TEN THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAT,. 7, 1916. "There is a point where cheapness ceases to be economy" FOUR HUNDRED COMMUNITIES IN U. S. TO CELEBRATE BABY WEEK A New Department Under New Management, and a New Service T t T We have just completed and perfected an arrangement with our buyer (Mr. Meyers of New York) to give us a WEEKLY SERVICE in up-to-the-minute MILLINERY, and until East n er we shall have the pleasure of displaying a new shipment of the latest ideas and styles in 8 lfl : . ,. fca,;v:i -' 1 A few "better babies. X't y !.'' H s ft'', 7, Womens Hats every Monday morning, in our Ready to Wear Department. AN EXPERT MILLINERY BUYER AT YOUR SERVICE selecting the choicest Hats and at prices never before duplicated in Salem, the first shipment just received and are now on display in our FRENCH ROOM in the READYTO .WEAR DEPT., Miss Lupton in charge Tomorrow's Big Sale NO. 785 WEDNESDAY SURPRISE SALE Tapestry Pillow Covers 20c each An immense sale of these ever popular Tapestry Pillow Covers in many designs. Well made, finished complete for the cushion, tossel on each corner. Choice of square or oblong shape. These tapestry covers are very scarce as they are imported and on account of the war they are difficult to get. At this surprise price they should sell rapidly. SPECIAL for tomorrow 1 20c Each Sale starts at 8:30. See the window display. No telephone or mail orders taken. GREAT RUMMAGE OF, REMNANTS NEXT FRIDAY ALL AT ONE-HALF PRICE On next Friday, March 10th, we will hold a rousing sale of remnants an accumulation of short lengths which we intend to dispose of, as we need the space they occupy for new goods. We will pile them on tables in the main aisle and you can pick out just what you want. It will be a regular Remnant Rummage event. Silks, Wash Goods, Wool Goods, Linens, Domestics, Rib bons, Laces, Embroideries, etc., will be represented. Real Rousing Remnant Bargains. Your Choice Next Friday One-Half Price THE HOUSE OF QUALITY l.Y JJxjo.qpIgood s - SEVENTH DAY OF Damon's Big Grocery Sale 4 cans Tomatoes 25c 5 lbs. New Italian Prunes 25c 35c can Steel Cut Coffee Sale Price 30c 35c can Chocolate Sale Price 30c Pure Maple Sugar, per lb. 20c 3 lbs. Strained Honey 25c Damon Unloads His Stock of Groceries at Sale Price 855 N. Commercial St. Phone 68 We Deliver Any Place in Salem All, Around Town 1 tummimttmmj: RESIDENCE PARLORS Lincensed Lady Era balmer Moderate Prices Latest Methods Are Found Only At Cottage Undertaking Parlors Thone724. Salem, Ore. WATCH and Also Nice Line omJW 13 Jewelry. yU.-Jl EARL NEUOF.BAUER ... J - ilasonlc Temple Wl COMING EVENTS March 7- TONIGHT -Burbnnk day. March !) Oregon Irrigation Drainage ami Rural Credits Conference at Houso of Rep resentatives. March 10 .Salmon day. Wallace Mae Murray lecture, Public Library. March IS Salem Floral Sociuty nt Commercial Club. March 11 Installation of Itev. Jamos Elvin, pastor First Congregational church. March 15 Monthly meeting of members of Commercial Club. March 111 Salem Festival chor us annual concert, opera house. March 18 Republican rally nt Armory. March 24-25 Marion County Sunday school convention. Dr. Mendelsohn, specialist, fits glass is correctly. U. 8. Hank. Bldg. John Conger, the printer, has pur chased through Scott & (laniard an im proved tract near (Juiunby. Dr. Stono'i drug Btore. Schmnanns tonight, armory, 8:30. The choir of the First Methodist church in preparing to give a special program of music Sunday evening nf the church under the direction of Dr. Frank Wilbur Chace. Or. Btone'i trrng store. 52c buys 65c linoleum this week. Bu ren & Hamilton. E. B. Millard of the Ladd & Bush bunk received word this morning of the death of his fitlher. William It. Millard at Whitewater, Wisconsin, in his tiSth year. Mr. Millard visited his son hero in 1911. . Schmnanns tonight, armory, 8:30. Order your pure milk, cream and Maplo drove butter from Maple Grove Dairy, 1215 South CommerciuL Phone 208. tf "The Value of a Public Market for Suloin" is the subject for discussion nt tho Men's Liberal club Wednesday evening at too Unitarian church, .8:00 o'clock. All meu interested in this problem nro invited to take n hand in tho discussion. Reserved seata 25 cents. A small Price for a fine concert nt the Urnnd, Much 10, by the Salem Festival Cuorus. Schumann tonight, armory, 8:30. Schumann tonight, armory, 8:30. Salem Festival Chorus Thursday night, March Hi, at the Grand, lie served seats, 25 cents. In honor of his birthday, W, A. I.awson, of 1715 North Commercial street, was given a surprise party yes terday by his wife and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Doppeii were the guests of honor. Furniture repairing, mattresses made over and upholstering. A. Tingstrom 013 Court. The river is rising and this morning was 13 feet above low water. Yesterday morning at 8 o'clock tho guago was 10 feet above nnd nt. noon, 11 feet nbove. Tho rninf ill yesterday was .15 of an inch. Bachelors home. Best In town. Room and board $5.00. Fine nienls. 