? THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11. 1916. FIvT? Backache? Run Down? Tired ? Clean the Kidneys With Hot Water and 'Anuric" IS BELIEVE WIRELESS EN a When run-down after a hard winter when life indoors has brought about a stagnant condition in the circulation most everyone is filled with uric acid especially is this so of people Sast middle age. This urio acid in the lood often causes rheumatism, lumba go, swelling of iinds and feet, or a bag-like condition under the eyes. Backache, frequent urination or the pains and stiffness of the joints are also often noticed. Dr. Pierce says that everyone should have a good sireat very day should drink plenty of pure water and exercise in th opn air as much as possibl. This helps to throw out the poisonous uric acid thru the kin and the "water". But for such persons as are past middle age it's often impossible to do this and lime . salts are deposited in the arteries, veins and joints, causing all kinds of dis SPECIAL TWO FEATURE ACTS PRINCESS "BLUE FEATHER" The only decendent of the great Artie Race on the stage; the only woman in the world doing genuine "Back Indian," .."War Bill" ..and Torn. Tom Dances. FLETCHER CHILDREN America's greatest Juvenile Performers In "MY WILD IRISH ROSE" Ball Boom and Fancy Dances, Comae Duets, Character Im personations . Clara Kimball Young IK THE "Yellow Pass Port" ' A. Story laid In Russia " TODAY -TOMORROW No Raise in Prices BLIGil THEATRE GETS JOB IN IDAHO Washington, Aug. 11. President Wil son today nominated Edward Heddon of Caldwell, Idaho, to be surveyor ge eral of the state. Ml Q Buy an Up-To-Date King Spreader pLEASE note that in the Low Corn King the box is narrow only 45 inches in width. The Low Corn King can be driven into a modern barn and loaded directly from the stable. That saves work. . The spread is eight feet or wider. That shortens the unloading time. The manure is thrown well beyond the wheels. That enables the driver to match up the edges of his strips without driving on manure-covered ground. You know what a big advantage that is. The manure gets two thorough beatings. It lands on the ground in a finely-pulverized condition. The soil immediately takes up the fertilizing properties. There is no loss or waste of valuable fertilizing material Buy an up-to-date, wide spreading Low Corn King spreader from the local dealer. International Harvester Company of America I (beeraersUd) Lw Cora King tpreadan are oU by -jj Chas. R. Archerd Imp. Co. Salem, Ore. tressing conditions. An antidote for this uric acid poison is to take hot water before meals and "Anuric." Ask your druggist for Doctor Pierce's Anuric, or end Doctor Pierce's Inva lids' Hotel and Surgical Institute in Buffalo, N. Y., a dollar bill ftr a full treatment, or ten cents for a trial package. "Anuria" is a recent scientific dis covery by Dr. Pierce. "Anuric" drives the uric acid out of your body. It is a uric acid solvent so effective that it eliminates these posions, cleans es the system, allows your over-worked kidneys to resume their normal func tions, ana just a few days' treatment with "Anuric" will convince you be cause it brings lasting relief to your painful, aching rheumatic joints no more backache or dizzy Bpells. Try it now and be convinced! SAKS EVIDENCE WILL CONVICT ALL Captain of Bomb Squad Says All Five Suspects Will Be Found Guilty San Francisco, Aug. 11. Captain Duncan Matheson. chief of the bnmb I sound, tndfiv deeliire ttint ha nnlieA and district attorney's office now have evidence sufficient to convict all of the five suspects charged with partici pating in the preparedness day bomb outrage. "We have plenty of evidence which the public knows nothing adont and will knew nothing of until the cases are tried," he said. "We have a num ber of new witnesses whose testimony will clinch the cases. We do not in tend to disclose the identity of these witnesses nor the character of their testimony until the day of the trials." An anonymous letter signed "Union Man," sent to the American Independ ent, a pro-German publication, was to day turned over to the district attor ney who haa the communication ex amined by Carl Eisenchimel, hand writing expert. The letter says: "Bomb explosion plot hatched by nation-wide ring inside Military Pre paredness League. Details later. At tempt to crush organized labor. Print notice of this and say received. This lets you in. Casey, Union