Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1916)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JO RNAL. SALEM. OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1916. SEVEN V RELIEF EXPEDITION IS An Economical, Delightful, Light Place to Trade i 'I i fwr.n inww v Jmi mk ! 3 Efefinefellic 20 In theconvenTenti Client Uift"W. i1f 5m'&effexiTe czzzzz NEW CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING KATES Kate per word New Today: !Each insertion, per word lc One week (6 insertions), per word 5c One month (26 insertions) per word 17c The Capital Journal will not be re sponsible for more than one insertion lor errors in Classified Advertisements. Bead your advertisement the first day it appears and notify us immediately if it contains an error. Minimum charge, 15c. HARRY Window cleaner, Phone 768 June4 PHONE 937 For wood saw. tf IT) It SALE Ccutcr St, -Shoe repairing outfit. 260 June FBONT APARTMENTS Ground floor 491 N. Cottage. tf FOR- RENT SIGNS Pot gale at Cap ital Journal office. tf FOR SALE ronv, quiet to drive, lit. 118, R. C. ride or june3 GOOD Furnished house to rent, close in. Phone Main 4 or 47. tf AVANTED Girl to do general house work. Inquire 274 N. Hummer. t jlOLSKKF.EPING ROOMS For rett Phone 47 or 4. G. , W., Johnson, tf .WANTED Housekeeper or man and wife, 2040 Lee St. R. 0. Cummin. juncl 3JOUHEKEEPER WANTED AddTess H. It, Egan, OervaiB, Route 2. Phone 3F1I. Junc2 J.(8T On Cottage St, between Ferry and Division, ring of keys. Phone 928-J. junel TUBNISHED rooms and housekeeping ppartmenta, rates reasonable, ejose U, 160 Court tf WANTED Experienced girl for gen eral house work. Call at 270 N. IMh Mrs. llarrr Clny. tf FOR GOOD Meals and comfortable rooms, reasonable, in modern home close iu, piione 1013. june3 FOR RF.NT Flat close in, furnished or unfurnished. Phone 823-J, or call at 252 North Cottage St tf FOR BALE 200 acres at Lyle, Wash, will consider some trade on elear firoperty. August Rauch, Salem, Or. june J 7 , FOR RENT 7 room house rinse in, with gns and bath. 340 Union St.. be tween High and Liberty, 10.00 per mo. Phone SHO-M. . junel ' . """"'- - "ii.iimii.ih j i '-Tin ini-i nt "'''-yy ' :' ' ' ""mfr " - f "11' "" ; TODAY WANTED TO RENT 5 room, fully modern bungalow or cottage with garage. Phone 511. tf FOR SALE Nice big Jersey cow, 5 yrs. old, giving 3 gallons per day, will be fresh in full. 1155 Broadway St. juucl FOR SALE 18 acres, good terms, 19 in crops and fruit, fair, buildings, best soil. W. W. Lander, Salem R. 9. junel5 FOR SALE Good Jersey milk -cow giving 3 1-2 gallons of milk, a bar gain. Phone 98F2. Walter Peajmine, R. 8. tf 0 LOGANBERRY PICKERS Want ed, good camp grounds and accom modations. Phone 37F3. O. L. Denier, R. 4. juneO FOR SALE 3 half truck Studebakej v wagoa. Will trade for heavier wagon, cordwood or stumpage. 2786 Lee. Phone 1322-J. tf FOR RENT Business block room, si 18x80 feet 467 State street. In quire at 463 State. Phone,. 1009. Maurice Elinger. tf FOR RXT 6 room modern cottage, 4 blocks fiom state house, $12 per month. S.-o Mr.' Lynch at livn of Commerce or Pnoue '44. j'ine3 I AM Taking orders for summer and fall delivery of wood. I will give a lower price now than I will late la the season. John H. Scott, phone 1552 After office hours, 622. june20 FOR BALE At bargain prices, one Troy laundry mangle 90 inches, store shelving, two teams and Shetland pony, 2 double buggies, one single buggy. H. Steinbock, 302 N. Com! Phtre 8P8. tf FOR SALE 10 acres Paradise Valley, southern California. Onnges. lem ons, apricots, olive, figs, guavas, etc. Crop last year ran 20 tons or anges, 30 ions apricots, etc. This Burburban acreage is located 15 min utes from heart of San Diego, 20 minutes from Imperial Beach, 25 from Hotel del Coionnda. Has mod ern chalet designed in good archi tect taste, every known convenience inside anil out, including city water, electric light, gas, tiled bath. Out buildings include packing house, garage, etc,, with private water sys tem. Hard surfaced electric, lighted boulevard to 8 in Diego; ocean view. Exclusive neighborhood and is the pretLiest, villa in Paradise Valley. Personal reasons compel the sale. Will sell for 13,000, and would con sider Willamette Valley farm prop erty, of equal merit for the larger itmnint, with some rasti or good pa per