EIGHT THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, . OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPT. 12, 1916. "Butterick Patterns and the Delineator" " W. B. Corsets" A RIBBON FESTIVAL I lou atsrr.i8i.ng 25c and 59c I Made possible through our New York connections, we have just received M some wonderful ribbon bargains in plain and fancy kinds, that should appeal to all interested in fancy work, holidaygif ts or hair bows for school wear. X Ribbons are very hard to get at the present time especially at bargain prices K and we are pleased to be able to oner such values as tnese to our customers. The greatest ribbon values offered to Salem people this year Ribbons in various colors plain and moire, values to 50c, your choice . .25c Fancy Ribbons, up to 9 inches, values to $1.25, your choice 59c (See the window display) E Court Meets After Vacation TOMORROW'S BIG SALE 812th WEDNESDAY SURPRISE An Offering of Pencil Sharpeners and Webster DictionariesYour Choice 85c Each Automatic Pencil Sharpeners that sharpen the pencil correctly and stop when the pencil is sharp enough. A good value at $1.00. Webster's New Century Dictionary, just the thing for teacher or student; a $2.00 value. Your choice Tomorrow -85c Each See the Beautiful Display of New Fall Silks in the Show Window New Overplaids and Subdued stripe effects in the season's favored colorings. 36 inches wide and extra good values. QUALITY AND SERVICE For Good Goods I Go to MEYERS All Around Town Fresh cider at Farmers Cider Works, 10c per gallon. sept21 COMING EVENTS TONIGHT Cherrinu Band concert, Willsou park. .Sept. 18. Opening day of city schools. k Sept. 13. Former Governor 4t . West; nt Congregational church, prohibition address. , Sept. 18. Willamette Univcrsi- ty college year begins. September 20. Monthly moot- ing Commercial club. Address by Hnrwood Hall. Bept. 25-80 Oregon State Fair. Oct. 4 5 0 Marion County In- : stitnto, Salem. Oct. 13. Inauguration of Dr. ! Carl Gregg Doney as prosi- dent of Willnniotto Univcrsi- tv. October 17-20. Baptist state convention, Salem. Dr. Mendelsohn, specialist, fits glass M correctly. U. S. Bank. Bldj. Fire destroyed three kilns and a small qnnntity of Imps In-longing to .liihu Kiehs near Tiilbut Sumlnv even- Two drunks were each fined $10 in city court this morning. The Anderson Furnace company is working on Ihe dryer to be used in con nection with the city's paving plant. As soon as completed, it will greatly increase the capacity of the plant. Drink Oereo, the liquid food, the health drink. Ask your grocer. tf The weather seems to be tlown to about an average September temperature as the range vesterdav was from 75 to all. The river fe Leading Jewelers and Ilartman Bros. Co., successor to Barr's, There is still the continued demand ami call for hop pickers and reports come in from several yards that at least fit) per cent more pickers are wanted. No finer stock anywhere than at Hartmnn Bros. Co., jewelers and sil versmiths. State and Liberty. Prof. Florlan Von Eschen, who has recently returned from the middle west, reports the wheat crop in the Hcd riv er country us being practically a fail ure, due ta unfavorable weather condi tions. Dr. Alice Bancroft, oyer Stockton's Kye and Nervo Specialist. Steve Henderson, well known in the city ami woo was with the Barnes store about a year anil a half ago be fore going into the movies, will ap pear this evening at the Oregon in the le Wolf Hopper film. "Cnsev at the Bat." Salem's most reliable jewelers, Gard ner & Kceno. Members of the auxiliary of the 8a- . 1cm rifle club are still taking an act ive iuterest in the Monday night drills according to Captain Rosenberg. Last night 30 of the members were out through the innnual of arms and foot movements. The first and second lieu- i tenant of the auxiliary will be elected Silversmiths J M onday evening, September 2.V and Jjl The supreme court, in an opinion I? handed down tnis morning, reversed the J? judgment of the Marion county district ?S , court presided over by Judge Kelly, in J.JjI,tbe case of A. J. Anderson, trustee in i bankruptcy of the estate of Roy H. 1" ' Wassoni et al vs. Dayton State bank. K Claiming that within the meaning of Bjjthe national bankruptcy act a prefer j ence was created when tho Stayton . bank received the sum of $730.32 in satisfaction of a judgment against Roy J, H. Wnssom and II. A. McLaughlin, part Vmi ners in the Salem Lumber company, the .V trustee in bankruptcy appealed to the "K supreme court in an attempt to recover JJ. that amount Irom the Staytotn bank. .". The opinion handed down this morn HH nX which was written by Justice Har ! ris rules that the notes held by the jP! Stayton bank are not in a preferred irV , class, inasmuch as the evidcuce shows " that the notes held by the Stayton bank are not in a preferred class, inasmuch VJ 8s the evidence shows that tho Wassom McLaughlin partnership was insolvent at the time, and that they are entitled only to the same percentage of div idends as other claims. The cause is re manded for further proceedings not in consistent with this opinion. Other opinions handed down: Marcclla Clark, appellant, vs. A. E. Clark, npopaled from Multnomah coun ty, Judge McGinn '8 judgment affirm ed, opinion by Justice Benson. C'urleton Lumber company vs. Lum ber Insurance company, of New York, appellant, appealed from Multuomah county, modified on rehearing, opinion by Justice McBride. Hancock Land company vs. City of Portland, appellant, appealed from Multnomah county, suit to cancel assess ment on real property, opinion by Chief Justice Moore, judgment of former Cir cuit Judge Harris for plaintiff, offirfn ed. li. C. Ounnell vs. Van Emon Ele vator company et al, appellant, appeal ed from Multnomah countv, suit for personal injuries, opinion by Justice Burnett, Circuit Judge Gatens' judg ment for plaintiff affirmed. Kehenrings were denied in Ream vs. Ream, Mathews vs. Chambers Power company, Meadow Land & Investment company vs. Manernd, Roney vs. Lane county, Fargo vs. Wade, Baldwin com pany. vs. Savage. Six Opinions Handed Down As Thinks It Presages Sweeping Men and Women Line Corn Democratic Victory In November Washington, Sept. 12. "There is now no question about Hughes' elec tion," said Representative Frank P. Woods, Iowa chairman of the republi can congressional campaign committee commenting on the Maine election, I dor Four Deep Judge Orders Door Closed San Francisco, Sept. 12. Warren K. Billings' technical knowledge of ex plosives and dynamiting and his past record will be the basis of tho case which the state hopes to establish against him when his trial on charge of 1 :: g cl) one inch with a gunge now of .1 of an inch above rero. ....Dr. F. H. Thompson has his offices remodeled and specialises in Knr, Nose, Eye and Throat. 414. Bank of Com merce, tf The Business Men's League of tho Commercial club will hold its monthly meeting this evening at the club. As this is the first meeting since the sum mer vacations, several matters that have been under consideration during the summer will he taken up lor nil all around free discussion. o Bring your agates home to be pol ished. Gardner & Kecne, Jewelers, Sulem. Willinin T. Foster, president of Reed college, was re elected president of the Oregon Social llvucno society at its nn- getting: mini meeting recently held in Portland. Among the directors of the society elected at this meeting, who will serve for a term of three years ending Sep tember, WW, nro J. N. Smith of Salem and (I. h. Frasure of West Salem. one week later tho captain will appoint the non-commissioned otticers. Ladies Preparing Welcome for Company M CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the nianv friends ami neinhhors for their kind assistance I the city from Camp Withycombe." and lloral offerings during the sad be-1 Although no definite plans were de The ladies of the Salem Patriotic league met this afternoon and discussed general plans for the reception to be given Company M upon its arrival in renveinent ami death of our deur wife and mother, Mrs. Lucy Latimer. W. J. Latimer and family cided on, it is the intention of the lea gue to give the members of Company M ! a banquet in the armory, to be followed I later in the evening by addresses bv The contract for the new heating, prominent state officials and responses plant to be installed in the Y. M. C. ' by t'1 officers of tho company. A. has been awarded to T. M. Barr and! Arrangements will be made for music work will begin within a few days. and after the program the evening will The swimming pool anil shower bath I be spent in an all around good social will be closed at the Y. M. C. A. dur- time when the boys in khaki will be "The whole fight will be over tho murder in connection with the fatal' scats in congress. Yesterday's result preparedness parade dynamiting here, makes it necessary for ns to elect on-j Following the acceptance of the ly eight more senators to seats now .twelfth juror, and the swearing in of held by democrats to overthrow the; the entire twelve, Deputy District At democratic majority, while a change , torney James Brenuan made the open of 15 will do the same thing in t.ie statement for the prosecution. If house. We expect to win a worlungtne gtate nag any m,w 8PUsation in the majority. iway of evidence to uncover during the The vote in Maine is a good omen, )rogre9S of the trial, thev were not in according to Secretary of the avy , ,iieated in Brennnn's statement. He Daniels. , J brought, out verv little that has not al- "An analysis of the vote-shows that . rca(y, bppn ,)lu, about 77,000 republicans voted for Mil-1 T)mt Bil,in ,, TllHim,H Vonuev, l.gen, the, republican gubernatorial : one of ,hp ai.