3115 N. High. MurKi B. F. Ramp, a fanner living near lirnoks, was in the city yesterday. To day he left for lies Moines, lown, whore ho will remain for the next six months in the interests of the lognnber-, I V juice industry of the Willamette val ''.V. Buy your linoleum now, 65c grade special this week 52c. Buren & Ham ilton, A shipment weighing 4,600 pounds was made yesterday by the WollsFnrgo express company to II irrisbtirg. The two transformers supplying Harris burg with light burned out and the shipment of two substitute triiiisforin- icrs were made from hero by tho Oregon l ower company. We have our "booster" meetings for business, clubs, etc. We need them for Christianity. Hoar Dr. Hutchinson. With the intentions of making the March 17th dance one of the events of the season, the Klks nre already issuing invitations nnd propuing plans. Each member of the lodge has been given the (privilege of inviting a friend nnd this I of course insures a large attendance. rue club rooms w'll be opeu for those who do not dance. Schumanus tonight, armory, 8:30. Joae Edwards, of Newbcrg, filed t& today as a candidate for nomination by lie republican party for the office oi state senator, 21th senatori il district, comprising the counties of Washington, Yamhill, Tillamook nnd Lincoln. H. L. F.ddy, of Koseburg, is a candidate for nomination by the republican party for the office of slate senator, fifth sena torial district, Nothing sensational or spectacular in Dr. Hutchinson ' sermons. Meetings begin Wednesday evening lit the Pres byterian church. A party of 15 arrived in the city yes terday from Cniuroso, Alberta, with the intentions of locating in Salem and vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. K. I.. Canifudd, with his father and mother and nine children and John Custer are included in the pirty. They have rented n home temporarily in the city but expect to locate on n farm close to Salem within :i short time. Schumanus tonight, armory, 8:30. Here is another piece of sad news for the economical housekeepers. Over the wire this morning came word that sugar would advance 15 cents a hun dred, taking effect tomorrow. And what is worse, dealers nre of the opin ion that the top price has not been reached. Schuman quintet tonight at the arm ory insteid of tomorrow night as an nounced in this morning's Statesman. Tell your friends. Company M will give a benefit enter tainment the evening of Thursday, March 10, nt the armory. Tho DeMoss entertainers have been engaged for that evening. This company is part of the original DeMoss family that began their rareer as entertainers in the central states about 47 years ago. An interest ing program has been submitted and the boys believe the DeMoss family will give a first class show. o Buy your tickets now. For the musi cal event of the season at the Grand, March Hi by the Salem Festival Chorus, reserved seats 25 cents. o Those interested in apple pruning will have an opportunity tomorrow aft ernoon of first hearing some theory on pruning and then of seeing an uctual demonstration. Professor Brown of the extension department of the Oregon Agricultural college will give a lecture on pruning nt .1:30 o'clock at the Com mercial club nnd nt 3 o'clock will give a practical demonstration at the apple orchard, corner of South Cottage and Rural avenue. The orchard may be reached by taking a South Commercial street car. The saving of 300,000 babies whose lives are needlessly snuffed out every year in the United Stales is the aim of the leaders in the nation-wide Better Baby Week to be held March 1 to 11. . More than 400 communities have completed plans for baby week, aided by the children's bureau of the United States department of labor. During baby week the needs of chil dren will be so presented that all parents in these communities will lealize these needs and will want to give their children tha best possible tare. They will know that this is their privilege, as well as their obli gation. Hundreds of women in tins citv, as well as thot;.iand3 throughout the country, are trying to tio awuy with the old belief that the rate of mor tality