DAILY CAPITAL JOT7XMAL, AUDI, OBEOON. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1913. ' pags Tinr.a, AN OLD RECIPE 10 Common Garden Bag and Sulphur Make Streaked, Faded or Gray Hair Dark and Glossy at Once. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, fcrigs back the natural color and lus ter to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching acalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mus ay and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug tore for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hjair Remedy." You will get a large bottle for about 50 cents. Everybody uses this old, famous recipe, because no one can possibly tell that you dark ened your hair, as it does it so natur ally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small atrand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap plication of two, your hair becomes beautifully dork, thick and glossy and .you look years younger. Local agent, J. C. Perry. CHANGES SEX OF ANIMALS, IT IS ASSERTED cxitbd press leabid in Vienna, Nov. 13. That he has suc ceeded in changing the sex of animals through transplanting cortfkin glands from the male to the female and vica versa, was the somewhat startling an nouncement made today in a public address by Professor Steinach. In other words, Professor Steinach says he showed animals,in which he declares he has changed the sex. He declared that placing the male glands into fe male animals, changed the entire nature of the latter and vica versa. He be lieves that similar operations are pos sible on human beings. (1 If Most of us would feel pretty well if it wasn't for our imaginary ailments. OLDER BOYS' CONFERENCE CMITID FBISS LlASin WIBI. Tarrytown, N. W., Nov. 14. The Met ropolitan and Suburban Older Boys' conference of the 'Y. M. C. A., convened here in annual session today. William Gilman Low, Jr., of New York, pre sided, at the opening sossions this after noon in Arbury M. E. church. The Rev. Joseph Hillman Hollister, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., delivered the annual address. The banquet to be held this evening in the Y. M. C. A. building will be the big feature of the annual moeting. Dr. Charles C. Albortson, D. ! D., of Brooklyn, will be the principal speaker at tonight 'b function, and mu sic will be furnished by the Y. M. C. A. Mandolin club. The sessions will continue through Sunday. STRAIGHTEN YOU UP If Costive, Headachy, Bilious, Stomach Sour, Breath Bad Clean You ' Liver and Bowels. '1 ' ""'-MtJtf!2SL. ma' M.'-V jftfctw " 'it .r " " t IMPORTANT The Portland Mausoleum Company have under construction in City View Cemetery, Salem, one of the most beautiful and substantial Community Mausoleums, of medium size, erected in the United States. An opportunity is afforded a limited number of families to purchase compartments in this perma nent burial monument. The cost is less than the "old way," and provision is made for perpetual care through the endowment fund WHY NOT PROVIDE "THE BETTER WAY?" Price of regular compartments will be advanced 10 per cent on December 1, 1913. Salem representative room 301 Hubbard building. Phone 239. Get a 10-cent bottle now. You men and women who can't get seeliug right who have headache, coated tongue, foul tatse and foul breath, dizziness, can't sleep, are bilious, nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or have backache and feel worn out. Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? Cascarets work while you sleep; cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from thr liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poison of the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your stomach sweet; liver and bowels reg ular, and head clear for months. Don 't forget the children. They love Casca rets because thoy tate good never gripe or sicken. MEET GENERAL BOOTH UNITED PHISS UASBO WIBI. Chicago, Nov. 14. With General Bramwell Booth, head of the Salvation Army, presiding officers' councils wore hId,here all day to discuss the policy of the American branch of the army and to suggest any changes necossary to the betterment financially and numer ically of the Middlo Westorn depart ments of the American organization. The first sessions ojiened at 10 a. m. No sot program has been arranged for tomorrow, but on , Sunday there will be a monster mass meeting held