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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1917)
TWO THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1917. You NeedNot Spend a Lot of Money to Have a Lot of Pretty Vaists ; Not if you buy them here; in fact it might be a surprisingly small sum. t I I t X STYLES AS ILLUSTRATED New Wirthmor $1 ' Sold here only. X X I X i The Finest Dollar Waist in America Si Fneirfs' kmml Meefog Ends Session at Hewberg TTowberg, Org., Juno .20, The 25th anuual session of Oregon yearly meeting f the Fiicnds church closed yesterday afternoon, after a very successful gath ering. The departments of homo mis ions and of systematic and proportion ate giving occupied attention during the day. Delegate were clioson to the fiveluuttee wag appointed to arrange tor the ? 'ears' .meeting, which convenes in Octo-j proper celebration of the anniversary. er at Richmond, Ind., as follows: One of the moat interesting addresses Homer L. Cox, Pnrtlnndt Josephine Hocketr, ttulam; K. H. Woodward, New- berg; T. O. Perisho, GrsenloafV Idaho; Lulo p iOr ' j mm,mm mn Krai mm- himw t rn., lMlllMlf - m lr1l- mm " V7W ' l -r. - i . : ilHW I H r,:n -w & lire 1 v . J ! COSi? THIS may be a good deal like Abraham Lincoln's question: "How long should a man's legs be?" And it can be an swered almost as shortly. You don't need to pay a cent more than the price of a Diamond Tire for all the mm 1 VI mst0 ' . t4&lT ECONOMICAL, DELIGHTFUL LIGHT PLACE TO TRADE , SfNO IS WIS MAIL ORDERS-HE P4Y 46 STATf ST SAim-UKtUVm Levi T. Pennington, Newborg; Edith II. Minchin, Dundee; Milo P. Elliott, .New berg, and F. M. George, Portland. The alternates are O. J. Sherman, Portland; Kara O. Pearson, Grcenleaf, Idaho; Sumner Binford, Caldwell, Idaho; Kstella Crozer, Rosednle; Anna B. Miles, Halem; Bertha K. Terrell, Newborg; lh-, T. W. Hester, Newberg, and Lomuel W. Heston, Ureeuleaf, Idaho. Next year will mark the 25th an niversary of the establishment of j of the entire session was the one on missions in Central America, by Eev. (. II. Jackson, one of the returned Lot U. Peorcf 4 Son service and mileage you can ever hope to get from any tire. ' Come into our store today and learn the "Fair List" price for your size. We wiQ be glad to tell you, if we can, how to get more mileage out of the tires now on your car. Every Diamond Tire most deliver full value in ser vice. If ever a Diamond Tire fails, a cheerful, willing adjustment will be promptly made. Lot L. Pearce & Son 236 N. Commercial St. Salem, Ore. To be specific, $1.00 will buy a neat, worthy, appealing, de pendable made, perfect fitting waist. Two dollars, it's true, will buy a finer Blouse, but the thought we want to con vey is that in these moderate priced waists, you get real style distinction and all that goes to make a blouse desir able. . ; Waists POSTAGE J. C C Corsets "For Women Who Care". COCCHI IS ARHESTED Rome, June 21. Alfredo Coc chi, wanted by the New York authorities for trial on the charge of murdering Ruth Cru gor, 17 year old sehool girl, was arrested at Bologne by Ital ian authorities this afternoon. Cocchi has been under observa tion for several weeks. Tho Italian authorities moved promptly on receipt of advices through American Ambassador l'n go requesting that he be de tained. missionaries from that r.oglected part of the western hemisphere- Tho matter of the selection of rep resentatives to a conference of all Friends after the close of the present war was referred to the permanent board of the yearly meeting with power to act. This conference is called by English Friends, and already va rious commisisons are working on in vestigations in preparation for this con ference. President Pennington, of Pacific eollege, is one of the commis sioners in one lino of this investiga tion. The subjoet of peace has occupied a large part of the time of the annual session, A memorial was approved by tho yearly meeting in honor of John Frederick Hanson, late of Portland, a noted advocate of peace and arbitra tion. One of tho lust acts of the ses sion was the expression of apprecia tion to the president and congress for the consideration shown to Friends in ezomptmc thein from military service. Much emphasis was laid during the gathering on tho principal lines in which Friend are serving Red Cross and Army x. M. V A., but especially alien enemy relief, war victims' re lief and the Friends reclamation units These have long been serving under the British flag, and now a force is under training in Haverford collece. which a number of Oregon young xricnas nave joined.' ALKALI MAKES SOAP BAD FOR WASHING HAIR Most soups and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp aud mnkes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain mulsified rocoanut oil, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap