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THE DAILY CAPITAL JOl RNAL, SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21, 1917.
- NEW TODAY
UUB8IFIED ADVERTISING BATES
Bate per word New Today I
uea insertion, per word-
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Oh month (26 insertioiu) per word 17c
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sponsible for more than oae insertion
far errors in Classified Advertisement.
Bead "our advertisement the first da
H appears and notify at immediately.
Minimum charge, 15e.
HAVB YOU WOOD SAWING t Call
phone 7. tf
DRY FIB Ash and maple and old fir
for sale. F. B. Wells, 2501J2. tf
HAKKV Window cleaner, Phone 1391J
321
FOR RUNT Seven room house, f urnish
I'd. on ( ottage St. I'hone 4. 2-2S
FOR BENT 4 room house, 137C N.
Ckurch. Ml
FOR SALE Good laying chickens.
iari Howard St. 2-21
FOR SALE A nice fresh cow and calf.
I'hone WW. 2-22
FURBISHED Housekeeping rooms.
G04 N. Com'L l'hono 2454 W. 2-28
FOR BALE A stump puller cheap. In
quire 341 Center St. 2-23
VACANT LOT To trado for good us
ed car. I'hone 503M. 2-21
WANTED Experienced farm hand,
steady work. I'hone 27F1G. 2-24
FOB RENT SIGNS-JFor sale at Cap
ital Journal office. tf
3 2-ROOM Apartments, bath, lights,
and telephone. 491 N. Cottage. 2-23
WILL SELL 22 head 3 and 4 year
old mules. Dwight Misner. tf
FOR SALE 5 vr. old Jersey cow with
heifer calf. $50. Phone 1289. 2-21
HAVE YOU WOOD SAWING 1 Call
phone 7. tf
GET PRICES On farm sale bills at
foe Journal office.
TKE8PASS Notices for sale at Jour
sal office. tf
SIX CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS
$5.00. Dr. May. Phone 572. tf
JONES' NURSERY State and 24th.
tf
HEMSTITCHING Room 10, McCor
nack bldg. C. A. Adsitt. 3-1
FOR SALE Fresh cow heavy milker,
also one will be fresh soon. 554 Fer
ry St. 2-22
SKKD POTATOES For, sale, fine gar
net potatoes, big producer. Phouc 152
EXPERIENCED GIRL Wishes gener
al house work. Address rj care Journ
. at. 2-27
FOR RENT Four rooms furnished,
centrally located, everything furn
ished, $15 a month. Phone 890J. 2-23
FOR SALE 1st class second growth
fir. Leave orders Richardson grocery
Phone 194. 2-2G
DRESSMAKING And plain sewing
done at Baker Apts., G45 Ferry St.
I'hone 10G3M. 2-21
WANTED To rent six or seven room
modem house with garage. Address
P. O. box 1(5. 2-26
WANTED A man to drive team in
woods, lossiug; must be experienced
wi.h work. Phone 692. 2-21
A STRICTLY Modern 5 room flat
nicely furnished, only $15 per month.
Phone 1737W. 2-21
WANTED Good shipping potatoes, in
ear lots or less. Salem Fruit Co., 267
S. Com 'I St. 2-22
NOTICE First class lertilizer for rose
bushes and gardens. Phone 2017J.
2-23
FOE RENT Strictly modern 8 room
bungalow, furnace heat, close, cheap.
I'hone 2092W. 2-24
WANTED i or 5 room furnished house
modern, with garage. A. E. Clyde, 467
N. 21st St., Salem. 2-21
RENTER Wants small farm, must
have buildings. Address Journal W.
B. 224
JF YOU Want plowing done phone
91F3 or write route 7, box 129, Sa
lem. 2-24
INDEPENDENT Auto service, auto
any time day or night. Call Hotel
Salem. Phone 208. 2-23
WANTED To buy old oak timber for
logs. Phone or write E, A. Way, Sa
lem, Ore. . tf
GET YOUR Tresspass notices, new
supply of cloth ones at Capital Jour
aaL tf
CARE OF Children or domestic work,
experienced. Phone Mrs. Philes, 2419.
3-6
2 ACRES With 4 room plastered
bungalow, barn and ckieken house,
Hollywood addition, price right. Mrs.
