SIX THE DAILY CAPITAL iOi RNAL. SALEM. OREGON. TUESDAY, JAN. 23, 1917. It's because their Turkish blend is BALANCED Balanced that is what makes Fatima's blend com foruible, both while you're smoking and afterward, too. i The milder tobaccos in this Turkish blend are so well balanced with the richer, fuller-flavored leaves as to entirely off-set all "oily heaviness'' the cause of discomfort in 80 many other cigarettes. And this very blending which makes Fatitnas so com fortable (and therefore so sensible) is also just what imparts that unusually good Fatiraa taste. But even so, you alone can decide whether or not you like Fatimas. That's easy to settle try them. The Original Turkish Blend Ifflr A " ' t'ri.ii . i m FAT I MA A Sensible Cigarette T7777 1 ""Large Industry Launched ?nnrtlVeWS With Opening of Bakery arated part built especially for that purpose. In addition to the plant itarlf, and within it, is the well lighted, sanitary, shipping room the wrapping and ai .milling Mm the loading platforms, under cover the office and the store room. The Cherry City Raking Co. was or ganised and financed by prominent men in the baking business, and built with Halem labor and materials. It is un der the management of Mr. 0. A. Wia hart, who acted as a perfect host last eening. He comes to Salem enthused with the beauty and business opportunities thai are open to the young man who is will ing to work and take advantage of its substantial and constantly increasing openings. Mr. Wishart is well prepar ed, bv practical eerienee as well as scientific study, to eater to the needs and desires of the Salem housewives. He is familiar with the best method. and has been associated with some of the most successful baking plants in this country. He has shown bin faith in the future of Salem by not only in vesting his capital here, but alio by de ciding to make it his home. The location of this plant in Salem means much to the city, not alone in better bread, delivered sanitary and fresh, through the growers, but it adds a worthwhile and welcome pay roll to be expended by the skilled workers and employes. When asked what this pay roll would amount to annually, Mr. Wishart re I lied "that depends on Salein we will give Salem the best bread that can be produced. No expense nor efforts will bo spared to establish a new stand ard for quality, and no efforts will bo too reat to maintain it as well as our service. 1 feel confident that your homes will realize this, almost at once, and when they do we will have no less than twenty employes, whose combin ed salaries will require mote than twenty thousand dollars a year. It is our intention to taKe the public into our confidence at all times. As sooa as we get in running order our doors will be open to every visitor, at any time. We are especially desirous of having the housewives of the city learn what this means to them in act ual cash savings, as well as freedom from long hours in a hot kitchen, to the detriment of their health and melr higher duties." Mr. Wishart is a modest, earnest young man, who seems to know his pro fession in no uncertain manner. He has a kindly way and we old nim a neart felt welcome to our city of cherries, af ter which this bakery is named. The 'Pirtnrp TpIIs w W WW w mm -w-w v . The Stow . Box 17. Oregon City. OhimhJ CLAIMS HE HAS LEASE I 41 II I Crant Brown of Cuba Says He Will Give Moral Tone to Boxing By H . C. Hamilton. I oiled Press staff correspondent.) New York, Jan. 2.1. Of rant Hugh Brown, recently impresario of a race; truck in Havana, Culm, will, by his own' admission, begin today to uplift boxiugi in New York City, He claimed lie had closed negotiations for a year's lease i on Madison Square Garden and that Jo- would begin at once to recruit mom i if js $ $ $ $ ! I For a quiet game of Pocket 1 Billitwds, a good cigar ir the ! :: latest Sporting News, call at i The Up-to Date Billiard Parlor 437 St 1 to ; , 5)(! bers for his national sport club of Amer ica. Brown says he intends to organise n club like the famous sporting organiza tion in London, .Madison Square Gar den, ho declared, will be made over so that a 15 story set of furnished rooms with both will be projected onto the Madison avenue side of the huge build- Inside there will be stationed per- uently an area capable ot seating 0,400 spectators, several hundred sec onds and a few boxers. Brown declares he will stage 25 or :t0 high class boxing contests every year. An effort will be made, he do Blared, to have the highest class of at tendance possible, members of his na tional club to be favored in application for tickets. Brown expects lo meet Tint O 'Sulli van, mannger of l.es Darey, today, and will make him ti good offer for a bout with Jack Dillon or.BiUy Miske, the Parmer being favored. Now that Brown has gathered in the; garden apparently Tex Hiekord is ex pected to step entirely out of the way in regard to Darey. He has said ever sineo the Australian left his native Uuid without besoming a soldier that when