by soildiors and exsoldiors in the Cort theatre, Dearborn street. General Booth will preside at the Sunday moot ing and discuss his plans for carrying the work of the army to foreign fields, lie explained briefly today that one of tho important matters under consider ation is the invasion of Australia, Now Zealand, China, 'Japan and othor far eastern and oriental countries, by the Salvation Army. ROYALLY WELCOMED SUBSTITUTE FOB SALOON One reason why pessimists, kickers and some of the so-called reformers ac complish so little in their efforts to overcoino certain evils that exist in every community is that they have nothing to offer as a substitute for the evil complained of. They do not realize that for every wrong there is a right and for every disease there is a remedy, but the remedy can not be applied until there is a proper diagno sis of the case. At the November election a number of cities and towns in the state voted saloons out of existence, but only one far has made any effort to offer something better as a substitute for the saloon evil, which a certain percent age of the population seem to regard as a necessity. Eugene wag the first town in the state to solve that problem by establishing a coffee club for the men. Now Salem having voted "dry" after January 1st, desires to offer a substitute for the saloon as the poor man 's club. The coffee club has been a success in Eugene. It has dono a work that no other institution can do, unless it is along similar lines. Thousands of men have been provided with a place to spend their leisure hours in a quiet orderly manner and hundreds have been provided with employment. The coffoe club reading room furnishes a place of recreation whore men from all walks of life can gather and discuss the question uppermost in their minds. They have plenty of literature, and can at any time secure food at a moderate price. It offers a moral atmosphore that no saloon over offored. It has an' uplifting influence that no grog shop can boast of. Tho people of Eugone aro proud of the coffee club and of the work that is being done. It is not as perfect at its promoters desire it to bo, but that will come in timo. We can heartily recommend to Snlom tho. adoption of tho coffee club as a substitute for the saloon. .It will mean the saving of hundreds of men and boyB and will prove to tho world that there is something better than the legalized saloon for tho workingmnn or boy. Eugene Guard. I Saturday Specials HBPLEY'S :SSSri Blankets Comforts Pillows Extra heavy grey wool and cot- ' Full double bed size comforts, ,Bed ,"ITS e0oi l,ttiity tick" ton blankets, 72x80. Regular .ilkolone covers, filted with san- i ' o '"T 13.75 blankets. Special .. , J" 20x27' weiht 3 PO". ai7 cotton. Ecgular $2.25, Regular $2.50. Special $2.69 I $1.19 11 $L98 vightsnd Sweaters Suits Women's and misses vests and ' Women's and misses' all wool One rack of suits, square cut tights in best quality cotton knit ' ruff neck sweaters, just the thing good length; every one a man underwear. Regular 50c, 65c, 75c for cold weather. Regular $5.00. tailored garment. Special 39c I '$3.98 $5,00 I InNiTRD rnsss ijhskii wibi.1 Fftcasmayo, South America, Nov. 14. After a visit to Eten, the American "commercial expedition" paid a short visit hero and then left for Snlnverry. Local officials and merchants outdid oven tho rocoptions that linvo been ac corded tho United States delegates at cities formerly visited. Any Vacant Space In Your Garage ? If there is, you're losing money. Every foot of storage capacity should be occupied by a machine. A full house means more money earned for repairs, more sales of supplies, increased profits. Do as the other business men do advertise A few standing lines in the "Want Ad" page of The Capital Journal will bring results. They will make that vacant space yield a profitable income. The Capital Journal is the official agency of Salem's automobile fans. They read the auto ads, and if yours is among those present, it will be seen and responded to. Now is the time. Fix up an ad and bring it or phone it to The Capital Journal. Main 82 ? :. , . 