(,us(,J r0m-n said Daniels "from 69,000, e0 ired dllri tho paBt' three years to .0,000 renubheans voted for repub- ,o o ho lean senatorial nominees This ea s cha , by Brennan which the that from 7 000 to 8.000 repub cans ; J f vntnUon to Hrt.n. voted w.th the democrats on national, imn att()ni(,y 18 "In the old .lavg republican inajori-i8 P'arcd to show that Billings is an ties were engulfing. The average ma-!"xre" n explosives that he. has been ioritv was about 30.000. When this overheard to say that he received 2..0 remembered, the n.OOO majority of ' or throwing a bomb in ( h.cago, that vesterdav seem, paltrv. received $200 for dynamiting power ' "It was onlv to be expected that!1'" towers nenr here some time ago more progressives would turn back to"J that he was thinking ot going to their old partv in a rock ribbed repnb-.'ew ork to "toss a bomb." lican state, than would desert to the "W e will also prove," said Brennan, democracy. This will be the ease in all j ' ' tlmt Billings w as seen with a suit normallv' republican states." But in lease containing 4U sticks of dynamite doubtful states, such as New York, thejon or about June 2. This suit case he majority of progressives will stay away; took to Tunforen. from their old standpnt acquaintances "j ''Wo expect to show that he was t SACRED HEART ACADEMY Under the direction of the X Sisters of the Holy Names Salem, Oregon BOARDING SCHOOL and SAY SCHOOL Most approved methods, primary grammar and High School Departments, complete course in 4 Harp, Piano, Voice culture, vio- lin and Harmony, Elocution and 1 Physical Culture. No interference with religion of pupils. Modern Conveniences. Domestic Comforts Scholastic year begins Sept. 11 f f ADDRESS Sister Superior seen to plant the suit case containing! a bomb at tho corner of Stuart andj Market streets on July 22 and that he was seen a few moments later at i Stuart and Mission streets, one block j away. " Conflicting shiries related to the! police and attaches of the district at ! torney 's office following his arrest E. will alsobe depended upon by the i 1 ! prosecution to obtain a conviction. ; Si Lieutenant Steven Banner, of thei : police traffic sqund, will bo the first, I witness for the prosecution this after-j l noon. He will be followed by Ir. Star First game R. If. E. 1 ford, tho autopsy surgeon. I Pittsburg 0 5 2j Biinncr was only a few vards from' Brooklyn H 10 0,the bomb when it exploded and will Evans, Jacobs and Fischer; Pfefferj describe the scenes which ensued. ! and Meyers. When court opened today eleven Second game x R. IL K. jurors were in tho box but great dif-i Pittsburg 2 5 Oifieulty was experienced in getting the Brooklyn 15 1 twelfth man. Eleven men were ex- .UIUU...HUA ui. i .Bi-nt-1, uuoiua au" i niuiucd before Willinm B. Balling, n! I manufac turer, was passed by both j sides. I t TODAY'S BALL SCORES t National R. H. I incinuati a o New York 3 7 Mitchell and iluhen; Benton and M Cartv. THE CAPITAL NORMAL and Industrial School Begins on September ISth. Better work will be done than ever before. If you are interested in Xornml work, Business, Civil Service, stenography, Type writing or Preparatory work. You will be well repaid by tak ing a course with us.. Address J. J. Kraps. Salem, Oregon Miller. First game Chicago Boston Carter and Archer; Gowily. CJ.....l T IT 1 -"..u gun.- n. Ji. , , , D j j th lnor8 ( hicago .1 Id .t( . '', h Boston 3 7 4 ,Il'l .,......,,.,:. t. Hcndrix and Wilson; Rudolph, Tyler' "e "".. ... ..- . "'" " i,l tiow.ly (Called .1 l:tth ' ,lfk. tlallt'e "d e8,''S9 to U J; Those J(. Jl. ft. I Wl... r..if w,.l ,l,w nt',n.iinnii 0 '' U 'judge Dunne imposed most drastic re-j "n i l h j 'Strictions on the audience. With the dolph ai"' , courtroom crowded to capacity and men1 and women lining the corridor four! Notice to Farmers Woodiv the auctioneer will sell your farm stock. Sales for 2 per cent oud guarantee satisfac tion. Phone .ill. ing the work for the next ten days. The expense of the new heating plant will be close to $000. given an opportunity to tell of their ad ventures on the Mexican border. It is probable that the Commercial club will be nsked to assist in the grand and (iowdv ness.) I who are in the room must remain until court recesses. St. Louis Philadelphia Meadows and Gonzales; and Bums, Adams. 