ever the time came for Darey to make n good match ho would not stand in the way. Darey, however, has refrained from signing for any of huge fortunes nained by promoters. If may be that even yet ho will rotate to sign until The western promoter has talked of Last night, marked another step for ward in the development of home in dustry iu Salon. The first batch of the nationally famous "Holsuiu" and ' Tip Top" bread was baked in the newly erected plant of the Cherry City Baking Co., at Broadway and Market Sts. The new building occupies a site a hundred by a hundred and thirty feet, on this 'conveniently located corner. The site was purchased and the build ing erected and equipped at an expense of about thirty thousand dollars. With the exception of the special machinery, most of. the materials and all of the labor was secured in Salem. The plans for handling the raw ma terials from the time they are received ut the incoming door, from the trucks, ciate.s and families, bv the owners and managers of this new industry. Among the guests were officials of the city and state, and of the Salem Commer cial club. While the regular force of bakers were preparing for the baking of Sa lem's new bread the guests were ini tiated into the latest scientific way of making sanitary bread more nutritious and more economically. They saw how the materials are received and stored in rooms of just the right temperature, from where they are conveyed, as need ed, to the weighing room. Here every thing is weighed in exact proportions and the right amount of eggs, flour, yeast, milk, sugar and all other ingredi ents that go to make line breads and pastry, are handled. The siftina- and blending of flour WHAT SENATORS SAY (Continued from page one.) COAL of individual freedom restrained by law for the general good and this should apply to nations as well as to individuals. "The principles of the massage con stitute an ideal to be struggled for, yet difficult to attain, but in the struggle nations will reach higher levels." nenator romciexter, Washington, ex pressed the fear that the president ' proposals would come as an "al'tront to the Kuropean nations.' OEO. C. WILL GEO. O. WILL New Edison Disk Piano 1 ell tne Victrolaa. Best and Cheapest Qrafanolas ones. Each in every Pianos rented. style end all m fltet gt rt records for each. 432 State 8treet Phone 159 Auto and Car- AUTO-WOHK riage trimming and Driving Enamel. Cloves P. W. BLISS, Auto and F. E. SHAPES Carriage 170 S. Commercial Trimmer Phone 411 304 S. Com'l. WOOD - COAL We make , your linen wear longer SALEM . and ,ook better vuel by our autodry va" room and press YABDS machi n e work, con Salem Laundry Co. Pnone 529 130 S. Liberty St. ld "SSr Mad6 Up-to-tHe-Mlnute The quality of our Jewelers and work is as high Optometrist as the price is low Hartman Bros Co Opp. Ladd & Bush State and Liberty Glasses our Tne Handy Man Specialty. Lenses duplicated Around the House on short notice. Dr. Herman Barr, POBTLAND B.B. Optometrist LIGHT & POWEB Hartman Bros Oo CO. Jewelers ' Larmer Transfer PURE MILK Phone, Office 930 and CREAM or Residence 1898. SUNNY BROOK Storage, Packing, DAIRY Shipping Moving, Auto Delivery Coal and Wood. J Quick, Reliable rhone 222 Service. I 1260 State St. m proposition that wc our independence," shall' said i president ' surrender Poind exter " In case we are involved with a for eign power we shall agree before hand reaching effect. Just after the president finished his message he said to me: 'I hope the people of the United States and in Europe will understand it in the same spirit in which it was given. agree Deiore nanu i T . . , . . kk.., ; to be coerced by an international army I V"7r rn, ' - and now " simple x,ngnsu. "i i 'u u v .v 1 Senator Curtis saw in the address don t believe this country has any 1jnerel a reproof to thc seDat6 for right to try to parcel out Europe. ' f c e P he Qri ina, HitchcH,k henaror Stone chairman of the for- ."t'&Lent resolution." e.g.. lerunous eomnunee, aia: - ii is - . nhtmho, .ii , '1 am very much opposed to the thia a great state paper the greatest of generation. It must have a far speech an "enunciation of the Jfenroe doctrine for the world." until the finished oroducts re loaded; was an interesting ana unknown guv in the delivery department, have elim unnecessary inovenieiit or mated every handling. The opening was marked ception tendered the grocers, with a re their asso- buildlng his own arena. If the garden real v has supped out or ins itrasu .u- mas forward with his plans iWould You Buy a BICYCLE Now if You Could Save $10 We have some Standard makes of wheels which we will sell at prices that will he bargains for you and we need the room. .. SneU and Yale $25.00 Watt Shipp Savage and Standard $35.00 Single Tube Bicycle Tim $1.00 ; ' i 126 So. (Wl St Phone 363 To Box Portlanders. Portland, Ore., Jan. 83. Three Cali fornia boxers will appear nt the Hose City Athletic club tonight in bouts with fast Portlanders. The principal quarrel is between