Man." Little importance is attached to the letter. WTRELEESS IS FIGHTING Berlin, Aug. 11. Since the be ginning of the great allied of fensives, daily wireless battles have been occurring between rival aero stations in belligerent countries. A dispatch from Lugano to day said the Italians complain that their wireless messages are being blocked by the more pow erful German stations which fill the air with flashes to prevent the Italians from getting their news to the world. Day and night the French, German and Italian stations engage in wire less fights. We mail your paper to you during your vacation. Phone 81. A. 35 i am. v Low Corn Doctor Sprays His Throat Between Speeches But He Is Very Hoarse By Percy Arnold (United Press staff correspondent) Bismark, N. D., Aug. 11. With his voice pretty well frazzled out, Presi dential Candidate Hughes today faced what was probably the busiest day scheduled on his whole transcontinent al trip. He had eight end of the train speech es in North Dakota and Montana towns before arriving in Billings, Mont., to night for one of his "big speeches." Talks were here, Mandan, Dickinson, Medora, Beach, Glendive, Forsyth and Jsjies city. Because of the strenuoelty of this program the republican candidate went on training schedule today. His voice, accustomed for the past few years to toe conversational tone of the supreme bench, will have to be coddled along very carefully from now on if he is to finish the speaking schedule ahead of him during .the next tour weeks. Dr. T. E. Hitman, his physician and physical advisor on this ' tour is assidiously spraying the candidate's strained Vocal chords several times each day. In addition Hughes is fol lowing a suggestion which former Sen ator Chauncey M. DePcw made to him at the time he stumped New York on the anti-race track bills, not to talk on the train, saving even conversation, as far as possible, since it always i . - ! . i. i i 1 1 . i i siruiiiB ae vvii'ts 10 try iu turn luuu enough to be heard on a moving train. Is An Effort to Talk Hughes is also taking exceeding care with his diet and is particularly strong on fruit His favorite bieakfast fruit is orange and always before he retires he drinks the juice of one or two or anges. The nominee's voice was very noarse today and it is an apparent ef fort for him to talk. Mrs. Hughes led a gentle rebellion today. Heretofore local committees have been anxious to have her sit on the platform beside her campaigning husband, but from now on tbo govern or's helpmate will sit in the audience. "I want to be where I can hear my husband and see him when he speaks she told Laurence H. Green, the govern or's secretary who is looking out for; her comfort on toe trip. Mrs. nugneB is taking no maid, so her husband, the republican presidential candidate, is buttoning dresses up the back. Mrs. Hughes seems to be standing the fatigue of the trip splendidly al though she misos no opportunity to take a walk. Hughes sprang a new hat today. Half an hour after he had donned it there was a gaping hole n the crown. The governor purchased the new kelly, which is a brown fedora with a slightly curled up brim in Chi cago and some jealous local committee man yanked it down too hard on the hook "today causing the hole. The candidate and Mrs. Hughes ate real home cooked bread today. Mrs. Rosa B. Upton Bascom of Fargo baked it of original Dakota wheat and sent it to Mrs. Hughes last night. Try Pineapple Pepsin for Your Indigestion Pineapple Juice has been proved to possess remarkable value as a stom ach medicine. Combined with pepsin and other ingredients as it is in NATOL PINEAPPLE PEPSIN COM POUND it produces surprising bene fit. We not only recommend NATOL PINEAPPLE PEPSIN COMPOUND, but give a positive money back guar antee with every 50c or $1.00 bottle. Try it J. C. Perry Drug Co. Illay Not Be Start of Big Balkan Drive New York, Aug. 11. Mail advices from a reliable source in a European capital received here today, said that the allies probably would not begin their Balkan offensive before Septem ber 1. The intense heat during the summer months makes daylight operations in the Balkans inadvisable, it was stated1! but the most important reason for the delay was the fact that Rumania will have finished harvesting her crops by j that time and her farmer soldiers will !be ready to take the field with the ' allies. I In view of the dispatches, it