TIIE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1917. THREE FREE TRACTOR DEMONSTRATION 1 ' Mlll ' - ' ' f - ' ' This Wonderful Little 2800-lb. BEAN TRACKPULL 6 Horse TRACTOR Goes under trees only four feet off the ground (where no horse can go.) "Gees" and "Haws" like a team turns inside a 10-foot circle pulls as strong on turns as on the straightaway gets into the corners pulls out of soft spots just like a team. You do not need to buy more land in order to earn more money, you can make more money on the land you have with a Bean Trackpull Tractor. SEE IT DEMONSTRATED AT F. A. Kurtz Farm -" Two miles north of Salem on the River Road - . IT DOES THE WORK OF SIX HORSES FOR WHAT TWO HORSES COST TO KEEP It is a light eater never tires Eats only when working and makes a profit for you. Don't miss the opportunity of seeing the BEAN TRACK PULL Demonstrated. Come out and see for yourself. DON'T FORGET THE TIME AND PLACE APRIL 6 FROM 1:30 P. M. TO 5 P. M. AT F. A KURTZ FARM, Salem, Ore. IN CASE OF RAIN DEMONSTRATION WILL BE POSTPONED Charles R. Archerd Implement Co. i JLLI Says Wilsons Speech' Rank With Those of Wash ington and Lincoln By Lord Northdtf fer, (Written for the t'nited Press.) London, April 4. I have taken a few hours to collect opinions of member of both hmiiuin nf ntrli.matit I ii.iuiiu auu HI HJ of the general public. Experts in statesmanship regard the president's speech as likely to rank with the most notable utterances of Washington and Lincoln. Its dignity, restraint and insight are considered ab solutely worthy of the chief of a hun dred million of the republic's citizens at this tremendous moment. . The joining with the allies by the United States is- especially welcomed by Englishmen who are fighting side by side with the heroic French. We regard the coming in of t'nele Sam as the help of another big brother in Frauce's fight against the Prussian bully. We will be able to take care of our own part of the war on land, on ea, in munitions plants and in the treasury, but the territories of France and Belgium have been chosen by the Hohonzollerus as their battleground for the conquest of the world and it is speaking nations Americans, British, fitting that we of the free English Canadians Australians, New Zealnnd crs. South Africans should combine with Russia and with Italy to rid the world of kaiserism just as the Rus sian people united against the domin ation of czardom. Tho intervention of the T'nited States is the greatest event in the his tory of the war since August, !H4. MIX IRON PEPSIN and1 SARSAPARILLA Efftctiv. 1 Combination. j A comprised in Hood's ParaaiMrin mi I'rpiirnn 1'illn. thene valuable i remedies posaess unequalled henlth- value, for the alleviation and cure of a long train of ailments common among our people in this 20th century. , In these days of rushing and push ing:, beyond the endurance of even the ' most robust, nearly every man and woman needs and must have the aid i of the health-givlnff powers of this ! combination of medicines to support and sustain normal health tone. If it ! is not supplied, the depletion of the blood and the broken-down nerves will I soon Rive way to permanent invalid- ' ism and ruined health. I The very best remedies for blood purifyinpr and nerve-building are I found in Hood's Sarsaparilla and i Peptiron Pills. Tou know well the great tonic properties of iron. They ! y much increased and improved in ', tais combination Hood's Parsnpa nX ueXora meals, Peptiron Tills after. 'PRINCESS PAT7AHI" COMING TO BLIGH We have all seen versions of the so called Hula Hula, some of them barely Oregnn t Conference United Evangelical Church April 5-8 The twenty third annual session of the Oregon conference of the United Evangelical church will be held in Sa- latii Ai-..;i K.Q U.r il r. "r 11 -j. loin is secretary, Hev. C. P. Gates of! A- retined version of this daueo is a ieature or tn.) program presented bv the Koyal Hawaiian Songbirds at Bhgh .... ' ( ' I ' ' '"" I ' ,0,3 r J J i'y bp Uw EVERYTHING FROM HATS TO SHOES . E AND EASTER CLOTHES FOR MEN AND BOYS Do your EASTER purchasing' where Reliability is the slogan of each transaction; where PRICES are the LOWEST and MERCHANDISE the BEST BUY AT j Brick Brothers THE THE HOUSE THAT GUARANTEES EVEEY PURCHASE CORNER STORE STATE AND LIBERTY escaping the description of being vul gar, but tho true Golden Hula Hula, as danced at Hila, is extremely artistic. tmu ii i iwp mmm American College Men Making Name for Amrica .in Balkans, Says Carolinan By Wilbur G. Torrest. Paris, March 15. (By mail.) A lit tle band of American college men are making a name for America in the Bal kans today. , This band is