Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, February 16, 1916, Page THREE, Image 3

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THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OKftrtuN. WEDNESDAY. FEB. 16. 1916.
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TH
CHICAGO
Salem's Only Complete Department Store, where we sell everything you eat
and wear. When you want Bargains come to the Chicago Store. One-fourth l
block filled with Choice Spring Goods
Read
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ver
the
oil
35c Fancy Silk Mulls,
yard :
23c
Ladies' 75c Silk Hose,
all the new shades, pair
49c
$2.50 Spring Hats
now
98c
65c Empress Crepe De Chine
Dress Goods, all colors, yard
39c
Ladies' 39c Silk Hose,
pair
25c
$5.00 Spring Hats
now
$1.98
Remnants of Silk HALF PRICE.
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owing Cot Down Prices
75c Black Velveteen for
Dresses, yard
49c
50c Shepherd Black and White OF
Check Dress Goods," yard 4.. 3C
$1.00 Charmeuse, Messellne,
yard :.
69c
45c Silk Mulls, 36 in. wide,
all colors, yard
29c
75c Wool Serge Dress Goods,
all colors, yard :
48c
85c Wool Serge,
yard ".
59c
Large Warm Com
forts now .
1 65c, 75c, 98c
Ladies' 25c Fleece Lined
Hose, pair
15c
Boys' 75c Wool
Knickerbockers .
45c
Boys' $1.00 Wool Suits
now :
$2.95
Men's Overalls,
sale price :.,
49c
Men's 75c Outing Flannel
Night Gowns, special price..
49c
Men's Heavy Gloves 1 A IP or
sale price iUC, IOC, LoZ
Men's 65c Heavy Work
Shirts :.
33c
Big Double Blankets
now
65c, 98c
$1.00. Corsets, all styles, long
and short, with supporters
49c
300 Pieces of White Muslin Under
wearGowns, Chemise, Drawers, yQ
Skirts special priced 25c, 35c, 7C
65c Baby's Embroidery Flounc- OO
ing, dainty designs, special, yd OjC
Boys' and Girls' Heavy IF OF
Weigh" Underwear IdC, L0K1
Ladies' 85c Heavy Weight
Union Suits now
49c
Ladies' 75c Outing . Flannel
Night Gowns, white, now
49c
Big Bargains in Kid Gloves, Laces,
Embroideries and Ribbons.
Visit our Basement Salesroom, our
Pure Food Grocery Department, our
China Glass, Aluminum, Tin and Silver
ware Departments. We make the low
prices for Salem.
Children's Coats up to $4
for : .'. :
Boys $4.50 Mackinaws,
best made, ale price
..... $2.98
Ladies' 85c Black Mercerized
Silk Petticoats now only
49c
Ladies' House Dresses, "7P no
dark and light colors, 40c, 1 3C, 0C
Ladies' New. Spring Dress
Shirts now $1.95 and
$2.50 up
FURS NOW ONE-HALF PRICE.
K:.:..49c,75c,98c
Ladies' $12.00 Wool Dresses
in basement
$2.98
Ladies' $15.00 Suits,
in basement
$3.90
Children's $4.50 Coats,
in basement
98c
Ladies' $3.50 Shoes,
new st'Jie, p;r
$1.98
Ladies' $2-50 Shoes,
new, pair :
$1.49
Shoes, now 25c, 49c, 75c, 98c
500 yards of 50c. and 65c OQ- OC
Bleached Table Linen, yd uCt JJC
8 l-3c Crash Toweling,
yard, now
312C
400dozeu Extra
Heavy Huck Towels
5c, 8c ,10c
75c Big Bed Sheets,
good, heavy Quality ..
49c
20c Pillow Cases
now
12V2C
1000 Yards Fancy Challies,
yard ; :
4c
8c. White. Outing. Flannel
yard :
6V4C
Diamond Soap,
now, bar
Standard Tomatoes,
3 cans for
Rolled Oats, best,
6 pounds for
25c
75c Lipton's Tea
now ;
65c
12 l-2c.Best Sugar Peas,
3 cans for .'.