4 i : ,:. i II Ail Patent Medicines or medicines advertised in this paper are for sale at DR. STONE S Drug Store The only cash 3 rug store in Oregon, owes no on, and no one owes it; car ries large stock; its shelves, counters and show cases ars loaded with drugs, medicines, notions, toilet articles, wines and liquors of all kinds for me dicinal purptset. Dr. Stone Is regu lar graduate in medicine and has had many years of experience in the prac tice. Consultations are free. Prescrip tions are free, and only regular pries for medicine. Dr. Stone can b found at his drug store, Salem, Ore., from 7 In the morning until 8 at night. Frer del'.very to all parts of the elty. Mail orders for any drug, medicine, patent medicine or notion will be for warded by parcel post on receipt of rlc in postage stamps and frsm 1 to 1 its tc stamps to cover postage. NEGRO TELLS HOW HE SLEW WOMAN PRACTITIONER DNITBD FBBSS UMBED WIBS.l Los Angeles, Cnl., Nov. 13 With a wealth of bloody detail, Burr Harris, negro, told on the witness stand yes terday how ho murdered Mrs. Rebecca 1 Gy, Christian Science practitioner, by benting her to death with a section of gaapipo a few weeks ago. Scores of women in the court room listoncd eagerly to tho negro's story. "When I went o Mrs. Gay's of fice," Harris recited, "After the first blow bIio looked up and tried. to say something. Then I struck her ngtiin mid again. When tho blood ran from hor faco it made a peculiar sound. "I trieil to push the chair with the body to a window, but tho body fell out. Then I tried to carry It, but it wtih too heavy, so 1 covered it with books ami papers 1 found on a tnblo. "1 washed my hands ami face at tho bowl where sho had stood. While I worked, somooiie tried the door of tho office, then went on. r'l tried to get work in Los Angeles and could not. Later I buried the bloody clothes 1 wore, and took advan tage of tho excursion rateB to 8nu Diego. I had forgotten all about tho murder when I was arrested there." Under his attorney questioning, Har ris testified that some one had told him tlvat a Mrs. Wallace was after him, and that lie must kill her. Ho wns searching for Mrs. Wallace, ho said, whon ho ontorod Mrs. Gay's office. Hf : v-rva .JJ li D V'..,'. v 9 4jjtr 'POPULAf MERCHANDISE mm The Markets The hop situation remains unchanged. Thoro are however many moro ealos than heretofore, though prices are un changed. It is roportod that about 1, 000 bales are changing hands in Port land daily at from 22 to 24 conts. Many of the dealers are expecting a 25-cent price before tho month is over. Reports from California Bhow Bales at about 23 cents. Wheat remains unchanged and the market is quiet. Liberal -arrivals of poultry have low ered the pricos Bomowhat, but thoy are still high enough to make consumers think swico before buying. Eggs are quoted at 47 cents, and are still on the upgrade. The Ogregon hen haB simply retired from business and will not sing hor charming lay until tho winter ward robe is completed. TrunoB are quotod, 30s and 40s, at 5 cents, but eastern buyers think this too high and sales are few. LAREIN RELEASED. OMITin I-MSS IIU1D WIIS.1 Dublin, Nov. 14. Tho government yesterday released James Larkin, the transport workers' strike leader, who was serving seven months for sedition. Tt did so in deferenco to the working classes' clamor, which was beginning to make the administration uneasy. NEW AIR RECORD. ohitkd ran lsased wias.1 Frledrichshafen, Germany, Nov. U. Aviator Schiirrmeister stayed in the air with hia aernplnno and two pas senders yesterday for a record of f hours and five minutes. PORTLAND MARKETS. Grain, Flour, Peed, Etc. Whout Track prices: Club, 79c; Bluostom, 90!)lc; Fortyfold, 80c; Rod ItuBsian, 78c; Vulloy, 80c. Alillstuffs Drnn, $22,00 per ton; shorts, $24; middliiigs,$30. Flour PtttonU, $4.50 per barrel; straights, $1.50; exports, $3.5,l)(?j)3,70; valley, $1.50; graham, $1.10; wholo wheat, $1.00. Corn Wholo, $37; cracked, $38 por ton. Hay Fancy Idaho timothy, 1718; fancy eastern Oregon timothy, $1510; timothy and clover, $1415; timothy and alfalfa, $1315; clover, $8.5010; oats and vetch, $10ll;heat, 1011; valley grain bay, $10(311. Oats No. 1, white, $2525.50 per ton. Barley Food, $24(ffi25 per ton; brew ing, nominal; rolled, $27(?p28, Groceries, Dried Fruits, Etc. Dried Fruits Apples, 10c per lb.; currants, 10c; apricots, 1214c; peach es, 8llc; prunes, Italian, 810c; sil ver, 18c; figs, white and black, 6i 7Mic; raisins, loose Muscatel, 7 Vic; bleached Thompson, lll&c; un bleached Sultnnas, 8 Vj c ; seeded, 7 Mi 8o. Coffee Roasted In drums, 1832e per III. Nut Walnuts, lDVie per lb.j Brazil