composed of more than 50 Voiing Americans who sailed for France about a year ago to become am bulance drivers for the American Am bulance Field (Service, under the direc tion of A. I'iutt Andrew, of LaPorte, Ind., and Gloucester, Mass., former as sistant secretary of the U. S. treasury. Two sections of ambulances in addi tion to many others now working on the western front are with the French armies in the Monastir region of recoil- Today Tomorrow Same Prices 1 ri 'IIRliSllllp BILL BIG HART In the Most Daring Picture He Ever Made 'The GUNFIGHTER' A' m Deadly Undertaking A Keystone v Again we want to draw your attention to Oregon Service COME EARLY The Oregon "Where the Crowds Go" quered southern Servia. Carrying wounded always at night, over wild roads, through rocky moun tain passes and over mountains is only part of tho work these American col legians are doing, according to Knnis Brown, of Charleston. S. C, who has just reached Paris on his way back to America. Brown joined the ambulance service while a student at Virginia uni versity, lie is the first American to return since the Americans embarked at Marseilles for Salonica. "For mouths since our allies took Monastir our ambulances have been very busy in the Balkans," Brown told tne uniteo rreas today.' "irom our headquarters near Monastir we have carried the wounded from the trenches north of Monastir; from Koritza to the i west, where the French blesses come t fmin 1)0 flftllt KlIUU t nulla lnnlr nfnv the mountains and from other points wherever we are directed by the French military authorities. Sometimes it has been necessary to use good strong American arm work to pull even our light American caig over the. dififcult roads. "To give Mime sort of an idea what the wounded are going through, it is sometimes 15 days before a man reaches' a good comfortable hospital after lie is wounded on the. front lino west of Kor itza. Our ambulances can only pene trate as far as Koritza. Here we take aboard men who have traveled for days on mule back. We then rush them as fast as possible toward comfort in the nearest thing to a mule that be found in the Balkans our little Detroit made ambulance. Sometimes the American drivers take their cars almost to the front trenches north of Monastir. Usually, however, we can pick up a loud in the town it self. . . "All drivers are armed with revolvers now on account of the Turkish and Bulgar comitadjis who have no use for Americans. Several drivers, including John Imbrcy, of Washington, D- 0., have had adventures with them but luckily so far no one has been hurt." When Brown left the Balkans seven When Brown left the Balka ns sev en cars of the two sections had been smashed by shells, four of them beyond repair. Among the members of his sec tion were: Arthur Blumenthal, of Wil mington, N. C, famous football tar nt Princeton ii 1913; Levering Hill, New York City, former Harvard student; Powell Felton, Philadelphia, of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania; Charles Baird. I of New York City, and many others, I mostly Harvard students. Before Brown went to the Balkans he had driven an American ambulance through the big attack at Verdun last year. The termination of his six months' ieulistment and ill health caused him to j leave for home. Despite finding himself ion a ship en route which was the victim I of a submarine in the Mediterranean, Brown reached Toulon - and Paris in I safety. The lawmakers at Lansing, the De troit News says, expect to make Michi gau(lie dryest slate in the union. Well it oufcht to be, with water cutting it in two and almost surrounding the two pieces, I Dayton, Ore., statistical secretnrv mul j Rev. 8. .Mumey. treasurer. The bish 'op, W. H. Fouke,:'D. D of Naperville, 111., will attend the sessions and deliv er several addresses. The program' for the three davs is as jfollows: Tuesday April 3, 7:30 p. in. examina tion or junior preachers. ueunesuay, s:;su a. in. examina tions continued. 2 p. m. Annual meeting of church extension society. 3 p. m. Annual meeting educational aid society. i p; m. Annual business meeting of conference missionary society. 7:30 p. m, Metting of conference missionary society; President's address, Rev. M. J. liallantyne. Address by Mrs. Thompson of the woman 'g missionary society. Bishop Fouke. Thursday 9 a. ni., conference sessions open. 'Bishop's address and communion service. 1:30 to 2:30 p. m Devotions and lectures by Bishop Fouke. 7:30 p. in. Sunday school and Chris tian Endeavor rally. Rev. C. P. Gates presiding. Addresses by Prof. L. P. Gilmore and Rev. R. U.' Caves. 'Friday H a. m. conference session. 