THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON. MONDAY. OCT. 30. Ifll 6. FIVE New MEN'S DRESS SHOES For Salem Dress Up Week, Just arrived, the most complete stock of Men's Dress Shoes in Salem at prices unequalled considering qual ity. See the NEW CHERRY TAN LEATHER in the NEW TOMORROW LAST Shoes from $3.50 to $12.00 TIIEPMCE 326 State Street Next to Ladd & ROSTEIN & GREENBAUM DRESS-UP WEEK MILLINERY . Visit this department, in rear room. Bargains in new Millinery. The very newest Hats and shapes. Beautiful assortment of new Hat Ornaments. Velvets, great range of colors. Expert Milliners ready to supply your wants. UMBRELLAS Silk, " Glorias, Cotton, $3.25 $1 to $1.75 50c Children's Umbrellas 50c See the new short handles OiiHnff Flannel downs Less than cost at the factory today. Girls' Gowns,' heavy Outing Flannel 50c Boys Night Shirts, Outing Flannel . . . .50c Men's Night Shirts, Outing Flannel . . . 65c Ladies' Gowns at..50c Nice white ones at. . 75c-60c Extra sizes at . . .$1.00 Ladies' and Girls' Coats New styles, new goods, nice dressy Coats. Ladies' Coats at $6.25, $9.00, $11.50, $12.50, S13.50 Slip-On Raincoats, boys or girls $2.00 Girls' Rain Caps, very neat $1.50 Ladies' Slip-On Rain coats, from . . .$2.00 up 240-246 Commercial Street, Salem. The Capital Journal Want Ads Are the Real Result Producers Phone 61 6 Bush Bank BLANKETS No raise in prices. We are selling Blankets at last year's prices. Come and see. Cotton Blankets, pr. 75c Large Blankets at $1.25 and $1 pr. Extra large Blankets at $1.50 pr. Wool. Nap Blankets, plaids, beauties, at $2.25 pr. White Wool Blankets, at. $3.75 pr. Our best Wool Blankets at $6.00 pr. Bath Robe Blankets at $3.00 each With cord to match. 3-lbs. Cotton Batts at 50c each Feather Pillows $1.25. $1.00. 75c each BOYS' SCHOOL SUITS $2.50 $3.00 $3.75 MEN'S ALL WOOL SUITS $10.00 $12.50 MEN'S $3.00 HATS Special $1.75 OVERCOAT BARGAINS Men's Half Wool Socks 12 l-2c Pair Men's Raincoats $2 up Men's Slip-On Rain coats $4.50 Men's new Wool Mix tures, raglan sleeves, $7.00 and $8.75 Boys' Oil Slickers $1.75 and $2.00 : ' ' ' IS'' (U MISS DOROTHY D Portland's Popular C'untrnlto appearin His Course With Mexico Is Given An Especially Hot Roasting r.,,.u.11 Mi,.k i,-r 'in Kiirpmliitir out the here today, ex-President Taft declared , I that America's present prosperity is evanescent, attacked the Adamson eight hour law, the president's foreign policy and his domestic, course. He declared the nation now is "liv ing in a fool's paradise," and that prosperity must vanish after the Euro pean war when the warriors again be me workers. "Tho slightest analysis of our pres ent prosperity," he said, "will show how utterly unwise tho people will bo if they allow it to have any effect up on their judgment in selecting tho party which is to conduct tho affairs of the nation for tho next four years." As for tho Underwood tariff, Taft said, "had not the war ensued the bus iness conditions of tne country ana tne precarious aituatiou of wage earners would have grown worse and worse." He condemned what he considered democratic extravagance and democrat ic abuses of the civil service. The Adamson bill, he said, "ought to arouse in every clear headed, clear sight ed American the utmost Humiliation.' Hughes' remedy for the strike situ ation, Taft added, would have been to 'offer arbitration and if this was re fused then to have the government do all in its power to protect tho rail roads when they filled strikers places. declaring Mr. Wilson a policy in Mexico should defeat him for the pres idency, Taft attacked the administra tion s foreign policy in general, adding: "The proncness of the administration to write a note well and appropriately phrased and to deem the incident closed has exposed the nation to ridicule." An English militant crusader strolled into a barn where a young man was milking a cow. With a snort she a-sked "How is it you are not at the front, young manf "Because ma'am," answered the mil ker, "there ain't no milk at that cud." WILSON'S POLICIES CONDEMNED BY TAFI OieBi A CopTalkrPdffl uv Liiis rciicr tumor. Terry, the Bit? Cod on the Main I Street beat, halted his number twelve feet alongside Banana Joe's fruit stand and took a nice red apple from tne top ot tne pile. "How you goin' to vote this fall, Joe " he asked. - "I no potta da v. te," said Joe with a grin. "I no getta my second papers for a long time yet. I no getta my first papers until this heeg war bust out Then I getta them mighty qucek, you bet!" "I bet you did!" said Terry, peel ing his apple carefully. "There's nothing blood thirsty about you, Joe. The corner of