Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1916)
11 -- SIX THE DAILY CAPITAL .TOT'RNAL, SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCT. 24, 1916 HHaBEEBimEBSBE - u I! nv ii !l II S3 ii ii ii .j II II CWy FCUIMOMEI i OF THIS GREAT SHOE BE AUG TO?! ! Shoes will never be as cheap as they are selling today. Get all the Shoes you expect to use for the next two years and save from ?5 per cent to 50 per cent on every pair you buy. Shoes, laid away at the prices we are quoting below will make you more money than anything you can buy. Shoes coming in this next month will all be higher, so do not miss this opportunity. All Shoes in our stock on sale excepting contract lines, which include Hanan & Son, Ground Gripper, Witch Elk in both Boots and Dress Shoes, and Ball Band Rubber Boots. NEXT FRIDAY IS RUBBER HEEL DAY. RUBBER HEELS PUT ON AT HALF PRICE-LOOK OVER SOME OF THE FOLLOWING REMARKABLY LOW PRICES Men's Dress Shoes Men's Tan and Black, Button and Lace Dress Shoes, regular ly.sold at $7.00, now go at $5.95 Men's Tan and Black, Button and Lace Dress Shoes, regularly sold at $6.00, now go at $4.95 Men's Tan and Black, Button and Lace Dress Shoes, regularly sold at $5.00, now go at $3.95 Men's Tan and Black, Button and Lace, broken lines $4.00 Shoes now go at '.. $3.35 Ladies' Dress Shoes Ladies' Novelty Dress Shoes, Lace only, sold regularly at $8.00, now go at.... $6.95 Ladies' Novelty Dress Shoes, Lace only, sold regularly at $7.00, now go, while they last, at J $5.95 8 EXTRA SPECIAL 50 Pairs Deyton 12-Inch Loggers, regularly sold at $6, now go at $3.95 EXTRA SPECIAL 500 Pairs Ladies' Felt Slip pers, both Comfy and Fur Trimmed styles, reg ularly sold for $1.50 and $2.00, now go at . ,0,5C EXTRA SPECIAL Ladies' Extra High Tops, tan, gun metal and patent vamp with dull kid tops, good values at $6, to close out, go at $4.95 Ladies' Dress Shoes, Button and Lace, all styles, regularly sold at $6.00, now go at $4.95 Ladies' Button and Lace Dress Shoes, regularly sold at $5.09, big line, now go at $3.95 Big line of MEN'S HOUSE SLIPPERS, regu larly sold at $2.50 to $3.00, tan and black, both in Everets and Gater styles, now go at . .$1,95 Ladies Dress Shoes Ladies' Dress Shoes, regularly sold at $4.00, large line to select from, now go at 1 $3.35 Ladies' Dress Shoes, Broken sizes, $3.50 and $4.00 Grades, some as high as $5.00, to close out go at $2.95 Ladies' Dress Pumps and Slippers, all styles, sold up to ), go at $3.35 and $3.95 Large Lines of AH Kinds of Pumps and Slippers, broken Lines, regular price up to $5.00, now go at $2.95 MEN'S AND WOMEN'S ODD LOTS RUB BERS, broken sizes, in the bargain basement, while they last, go at 50c CHILDREN'S ODD LOT OF RUBBERS, sizes from 4 to 7'2, about 30 pairs, to be closed out at Jfjg BIG LINE LADIES' TAN BUTTON $5.00 DRESS SHOES, best grade, all sizes, to clean "P $2.95 SPECIAL $4.00 MEN'S WORK SHOES, tan and Mack, heavy soles, good values, to clean up $2.65 Small run of MEN'S SEMI-DRESS SHOES, heavy weight, all black, all sizes, while they last, go at $295 These Shoes are regularly priced at less than they will sell for another season, and with this big reduction it will pay you to buy every pair that it is possible for you to use. BRING YOUR REPAIR WORK in and have it done at Cut Rates. Men's Best Soles, 75c; Ladies' Best Soles, 50c; Children's and Boys', from 35c to 60c. All Leather Heels, 25c. RUBBER . HEEL DAY one Friday each month, when we put Rubber Heels on at HALF-PRICE. This is to introduce our New Live Rubber Heels. I I I S3 S3 S! & n a E3 B a B a cs ti 1 P El a El a ti M 13 El CI n c n a a a a a n D El 11 II 13 VISIT OUR REPAIR SHOP ti And save 25 per cent on all Repair Work. Prompt service; Best leather; J Best Workmanship. cBCgnB3BBnnBganESBsaaaBnas3SBBBinnaggaagc 326 State Street Phone 616 n ii u D El ri u m :ggagnaBBgzggBflBBgaBaBBaDBDaaDBBBB E (Continued from page one.) tempts to nttnck were thus frustrated, j "On the eastern front from tho ocean to the Carpathians thero wero uo iui liortnnt operations." Have Half the Hallway. " I'etrogrtul, Oct. 24. Mncl'.euseu's forces hnvc occupied tho railway junc tion of Modjidin, 20 miles went of Con tutiwa on tho Constiinzn-.Cernnvoda railway, the war nffico, announced to tiny in a statement admitting tho loss of Coustnimi. Under pressure of the enemy the Rus woKumniiians retired northward to the heights north of Constnnzn and Med jidiu, the enemy occupying these points, it wu stnted. The Hussion and Ku iiinninus continue to resist the enemy 'm uilvaiice. (The IVtrogrndc statement Indicates that all the Constniiza-Ccrnavoda mil wny from Medjldia enstwurd to Con Khuuu, or considerably more than ball' of the railway, is now controlled