THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPT. 15, 1916. SEVEN mm mmmm t i 9u a a n u a a ri ii a . n ii ii ii ii ii ii ii ii ii ii ii $15.00 1 VICTROLA I $75.00 BIG LIR IS (Continued from rage One.) J $25.00 $40.00 No home is complete without a Victrola. The music of the masters is yours to command when you own one of these superb instruments. Amuse ment v and entertainment for your family and friends, no matter what their tastes may be, are available with the Vic trola. For dancing, for concert or sacred music for grand opera or the popular airs of the day, a Victrola will supply all your needs. There's a Victrola to fit your requirements at a price to fit your purse. Our easy pay ment plan will help you to have the advantage of a Victrola in your home. Come band hear your favorite selections and en joy real entertainment We are always glad to demonstrate the superior merit of THE VICTROLA R. F. PETERS, Mgr. t $100 $150 mm $50.00 Wiley B. Allen Co. ; $200 J FrammwnU TODAY - TOMORROW OLIVER MOROSCO PreBonts Rita Jolivet ' in AN INTERNATIONAL MARRIAGE By George Broadliurst PATHE WEEKLY Always the Best Pictures Salem' g only exclusive Picture Show WILL SPEAK HEBE SUNDAY There are more insane in the United States than Btudents in colleges and universities. Rev. William L. Sullivan, minister of All SSouls church, New York, devotes the month of September to liberal evan gelism on the Pacific coast. He will speak nt the Unitarian church corner of Cottage and Chcmeketa, Sunday, at 7:45 p. m. Mr. Sullivan ia conceded to lie the most stirring and inspiring speaker of our fellowship. He is n man of remarkable gifts of mind and heart and rare spirit, a great preacher with a broadly inclusive religious message. ' When he goes to Ooston its churches prove too sninl lto hold those who wish to hear him. The Kim ought to keep up with the Hub. Mr. Sullivan, born in Massachusetts, was thoroughly educated in the Roman Catholic schools and became a Paulist Father, which is the preaching evnngel ist body of the church. In this work he had extraordinary success. Ho also became a leading professor in a Cath olic college. Through his reading and stuily and his own intuitions he devel oped into a liberal theologian and he was one of the 10 or 11 priests in this country who refused to sign the oath condemning modernists in the Catholic church. Though greatly beloved and re spected he was dropped from its fellow ship. UnembittereJ he took up his life anew. After several years he conclud ed that, his place wns with the liberals and that he ought to preach. He quiet Iv and modestlv entered the Unitarian fellowship, taking charge of a small mission church. Through his remarkable gifts as a preacher and his deep relig ious spirit he won instant prominence, and after a veur was called to the church at New York, to which he now ministers. He is greatly beloved by his fellow-preachers and crowds flock to hear him wherever he goes. Mrs. W. I. Nonhup who won in the tennis tournament last week in Salem, beat Miss Harriet Johnson 6 t, 6 1 in the Irvlugton club ehainpions'.iip yesterday in Portland. Miss Stella Frohnian beat Miss Persis Pettis by default. Miss Stella Fording beat Miss Irene Campbell 0 4, and 6 4. ToDay 1 "3 ROBERT WARWICK in HUMAN DRIFT WOOD World Feature MUTUAL WEEKLY GEO. 0VEY Comedy GREAT WILD ANIMAL Comedy BL1GM THEATRE caccznsnnnnsannBcnnBnannnciiajianEnnnannnnaaaiianci ALL SALEM IS ON TIP-TOE WAITING FOR BILLIE BURKE In Her $1,000,000 Production "GIoriaY Romance" 6000 Feet SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUES. 6000 Feet METRO SPECIAL THE "IDOL OF THE SCREEN" FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN in 2000 Feet A BIG SHOW "A VIRGINIA ROMANCE" The Oregon 2000 Feet REGULAR PRICES n II jiv) ' II 1 1 v II Kzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzaasiaszzazaz-aaacaaanacaaaanai In Marshfiel.l ' snd Jforth Bend 423 passengers and crew, many clad in odds and ends, penniless and in some cases suffering from nervous shock, were dis tributed among the towns people, await ing the arrival of special trains to car ry them on to Seattle. 80 far as ia known now, not a single life was lost. Fire was discovered in the second steerage of the Congress at 1 p. m. yesterday. Captain Cousins decided to make a 30 mile run for shore. The race with death was won by a hair's breadth. When the burning liner cast anchor off Coos Bay, fire was roar ing forward, herding terrified passen-. gers toward the bow. "It was women and children first," said Chief Steward Damrden. "Captain Cousins ordered lifeboats lowered after the deck began to get hot under our feet. Before that thick volumes of smoke had driven us from the lower decks and we were all packed forward "As heat from the flames became more intense, some passengers began sobbing. Most of them kept their heads and those who broke down were com forted by others. Crew Was Heroic. "The real wrench came began when we began lowering lifeboats and the order 'women and children first' was given out. Many women refused to leave their husbands. The men urged them to go but they would not. By this time the smoke and hot fumes were so dense and suffocating on the port side that all effort to launch boats there were abandoned and the passengers marched to starboard. "In spite of the steadily gaining fire, there was no panic. We lowered sev en boats as smoothly as if in practice. The sea was calm and passengers were carried immediately to the dredge Michie. "After all passengers were saved we tried to rescue some of their clothing and other effects. 