60c Tea, highest grade, jp J
pound ; IvJL
35c Pure Berry. Coffee,
pound
Fancy Cups and Saucers,
sale price
$2.75 Heavy Aluminum
Percolators, sale price ....
$1.75
$1.50 Aluminum Frying Pan
heavy quality
75c
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SALEM'S ONLY
COMPLETE
DEPARTMENT
STORE
Phone
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BRIGHTER CHILDREN
Children are probably brighter to-day"
than a generation ago but are they
stronger? That's a grave question.
So many pinched faces, dulled eyes
and languid feelings make us wonder
if they will ever grow into robust,
healthy men and women.
Tf vnnr rhitrlrpn ratrh cnlds easilv.
are tired when rising, lack healthy
rnlAr ttT find studies difficult, fifive I
them Scott's Emulsion for one month
to enrich their blood and restore the
body-forces to healthy action.
Qtt'c Fmnkinn is used in rjrivate
schools. It is not a "patent medicine", !
simply a highly concentrated oil-food, i
without alcohol or harmful drugs. It j
cannot harm; it improves blood; it bene
fit! lungs nd strengthens the system. !
Your druggist has it refuse substitutes. I
Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 15-41 j
'
High School Pupils j
to Protect Property
1
The boys and girls of the senior high'
H'hool, or rather the students of that;
institution, .have resolved themselves'
into a body for the protection of thej
school property and for keeping the'
high school building in a proper condi
tion of neatness and cleanliness on the
interior. Not that it was in a condi- j
tion opposed to clearness, but there '
had been a growing disposition to leave
papers and parts of the noonday lunch;
around the building and a growing
carelessness as to marking and defac-j
ing the furniture.
Xow this will nil be taken care of,
as at a meeting this week, the students'
organized and appointed committees of
boys and girls, who will make it their j
special business to see that no paper 1
or trash is left In the building and
that no one defaces any of the interior,
furnishings.
Shutting Off Supplies From
Germany Causes Shortage
of Drug Supplies
Tu the average citizen in Salem there
is not a very close connection between
headache powders and the war in Ku
rope. But the relationship becomes a
reality not only in the price now paid
for headache ponders, but ninny other
drugs in common use.
All chemicals like bismuth, phennce
tine, and salol and others which ure
ingerdients of headache powders have
advanced fully 1.000 per cent in price.
The Germans supplied the world and
were the only manufacturers, and just
at present, Germany is not shipping to
this country.
Quinine that sold for 50 cents tin
ounce before the war. now retails for
from $2 to $2.50 an ounce and is very
scarce.
That useful article, castor oil, comes
just twice as high as it did before
the fatal August 4, 1!H4, when Eng
land declared war on Germany.
The 10 cent bottle of glycerine is
not as large as it used to be. In fact,
the dime bottle in the days of two years
ago is just half as large as It used to
be.
Kp.wm '.alts have also taken the sky
ward route in prices.. Instead of buy
ing a pound for 10 cents, it will re
quire money to the amount of 25 cents
to buy a pound and it is becoming more
scarce, every day.
Blue vitriol, worth 10 cents a pound,
before the war, is now selling in Sa
lem for 30 cents a pound and even
the common alum, that formerly was
retailed for 1!) cents a pound, has ad
vanced to 25 cents.
Salt petre, so necessary in the manu
facture of explosives, is naturally in
I great demand w ith the munition plants,
land this accounts for the advance in
price of fiom 15 cents a pound to (id
cents. .
Borax may be included in the useful
articles, advancing from 15 cents to 25
cents a pound.
j But it is in the bromide class that the
I greatest scarcity exists, as bromide
I potassium has advanced from 10 cents
un ounce to i an ounce and nronncie
soda is worth .-just two times as much as
it was before the war.