is con sidered possible that the capturing of 'the Doiran railway station, officially announced today does not mark the actual beginning of the allied offensive but a preliminary step. 8ILVERTON MAN LOOKS FOB LOST AUTOMOBILE Boscoe Langley, of Bilverton, Ore., is in Eugene today in search of his Ford automobile, motor No. 603,812, dealors' license No. 157D, which was taken from his home one night last week. It is be lieved that three o'f the prisoners whu escaped from the state penitentiary last week stole the car. One is described as bein very short and the other two of medinm seicht. They have been followed as far as Eugene, ana nere an trace nas Deen iobi Eugene Guard, FAMOUS SURGEON DEAD Chicago, Aug. 11. Dr. John B. Mur phy, famous Chicago surgeon, died this afternoon at Mackinac, Mich. Dr. Murphy recently was knighted with a papal order by Archbishop Mun delein. Dr. Murphy's death at Mackinac oc curred at 4:30 p. m. at the Grand ho tel, where he was staying with his fam ily. Dr. Murphy was one of the guests at the Mundelein banquet and partook of the poison soap by Jean Crones, anar chist. Journal Want Ads Get Besults You Want Try ene and see. TRY ARBITRATION Employers Indorse Plan and Unions Have It Under Consideration San Francisco, Aug. 11. Arbitration of all of San Francisco's industrial dis putes will be attempted at onoe. if the suggestion of Mayor Rolph, in an open letter made public today, is adopted by the chamber of commerce and the labor unions involved. The mayor proposed that the central labor bodies and the employers organ izations appoint five members each and that to the board so organized be added Archbishop Edward J. Hanna and four other clergymen appointed by the arch bishop. He suggests that such a board be given power to act and expresses the belief that it "could quickly relieve much of the present industrial friction, correct abuses, prevent strikes, lockouts and boycotts and insure industrial peace without which neither capital nor labor can prosper." Tho mayor's suggestion wo immedi ately indorsed by the Building Trades Council and other onion .organizations are considering it today. The employ ers' organizations have not yet replied to the mayor's appeal. Simultaneously with the mayor's ap peal, the police committee of the board of supervisors rejected the proposed or dinance to make picketing by striking workingmea a misdemeanor punishable by a fine and imprisonment. Says Her Husband Treated Her Badly "In March, 1915, defendant struck plaintiff and threw her out of the home which plaintiff and defendant were then occupying at Medford. Plaintiff was in her night clothes and bare footed and was unable to get into the house again without legal assistance." Such in effect is one of the indigni ties cited in an action for divorce filed in the Marion county circuit court yes terday afternoon by Florence Haight, a teacher of vocal music with rooms in the Grand theatre building, against Fred H. Haight. It is stated in Mrs. Haight 's com plaint that the couple were married in Seattle August 24, 1908; that defend ant has not treated plaintiff in accord ance with his marriage vows, but has treated her in a cruel and inhuman manner, heaping upon her personal in dignities, thereby rendering her life burdensome. The defendant is describ ed as a mnsic teacher with an approxi mate income of $150 a month. The custody of the one child result ing from the union, a girl of five years, is asked by the plaintiff. Also 4100 temporary alimony, $100 attorney fees and $35 a month as permanent sup port and maintenance of the child. Puget Sound Navy Yard Is Up Tuesday Washington, Aug. 11. A roll call in the house next Tuesday will determine whether the Puget Sound navy yard will share in the proposed $0,000,000 appropriation for battleship construc tion in the Boston, Norfolk, Philadel phia and Puget Sound yards. A conference report on the naval bill, submitted to the house today strikes out the provision for all yards. Chairman Padgett of the house com mittee announced he would ask the bouse to vote whether it desired to override its conferees and authorize the equipment of the year. He and other conferees were not absolutely op posed, he said. Think Women Will Declare for Hughes Colorado Springs, Colo., Aug. 11. A declaration for Charles E. Hughes in re turn for his avowal of federal woman suffrage was expected to be adopted at the