mid beat the most expensive soaps or anything else nil to pieces. You can get. tins at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Himplv moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all that is required. It makes an abund ance of rich, ereamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, nnd rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and caay to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Cigarettt Causes Arrest of Deserter Portland, Or.. June 21. Sol 1S1;1. alias Jack Gibson, here todnv faces the charge of deserting from the navy in time of war, punishable by death. ttlapp s entire trouble ran b traced I to one indiscretion, lie blew cigarette smoke into the tta'e of a nolicemau. Tho officer demanded Blupp's registra- tio eatti. " Mot eld mioitgh," replied Bla pp. "Didn't have to register. ' The iiolircnuxn then arrested Blaim for violating t!e law prohibiting minors from smoking. Uttvr mvestia tion showed that 1PP deserted from'tioni 'nf th, ski, ,d walp. onT the cruiser ISew Orleans aud was turn-Ik. . .., ..j i . n c,.L He is not of age. I By AZHTB Mm. Charles I MA'. ;n ia,, Saturday for Washington, D. C, to join her husband, Senator McNary. She will pevsa several week in Wuhintrton. re- iunuug wun senator Mcary in the early fall. Mr. and Mrs. . 1). Cmtti at T. Grande, who- have been passing a few days in Halem as th euesta of Judce and Mrs. Georgo O. Bingham, motored noma i uesaey evening. Mrs. E. E. Meriree of Portland in the house guest of Mrs. James A. Wil son for several days. www Miss Helen Hunt entertained a co terie of young folk Tuesday evening with a line party at the Oreaon theatter rou owe a Dy delightful rerreshment at The Spa. Mr. and Mrs. La ban Steevea chaper oned the party. Those bidden were: f :. r t . ' . t r i i 'Ulna jiuiiei oiwven, juibb vrreicuen Parounagian, Miss Grace Hunt, Charles -Mcujeuen, iiobin .Fisher, Kenneth i,ecg, Harlan Hunt, Loren Simpson, Armin Uerger, Bayard Findley, f-red Blake and Douglas Walker. Mrs. C. P. Bishop left yesterday for Brownsville where she will visit friends for a few days. Mrs. M. J. Wiseearver of McMinn ville, is the week end guest of Mrs. J. G. Richardson. Mrs. Wiseearver has many friends in Salem, having frequently visited here when her brother-in-law and sister, Dr. and Mrs. Frank E. Smith of Portland, made their home in this city. Tomorrow Mrs Richardson will en tertain in honor of her guest. Mrs. George C. Will has as her guest for a week or two, Mrs. Nellie Grills of Portland. Friday afternoon, the Unitarian Alli ance will meet t the residence of Mrs. Clarence S. Hamilton, 290 Front street. Mrs- Mary A. Rin.go of St. Francis, Kansas, arrived in Salem several days ago and is visiting at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ringo. She will visit in Salem for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Groves, who have been making their home in Butte, Mon tana, for the past in or seven monrns, have returned to Salem. Mrs. Groves formerly wag Mrs. ttta Knecves. Mrs. Ida Niles left yesterday for northwestern Iowa to spend the sum mer months with her parents. w v Miss Delia Hagnn has returned from TWO MILLION TONS LOSTlGEJliRY Submarine War Declared Feb ruary First Shows These Results New York, Juno 21. Germany has siink about two Aiiillion tons of British ships alone since the unlimited subma rine warfare was declarer on renru ary 1, according to figures cited today by a maritime expert, based on calcu lations from the official British lists ot losses. In the submarine campaign to date the British have lost H2 vessels. Official figures available since March 4. give i'Mi British ships of more than llidO tons sunk and Is.1) ot hiss than that tonnage. From February I to 25 the size of the 171 vessels- sunn was not officially given. Best information, however, estimated tho division as 100 ships of more than NWO tons and 71 be low that figure. This would make a total of 43fl large vessels suuk aud 206 smaller ones. The average of the 436 large vessels was said by a maritime expert todny to be about four thousand tons; that of the smaller 800 tons. This would give the total tonnage of ships of more than lliOO tons thus destroyed at 1,744,000 tons aud that of the smaller ships K54, S00 a grand total of 1,908,800 tons. The figures do not include sinkings of French, Italian, American or other vessels than British. Winter Wheat Higher Spring Down Two Lents Chicaeo. June 21 The weather again was the ruling factor in the wheat mar ket. Shower in the winter wheat belt, where harvesting i under way, sent that future up three cents, while spring wheat, influenced by continued fair eather lost two cents. .Inlv onened t 2-01 yesterday's closing price, and later gained 3. Sep tember opeued unchanged at tl.80, lat er losing 2. Wain aud cooler weatner na uuuiu