A. D. Peterson, Boute 9, box 160,
Phone 15F3. 2-22
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Will sell
my private sanitarium, fully equip
ped for handling mental, alcoholic
mud drug cases. A man and wife with
hospital experience possessing execu
tive ability can handle my proposi
tion. Investigate if interested. 216
care Journal. 2-23
i Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR I A
OR SALE Baled grain hay and etch
key. George Swegie tf
WANTED Young draft colt 3 or 4
years old. Phono 91F12. 2-21
CORD WOOD Sawed or full length.
W. F. Proctor, phone 1322J. 3-12
FOR SALE 5 passenger Ford for sale.
Good condition. Call at Central Ci
gar store. 2-22
FOR SALE A fine young fresh cow.
S. Ilaumgartner, 2675 Highland Ave.
WANTED A room where yon can be
called in mornings. Call Geo. Bros,
restaurant. 2-21
62 ACRE FARM One mile south west
of Gervais, trade for city property.
See G. W. Johnson. 2-22
FOUND Gold bar pin. Call at Journ
al office, prove property and pay for
ad. 2-21
FOR SALE 1 acre on rock road J-j
mile from car line, price- $350.00. W.
H. (.rabenhorst & Co., 275 State St.
6 ROOM HOUSE And small barn at
& remarkable bargain, part cash,
balance easy terms. L, K. Moore, 317
Board of Trade, Portland, Ore. 2-24
WANTED Ford car in 1st class condi
tion. Will trade my equity in good
house on two lots in outskirts of Sa
lem. L. O. W. care Journal. 2-21
COL. E. G. SNIDER "Whirlwind
auctioneer" courteous, quick, effi
cient. Get Snider, he knows how. Res.
1505 Mission St. Phone 1428M. 3-1
POTATOES WANTED Don't forgot
we are always in the market for po
tatoes in small lots or car lots at the
highest cash price. Phone 717, Man
gis Bros. tf
HORSES WANTED We buy and sell
all kinds of work horses. If you have
any for sale call on us. Clearwater
Bros., Salem Horse Exchange barn.
554 Ferry St. Phone 1031 or 483. 3-6
HORSE SALE The Woodburn farm
ers' 12th annual spring horse sale
will be held at Ratcliffe's barns,
Woodburn, February 24, '17, D. M.
Dryden, president; E. R. Danielson,
secretary; D. M. Ratcliffe, manager
and auctioneer.
MONEY TO LOAN On second hand
jewelry, men's clothing, musical in
struments, tools, guns, bicycles, etc.,
also bought, sold and traded, Capi
tal Exchange, 337 Court St. Phone
493. 2-24
MONEY LOANED On furniture, live
stock, vehicles, implements, etc. All
transactions private. Possession re
tained. Union Loan Agency, 217 8.
High street , 2-25
FOR' SALE 10 acres all under cultiva
tion, new 5 room bungalow, new barn,
chicken house, woodshed, well and
bearing fruit. This Is a snap. Price
2850.00. W. H. Grabenhorst & Co.,
275 State St.
LOT In Fairmount Park for sale
cheap if taken at once. See Mr. Fro
mader at Misner garage. Price $275.
DARK BROWN Horse, age 5, blocky
3 white feet, rope on neck strayed
away from Woodburn, finder please
call at 254 Ferry street. Gillmer sta
ble, Salem, Ore. 2-22
CORN SILAGE For sale, 25 tons at
state fair grounds, with free privi
lege of state barns for feeding. Phone
1163. 2-23
FOR SALE Pair of black mares, age
7 and 8 weight 3300 lbs; one in foal
and good worker, price $425. Call at
254 Ferry street, Gilliam stable. 2-22
WANTED An experienced farmer
wants position at general farming
for the season. Address 10 care Jour
nal. 2-22
WANTED Three sawmill men. Sa
lem Employment agency, room 14
Brevman building, 180 N. Commer
cial" St. 2-21
FOR SALE 95 acre farm, 40 acre
prune orchard, balance plow land,
good buildings. Price $110.00 an acre.
W. H. Grabeuho'rst & Co., 275 State
St.
FOR SALE Five room modern bunga
low, lot 75x75, $500.00 will handle
this fine home, balance monthly pay
ments. W. H. Grabenhorst & Co., 275
State St.
THE Hammond Lumber company has
started their mill and camp and can
use a few men for mill and camp
work. Applv Hammond Lumber Co.,
Mill City, Oregon. 2-28
FOR SALE S. 0. W. Leghorn eggs
for hatching $1.50 per setting, or
$5.00 for 100; all trapnested, Ferrer
stock; also have few cockerels $2.50
up; also have S. C. Black Minorcas.