If the 10 cent bottle of castor oil is
not as large by half as it used to be,
or if it requires a microscope to find
the 10 cerjts worth of quinine, the cause
thereof is not due to the lack of gener
osity on the part of the druggist, but to
the fact that Germany practically had
control of the drug market of the world,
and that for good and 'sufficient reas
ons, commerce between this country and
Germany is at a standstill.
Public Opinion Indorses
this family remedy by making its sale larger tharK that
of any other medicine in the world. The experience of
generations has proved its great value in the treatment
of indigestion, biliousness, headache and constipation.
BEECflAEi3'S PI
relieve these troubles and prevent them from becoming serious ills by
promptly clearing wastes and poisons out of the digestive system.
They strengthen the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate tht
bowels. Mild and harmless. A proven family remedy, unequalled
For Digestive Troubles
Lrift StU of Aar Mdicia la thm World.
5oUl rftrrwbirt. In bosM, 10c, 25c
Turner News Items
(Capital Journal Special Service.)
Turner, Ore., Feb. 10. The high wa
ter mark has passed and the "City
'Duds" can get to the city hull without
(boats again. This spring weather has
j caused Cop Smith to get his squad busy
.repairing sidewalks and crossings.
.Miss Elizabeth Cornelius is spending
a few days in Salem this week after
! attending the I.incnin day banquet
! where she made a Lincoln speech. '
j Henry Karl swears more than any
j other man in town these days because
there are so many prospective voters
I coming in to register,
i Mr. and Mrs. Crawford visited with
friends in Salem Sunday afternoon.
Kugeno McVicker recently returned
to Kansas and reports that times ure
good back there.
I Dr. Mrs. G. A. Mas-sey, Trof. nnd Mrs.
,T. E. Wilson attended church services
. in Salem Sunday evening,
j Turner high school boys nre begin
ning to get the baseball spirit and plan
to organize a team at once.
The high school student body plans
to give a reception and rally for all
eighth grade and high school students
in the adjoining districts on or about
the 10th of March.
Exams have come nnd gone. One-half
year of successful school at Turner has
passed into history. The momentum
already gathered in the Inst half will
llp to make the coming half pven
shorter if measured by one's mental
time piece.
Parents nnd students alike agree that
the school this venr is the nvt popular
institution in this section. Mrs. I
Lister has presented each room with a
benutiful hand -painted picture. Thesw
pictures are taken from Oregon scenerv
nnd are highly prized by both teachers
and students. Mrs. Lister nays in pre
venting these pictures, that she wishes
to show her appreciation of the school
and that it is a pleasure to present
these pictures to the bovs nnd girls who
nre working hard and faithfully for the
school.
Outsiders often speak of tho bii''
ENRICH THE BLOOD
Hood's Sarsaparilla, a Spring Tonic
Medicine, is Necessary.
Everybody Is troubled at this sea
son with loss of vitality, failure ol
appetite, that tired feelliiR, or with
bilious turns, dull -headaches, indi
gestion and other stomach troubles;
or with pimples and other eruption!
on the face and body. The reason ii
that the blood is impure and impov
erished. Hood's Sarsaparilla relieves aV.
these ailments. It is the old rellabK
medicine that has stood the test ol
forty years, that makes pure, rich,
red blood that strengthens everj
oriian and builds up the whole sys
tem. It is the all-the-year-round
blood-purifier and health-giver.
Nothing else acts like It, for nothing
else is like It. There is no real sub
stitute; so he sure to get Hood's
Ask your druggist for it today, anc
begin taking It at once.
school moral standard upheld by the en
tire student body. This is practically a
self governed school because there
have not been uny cases of discipline t
speak of.
The student body has shown its loyal
ty to the school by maintaining an av
erage of H0.5 per cent through the
stormy month of January.
Principal Wilson has organized new
classes in civics and botany for the sec
ond half. Each of these classes has
sonic 21 or 22 students in it.
Throw Off Colds and Prevent Grip.
When von feel n cold comini on, take
LAXATIVE iiltoMO Ql'IMNE. Jt re
limnes cause of Colds nnd Grip. Unl v
lone "HKOMO l;l'l.I.K." K. W.