wflWt nn corn .hilv opened at fl-)-l2. but later gained 3-8. eVptembcr 0ned -4 off. but subsequently went to 1.4- 3-fi, up 1 J . JeceniDer opruea a-o uln ar t si. 07V, later painins 1. Oats gained in sympathy wita corn All futures opened at yesterday's close. Julv later gained 3-S to 62i. Septem h..' s-h in 52 l i and December 7-8 to S4 '-j. Provisions were higher in spite of a (slow and lower h.g market. ECZEMA REMEDY Sold on m uar2it for Efma, Tattoo CU W.. -.A st..,;!.. THAO& 1 THOMPSOIf Portland! where she has ben visiting for a few days. . Her mother., Mrs. 0. P. Hoff , w ho ac companied her to Portland remained down for a few davs longer. Mrs. Ray L. Smith left yesterday for a few days visit in Lebanon. Mrs. C. H. Marsh and daughter, Miw Marsh, who have been passing a few days in Salem at the home of Mrs. E. Brock in West Salem, returned to their home in Marshficld Wednesday. Mrs. J. M. Garrison and her daughter. Miss Mildred Garrison, have gone to Newport for the summer. Miss Margar et Garrison who recently won the ora torical honors in California for Oregon, is passing the summer in Portland and is tfle guest or her sister, .Mrs. E. . Huckabav. The Presbyterian ladies aid society will meet in tie church for an all day session tomorrow at 10 a. m. to eew for the Red Cross. All members are requested to bring surprise dishes of cooked food for lunch eon. Mrs. Alonzo Palmer and Mrs- Miner va Rowe were hostesses for the Engle wood U. B. aid society Wednesday af ternoon. The afternoon was spent very infor-; mally tying a quilt for a neighbor who leaves soon for Canada. Miss Alberta Hale assisted the hostesses in serving dainty refreshments. Others present were Mrs. Ben Davrs, Mrs. Guy F. Phelps, Mrs. Frank H. Ncff, Mrs. Effie Fuestman, Mrs. Wm. Baumgartner and Mrs. Henry Pascoe. The members of this aid are all re quested to meet again in tho basement of their church Friday afternoon June L'2d, to tie another quilt, and do any other work necessary. GERMANS GET OUT (Continued from Page One.) to report from the British front to day. The German Version. Berlin, via London, June 21 Capture of a French position at VauxUaillon over a width of more than a mile By a German storming attack, was announced ; in today's official statement. "The enemy was completely sur prised," the war office said. "8ome of our troops penetrated as far as thej reserves positions. The enemy losses j were heavy." New King With Allies. Athens, June 21. The official ga zette published a letter from King Alexander to Premier Zaimis pledging co-operation with the allies. "I am following with the utmost in terest tho eovernment s efforts at re storation of the unity of the country," the new king declared- "As for myself, I am willingly remaining as the faith' ful guardian of our constitutional char ter, as convinced of the good intentions of the powers and will co-operate sin cerely with them in maintaining tran quility, thus reconciling the different elements in the-nation." PLAN IS INVASION (Continned from page one. first is the style machine America first made and is now -making. It is cheap est. "The observers' machine, without which effective artillerying or any sort of ground fighting is useless, carries only a small machine gnu. It is helpless before a battle plane. Its duty is to teek out enemy batteries, keep tab on enemy troop movement, direct artillery fire. During attacks it is only through the observation machine that the staff behind our lines can tell how an attack is progressing. We need thousands more of them. They do their talking to the tmrand bv wireless: thev receive iu-i strnctions via a sort of wigwag system- "But observation work is impossible without battle planes. "It would be the battle planes with which we would invade Germany. We must have thousands and thousands more of them to do it. By using two battle planes to protect each observa tion plane we can save the reconnais sance planes, but this won't give us air supremacy, lo get this supremacy we must put together great uomDing squadrons and send them far into Ger man territory." CROWD DESTROYS (Continued from Page One.) Keewoman Farling amid the applause and jeers of hundreds. No charge was immediately placed against her. Mrs. Richardson did virtually all the work of tearing down the four banners. While several movie operators com mandeered a negro's passing hack to screen the waving a banner fragments by the crowd, four snffrago recruits inarched from their headquartes with four new vellow banners- . One is Belligerent. These recruits were extremely bellig erent. The leader, a small woman, saw several men with their backs toward her, in her path. She deliberatelv marehed into one. knocking him over. Police Captain Hartley refused to let the man take revenge on the woman 's banner. , Another man demanded to know if the women had a permit to parade. "Ill show you," retorted Hartley, and he hustled the man to the street. Just before the second attack of the day on the banners Senator J. Hamilton Lewis stopped to tell Miss Hunkins he was "strong for woman suffrage" but that he doesn't believe the women should go at it just that way. Police iusMctors wandered pleasant ly through the growing crowd ssyinc "please, gentlemen, move on. You'll, find a recruiting station just block away. After all. anyone can pull down a banaer. but it take man tn sbonbir a musket." I M,. p;i,,..i..An :. . :... .; .,.)