executive session of the woman's party conference here this afternoon. Non-pnrtisan pleas by the conference leaders, who strongly favor indorse ment of the republican candidate, was counted on to overcome a few socialist and prohibition delegates who wish the declaration to stop with opposition to President Wilson for his refusal to aid in passage of the Susan B. Anthony fed eral suffargc amendment. Announcement of the Woman's party election policy will be made at an open air mass meeting tonight at which the leaders, including Miss Alice Paul, Miss Anne Martin, Miss Gail Laughlin and Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatcb, will speak. The democratic congress came in for Bevere criticism in speeches by Mrs. Florence Bayard Hilles, Mrs. William Kent and Mrs. Sarah Bard Field at this morning's public session on the present status of the Anthony amendment. Portland to Build Three Big Steamers Portlaud, Ore., Aug. 11. Eastern rep resentatives of the Northwest Steel company and the Willamette Iron and Hteel Works signed contracts for the construction here of three additional steel, ocean going steamers to eost $3, 000,000, it was learned today. Twe ateel steamers are already on the ways. Work on the additional three will he started when materials arrive. OIL TANKER STUCK Marshfield, Or., Aug. 11. Entering Coos Bay today, the oil tanker Whit tier grounded on a sand spit just in side the entrance, opposite the life guard station. After two hawsers had snapped with the strain, the govern ment tug Michie hauled the tanker in to deep water. It proceeded undam aged. Journal Want Ads Get Results. Operator at Sandy Hook Picks Up Message He Thinks Is from Her . New York, Aug. 11. The ubiquituous Bremen, Deutschland 's sister ship bob bed up again today, this time via wire less. The operator at the Seagate and Sandy Hook wireless station was start led from a doze early today by a call for "Telefunken station, New York" the call used by all German ships be fore the war. He replied "Telofunken station closed" and asked the sender's name. There was no reply. About 3 a. m., an hour and a half later, another call, apparently from the same source inquired when the Telcfunken station would open. This time the message was signed "D. B. U.", which is the old sig nature of the North German Lloyd ship Breslau, supposed to be tied up at New Orleans. "The spark from a German apparat us," said the Seagate operator. "It was unmistakable and came from about 50 miles at sea, from a low power in strument." This gave rise to the belief that the call came from the Bremen, but at the same time Baltimore and New London, Oonn., are confident the submarine may appeal there nt any moment. Another wireless station reported picking up a message early today signed "Bremen." It reported a posi tion 30 miles off Sandy Hook but gave no destination. Officials of the Tele funken sttion, which was first called, expressed belief that the messages were being sent by some joker from an ama teur station. "Fair Crowds" Heard Candidate Hughes By Perry Arnold, (United Press Staff Correspondent.) . Dickinson, N. D., Aug. 11. It was a vision of service that led Charles Evans Hughes to accept the nomina tion, the republican candidate told several audiences in North Dakota to dny, speaking from Tfie rear platform of the car. Although hoarse the candidate spoke with more vigor thaa on any previous day. At stops in Bismarck, Mandan and here ho dwelt briefly, forcefully on "America first and America ef ficient" assailing the democratic ad' ministration for governmental inef ficiency and coining a few more Hughes' epigrams,, such as: " America cannot hold her own by declamation." "Administration is three quarters of government." i "It is easy to have paper pro grams." "I don't stand for what I don't be lieve is right simply because it is un der the banner of my party." "Private debts must not be paid in public office." The candidate had fair crowds every where. Local politicians said these would have been larger if schedules had not been moved up a few hours without adequate notice to various cities. nV Ymft....S Would Tax Munition Makers Ten Per Cent Washington, Aug. 11. Lessening the tax burden to be borne by munition maker!!, democratic members of the senate finance committee today fixed a flat rate of 10 per cent on the net pro' ducts of all firms mnking munitions or their component