Phone 78F14. 2-27
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
C ASTO Rt A
FLEET TO HAVE CONVOY
Norfolk, Va., Feb. 21. A fleet of
twenty merchant ships, loaded to the
gunwales with food for the allies, steam
ed out of the capes this afternoon and
turned their prows toward Europe.
Warship convoys are expected to meet
them, outside the three mile limit.
CASTOR I A
Fcr Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
LAURGAARD SCHOOL !
LAW DANGEROUS ONE
I
Removes Directors With Ex
perience and May Destroy
Their Work
That the Laurgaard bill reducing the
term of school directors from five to
three years is a measure that will nul
lify all the efforts of people vitally
interested in keeping the school board
out of polities and making that officii
a prize to bo fought for along political
lines is the belief of Salem school di
rectors. The bill has been signed by
Governor Withycombe. The governor
has also signed Senator Orton's tenure
in office bill, which is designed for the
Portland schools, Representative Shel
don's bill permitting nontax payers
to vote for school directors, and Sena
tor Eddy's bill providing for the recall
of school directors.
There has been much dissatisfaction
among those interested in the efficiency
of the schools concerning the provisions
of this bill, which is declared to be pri
marily intended for use in ousting L.
R. Alderman, superintendent of the
Portland public schools, that it will
have a tendency to bring this office
more and more into politics is the gen
eral belief.
The bill will remove from the Salem
school board two of its most efficient
niembors.asit requires that two new di
rectors shall be elected at the next
-chool election, which will be in June.
Two more are to be elected in 1918, and
one in 1819. The members of the Salem
school board who will be affected are
A. A. Lee, chairman, whose PfWDlrt
term expires in June, and E. T. Barnes,
who would be slatod to be chairman
next year by virtue of being the senior
member. The method of choosing a chair
man has been also changed in that, that
officer is to be elected Instead of com
ing up to it through a period of service
of four years.
A. A. Lee, retiring chairman, declar
ed this morning that the new law would
undo a great deal Of the work in this
city in removing the office out of poli
tics. The present measure lays it open
to be fought, for as democrats or repub
licans instead of on a non-partisan ba
sis. He could not see the wisdom, if any
wisdom there was in the measure, of
changing the school directors so fre
quently as in his opinion it requires a
man about three years before he be
comes thoroughly acquainted with the
business and the working of the vari
ous departments in order to give effi
cient consideration to the matters that
come up.
It lays the board open to having in
experienced men run the schools and
with the election of two new members
each year who are unacquainted with
the policies of the board and with the
situation in general, there is a possi
bility that men hostile to the policy of
the board can be elected to the board
and reverse its attitude to the detri
ment of the schools. In the conduct of
the business end of the school board af
fairs, Mr. Lee declares that it is fully
three years before a director becomes
fully acquainted with the ins and outs
of purchasing materials and supplies,
etc.
Under the new system, the two new
members elected could dominate the
board by securing the collusion of one
ether members. In this way members
hostile to progress of the schools, or an
element hostile to the high schools,
could creep into power and in a few
short years nullify the good work of the
past fifteen years.
The act in itself practically legislates
certain members of the school board
out of office. Mr. Lee declares he does
not think it a good piece of business,
although it really concerns him little
because his term ends m June. As to
Mr. Barnes, his service as a school di
rector is now vastly more valuable than
when he was elected, although when
he was elected he brought to the office
a well trained business acumen. It has
been admitted that the services of Mr.
Barnes on the school board as a pur
chasing agent has been invaluable and,
accordingly, when such a measure as
the Laurgaard bill is passed and made
a law, it strikes hard at the efficiency
of the schools. Other directors of the
Salem schools, who have gone into the
office with preconceived ideas concern
ing how things should be run and with
decided opinions hostile to certain in-
SURE WAY TO GET
RID OF DANDRUFF
There is one sure wav that never
fails to remove dandruff completely
end that is to dissolve it. This destroys
it entirely. To do this, just get about
four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid
arvon; apply it at night when retiring;
use enough to moisten the scalp and rub
it in gently with the finger tips.
By morning, most if not all. of your
dandruff will be gone, and three or
four more applications will completely
dissolve and entirely destroy every sin
gle sign and trace of it, no matter how
much dandruff you may have.
You will find, too, ihat all itching
and digging of the scalp will stop in
stantly, and your hair will be fluffy,
lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and
look and feel a hnndred times better.