! I woman with fiery red hair. Her son SHIPLEY'S June White Sale Ml ARTICLES IN WHITE AT REDUCED PRICES Supply your wants in Household Linens, Household Cotton, White Wash Goods, White Hosiery, Knitted Underwear, Infants Wear, Lingerie Waists, White Petticoats, Neckwear, Stationery and Dress Makers Supplies. SUPPLY YOUR WANTS NOW EXTRAORDINARY DRESSES. DRESSES, DRESSES Silk Dresses, Lingerie Finest Assortment in the Radically Reduced Prices ONE ASSORTMENT rkXTT" A COrkOTTWiT'XTT See Window Display. U, G, Shipley Co. Quality Merchandise Liberty accompanied her. She said she was j "born in Missouri and you have to show mo those women are real patri- ots:" , . . , ,- , . Another son is in theiofftctfrs' tram- ing camp at Fort Myer. -' ! President Vilssn was in his study j when tho riot started and. during the j excitement went from his study to) luncheon. Tho noise from the crowd ontside was distinstly audible in tho White House. . ' . I .r Tlie First Incident. Washington, June 21. Amid the cheers of a small crowd, a banner de - nouncing the president aud Elihu Root ; placed at tho northeast gate of - the! White House today by suffragettes, was ripped down by two men five minutes after it appeared. lhe sign, held by Mias Catherine jsts evidently have procured a big re Morey, Boston, aud Miss Lucy Burns. ; .,evve supply of denunciatory banners Brooklyn, was identical in wording ;fr it was announced another would be with the one which was destroyed yes- placed on view at 12:30. That is tho terday, hour when lunch crowds from scores Immediately the sign was placed at of nenrbv offices are thickest. the gate, a crowd of about .50, jeering j Police Superintendent Pullman is pi e and hooting, assembled. 1 pared to send additional police ti the Suddenly a man, who refuned to give 8cene. "DEAR,-Stop Your Dandruff by using Pompeian HAIR Massage." "Dandruff has made your hair straggly, thin looking and lifeless. Your coat collar is al ways covered with ugly scales. Stop your Dandruff now. You can. Just look at my hair. The , Dandruff is entirely gone and almost overnight Pompeian HAIR Massage made my hair at tractive." The success of Pompeian HAIR Msssae is in its name "Mas sage." It is a treatment, not merely a tonic The massaging (rubbing) of the scalp wakes up the roots of the hair to new life. This massaging riso opens the pores of the scalp to the wonder fully stimulating liquids n Pom peian HAIR Massage. Dandruff goes. Your hair will become and stay healthy, vigorous, attractive. AH that Is seeded is a' little massaging once or twice a week. One application shows results. Tour scaio will immediately feci Dresses. Spoil Dressesthe City is now offered at $16.75 $24.75 Street Popular Prices his name, dashed forward and ripped away the lower part of the sign, Tho upper portion was next ripped off by George B. Montgomery, Richmond, Va., who participated in'he smalli riofc yesterday. The pickets had difficulty in keeping a grip on the framework as Montgomery tugged and pulled at it The remnants were immediately seized bv police who made no attempt to interfere with the destruction of the banner. After the lust of the sign had gone the pickets surrendered the frame- work to other suffragists, who had stood quietly looking on and it was taken, back 'to headquarters, The pickets then unfurled another banner, proclaiming "Democracy should beein at home " . . .' ! Tho near ssilitaut branch of suf frajr- clean and invigorated. In one month your Dandruff will b: gone: Pompeian HAIR Massage is a clear amber liquid. Not oily. Net sticky. Very pleasant to use. "Greatest treatment for Dand ruff in the world," says J. A. Y, Chicago, 111., "and I speak from experience, My hair before I started using it had gone beyond the ordinary stages of Dandruff and was covered with scales which embarrassed me greatly. I have introduced Pompeian HAIR Mas sage to my friends." Practically every user says one bottle shows actual results. Get a 25c, 50c or $1 bottle at the stores and say the same. - Have your barber every now and then apply a careful Pompeian HAIR Massage. Used in over 30,000 of the best barber shops from Maine to California, v Made by the reliable makers cf the famous Pompeian MASSAGE Cream and Pompeian MIGHT Cream. Ad. 3P