
along the bore and gives
the bullet a bumpy path
from breech to muzzle.
Poor priming
ruins a rifle
The slightest inaccuracy
in the rirle is multiplied
many times on the target.
The priming in U S
Rim-Fire Cartridges (in
cluding the famous .22
N. R. A. Long Rifle) does
not attract rust It does
away with excessive "pit
ting." It helps your rifle
to remain accurate.
For the sake of your
rifle, use US Rim-Fires.
Money back if not satisfied.
CARTRIDGES
AND SHELLS
!
The first application of How
ard's Uuuermiik Cream will as
tonish you. The dullebi, must life
k'Hs complexion turned tu radi
ant beauty and red- or rough
hands or arms made snowy white,
yet there ia not the slighttat eign
of its uee. It actually vaniBheu
from sight und the most heated
atmosphere will nut produce the
leaM shininess or grea&lneea of the
akin.
No matter whether you are trou
bled with a poor complexion,
wrinkles, puffinesi around the eyes
crow's feet or lines around mouth,
or just a simple roughness of the
lace, hands or arms caused by
wind or sun, you will find that
these troubles will quickly disap
pear with the use of Howard's
lluttermilk Cream.
To prove this to your complete
satisfaction, get a package today
at any first class drug or toilet
goods counter. Insist on Howard s
liuttermilk Cream, no other cream
can take its place. If you cannot
obtain, send 10 cent ellver or
stamps for generous trial pack
age of Cream and Soap to Howard
liros. Company, 457 Washington
.street. Buffalo, N. Y. Capital Drug
Store. Z. J. Riggs. Prop., can sup-
piyyou. (adv)
First Armory Drill
Checks Are Received
Amounting to $124.91! the first
armory drill checks for the first
six months of this year have been
received by the office of the adju
tant geDeral of the Oregon nation
al Miavd from the war department
in Washington.
The checks are for H company
of Portland, one of the machine
gun outfits 5t the Fifth regiment,
and the amount pays 75 men and
three officers. Only for men In
the organization failed to quali
fy by attt-ndinr 50 per cent of th
drills per month. Cheeks of ether
organizations are expeeted to ar
rive soon.
l!
'
i
- r r-
Lecturers of National Prominence
Stefansson, noted explorer of the far North, who brings a re
markable illustrated lecture on "My Five Years in the Arctic;"
Tom Skeyhlll, Anzac soldier-poet and adventurer, just back from
Russia with a great story about latest developments in Bolshevik-Land;
Peter Clark Macfarlane, prominent author and con
tributor to leading national magazines; Father D. J. Cronin,
speaking on "The Weeds and Flowers of Literature," and Rur
nell Ford, electrical scientist and inventor, demonstrating the
marvels of electricity.
A Big Play Production
The Keighlny Broadway Players, a New York company with
an all-professional cast, will present on the fifth night one of
the greatest comedies of the present day, "Nothing But the
Truth. " This big fnrre success was first presented on Broadway
by Willie Collier, achieving a record run.
Have You Bought Your Season Ticket?
lt,is,theJl0pei1 Sesame" to a week of Oeimine Entertainment
Adults, $2.72; Students, $1.50; Child's, $1.00. No War Tax.
A Week of Splendid Music
Two concerts will be presented by Lleurance's Little Sym
nt rckestra created and coached by Thurlow Lieurance,
noted American composer. At the evening concert Jane Peter
son, prominent Chicago contralto, win- appear as soloist. Two
concerts by The Jugo-Slav Tamburica Orchestra, an organlza-
f . . f erD. Europe' Two cherts by The Orpheus Four,
official quartet of the Orpheus Club of Los Angeles and rated
as one of the foremost male quartets in the country. Two pro
grams by the Roach-Freeman Duo and two programs of solo
work and community singing directed by Walter Jenkins.
An Abundance of Entertainment
The inimitable Ada Roach is coining! Her dialect stories and
character sketches are among the best being presented on the
platform. Ruth Freeman too is an entertainer of note Then
there Is the big play production and distinct entertainment
value in over half of the lectures of the week. It Is an evenly
balanced program. You'll like It through and through.
Make Chautauqua Week
Your Vacation Week
Salem, July 25 to 31
UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE COMPANY. New York.
Hauser Bros.
Albany Salem Eugene
J. H. TOUTJIAH
of Brooklyn, N. Y, Derbj
Court and High Sts.
Thursday July 1, 8 p. m
i?Tont1in ts n varu .
- . ."vim 5
or Vnn oViA.il.l 1 .
. ouuuiu near aim.
free. N0 collection.
We Pay-
27c per doz. for
THE
i
ATTENTION!
VACATIONISTS
We have just gone over our entire stock and have found several
broken lines in Men's Haberdashery. We have put a special
price on these articles to clean them up. This is our regular high
grade stock but just odd sizes and broken lines.
Outing Shirts, white and khaki, values
t0n- $1.95
Polo Collar Outing Shirts (striped)
valued at $2.50, now $1 9g
Band and Xegligee Shirts fast oolor
to close
95c
CLOSING OUT SUMMER UNDERWEAR
Porus Knit Unions, ecru or white
Balbrigan Shirts and Drawers, each
95c
ooc jji
Ut StrcH Phone .77 M
O n. 'as
ixuiiiu Limine
Take Notice
r
. ...r wm jn
a iuii Jin- nil mi im . it ul 1 mi
w b- r
you to come and see us &ta
prices. We always hare a rupftr
of all kinds.
Aunis, ail sizes, prices very m
CAPITAL
Bargain House
We buy and sell everythlnj
KM- 1- 11...
Two stages Daily
Leave Salem 10:30 am; 4:M H
.icuvc mil i inn, .
Leave O. B. depot Sale
iv fi t'p .i.i c'.iiia i .nr rn. iiua
Mehama. SLayton, Sut"
Aumsvi.lo. Turner, Sla'
pilal, Cottaca farm.
Phone 304
a Salem Bk. of ComcwK
ts -it- Phone 80
jtjriyn h I -
Glasses
Easier and Better. W" "I
and see
HARTMAN BROS.
Fhone 1255 Salem, ON
Portland & Salem
Staee Line
tt 41,. Hnuf
avery nour on -
Bath Ends
Leaves 10th and Alder
Seward Hotel every tw
Leaves Salem Bligh Bo
First Stage 7 a. m.
LastStaffeJj
L. M. HUM
Care of
Yiok So Ton?
Chinese lledUclne and Tea C
Haa medicine bicb "nu
care any known disei"
Open Sundays trom "
until P m
1S3 Sooth High -j
. phone e
Baiem, urej"". -
!): a.
!: D.
j TrrzrrZrtt0
Salem .
- tfeai
09 a. m. :"
MONMOUTH M't4
Leav Salem O B
ra. 11K a m. : T iS
Leave Monmouth Hf""
1.00 p. m. t.U .
Leave Independent ricr-
a. m. p. m ?
Special trtpa fcy pV0i
Seven paaaenr Jr "J-
j w PARKER. "T
,
Rea. ohone Hi. mIj-