.GROVE'S signature on box, 25c.
Sl!
j PECULIAR PACTS ABOUT
; WELL KNOWN PEOPLE
Milwaukee, Wis., Feb. 10.
Since Kir Thomas Shmgnessy
has been made a baron by King
George, he is culled "tho peer
that made .Milwaukee famous"
by those win) used to know
"Tom'' when he attended the
Third ward si lion in this city.
OAT SMUT PREVENTION
Washington, 1). Feb. III. The av
erage annual losses from smut in oats
rue greater than those caused by liny
other preventable cereal disease ill the
I'nited States. Treiting the seed with
hot water or with formaldehyde solu
tion before sowing is nil easy, cheap,
and effective way of preventing this
disease. The latter method, which is
the one most available for general use,
is hero briefly summarized. Until meth
ods are described in detail in Fanners'
Mil Hot in "id", which will be sent free
on 'Application to the secretary of ag
riculture, Washington, I). ('.
.Mix the foruialin (a commercial prep
aration which is It" per cent formalde
hyde by weight) with water at the rate
of 1 pound (a little less than a pint)
to -10 gallons of water. The grain may
be either loosely inclosed in sacks or
put loose into i tub or vat with the
solution. Agitate the sacks or stir the
loose grain occasionally so that the en
tire surface, of every grain will be thor
oughly wet. Instead of being immersed
the seed oats may be spread on a clean
floor or canvas and sprinkled with the
solution and shoveled over during the
process so th it they will be wet evenly
as ill the other inet'.wul Not over n
gallon of solution will lie needed for
every bushel of dry grain. After
sprinkling, shovel the seed into a pile.
cover it with sucks wet with the solu-j
tion, nnd allow it to stand for lit lensr.
two hours before spreading it out to
dry.
Precautions: The oats may be seed-1
cd as soon as dry enough to run through
the drill. If the seed is still moist, how
ever, tiie drill must be set to sow more
to the ncre thin if it is dry. The
iiu lit it v w hich should be sown mny be
determined by measuring a given bulk
before uinl after treatment nnd figuring:
the proportion ot increase, After treat
ing do not expose the seed to freezing
until it is thoroughly dry.
l)o not allow the treated seed to coinn
into contact with old sacks, bins or ma
chinery in which there may be smut
snores. If' such must bo used, scald
liiein or wash them first with the for
m tldchyde solution.
Santa Monica After
Big Automobile Races
Santa Monica, Oil., Feb. 111. Simla
Monica .-tinted a hot fight yesterday j
to get the. Vnndcibilt and Grand Prix'
automobile races for the historic eight
mile course here next. November.
At the reipicst of the chamber of
commerce, the city commissioners sent a
telegram to the Cup Holders' associa
tion in New York asking 'sanction for
the twin classic. The message stated
that all difficulties with property hold
ers had been settled, and that the neces
sary cash guarantees had been assured
by bankers of the buy district.
Elgin, 111., is already in the field,
making a strong campaign to grab the1
races. Now that Santa Monica has vir-'
tuiilly decided to have them here if the
sanction can be obtained, a warm bat
tle is expected.
The telegram was sent this morning,
when a delegation from the chamber of
commerce, headed by Paul Derkum, pro
moter of the last Venice automobile
ruce, attended the meeting of the city
commissioners nnd went to the bat hard
in favor of the proposition.
They were urged there were already
a number of famous machines in south
ern CaliforniaC, including the English
Sunbeam, just arrived, and that the
Viiiideiliilt nnd Grand Trix would nf
ford il fitting climax to the projected
season of motor racing here.
The Vniidcrbilt and Grand Prixs were
held on the Santa Monica course two
years ago. The course, which runs
through the i-ity streets, is conceded to
be one of the fastest in the world. Rec
ords have repeatedly been smashed on
it. Last year the races were contested
at. the Panama Pacific exposition, Sun
Francisco. Tf sanction is secured, work
will start nt once in regruding the Santa
Monica course.
i
DON'T LET SOAP
SPOIL YOUR HAIP.