I Harry I'olsinger of Han Francisco, 12S, and "Muff" Brouson, hailed as a marvel around these parts. Jimmy Duf fy, of Oakland, tackles Weldou Wing, of Portland, at. I IS, and Sammy Morris, of San Francisco, will meet Shel Mo Cool in the 125 class. Several other matches aro scheduled. WiU Cut Salaries. Now York, Jan. 23. According to word received hcic'Iiom Charles It lib bets, president of the Brooklyn National league club, now at not springs, .rx., II members of the champions have re ceived contracts calling for salary re ductions. He added that he would not recede from the stand he has taken. Three players have already returned their contracts. The Baseball Strike. New York, Jan. 2;!. Dave FulU to day began preparations to strike anoth er blow in his fight to obtain conces sions for minor league ball players. He expects to receive applications from players in nine minor leagues heretofore denied membership in the baseball play ers fraternity. He let down the bars to players in Class B and C leagues. to most of the visitors, as to the lay man "flour is flour." Only the finest of flour that has been sifted througfl' the bolting cloth will go through into the blender. From here it is transferred to the mi stag roo. The mixing room like all othersis operated on an exact scientific basis, as even the water that goes into thc dough is weighed and tempered before going into the automatic mixers. More than one of the ladies remarked "If I had as much strength in my anus as that machine puts into the kneading l know my bread would bo just as fine n,l lieht as this." After the dough is thoroughly mixed it is taken in steel troughs to the proof ing room, which is kept at a tempera ture of eighty degrees, where the dough raises for five hours. From this point it "oes to the divid ing machine which cuts the dough into pieces of exactly the same weight, at the rate of 2200 per hour. This is but one of the many machines tor the saving of a great deal of time and man ual labor, to say nothing of the free idom from human handling. After each piece of dough has neen rounded, on another machine, it travels through the proof er in aluminum cups, for twelve minutes, to bring back the elasticity that may have ben lost when it' went through the divider, and then through the. mounder. Next it went to the sbapor that moulds it in shape for the pans. Filled pans are then takeu to the proof boxes and left to rise for ninety minutes be tore baking in the big, steam ovens. These ovens are heated with a lino of flues running back and forth on the top and below the chamber. The heat is supplied by a furnace back of the ovens, and uo direct heat or firing i seeu or is in connection with any part of the plant, excepting only in the sep- MiHiniHHiiumiuiiiHiiiiinumiHiiain i Special Values in i HEN'S GOODS Broken lines of Men's Fall Suits are now greatly reduced. Hart Schaffner & Marx $25.00 Suits can now be had for $21.25, and where we have but one of a size, $19.85. We have several lines of suits that formerly sold for $20.00 that we have specially low priced at $15.85. We also have several Oregon Cassimere Suits that always sell for $12.50 to $15.00 that we want to close out and are very low priced at $10.85; sizes 36 to 46. When you con sider the increased prices on all woolen .goods and we wifl guarantee these all wool you can readily see the splendid values we are offering. Special Bargains m I Freddie Must Explain. Milwaukee, Wis., Jan. 83. Freddie Welsh, lightweight champion, has beenj summoned to appear before the boxing commission February S to explain his poor showing against Richie Mitchell here January 10. A Rough Scrap Raciue, Wis., Jan. 23. In one of the roughest 10-round scraps ever Muged in Wisconsin, GeTrrge "K. O. " llrown earn ed a draw with Bob Ifoha. Milwaukee, here last night. Standing toe to toe, the two fighters exchanged wallops during 'the entire route and both were badlv LIGHT HEARTED WOMEN A cheerful, tiirht hearted woraau is the iov of a man's life. Beauty will)! fade, a good figure will change, but the .harm of health and cheerfulness will endure to the. end. But how can a wniaa bo cheerful and happy when dragged down by some female de rangement, with a backache, head ache, and often on the verge of a nerv ous breakdown. I.vdla K. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is the standard remedy for such ailments. During the last 40 years thousands of homes have beeu made happy by this woman' great remedy j Men's 6-inch Heavy Work Shoes, regular price $4.50 to $5.00; now $3.95 $6.50 14-inch High Top $4.95 These are all first class Heavy Work Shoes; all sizes. Odd lots of Men's Dress Shoes formerly priced at $5.00, now $3.90 We have Three lines of HART SCHAFFNER & MARX Suits that ought to move quick at $15.85 They are the best fabric, neat dark patterns, correct style and best of tailoring. You can make a big profit on your investment by buv ing now. SALEM WOOLEN MILLS STORE battered when the gong sounded. tor woman s ills.