down. J. L. Iiell, Mill City. Ore. june2j Personality The unusual blend of pure Turkish tobaccos in La Marquise gives this cigarette a distinctive, high-class character decidedly different from any other. PURE TURKISH CIGARETTES . (Their extreme mildness is atifying, their aromatic richness satisfying, their mellow flavor pleasing in the highest degree. No other cigarette has ever merited saphunstintedapproval intheitest. Manufactured by BUTLER-BDTL"ER BRANCH fakers of high-gnde ; III UUUUJt S-LEM Chimney Sweep. Phone 10. june6 READ Dr. May's announcement in to days' paper. . juiui5 FOR SALE Good Jersey cow. Box 81, li. 2., Salem, Or. junc3 SMALL TEAM To trade for milk cows. Phone 36F23. june3 FOB SALE 1 S Buff Leghorns hens, 50c each. Phone H9F21. june3 AGENT WANTED For fast selling article. Address box444, Sulem, Or. june2 PURE Whale oil soap for hop spray for sale at the Capital Soap Works tf FOIt SALE Cheap, light single wagon. St. 11D0 lb. mare; 1395 N. Liberty june3 VENTED Girl for general house work. 0. C. Jones, R. 8,B. 74. Phone 29F2. june2 WILL EXCHANGE Lot in good Colo rado town for Salem lot. 1395 N. Lib erty St jmie3 AUCTION SALE mercial, June 2, for particulars. At 1215 N. om 1916. See page' 10 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED Middle aged preferred. Phone 403-M or ad dress 1296 N. 18 St. tf SEED POTATOES Choice Burbnnk and Golden Coin seed for sjle. Mtan gis Bros., 540 State St. jtme3 WANTED Second hmd baby walker and high chair in good condition. G. C. Jones, R. 8, b. 74. Phone 29F2. j2 FOR TRADE Eight acres, nearly all set to prune trees three years old, for house and lot, must bo clear. Phone 216. junel A DRIVING HORSE For sale, or will trade for a yonng horse 'weighing 1300 lbs. A. Prankc, on Garden road route 7 box 223. junel WELTMER SYSTEM Of suggestive Therapeutics, practiced by Dr. W. T. Tompsins, S. T. Most powerful, nat ural and successful treatment known to science for the relief and cure of headache, stomach, liver and kidney trouble; rheumatism, constipation, infantile paralysis and all female complaints, heart, lung and throat troubles; all diseases of the eye; can cer, goitre, epilepsia, asthma, nerv ousness or any chronic disease. Sug gestive therapeutics properly applied to a diseased body is positive, sure and permanent in its results. Hours 9 to 12 a. in, 1 to 5 p. m., phone 991. Office rooms 1, 2 and 3 Biyne ifldg. 311 State St., Sulem, Oregon. New Today Ads wor while yoo sleep will hare results for yon in the morning. ? Turkish cigarettes only TOBACCO COWAMX i Monmouth News (Capital Journal Special Service.) Monmouth, Ore., June 1. Decoration day was observed at tho Normal school in the regular interesting celebrative manner. .Most of the old soldiers and members of the Woman's Relief Corps of Polk county were present. The Boy Scouts and Willamette Camp Fire Girls of Monmouth, dressed in tlfeir uni forms, met the old soldiers at the train. The girls pinned roses on the old vet erans and then escorted them to the Normal chapel where the exercises took place. The program for the afternoon was as follows: Bugle Call "Assembly." Mr. Har old Tallmnn. Living Flag Delphian Girls. Scripture Reading Chaplain, O. A. R. Music "Star Spangled Banner." Oregon Normal. Paper Mrs. I. L. Patterson. Music '-To Thee, O Country." Oregon Normal. Reading "The Man Without a Country. ' ' Miss Claybnugh. Hoi ing." MrMar """rn" Address Governor Withyeomhe. Music "America." Oregon Normal. Flag Drill On Campus, Children of Training School. Fife and Drum O. A. R. Bugle Call "Reveille." Mr. Harold Tallmnn. The Monmouth high school baseball team made a trip to Airlie last Tues day afternoon, May 30, where they played a game with the Airlie baseball team. The latter were victorious with a score of 14 to 10. The Boy Scouts of Monmouth played SeonU Tuwdav KXC month l,;l, .;.l,nni .,ow tv, ,r m.L IT... ii.uvii .vm iiic vinurjr Willi a score of 8 to 4. The whole family will enjoy reading the Capital Journal. ifm&jimr&.ik LAST TIME TODAY LENORE ULRICH The Versatile Little Actress "THE HEART OF PAULA" PARAMOUNT PICT O G B A F 11 8 Orchestra Music Ye Liberty Theatre , r TO BE SENT AT ONCE British Government To Send Ship to Marooned Discoverers . London, June 1. Tho British, gov ernment probably will lake immediate steps to send a -relief expedition in search of twenty two men of tho Shackleton expedition, stranded on Eleph int island, near the south pole. The Daily Chronicle, which received a cablegram from lieutenant Shackle ton, announcing his arrival at the Falkland islands, urged the government relief committee whose formation was announced by Premier, Asquith yester day to move quickly. The Chronicle asked that expeditions be sent to the relief of both the Shn kleton party and the Iiof sea expedition which started from the- New Zealand side of the south polo and was stranded when the steamer Aurora broke from her moor ings. Lieutenant Shackleton was asked -by cable today to forward further details of the progress inado by his expedition. His first message reported merely th it his ship, the Endurance, was crushed in the ice floes and that the; party left on Elephant island was i d'n need of rescue. I0NAL iv optinued from Page OneO tion that the Coliseum "must be abso lutely dry" during the convention. The first contest taken up wns that of the Fifth and Sixth districts of Vir ginia. It was decided to refer the mut ter to the Virginia delegation withxli rectious they recommend to the na tional committee who should be seated. The Texas contests were next. Chair man Hilles suggested two delegates for each of the 13 districts contested with half a vote apiece. A sub-committee was appointed to consider the matter, composed of Senators Smoot of Utah und Warren of Wyoming. A resolution wns passed to tho e'ffect that the national committee should vote on contests immediately after ho sub corn mitee reports. iBlands May Get Votes. In case of contests where a nationnl committeeman was involved, it wns de cided he should not be allowed to vote. The TennesHce contests where eight delegates at large were elected were taken up next. It was decided to al low tho four delegates receiving the highest number of votes to bo seated as delegates at large and the other four as altcrhates at large. The Kentucky contests, which are 'similar to that of the Tennessee contests, were put over. The committee then took up the ques tion of the status of the delegates from the Philippines, Porto Rico and Hawaii. They have for a long time been demanding that their delegates who have now seats but no votes, be given votes tho samo as Alaska and the District of Columbia. On motion of Committeeman Warren of Michigan, it was decided to recommend to the con vention thaf the delegntes from these .territories be allowed votes. There ure two delegates from each territory. ine six Aiannma "lilly whites" dele gates at large were seated by unanimous vote or tne committee niter an ho;;r a argument by the "blnck and tans," the contesting delegation. lhe contest, in the ninth Alnbnmn listrict. was then taken up. Begins Work on Them. Chicago. June 1. The G. O. P. nn- tional committee today began to un tangle the situation resulting from 40 separate contests, involving 62 dele gates from southern states. Although Secretary Remolds of the committee declared th.) fights involved were, nu ndv bnttl-s for-local control, and the usual fights between the "black ami tans" and the "lilly il . : J j Hughes, Kd, -.-.,1 naiimiig CIIJllCSlS ClOHCiy. I The same rules, in substance, that j governed the contests in 1912 were to be adopted by the national committees nt tne Beginning of the hearings at 10:30 a. ni. As in 1012, the proceedings will be only semi-public, with press associa tion men tie only reporters admitted. ilughes' managers were expected to naien cioseiy tne contest from Georgia, affecting 17 delegates. One delega tion, headed by National Committee man Henry . Jackson, is nligned with I A 1.1 l..