among children who had not reached tha first anniversary of the.r birth was a wise oispsnsation of na ture intended to prevent vii with a weak constitution r coming too plentiful, thry are trying to rea.'ixe that a groat is a national disas' THE CHILDREN'S BUREAU AND BABY WEEK S "Is Baby Week the business of a Government Bureau?" The observing taxpayer is perhaps asking this ques tion. F.ven since last October when the (leneral Federation of Women's Clubs announced its plan, an increasing pro portion of the Bureau's office force has been detailed to the correspondence re quired by the growing interest in the nation-wide observance of Baby Week. The sociologist and tho statistician will remind us that the Bureau was created to make investigations per taining to the welfare of children and that Baby Week is not an investiga tion and is not statistics. To all these groups we are account able. What is our reply? For the three years the bureau has been in existence it has put a consider able share of its energy into a statis tical study of the social and economic causes of infant mortality, planned with the greatest care and conducted by trained field agents with all possi ble precision. The results of this in quiry are being published as the law requires, in a series of reports which consist of statistical tabulations ac- : companies by descriptive text. There arc main- million fathers and .... ;.. r'.:....l :.. .1.. i: mulling in in,, v.miri outics, incumiii many of the best educated fathers and mothers, who never read a statistical table ami never will. Yet hidden with in the figures of the Bureau's reports on infant mortality, the reading of I which they will successfully evade, lie stem facts about the dangers which be i sit American babies. I These figures give a clue to the rea sons why, on the great average, one i baby in eight dies before, the end of the first year of life. They show that ! this average obscures a wide gamut I with comparative immunity from infant . loss at one end and with fearful in I f ant. waste at the other. I If the Bureau is to investigate and j to report as the law directs, then it ! must try to find ways of reporting ! which will be heard by the whole public which it was created to serve. The popular methods of the'Baby j Week, which are those of all astute ad vertisers, form an invaluable method of ; reporting to the parents of this nation ! those standards of ' infant welfare which experts are endeavoring to ina!': clear. , , The Baby Week emphasizes the coi -xt motive side of infant care. Tt ad dresses not only individual parents but communities,. The best test of its value will be the work that follows it: Undoubtedly every State Board or" Health should secure what only si a states have nt present a special divir- i ion of chihl hygiene. N'o city or town should tail to provide instructive nurs ing service and to pay constant heed to tiic problems of hygiene and sanita tion, of proper housing and of recrea tion spnecs, since all "these immediately affect tho welfare of infants. There arc 11,009 counties in the Fnited States. In every county seat, then? should be a center for the health w,orc of that county a station for examin ing babies, and older children, and for furnishing expert advice lor keeping them well in short, a health teaching eenrer. We must have complete birth regula tion. All theso will be institutions for tho common use no more revolutionary, no more eleemosynary, than public schools and weather bureaus and agricultural experiment stations. The New Zealand infant mortality rate is less than one-half of ours and is being further reduced. Why take less pains for American babies than New Zealand takes Dr. A. L. Hutchinson, former pastor of the Presbyterian church of this city, will conduct evangelistic meetings for ten days in that church beginning Match S, at 7::i0 o'clock. A cordial in vitation is extended to everybody. That menus you. Tomorrow eenlng a free lecture will be given nt the United Kvnngelictil church, North Cottage and Center streets, by R. H. Heed. Ho will speuk on, "Wild West Days." Mr. Heed has prepared his lectures from personn) experiences in the wtld west having been n pioneer religious organizer in much of the old Rocky mountain and nnd North Woods country. The lecture tomorrow evening is one of the series to be given by Mr. Reed. Other sub jects nro "Custer's I.nst Battle," Yel lowstone Park and Mammoth Cave, H. Pohle & Son have Just unloaded what is probably the first ear of gas engines ever used in Willamette vil ley by any dealer. These