parts. Chairman Simmons estimated that this clause would raise $45,000,000 a year $11,000,000 less than would have been produced by the house provision. Products which are sold within the United States ns well as those shipped abroad will be levied upon under this provision. It will be held to have been in effect since the beginning of this year. It will become inoperative one yenr after the close of the war. The tax is applicable to all sorts of firearms, explosives, bayonets, subma rines or torpedoes. Got All He Wanted. O'Brien Did yei convince Cassidy thot he was in the wrongt . Mulligan Oi dinnaw if I convinced him; but Oi ineel him own up to it. Boston Transcript. If Too Fat Get More Fresh Air Be Moderate In Yonr Diet And Reduce Your Weight Take Oil of Korein. Lack of fresh air it is said weakens the oxygen carrying power of the blood, the liver becomes sluggish, fat Mccumu latea aad the action of many of the vital organs are hindered thereby. The heart action becomes weak, work is an effort and the beauty of the figure i destroyed. Fat put on by Indoor life ia unhealthy nnd if nature is not assisted in throw ing it ofl a serious case of obesity may result. When you fee! that you are getting toa stout, take the matter in hand at once. Don't wait until your figure hasJ become a joke and yonr neaitn ruined through carrying around burden of unsightly and unhealthy fat. Spend as much time as you possibly can in the open; breathe deeply, and get from Central Pharmacy or any dinggist a box of oil of korein capsules; take one after each meal and one before retiring at night'. Weigh yourself every few days and keep up the treatment nntil you are down to normal. Oil of korein is ab solutely harmless, is pleasant to take, helps the digestion and even a few days treatment has been reported to show aoticeible reduction! in weight. KM The Refreshing Qhamt of good tea is in its delicate flavor Unfortunately, the world is not full of good tea. You must choose with care. Those many women who use Schillings Best know that the cost of good tea is very, very little. But this is not the only reason for their preference. Another reason a very real reason is that each of the four taste-types ("Japan, English Breakfast, Ceylon, Oolong J brews tea of indescribable charm. Send for the Taste Packet which makes it easy fir yiu te find the type if te thtt fin like best. Qintaini feitr parchmyn envehpes if Schilling Tea Japan, English Breakfast, Ceylm and Oiling. Enmgh fir five tr lix eupi if each kind. Mailed frimptlymrtceiptif loitnls ( stampsirciin). iAddress: LA Schilling W Qimpanj jjj Secind St., San Frtnciici. Schillings Best Sold through grocers only. In itandard packages, S-cz. and a $ ik COCOANUT OIL FINE FOB WASHING HAIR If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful what you wash it with. Most soaps and prepared shampooB contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, uid is vary baneful. Just plain nmlsified co coauut oil (which is pure and entirely greascless), is much better than tho most expensive soap or nnything else you can use for shampooing, as this can't possibly injure the hair. Simply moisten pour hair with water and rub it in. One or two tcisjionn f'uls will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rins es out easily, and removes every par ticle of dust, dirt, dandruff and exces sive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsified cocoanut oil at most any drug store. It is verp erenp, nnd a few ounces is enough to lust everyone in the family for months. TODAY AND TOMORROW Daniel Frobman Presents ANN PENNINGTON at "SUSIE SNOWTLAKE" By Shannon Fife. O -y! V ""fllANN OWNlHGIONff) 15 Tea SdulUac't Beit Jersey City Cannot Protect Its Citizens Trenton, N. J., Aug. 10. Federal Judge Rollstab today granted an in junction restraining the board of eon niissioners of Jersey City from pre- i venting the shipment through that' town of explosives by the Canadian I Car and Foundry company. The em- burgo was declared after the recent. I Hlm k Tom disaster but under the fed eral ruling t ne placing or tnc nan wan declared illegal and the tranipor&ttiou of ar material can be carried on nil freely as before. OREGON TODAY-TOMORROW Vaudeville MANHATTAN TRIO Three Boys who ..Can Sing H. B. WARNER IN "THE MARKET OF VAIN DESIRE" Produced by THOS. 1NCE; Also A Rip Roaring Keystone A Show Worth Seeing NO RAISE IN PRICES j Japan