by Mackeosen. Medjldia is the junction point of this railway and a new line lending southward to a point near the Unitarian frontier). In the Trotus valley the Austro -tier-mnn forces have made no fresh attempts to advance from Transylvania. AIoiir the Hiisao-Dobruiin-Ktuipoluug line, nn artillery duel is going on. Near Orso vn neni the junction of Ncrbia, Human ian and Trtinsylvuniii hostile uttnckn were repelled by the Hnuiuninu ntril-lery. Serbians Near Monastlr. Pnris, Oct. 24. Serbian troops have resumed the advance" against Monastic, capturing GcrmnnBulgar trcucbes to a denth of half a mile and inflicting heavy loses on the enemy, It was offic ially announced today The Serbian gain was made iuimed- iutelv after the repulse ot several enemy attneks by Serbian artillery. Fresh Herman units reccutly arrived at the Ccrna river front, co-oporntiug with the Hultinrs. All operations hnvo stopped on the Struma front on the allies' right-wing because of floods. On the Lake Dorian front artillery activity has been very livelv. . The British took nn enemy trench near Nakukovo, capturing 20 (ioniums. British Bold Gains. London, Oct. 24. British troops lust l.X night fully consolidated' and secured against counter nttacks the 1,000 yards of (lormnu trenches won in yesterday's ndvnnce against Bapnume on the line east of (iurdecourt and l.e-s Bouefs, it was officinlly announced today. There was intermittent shelling on the Homme front during the night. General Htiiir today contradicted the (lerranu claim that the capture of Sch- wnbein redonbt and the advance at l.e- Sars were made at the expense of heavy British losses. The troops engaged lost only 1.200 men, he reported, and brought in 1,000 German prisoners. "On Archduke Carl's tront, souiu or Kronstadt, tho town of Predeol (inside the Rumanian frontier) was captured yesterday. Six hundred prisoners were taken, nil the south exit or neu lower Pass during the Inst few days Ruman ian resistance has been broken. "Tho fortress of Bucharest' has once moie been bombed. On the Macedonian front there Is nothing new." ODDS FAVOR WILSON " Chicago, Oct. 24 In local bet ting circles the odds on a demo cratic victory November 7 have been backed down from 2 to 1 to 7 to 5. Hughes is still a 1 to 2 favorite. Jim O'I.eary, Chicago's chief betting commissioner, explained: "There's a big democratic wave on throughout the country so t cut my price." " O'I.eary expects that Roose velt's coming Thursday will change the odds again in favor of the republican nominee. To the Yoters of the Seventh Ward: I wish to announce to you my candidacy for the office of Councilman of the seventh ward in op position to the two candidates whose names will appear upon the ballot. It will be necessary for you to write my name on the ballot in the line provided for such purpose and to mark "X" in s front of my name just as though you were voting on any name printed on the ballot. My friends in the ward have insisted upon my seeking re-election, and it is only in response to their pressure I have consented at this late date to stand for re-election. Yours respectfully, (Pd. Adv.) G. C. MILLETT. A new hand-operated pump for the use of glaziers applies putty to both sides savinn nearly one half the lafior .4-in mounting glass. - - Quiet on the Somme. Paris, Oct. 24. A rather violent artil lery combat on the front of Biaehes Ablaincourt, south of the Homme, was reported today but no important Infan try actions occurred during the night. The war office announced was that a French aeroplane swooped down and at tacked a Gorman trench-in the HI. Vaast wood. Sunk Sailing Vessels. Constantinople, Oct. 24. Turkish sub marines sank several sailing ships load ed with food off the Rumanian coast and also one transport Of 300 tous, tne war office announced. HAVE ROSY CHEEKS ' AND FEEL FRESH AS A DAISY-TRY THIS! Says glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast - wathoa out poloont, A Battle In the Air. Berlin, via wireless to Sayville, I.. I., Oct. 24. A score of Merman and allied aeroplanes engaged in a battle off the Handera coast yesterday, afternoon, one enemy plane being shot diwn and the others driven off, it was officially an nounced this afternoon. Two Herman sea-planes first attacked an enemy squadron of three hydro planes, and two land battle planes, rout ing them- The enemy planes were rein forced bv six more machines but were driven back by eight dermau machines. Kaiser at Bapaume. Paris. Oct. 24. Kaiser Wiilielin Is re Lj ported to have arrived at the Bapaume I front to supervise preparations for a heavv Herman counter offensive norta of the Somme, the Liberie reported to day, To see the tinge of healthy bloom in vour lace, to see your skin Ret clearer and clearer, to wake up with out a headache, backache, coated tongue or a-nasty breath, in fact to feel your best, day in and day our, jusr try inside-bathing every morning for one week. . . - . ' .Before breakfast each day, . drink a Rlass of real hot water with a teaspoon- tul or limestone paospnuiu in n s harmless means of washing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day s indigestime wasie, sour hi I., and toxins: thus- cleansing, swout- eninir sn d mirifvinir the entire alimen- tnrv cans before nutting more iuuu into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an 3 .