Main and Second looks better to you than them trenches, don't it?" "Sure, Mike!" grinned Joe. "Thnt's because you're nothing but an ignorant foreigner," said the Big Cop. "You don't appreciate the blessing of being shot through the left lung by a thirteen-inch shell. You can t see the admirability of having the tag ends of what was once your legs cut off short below your belt by a Red Cross surgeon." "You talk liken da crazy man!" said Joe scornfully. "Whata man wanta that?" "Plenty of them," said the Big Cop. "You'll near them any day now Republicans on the tails of the carts and on the rostrum roastin' Wood row Wilson for leavin' the nation in a condition of peace and plenty. It is awful, what that Wilson has done to the nation! If he had but heeded the advice of the sturdy Republican talkers the cork leg industry might now be in a condition of prosperity never before known. I might be walking my beat in a wheel chair. 'Yes. Joe, peace and prosperity is an awful condition for any nation to might now be a sweetly reminiscent he in and the Republicans blame I red spatter on the sidewalk, I can Woodrow Wilson for it. 'Look at j hardly contain myself. I can never what he has done!' they say. 'Every forgive Woodrow for not making the factory in the country running over- I United States a sweet scene of mur time and more wark than there is der and rapine and ruined homes!" men, and wives living wiih their hus- "You maka me sick!" said Joe. l ands, and husbands supporting their "Who talks lika that?" children, when if it hain't been for 'The Big Cop laughed. Woodrow we might even now be in a "Well, what else does it mean, delightful condition of war and 'Joe?" he asked, "when they roast starvation and the monotony of the : Woodrow for not leaping into a war? streets beautified by eight hundred! You can't have war without the up thousand or thereabouts handsomely . to-dute trimmings. I can't Bee but mrnelod cripples. that the only grouch they have '"Vote against Woodrow,' they against Woodrow is that he kept the say. 'It's a shame we can't have: country a land of peace and made it Theodore Roosevelt, but if we can't, a land of plenty." let's have the man he's for. Look at "Sure, Mike!" said Joe cheerfully. APHNB LEWIS VT; g at the Oregon Tonight and Tomorrow E BAILY IS A WRETCH Wires Originator of Story That It Is "A Jumble of Falsehoods" San Fruncinco, Oct. 30. Keitorutiiit,' I una liiui i iiniucm u nan son hud tried to add a postscript to his "strict account ability" note to Germany, Heury Brcck- enridge, former assistant secretary of war has wired a local newspaper as fol lows: "I have just sent the following tele gram to Charles H. Bailey: 'Your letter to Grafton Cushing is a jumble of false statements and you arc an unconscion able wretch for uttering it.' " Breckenridge, who is at Del Monte, Cal., attending a conference of hard ware officials, declined today to discuss tne matter lunuer. Dentist Sticks to Story, Boston, Mass., Oct. 30. Henry Cabot Lodge, United -States senator Irom Mas sachusetts whose attack on President Wilson because of an alleged postscript to the second Lusitnnia note, was de nounced as "beneath contempt" by for mer Assistant Secretary of State Brock- enridge, will make "whatever reply ho sees it" at a republican rally at Pitts field tonight- Dr. Charles Hervey Baillcy of the funs dental school, on whose author ity Senator Lodge made the charges, today reiterated his statement that the letter he wrote to Grafton D. Cushing, which was quoted by Senntor Lodge, was "a fair and not at all exaggerat ed" storv of his conversation with t Ri'm.kfMir-i iltru Hardened. Does my practicing make you ner vous, asked the man who was learning to play tho comet, i It did when I first heard it, liut now I'm getting so thut I don't care what happens to yon. Often the Bpirit of pei'seveerance strikes a man hardest when he is in the wrong, Amhor Pifis isPiflj voursolf.' tl-.r-v snv. 