3 1 4 13 Alexander Word waa received this morning from Dr. W. (). Asseln who is special izing at St. Paul, that he expects to be home within a few davn. THE New York Sun in an exhaustive article shows that James M. Barnes is the present champion golf professional of 1916, aver aging 73.75 strokes per round. Barnes saya that Dunlop Golf Balls are "the best in the world" Try DUNLOP "29" or "31". Unequalled for distance, steadiness and accuracy. 99.00 a dozen; 75c each. Your golf professional will supply DUNLOPS. The Dunlop Rubber Co., Ltd. Birmlngton, England. Piper and Tafta, Seattle, Washington, Northwest Wholesale Distributors Play with the big leaguers smoke' parade in the business district of the La Corona cigars. i city and that the Cnerrians will be on o I baud with the Cherrian band. In fact, The Salem high school football team the various organizations of tho city which captured the Willamette valley i will be asked to participate in tlio pa championship last year being practic-j rade "when Johnny comes marching ally out of the high school field, owing I home." to the graduation of eight of its mem- bers and the desertion of two others. . BUT TEN WERE KILLED high school dopsters are mighty busy at present framing up a new machine. Quebec, Sept. 12. Ten workmen lost Hex Putnam the new conch, is a grad-; their lives when the central span of uute of the state university. He will, the Unebec bridire collnnsed vesterdav have' iiis work cut out for him whcnjns it was being lifted into place, the school opens next Monday. The first j St. Lawrence Bridge company, con-1 contest will be on October 4, agamst tractors, announced this afternoon after the alumni. j completing - a roll call of their ein- o ployes. Announcement I hereby announce , my candidacy for city recorder at the PIONEER JOHN S. HEERIN DEAD. coining city primaries. Karl Knee. scl2 " ! John S. Herein, for nearly sixtv- ....Although reports were published yes- thre,. years a resident of '.Inckso'n tcjday in the Portland papers that A countv, -.lied at his home at 343 North quarantine hud been placed on the Mi" street in Ashland, Oregon, at 10 Livcsley yard at Livesley on account . 0 -(,1H.k , Kri(luVj September S, of the case of infantile paralysis dis- ,, jlis n(Ie wns Ss 'years. ! months covered there last week the tacts are, ,, . (lvs.-Ashlnnd Tidings, that no quarantine has been placed on i - -L -, - - . . .. - - . .tj-.-t,,-..-.-,-,-, the yards and that the Italian family i .,,,, ,....,,,,, ,.,.. .,:.., in which the case developed, was taken; if ,, ()f - of th(J mMf vq- to Portland, h very thing in tne camp fr(n th( -,.,,,,,, Norwe(jinng am. of the Italian tamily was burned and i,,,,..,, : i.,.r,i,,.i .,.! i ka .... mere is no: American B. H. Boston 3 7 Washington 4 9 ' Kuth, Mays, Shore and Thomas Johnson and Henry. "No Infantile Paralysis at Livesley Hop Yards St. Louis 5 Chicago Weilman and Hartley; Schalk. Detroit Cleveland Klunke and Spencer: i ner and O'Neill. No other scheduled. K. I The dispatch from Portland, )b Ollislied in the Capital Journal yesterday which stated that a practical quaran tine had been established at the Lives ley yards as the result of an infantile paralysis case in Portland, is absolute- D 2 1 ly untrue. 3 3 2' This report has gained tremendous Bens and ! circulation during the past few hours, land the result o far as the Livesley interests are concerned are naturally disastrous. Mr. T. M. Liveslev made the follow- R. 10 K. IT 17 2 2 7 2 Covalcski, Pen- Wanted 1 will pay you the highest cash price for. your use) furni ture. Phone 311, Woodry the auctioneer. the assurance nj' the best medical "mii tiiority. that there i no ground Tor alarm." LITTLE TALKS ON THRIFT By S. W. STRAUS PriiiJtnt Jmtricam Socittf ftr thrift according to physicias danger whatever from the one that developed and which is now Portland. The Artisan lodge will hold an open uieetinir Wednesday evening at homo of Mrs. Fred Cook. 211 South Cottage street. This is in the way of the first social gathering of the sea-, son and besides other entertainment,! an address will be made by Mr. Sword of Portland who is interested in thel work of the Artisans. o ! The box department of the Spanlding : Logging company is putting out fully double the amount of peach boxes that! it did one year ago and now that the season is on for dried prune boxes, the orders coming tu rather indicate this business will also show an 100 per cent increase compared to one year ago. According to 1. A. Hodge superintend-1 ent of this department, the box