1:30 to 2:30 p. in. Bishop 's hour. 7:30 p. m. Sermon by Hev. A. P. Layton, St. Johns, Ore. Saturday 9 a. m. conference session. 1:30 to 2:30 p. in. Bishop's hour. 7:30 p. m. Srtnioii by Rev. 11. II. Faruham of Portland Ockley Green church. . Sunday . 10 in. S. S. in charge of Supt. Mrs. Thompson. Addresses by Kevs. A. R. Schiualle and W. S. Plow man. 11 a. m. Sermon by Bishop Fouke. 3 p. in. Ordination service. 6:30 p. m. Christian Endeavor, Ruth Thompson leader. Addresses by Walter Larsen and Rev. V. A. Ballantyne. 7:30 p. in. Sermon by Bishop Fouke Wheat Opened Above $2 " But Dropped Again Chicago, April 4. Wheat opened up today above the $2 mark, tho highest of the season. Corn and oats also made new tops. Prospects of congress de claring war and poor crop conditions were responsible for the advance. Later in the day the quotations drop ped, wheat going below Monday's close. May wheat opened up 'A H, but subse quently .lost 1 1-8, going to 1.9S 7-H. July opened up 1-S, later lost 1-2 and dropping to $1.67 1-2. September opened down 1-2 and later gained 3-8, going to 41.51- 3-8. Corn showed sharp advances in the face of moderate trailing. May opened up 1 3-4 Inter lost to $1.23 3-1. July opened up 1 5-H, subsequently Germans Blew Little Girl American College Man Was Visiting With, To Pieces Paris, March IC-rBy mail) Many times a day the little band of .15 Am erican college students driving cms for the American ambulance in tho Bal kans get their fill of the horrors of K ii ii i a Brown of Charleston, S. C, the theatre next Monday and Tuesday, and . 01 V""1, 18 nZ t(0llnv the interpretation of the Golden Hula ,o1'' ,!,fi " o of Robert Montgon -Hula, offered by Princess Pauahi. Bl''!;v' . boy trom New iork real native Hawaiian princess, is an ex-lnt-v' ''l' 0,,1,y ?"e ' 1 , """W ceptionally beautiful I, j IaX 1 t i i. 1 i r. i National tiiiam Mhvps i'"'-" m Wrown- "ai"i "''"y r"h streets and never allow them to be seen in the open squares. The ambulaiuH base was therefore moved to Negozaut, south of Monastir, from where wo worn ed, always at night, bringing tht wounded back to the base hospilu'i from the front lines." Complaint is constantly made we are starving in the midst of id ty."' But whoso plenty i Unit . ' ii;'HU il IS. wri iiriiuiun iiiiHluiuin i IPCtinhtn IC Sofrflf ! passes and over country' no niiin would uesiHumn is oecreiihillk ot. tl.nvoiinK iu ,-,en,.e time. t, .i i . ., , . I "Shelling of our territory bv the big Portland, Or., April 4. Strict cen- jOenuau guns is ceaseless. Kven in the sorship 'yesterday veiled the move- town we are constantly strntfed. Mont ments of the Third Oregon infantrv. Igomery was sitting in bis ambulance ' Early in the' morning the First bat-1 ,mo t,alki" ta "je tot of a lit , ,. . . . . - . tie girl who was interested to know all talion, conq.rismg companies A, 11, C j,,,.,,,,,. of im.onsequently tilings about and I), left Vancouver. The military the ambulance nnd Aineiii ans in tren- einl. As they tallied and laughed, a STOMACH UPSET? Get at the Real Cause Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per forming their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, lazy, don't-care feeling, tin ambition or energy, troubled with undigested foods, you should take Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound nlixed with olive oil. You will know them by their griping, cramps cr pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can cat what you like. At 10c and 2Sc per Lox. All druggists. authorities vil not permit publication of the destination of these troops. Orders moving others of the two bat talions remaining at Vancouver are ex pected at any moment. They will be ready to move as quickly ns thev can be mustered. With the military censorship so strict, there is little to be told about the Third Oregon and its activities; be yond the efforts to obtain recruits. About 20 men were enlisted yesterday at the recruiting - station oil Fourth street, bctwwen Washington and Stark. Colonel John L.. May, commanding the regiment, has been authorized to incur expenses incident to sending out recruiting details to various towns. Re cruiting parties will probably be sent out at once. Mayor Evans, of McMinnville, culled on George A. White, adjutant-general of the Oregon National (Juard, yester day and promised to do all possible to encourage enlistments in company A of that city, which is one of tho two smallest companies in the regiment.. He said several students of McMinn ville. college wanted to enlist," but de sired to obtain college credits for their period of service. The mayor said the question would be taken up with the college authorities. A DAGGER IN THE BACK That's the woman's dread when she gets up in the morning to start the day's work. "Oh! how my back aches! ' GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules taken today eases the backache of to morrow taken every day ends the back ache for all time. Don't delay. What's the use of suffering? Begin taking GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules! today and be relieved tomorrow. Tako three or four every day and be per manently free from wrenching, distress ing back pain. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL. Since 1(51)6 GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil lias been the National Remedy of Holland, tie government of the ivetuerlands having granted a spo- cial charter authorizing its preparation and sale, 'i lie housewife of Holland would almost, as soon be without bread as she would without her "Real Dutch Drops" as she quaintly calls GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. This is tho one reason why you will find the women and children of Holland so sturdy and robust. GOLD MEDAL are the pure, original Haarlem Oil Cupsules, Imported direct from the laboratories In Haarlem, Hol land. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL. Look for the name on every box. Sold by reliable druggists in seal ed packages at 2"e, 50c. and $1.00. Mon ey refunded if they do not help you. Accept only the GOLD MEDAL. All others are imitations. German shell fell, blew tho child to pieces and wounded Montgomery. He is now recovering. "The boys drive their little cars un der fire when necessary to carry a spark of human life bnoit to safety where it can have n ehnuee to flume up again. "Back there in the little English cemetery, at Salonica, is one who will never return. He is. Edward Sotwell, Cambridge, Mass., a former student of Harvard, accidentally killed-on duty. "We buried him immediately" said Brown. "A French priest conducted the service while we stood around. "Sotwell was the victim of an auto wreck not long after 'we arrived at j Salonica after a hard voyage on a stiit' l ty troop ship down tho -Mediterranean. I "From Fiorina we headed directly! for Monastir," added Brown. "We in-! rived there just after the bnttle in! which allied troops, including the Scr-1 bians, had driven out tho liulgais. Dead I were lying everywhere. The liulgnrs hail retreated to lines north of Monas-i tir and us we drove in they were shell ing the town. Bulgar and Turk regu lars still occupied many houses and' were continuously 'sniping' the sol-j dieis. None of us were hit. "The real danger commenced when I the Germans took over the Bulgar lines' to the north. The Germans moved in j heavier artillery and gave Monastir its I daily deluge of steel. Through their I system of espionage and observation it! was not safe for even a small Ford j ambulance to move through Monnstir's j crooked streets. Shells would drop just behind our cars as they passed along; tlii range nt times so exact that the ; explosions would follow the curves and . corners. I "The persistent shelling op Monastir j filially made it too unhealthy for the j American ambulances there.' It was i necessary to hide the cars In narrow THURSDAY WM.RUSSEL IN "THE LOVE HERMIT" Clark Irvine's Gripping Story of love and High Finance THRILLING COMEDY MUTUAL WEEKLY Friday -Saturday . HIPPODROME VAUDEVILLE BLIGHT THEATRE "-"; ; - fc? i'. X Iff t-t(Ss' TODAY VIVIAN MARTIN ' IN dropping 1-2 to 1.22. September opened up 3, later losing 1 3-4 to 1.19 1-2. Oats followed the advance in the major grains, but subsequently lost on the decline. May opened up I 7-8 later losing 1 3-8 to (53 ) H. July opened up olive cclor. They do the work without J 1 and declined l'k to .i-8. he tember opened to 53 3 up 3-S, but later lost Provisions opening with a good gain, continued the upward climb during tho morning trading. Captain Nemo, hero of Jule Verne's "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea." "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," the greatest achievement in cinema drama will be presented at re Liberty theatre next Sunday and Monday, April H and 0. It is a dramatization of the most imaginative story ever written. All of Jules Verne's characters, including Captain Nemo and Ned Lund are made human iu this thrilling photo-drama. "THE WAX MODEL" Pictograph Comedy Friday-Saturday MAE MURRAY "ON RECORD" A story of the Aviation field, " Vaudevilfe Saturday : Sunday, Monday and Tuesday JULES VERNE'S 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA Police Court and "J00' Filmed at the Bottom of tho Ocean Flashing Scenes from Ocean, earth and sky that surpass all the dreams of fiction. YE LIBERTY