'with nil vnur (arms and legs shamefully remaining I where thev were meant to be. and think how gloriously you might be trimmed of them members if it hadn't been for Woodrow. Maybe now,' they say, 'you'll go down to a ripe old atre and never know the blessedness of living the greater part of your life as blind as a mole, with part of your jaw decaying some where in the trench where the shell exploded. " 'Look at my house,' they say, 'and then vote for Woodrow if you dare. It stands like it did yesterday and year before last, when if it hadn't been for the way Woodrow did it might be one of the finest piles of bricks and ashes ever desert ed by the last starved rat. We'll never be full of picturesque ruins and graves of babies that starved to death, like them that makes Belgium . so grand, whilst Woodrow is per mitted to settle things in the way brainy men would settle them! " 'If you want to know how we feel about Woedrow Wilson,' they say, 'take a look at Maggie, my wife, and Dora, and . Edward, and little John, the baby. Since my wages went up and there's no lay-offs they are as shamefully fat as partridges and as disgracefully happy as larks. It is an awful condition for civilized women and children to be in! But for this outrageous man, Woodrow Wilson, they might all now he hap pily starving to death on the thin charity supplied by the kind-hearted Mexicans, or delightfully dead from a bomb dropped by an airship. Poor little John! When 1 think that, II it hadn't been for the way Woodrow handled things, the saucy, fat baby v Wm. ' & ' r 1 JJ tsjsm Student Body Hears Talks About Salem The High school student body turned out en masse this forenoon to heur John H. Albert and Rev. James Klvin who made addresses in connection with tho Salem Week celebration. Mr. Albert epoko on "Loyalty" and Mr. Elvin emphasized tho value of "Co Operation' in building up a city. ' Preceding the speaking and between times the glee club rendered a numbi of selections. Following the program '' I believe in Salem" buttons were dis tributed. Virtunlly tho same sequence was ob served at Willamette University where the students became thoroughly imbued with the spirit of tho occasion. At torney I vhii Martin, who had visited the university to hear the speaking, be came so enthusiastic at the spirit shown that ho ton mounted the rostrum and boosted for the Capital City. Tho Grant school was the lust visited this morning and a splendid reception was accorded the speakers. This after noon the committee will make addres ses in the Lincoln, McKinlcy, Richmond mid Washington Junior high in the order named, distributing booster but - - - i Our Store Is Busy Showing new ready-to-wear for ladies. The Dress Up Move ment is going strong and now is up to each individual to make his or her showing. Our showing in Suits, Coats, Hats and Shoes is in keeping with the better Salem and we ask ycu to pay our store a visit whether you buy or not. Fuller tons THE new addition to Hotel Marion of forty-one beau tiful rooms will be opened to the public Friday, Nov. 3, jn .connection with Salem Dress Up week. THE event will be celebrated with a splendid dinner at 7 p.m. at $1.50 per cover, followed by dancing. MISS DOROTHY DAPHNE LEWIS of Portland will sing, music by the augmented Booth Orchestra. THE HOTEL will be open for inspection from 8 to 10 p. m. CHAS. G. MILLER MANAGER tons at tho close of the program. Tomorrow the school children write their essays in competition for the three cash prizes. H the evening a huge smoker and muss meeting will be neiu at tno Commercial club rooms with several out of town speakers on I the program. A sandbox, similar to that in use on : railroad trains and street cars, has been I successfully used on the automobile. Tho flow of sand from this new attachment is controlled by the driver. A Milwau kee automobile specialist is responsible for the invention of this new use for Sand. United States rice exportation has quadrupled in a year. OurAirn is toive y ouResulb Wo matter what kind of a Want Ad uou put in our paper wewilliw you results - There Is no very good reason why Ittiiyono should stay home Tuesday even jing, provided amusement or instruction lis wanted. At the opera house there, will be a Christian Science lii-turo by a mem ber tif the lecturing board of the Moth er church of Boston. At the armory Senator Gore, of Uakluud. will tell of 'tho issues before the people fun it j democratic Htmidiuiiit, At the Cum jinerciiil club O. M. Clink, president of .the Portland Cliiimber of Connnorco I will speak and there will lie u gcncrul smoker. Tho Six O'clock club of tho jl'iist Methodist church will be served a j dinner in Hie parlors of the church, and addresses will be niiide by Attorney General George M. Kiiihii anil Waller V. Wiuslow. The .Marion County 1'oultry i unsocial ion members will hold u meeting at the ottiiu of 1. A. While & Sons n the Clieiriiins have been ordered to meet lit the Commercial club for an important session, to bo followed by a smoker. And there. you huvo it. Why stay at Ihiiiic I Discretion. "Yes sir, 1 fell over the side of tlm ship and a slunk 'e came along nml grubbed inn by the leg." "Good gracious! And wliut did you do?" "Let 'ini 'live (lie leg o' course. I never argues with sharks." Today 415 State street 114 Liberty street n r