engines were received direct from factory and arc practically self starting. These will be sold here at from $:t."i and up. Which is considerable iess thnu engines can bo purchased from mail order houses. Four applications to purchase land from tho Oregon And California rail road company have been recently filed for record in the coiiuty clerk 's 'office. These applications to' purchase were made by parties living in the east be lieving possibly that by tue filing, they would be given prior rights if the land was throwu open to purchase. The land on which tho filings were made ire timber lauds and described as fol lows: N. K. 1-4 of section -, town ship 0, range 1 east; S. W.M-4 of sec tion 3"), township 0, range I east; N. E. 1-4 section L'.i, township N, range .1 east, and N. W. 1-4 of section LT), township S, range 1 east. A quick exchange auction market for the benefit of the. people of Salem nnd vicinity will be opened by F. N. Wood ry, veteran aintiineer who has recent ly located here coming from Canada, lie will sell anything and everything on commission and has established headquarters on the vacant lot on Com mercial street, just north of the Ml rion hotel. Farmers will find accom modations for their stock on this lot and Mr. Woodry intends to follow the lines of a regular farmers exchange. The auction and exchange inrket will be held every Saturday .ifternoon be ginning at 1:30 o'clock. That the postoffice sub-station No. 2, located nt the Crown Drug store fills a long felt want is evidenced by the iiles made since the office was opened. January 17. The sales of stamps from the opening of the office January 17 to February 1 were $"5(1.50. For the month of February, the total sales were !f"ti(W. 75. The best -single day's business was or. February 5, when the sales amounted to J54.50. Suh-eontrnct sta tion No. 1. located near the fair grounds nt the Melrose grocery sold stamps amounting to S5.W for the month of February. This was the station that the postoffice intended to close, but was continued on account of the protest from that part of the city. Automobilists will now nave the pleasure of driving at the speed of ten miles an hour while passing school houses, according to the ordinance pass ed bv the council last evening. It will be signed today by Mayor Harley O. Whita nd become effective March IS. The ordinance provides for a speed of not to exceed 10 miles while passing a school house between the hours of eight in the morning until five o'clock in the evening during school days and when the schools are in session. At present the limit of speed is i!0 miles in the city while outside of the congest ed districts, where a speed of 15 miles an hour is the limit. The speed of nutos passing school houses was Vrought to the attention of the council through the Parent-Teachers' Association of the Lincoln junior high school. There will be a local teachers' In- today in the matter of the estate of stitute at the Woodburn high school on Jacob U. Miller shows the estate to eon I Saturday, March 11, 191d, at 10 o 'clock ! sist of real property to tho valuo of j a, in. There will be special discussion $1300 and personal property to the I of methods of teaching and discipline, j value of $i9,752.77. The appraiser Professor Pittmnn of Monmouth will j we.re George W. Fry, Henry Kraus, ami ue tue principal speauecor tlio day. Chris Zimmerman. The Salem fire department was called out to a chimney fire at SS5 1-th street this morning at 9:45. No! damage was done. j sc sjc s( J( sc sjc ss s)t )jc s(c ?(( jjc )( , I COURT HOUSE NEWS J County Judge Bushey today appoint ed! S. H. Heltzel as administrator of. 'the estato of K. Elizabeth Mcliae, ' deceased, who died February 2Sth leav-1 I ing an estate consisting of personal ' property valued at ifsou ami real prop- j erty worth ijcJOOO. The. appraisers are ' W. II. Hobson, Warren Richardson, and J. B. Crier. The heirs are Mrs. Rose B. Kinsev, a daughter, of Bandon;, 'Mis. Allio Murphy, a daughter, of: ! Stnyton, and Everett Mcltae, a son,; ! of Salem. i An inventory and appraisement filed Phone 700 TAXI SERVICE OARS OF ANT KIND, FOR ANT PLACE, AT ANT TIME Good Garage In connection foi storage of can. Reasonable Rate. SALEM TAXI CO. Garage OPEN ALL NIGHT. 246 State Street. Buy a Box of Smelt Now is the time to salt them or can in fruit Jars, and have them on the table when you can't get them fresh. SPECIAL PRICES On boxes of 50-pounds. Remember they are much cheaper thaj any other fish or meat. Shipments daily from the river. WARD K. RICHARDSON 2395 FRONT STREET. PHONE 494