nuts, 20c; filberts, 15c; almonds, 20c; pecani, 17c; cocoaniits, 00c$l por dos, -M-M-4 white, $4.75; Lima, $8.30; pink, $4.00; red Mexicans, 5c; bayou, $4.40. Rice No. 1 Japan, 55V4c; cheapor grades, 4Vic; southern head, 5flc. Honey Cboico) $3.253.75 per case. Sugar Fruit and berry, $5.20; Hono lulu plantation, $5.15; beet, $5; Extra C, $4.70; powdered, barrels, $5.45; cubes, barrels, $5,20, Fruits and Vegetables. Greon Fruit Apples, 60c$2.25 por box; oaches, 3050o per box; pears, $11.50 per box; grapes, 00c$1.50 por crate; Malagas, $7.50 per kog; casabaa, 2c er lb.; cranborrios, $8.5011 por bbl. fruit, $5.507; lemons, $89 per box; pineapples, 7c por lb. Tropical Fruits Orangos, Valencia, $4; navels, $4.505:50; Florida grape fruit, $5.507; lemons, $8.5010 por box; pinoapplos, 7o per lb. Vegetables Cubbago, :ilVac por lb.; cauKJftowor, $11.25 per doz.; cucum ber!,, 4045c por doz.; oggplant, 7o por lb.; head lettuce, $22.25 por crate; peppers, C7o per lb.j radlshos, 1012o por doz.; tomatoes, $1.50 per box; gar lie, 12!jc per lb.; sprouts, lie per lb.; artiehokos, $1.50 por doz.; squash, l'jc per lb.; pumpkius, IVjC per lb.; colory, 5()(ih75c per doz. Potatoes Now, 75c(;$l per ewt.j sweets, $2,25 por crate. Onions Oregon, $2.15 por Back. Dairy and Country Produce, Duttor Oregon creamory, solid pack, 3()c pur lb.; prints, box lots, 84c, Eggs Orogon ranch, 45o por doz. Cheoso Orogon Triplots, lOVic; Dai Bios, 17c; Young America, 18a. Veal Fancy, 131 Oo por pound. Pork Fancy, lie per lb. Provisions. Dams 10 to 12 lbs., 2020',4e; 12 to 141bs., 1920c; picnics, 14y4nj cottage roll, 17Vi. Bacon Fancy, 2829c; standard, 21Vj25c; English, 2122c Lard In tierces, choice, 14Vdo; com pound, te. Dry Bait Meats Backs, dry salt, 13 14c; backs, smoked, 14'j15'jO; bellies, dry suit, 14Vio; smoked, lOo. i Smokod Meats Beef tongues, 25o dried boot tots, 22c; outside, 20o; lu sides, 23c; knuckles, 21a. Picklod Goods Barrels, pigs feet, $14; regular tripe, $10; honeycomb trlpo, $12; lunch touBguos, $22; lambs' tongues, $40, Hops, WooL Hides, Etc ( Hops 1913 contracts, 2324c; 1912 Mohair Choice, 2526o per lb. Hides Salted, 12o per lb.: salted eaU 1017c; salted kip, 12o; salted stag, oyjc; green hides, llVio; dry hides, 2U-t dry calf, No, 1, 25c; dry Btags, 12 LOCAL WHOLESALE MARKET. Brau, per ton , . $25.00 Shorts, per ton $27.00 Wheat, por bushol sue Outs, per bushol 32(5)33e Chittlm Bark, por lb 45o Hay, Timothy .$15.00 Oats and vetch . $12.00 Clover, per ton I $9.00 Cheat, per ton ...$11.00 Butter and Eggs. Butterfat, por lb., f. o. b. Salem......348 35o 30a 40o Creamery buttor, por lb. Country buttor, por lb. . ... 88i Pr dozen Poultry, Fryors Hons, per lb. ..12s ..12 Roosters, per lb, 8o Steers. i : . Steem . , 79C Cows, per cwt .....4(ffi5 - 8e ...T to 7V4i 4o Hogs, fat, per lb Stock ogs, por lb .. Ewes, per lb prlng lambs, per lb............4Vj5o Voal, according to quality ... ll13c, Pelts. Dry, per lb H Halted country pelts, pnc.h C5ciiV Lamb pelts, each 20a Halt Granulated, $14 per ton; half ground, 100s, $10.25 per ton; 60s, $11 crop, nominal. per ton. Wool Eastern Orogon, I0lflo per Beans Small white, $0,00; large lb.; valley, 10(?lHc, DO IT NOW. Salem Pooplo Should Not Wait Until It Is Too Late. Tho appalling deathrato from kid ney diseaso is duo largely to the fact that tho little kidney troubles are usual ly segloctfld until thoy bocomo serious. Tho slight symptoms often give place) to chronic disorders and thj sufferer may graduully slip Into some serious form of kidney complaint. If you suffer from backache, head achos, dizzy spoils; If tho kiduoy se cretlons aro lrregulur of passage and unnatuml in appearance, do not delay. Help the kidneys at once. Dona's Kidney Pills are especially for kidney disorders thoy sot whore othors full. Over one hundred thou sand pooplo have recommended thorn. Here's a case at home; Joseph Wint, 008 High street, Solom, Orogon, says: "My kldnoys were dis ordered and my back seemed to lose its strongth. Doau's Kidney Pills soon fixed me up alright, I know that Doan's Kldnoy Tills are a fine kidney medi cine and I willingly recommend them." For sale by all dealers. Price CO cents. FosterMilburn Co., Buffalo, Now York, solo agenU for the United States, Romembor tho name Doan's and tako no other, MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross HENRY JR. 5AY51 ii 1 j J J : 1 S l Ik. A it toiM