depart ment has been running at full capacity for two mouths and in order to prop erly take care of the business the ma chine capacity has been increased by! the installing of several saws and nail-' CIS. eietv that was tfiven Hliet-itil tecoffni af i tion at the world 's fair nt San Francis-1 1,1 1 co. The announcement of the society's appearance in Sulcm was made this I morning by the Rev. John Oval! of the he s....iui, MiwMi,.,, ...,,' . The Scandinavian singing society of i Portland will appear in the eity Fri-! day, September 2 at the fair grounds as' definite arrangements were made, Krumbles has a flavor never known before In the thou sands of years that people have been eating whole wheat. 10o Leek tor thia signature 'm i n- 1L - " Chicago Wheat Takes Another Small Tumble ' Chicago. Sept. 12. Selling on lower cables mid bearish reports of an in crease of a million bushels in Mm Kurottean visible suiudv tumbled l,..-nl ing statement this afternoon, "'l tiosej wheat values overnight from two cents who have relatives in the yards, or, o -j.fl ,.,,, A niuv ,ook fo,. those who may have planned to work I imvjI1 n - opening when shorts in the yards themselves, need not feel ruh,i to cover, but the market soon the slightest apprehension. We liave lir(k ml .,ril.os . , Sei.tem- bcr was down below the opening 1 'i at .tl..")l, December down 1 at 4f,2, and May down l1! nt iM.-'i 3 4. Corn showed further decline. Ki-oe selling and improved crop reports with responsible. September was down I K nt S5 3-4, December down 3-S at 71 1-8, and May down at 75 3-s. Oats were down on the weakening influence of other grains. September was down 1-4 at 44.3-4, 'December down "is at 47'i and May down 12 at 50 3-S. ' Provisions were lower on a heavy selling movement. as saying he was thrifty. vears he owned $6,700 worth stock and machinery and made an $8,000 payment on a $28,000 farm. A Connecticut newsboy did just as well with a smaller start II took him six years to save $100. Remember, a newsboy handles pennies, not dollars. This money he invested in a lot on the edge of the city. The war came on and his profits increased so that, in a year or so, he was able to pay off the mortgage on his lot. A few months ago he received an offer of $20,000 for this lot because it was needed by a munitions plant. Luck, you sav? Well, perhaps; but how about the original $100 that he saved penny by penny and the money that he eirncd and saved witn which to pay off the mortgage? It's often the little saving that develops into a good investment. A ten-year-old boy was given 10 A young cents in planting time two years "Iowa farmer ago. He bought a package of cu rented an 80- cumber seed with it and raised a acre farm nice patch of that vegetable for the' half a dozen local market which brought him $6 years ago. He in money. With $5 of this money borrowed he purchased a ewe lamb and cared $000 from a for it. Last spring the mother sheep local bank to had two little lambs, so now the boy, buy stock. He has three shetfp for his investment.! paid strict at- The mother sheep is worth $10 and tention to the lambs $5 each, making a total, business. He of $20 he has earned with his 10-; was very in- cent investment in a year and a dustrious, half. Besides, he sold the wool of which is the the mother sheep for $2.45, with amf thinulwhich he has opened a bank ac- In six count. Mow tins Doy nas icarncu, of 1 his lesson on thrilt ana he knows, it s not hick, cut mat money makes money w hen it's wisely expended. J Georcia is bringing up a popula tion of capitalists through its pig' clubs. The enrollment of members of the pig clubs for this yrar has' reached more than 2,500. The first year 977 joined, the second year, 1,48, and this year 2,500. In order. to be eligible as a member of a pig club in Georgia a boy must own a pure bred pig and he must feed and care for it in the manner outlined in a course of instructions. There are now seventy-two county pig clubs. Of twenty; counties that have been organized for three years, sixteen are now producing their own meat supply and several are shipping their surplus to other markets. Community curing houses and Icing plants have been estab lished in various points and the boya bank their piff money, ' mm Of Any kihd 17 i Ar Any time $ Salem-Independence Auto t Service t EDMUND SON ft BTJBNEE, Props rhotie Ootl or 12o5 Leaves Salem, cor. State and Liberty Street daily, 8:00 a. fh., 11:00 a. m.. 2:30 n. m. and 6:00 p. m. Leaves Independence opposite Postoffice daily. 9:00 a. m., 12:30 p. m., 4:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. I Fare, 50c Extra Cars for Country Trips.