You can get liquid arvon at any drug
store. It is inexpensive, and four
ounces is all you will need. This sim
ple remedv has never been known to
fail.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORiA
Falling and breaking his arm was
the mishap of MarshnH Ryan yesterday
in the High school gym. The arm was
fractured twice just above the wrist. I
Young Ryan had climbed up the lad
der to untangle the basketball net
when one of his friends playfully
shook the ladder causing the fall.
Marshall Ryan is the son of asisst
ant stato treasurer Thos. F. Ryau, who
resides at 360 North Capitol street.
BE CAREFUL IN USING
SOAP ON YOUR HAIR
Most soaps and prepared shampoos
contain too much alkali, which is very
injurious, as it dries the scalp and
makes the hair brittle.
The best thing to use is .just plain
mulsified cocoanut oil, for it is pure
and entirely greaselcss. It's very cheap
and beats the most expensive soaps or
anything else all to pieces. You can get
this at any drug store, and a few ounc
es will last the whole family for months
Simplv moisten the hair with water
and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all
that is required. It makes an abundance
of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thor
oughly, rinses out easily. The hair
dries quickly and evenly, and is soft,
fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy, and
easy to handle. Kcsides, it loosens and
takes out every particle of dust, dirt
and dandruff.
stitutions, have found their ideas
changing as their term runs on and they
admit that being a school director is
a serious business and one that requires
experience.
GIRLS
Alhambra Musical
Comedy Co.
HONEY MOON GIRLS
MUSIC, LAUGHTER, PRETTY GIRLS,
NEW SHOW, NEW PEOPLE
THTODAY--FRIDAY
BLiGN
THEATRE
TODAY-TOMORROW
DANIEL FROHMAN
Presents
MARGUERITE CLARK
In a Picturization of Her Greatest Stage Success
SNOW WHITE
WiOametteY.W.CA.
Elects President
At a special meeting of the Y. W.
C. A., of Willamette University, held
after chapel today Miss Fannie Cc-
Kennon was elected president of the i
organization. Her term of office will
commence with the installation on
March 8.
In the work of the coming term
Miss McKennon will be assisted by
Mildred Wiggins, vice president; Mar !
garet Fuller, secretary; and Vesta Mul- j
ligan, treasurer. All of tho officers!
elect arc active workers in the Chris
tian association.
At present Miss McKennon is secre
tary of the Associated student body,
and chairman of the Y. W. extension
committee. As a junior she has al
ways taken an active part in class af
fairs, she is also a prominent member
of the Philodosian Literary Society, i
Her helpers are numbered among the
leading women of the student body. I
With such an array of popular per
sonages to heal the organization, its
future work is certain of conscientious
fulfillment.
Under the leadership of Miss Aetna
Emmel, the outgoing president, many
things havo Ibeen accomplished dur
ing the year. The extension work has j
never before exercised such a wide
influence upon the communities fav
ored. Seral classes at Chcmawa
have been conducted a greater part of
the year. In addition the women have
saved up a $125 to loan to co-eds, who
desire to attend the annual conference
at Seabcck.
According to the faculty ruling the
presidency of the Y. W. is a major
student body office.
BROKE HIS ARM.
Matinee 10c
Evening 15c
Children . 5c
The Beloved Fairy Tale
YE LIBERTY
Two Days
Matinee
Evening
New Spring
Shoes and Pumps
Arriving Daily at Salem's
Cash Shoe Store
THE BOOTERY
If you could buy all your merchandise as cheap as you can your shoes at
"The Bootery" you would have no cause to complain about the high cost of
living. You would never have any worries about your accounts because you
would always pay cash, and you could soon open a savings account on wh t
you would save. Come in and see just how much you can save on your next
pair.
WE HAVE A LARGE LINE OF NEW PUMPS IN ALL THE NEW STYLES
THAT WILL BE SO POPULAR THIS SEASON, PRICED FROM
$2.50 to $4.00
MEN'S WORK SHOES IN ALL THE BEST LEATHERS
$2.50 to $4.00
CHILDREN'S SHOES, BUTTON AND LACE, BIG LINE TO SELECT
FROM
50c to $2.00
Watch our Cash Plan grow in popularity and watch our adds for anounce
ments of new Shoes as we have a big surprise in store for you. Now do not
miss this as we will spring it within the week.
"THE BIG STORE WITH THE SMALL PRICES"
I PHONE igg jA
1196 cSS Hi
QlHMIIIIMIIIM epillllllHai
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