-.l .. .1 ' i . . i"na We " T'V,?? il'l -t-tin, .WegaHon, I ye airman Walt er John- . is believed to son, is believed to bo aliuned with hughes. The Louisiana involving 12 delegate also has possibilities of a fight among Hughes, Roosevelt and the old guard. This contest is based on the Inability of negroes to gain entrance to the New Or lesns, hotel where the whites met. There are two warring delegations in Georgia, a (angle in Texas involving the technical point of tho right of dis tricts to send two delegates, and in Vir ginia, where one Richmond district is involved, it is a 'fight between the "black and tans" and "lilly whites." . Six delegates at large and one dis trict delegate are involved in the Ala bama contest, probably the first to be taken up. The regulars in this contest are claimed by Hughes. In Ohhhoma, where four district delegates are involved, it is believed to ne a case f Hoosevelt Hughes. against NEWSPAPER TOR DONALD H. E. Hodges, who has discontinued publication of the Willamette Valley Enterprise at Veneta, Is moving his plant to Donald, where he will start a weekly newspaper with a jot) printing plant in connection. Donild is locat ed on the Oregon Electric just north of Salem. Eugene Register. urae WSiiie Sale Our Display of White Goods Introduces Fresh New Stock of Women's Undennuslins, White Summer Blouses, White Dress Cottons,. Embroideries, Household Linens, Bedding Extra Values at Unusual Prices 416 STATE STREET THE STORE FOR THE PEOPLE Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. We Pay Postage on Mail Orders Politics Knocks Props from Under Market New York, June 1. The Now York Evening Hun's financial review today said: Wall Street passed more completely under the influence of political uncer tainties today than at. uny time in the recent puut and barely more than a nominal market prevailed on. the utoek exchange. Similar conditions, it is be lieved, are likely to prevail until the republican convention selects the presi dential candidate to run against Presi dent Wilson, who is certain of the democratic nomination. Tho political obsession was so com plete that no attention whatever was paid to tho brilliant statement of April earnings made by the Pennsyl vania system and the New York .Mnes or at least the showings were devoid of influence upon the stocks of the two companies. Prices opened languidly showing no important changes in either direction and the trailing was dull and profes sional from tho outset. An early recession of the general list was followed by a rallying tendency and the undertone was strong. But the movement wan very narrow and was wholly without significance except in sofar us it disclosed lack of speculative Bentiment. Report Says Business Has Reached Maximum Washington, June 1. "Business ac tivity in tho United States perhaps has reached the maximum of the present movement," the federal reserve board's monthly bulletin today says. 'the reasons given include: Orders covering factory outputs to the end of the year. A more or less cautious attitude as to tho future. Considerable unrest on the part of lahor, "even where moat highly com pensated." A slightly less favorable outlook for some of the growing crops. On the other hand, the report says: "Mines and oil wells are exceed ingly active, "Lumber and building show great ac tivity. " liailroad earnings are generally ex cellent. "Fostoffiees and similar receipts are at a niuximum everywhere." Boy Finds Police Station Too Tame So He "Borrows" a Horse Richard Smith, an eight, year old boy who resides with Ins grand parents, Mr. und Mrs. W. T. Davidson, at Hose dale, got hist in Salem yesterday Biid was taken-to the police station for sale keeping until his ciders arrived. The boy was tround the station this morn ing when he expressed a desire to go outside to play which was granted. He troitrd off down the alley and after a few minutes and wns seen by a man on the street to etimb inti Nelson liros. wagon which wna standing nliuigside the curb. The boy picked up the reins ind drove off and neither boy, wagon or horse have been seen since. roe. I TODAY - TOMORROW SATURDAY HELENEROSSON "APRIL" A Fascinating Mountain Romance in 5 Acts' OH! 01 HENRY Two Eeel Thanhouser Comedy Mutual Weekly Western Vaudeville Ass'n. VAUDEVILLE Friday and Saturday 4J "1 WATCH FOB THE BIG SHOW SUNDAY JO Z! Ht Z 12 m ZZ II 12 13 12 13 3 una OREGON Triangle Pictures Tomorrow - Saturday VAUDEVILLE 3 Big Acts 3 FEATURING STANLEY & LEA Orpheum Musical Novelty BEN CLARK Ventriloquist & Comedian GYPSY DUO Singing and Dancing Specialty by two girls who. know now. SPECIAL KEYSTONE Special Matinees 15c Children 5c Evening 25c: Children 10c ti II ts u II n n H n u is it u u M II n U n ii ii si II n M M n u 11 n n ii ti El u u n El II I M li li n El U tf II 111 ri ii ii M M M 13 S MISS FABER, Organist ta n ii ii ti M ii A 2 1-2 hour Show 3 NEW ACTS SUNDAY MEET AT THE OREGON' Wy TK2ATRE , n N .tills