-.-..ii.. empty siomacn is wgnorriuu ating. It cleans out all the sour fer mentations, gases and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate will cost very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleans es, sweetens and freshens the skin, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the blood and internal orgaus. Those who are subject to constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, rheumatic twinges, also those whose skin is sal low and complexion pallid, are assured that one week of inside bathing will hnve them both looking and feeling ' better in every way. WILCOX SAYS LAW - IM DEFEAT WILSON C iL- 1 M.1 oajfs uie . lw luarits men Liable to Both Fine and Imprisonment THE SPRING OF aEBPETUAL YOUTH was what the Spanish explorer sought in Florida. Youth cannot be perpet ual, but with health a man or woman can retain youthful looks till the near approach of actual old age. If u wom an is dragging wearily along oppress ed bv some woman's ailment, she mav expect a return of youthful beauty anil vivacity by using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. home of Mrs. M. D. Coats Wednesday afternoon, says the Myrtle Creek Mail. Some 19 ladies were present, and a very enjoyable and ru-ofifnblo j session was held. Iii an indirect way the matter of politics was brought up and a canvass of the ladies wos madu to determine how thev stood on tho presidential issue. Of the 19 ladies pres ent 18 were for Wilson and one for Hughes. Roseburg Review. WILSON IN LEAD Wiiehington, Oct. 24. ''The Wilson AdmnsoR wnse increase bill will do more than auy one thing to defeat Presi dent Wilson's ambition to succeed him self," Republican Chairman Willcox de clnred today in a stntement mailed to Washington newspaper correspondents. "Mr. Wilson may have succeeded in palming off a gold brick on the presi dents of the railway brotherhoods, but he cannot deceive the men they repre sent, once they get a chance to examine the bill for themselves." Willcox declared the Adamson act makes every railway employe subject not only to injunction but to a fine of 100 to .1,006 or one year's imprison ment, or both, for interfering with in terstate traffic. - This fact has been pointed out to him by William J. Pin kerton, member of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen ' and candidate against W; G.'I-ee 'for president of that organisation at the last election. .- Tho announcement of President I.ov ett of the Union Pacific and President I'nderwood of the Erie of their support of Wilson should make railroad men sus picious, Willcox said. Great Britain Buys Flour m Portland Portland, Or., Oct. 24. Great Britain has purchased two shiploads of flour in -Portland during the last few days according to apparently reliable report today. British agents are eagerly seek ing aiore but are .handicapped by lack of ships and mills to handle their or ders. Thev are said to have paid con siderably more, than the market price, which is $7.80 it barrel for patent flour todav. One Chicaso firm, it was learned, bought nearly 1,000,000 bushels of wheat from the Pacific northwest with in a week. Its agents paid $1.55 per bushel for bluestem, Portland delivery Millers from as far south as Kentucky, and even in the middle west, are seek ing wheat here. ... . . ; The Indies of Tho towers of the Panama cathedral are roofed with npni-1 uhiio u.k;..k .A t - ,-.. uuuiio, r u i ii the Presbvterian lTle,,t th6 sunlight so that they can bs utr utmi'n tu rue i rosov "prion I "v o",,"fiu hnrch held their aid meeting 'at the wen far ou to s1- Only One Night En Route A New Tram Salem to San Francisc o ' Lv. SALEM 11 :05 A. M. - - Ar. SAN FRANCISCO 5:50 P. M. STANDARD AND TOURIST SLEEPING CARS - STEEL COACHES-DINING CAR WiUametteUmpqua Sacramento VALLEYS :- by DAYLIGHT , , TWO OTHER DAILYTRAINS Shasta LimitedSan Francisco Express Lv. 5:43 p.m. Lv. 10:05 p.m. . CONNECTIONS FOR ALL EASTERN AND SOUTHERN POINTS Ask Local Agent for Information'. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent PORTLAND Southern Pacific