8ome had run from their staterooms at the first alarm half dressed, and failed to Teturn for more clothes. But we had barely started this work when fire came crackling up through the woodwork and terrific heat began warping the deck." Weary deck hands, their eyes red rimmed from Bmoke inflamation, many with slight burns, were hailed as heroes today by the rescued passengers. These sailors-fought the 'flames to the last. When nothing more could be done they tumbled -into lifeboats as they were, many wearing only canvas pants, and streaked from head to foot with soot and grease. One oiler was overcome by smoke. There were several others injured. . Mrs. Margaret Eeig, of St. Louis, was ill in bed when the order came to aban don ship. Fellow passengers carried her to a boat, and she was landed safe ly. Fought Fire Until Unconscious. Not so much as a foot wetting was ex perienced by any Bcnmen or passengers during the transfer, with one exception.. The ship's baker, survivor of the Ti tanic disaster, tumbled into the water. He was hauled out immediately. Chief Engineer Martland, Assistant Higgins and Steward Tyson fought the blaze until they fell unconscious. Ty son is in Mercy hospital, still uncon scious. Captain Cousins was standing on deck, -at ill hoping to save his ship when Martland, gasping and choking, was carried up. The order "to the 'life boats" was given at onek. Purser Holzer made several attempts to reach the ship's safe, but fire cut him off and he had to run for his life. This safo contained the ship's papers, $10,000 in company money and about .tH.OUO worth of passengers' valuables. In the rush on' deck, the crowding from port and starboard when pursued by billows of smoke, and the excitement of climbing into lifeboats, many famil ies were torn apart. Some did not meet again until all, had lauded at North Bend. There were hysterical scenes of jpy at the wharf. Dredge Michie Picked Them Up. Flashing his "S. O. S." over the sea, the wireless operator stuck to his key until heat put the main apparatus out of commission. He then connected up his auxiliury plant and continued calling help until it collapsed and he was driven from bis post by the scorch ing heat. His call wns heard at the Coos Bny station. Many boats hurried to meet the i Congress. The schooner Tillamook and the dredge Indue were first to reueii her and began receiving passengers. Officers of the Congress remained aboard of the schooner A. M. Simpson, close beside the burning liner so they will be first to board it after the flames subdued. Five thousand barrels of oil in the Congress fuel tanks were binning today, vomiting a huge pillar of inky smoke skvward. The Congress was the big gest of the Pacific Coast Steamship company fleet and one of the best liners on the 'Senttle-San Diego run. It was worth 2,000,000. Wreck Is Roaring Furnace. J. A. Smith, San Francisco silk dealer, declared the Congress crew worked without a hitch' from the time 'fire wns discovered until all passengers were ashore. Some stewards tried repeatedly to dash through dense smoke over the aft er patj of the steamer and rescue lug gage. A number of passengers rushed on dei'k in their underwear. Stewards supplied them with blankets and shawls. No sooner was the galley shift trans ferred to the Michie thnn it began pre paring hot coffee. Darkness was fall ing, and the gloom brought outbursts of hysteria. As the dredge started shoreward fire began shooting up from the doomed liner, which broke from its moorings and drifted. The Congress became a furnace, ra diating burning heat far over the water, while leaping flames threw a flickering glare over huddled groups on the dredge and throngs of spectators on the beach. To Inquire as tao Cause. San Francisco, Sept. 15. James Guth rie and Joseph P. Dolan, federal steam ship inspectors, are expected to begin at once an investigation of the fire 'aboard the steamer Congress which vir tually destroyed that vessel last night. Although neither would discuss the matter today, it is expected that one of them will start immediately for Marshfield. Simultaneously with this investiga tion, the inspectors are probing the my terious fire a few days ago in the low- II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II M n 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 1 1 11 H 11 11 11 u u Our Fall Woolens Are Now On Display Make your choice now. My prices for Suits made in Salem, to your individual measurepriced from $20 to $40 Anything with my stamp wiii mean satisfaction to you. MEN'S TAILORS The best dressed men in any gathering are the men who have a tailor and put confidence in him and let him plan their clothes, The ready-to-wear clothier, almost without exception, has his tailor. If he is dis satisfi e d with the clothes he sells, why shouldn't you be more so? D.il. Mosher Tailor to Men and Women... 344 State Street Salem, - Oregon is m v 11 LADIES' TAILORS . A lady of taste and discrim ination requires a garment tail ored and fitted to her own in dividual figure. In our shop we aim to givo each ludy an abso lutely individual design and an exclusive material, so that whfcn sho leaves our place she has the assurance that she has a garment that is becoming and sho . will not bo embarrassed by seeing the same pattern and stylo on another. Our material and lining are as good and in most cases far better than tho Portland tailors. er after hold of the liner Beaver, which was suppressed after the steamer had come into port and discharged her passengers. Tug Goes to Rescue. Eureka, Cal Sept. 15. Under rush orders from Victoria, tho wrecking tug Salvor, which has-been assisting in the effort to pull the steamer Bear off tho reef near here, sailed today for Coos Bay where the Bteamer Congress is burn ing. It is believed she will be used in an attempt to salvage the Congress. Captain H. H. Logan is in command. Calls Out All Police. New York, Sept. 15. Increasing vio lence in the traction strike today was followed by orders from Police Com missioner Wood which will put prac tically every available police officer in the city on duty in an effort to con trol the present situation and meet con ditions that may-arise should the threat to call a sympathetic strike be carried out. Jefaration See the Cherrians and Salem Special in the Movies. 1000 Feet-Special Reel 1000 Feet Bligh Theatre, Sunday and Mon. paf I a r "l 1 r. TrZ . of Fall Fashions in Footwear We have all the very newest Fall Shoes for ladies, in a wide range of patterns and lasts, in both button and lace, high and low heels. Our windows show you the best in shoes. $3 $8 Reinh art's Shoe Store 152 North Commercial Street r ' tin. f l'mmm'i ia 12 13 12 Ii II II 12 IS I! I: II II I! !! II II Li