When you wash your hair, be enrefnj
what you irse. .Most soaps and riro ,- rfl
shampoos contain too much alkali,
which is very injurious, as it dries tliu
sculp and makes the hair brittle.
The best thing to use is just pluiii
niulsified coconiiiit oil, for this is pure
ii ml entirely gicnseless. It's very cheap,
U ud beats the most expensive soups or
anything else all to pieces. You can
get this at any drug store, and u few
ounces will last the whole family I'm
months.
Simply moisten the hair with water
and rub it in, about a te.'ispoonful in
all that is required. It makes an
aliiindnnce of rich, creamy lather,
cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out
easily. The hair dries quickly nnd ev
enly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright,
fluffy, wavy and easy to handle. Bo
sides, it loosen and takes out eveiy
piirticle of dust, dirt and dandruff.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Want to Bake
PILLA Better Cakes?
Cakes baked with
Merit Vanilla
..I kalUrvliiivii thai
t eatini Mate that comet
only from pure concentrated
flaviuinu Them's rral bakina
jj economy in the 25 cent bottle.
Order of Your Grocer
PS)
1
Foster-Mnore Co. to Marie C. Eriek
son, pt. A. F. Palanquin el. 42-5-2W.
Curl K. Lne et ux to Lima Anilius,
lit. Joel Fuller el. 2.1 and 20 ll 1V.
Thomas J. Hall to Margaret T. Hull,
lots 1 nnd 2 blk. 51 Gervais.
J. C. and A. L. Clearwater to Lerny
and Catherine Hewlett it. of lots 7 and
8 blk. it I'niversity add to Salem.
W. A. Young et ux to P. A. Huberts
pt. Geo. W. Pitiinm ci. 1.T7-1W.
A. H. Hammer et ux to L. V. Ham
mer, Samuel Parker el. 77 7-.'lV; M. L.
Savage cl. 79-7-3W.
It. K. Page et ux to Win. Terlick, lot
fi, Orchard Park add Salem.
A. .T. Pruitt et ux to Mrs. W. Ti.
Lauder, lot fi blk. I I Oicmekctn.
F. W. Hall et nx to Oregon C.rnin Co.
lot 0 and 10 blk. 3, Capital Street ndd
Salrm.
Daisy Martin, the 14 year-old hen at
Mcdford'n poultry show that, is Mtill
hiving egg, might hnve been nnmed
Jim Dundy hud the been a rooster.
ADVERTISED LETTER LIST
&
Advertised Feluuaiy l.V Ullli.
Alcorn, Mr. W. A.
A mill sou, Miss Mnrv.
lierrv. Mrs. K. ,.
Heuver, Mrs. M.
Berwick, Mrs. El ins.
C irson, W, C.
Cooke, Mis. Charles.
I lent, Miss Genieve.
Uenick, Mr. .. II.
Edelniau, -Mrs. Sol.
Ferguson, Mrs. O. E.
Crissom, Miss Ethel.
Keppinger, Mis. E.
King, .Mr.
Mcintosh, Hilly.
I'ielce, 1;. II.
Potter, I). W.
R.vun, Mr. H. W.
Sacks, Mr. Jerome. '
Sacks, Mr. Edward K.
Schweitzer. Mrs. Dcllie.
Sholdon, Miss Zoe.
Skeels, Mrs. W. II.
Smith, C. E.
Smith, Mr. John M.
Ward, Mr. M. N.
Wheeler, Mr. Frank.
White, Joe.
Wilcox, Mrs. V.
AUGUST HITKKSTEIV,
p. r.
w8
I ' You are safe when,
you buy a standard.
Dentifrice like
PERFECT
era Cream
A Standard Ethical Dtntifric
Send 2c stamp today for a generous trial pack
age of either Dr. Lyon's Perfect Dental Cream
or Tooth Powder.
L W. Lyon & Son., Inc., j C 1 W. 27th St., New York City