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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1917)
1 W I THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OKM.' MONDAY. SEPT. 24, 1917. Th well-known. tried and reliable uen trating preparation, "Mother' Friend", la prepared especially (or mother. It la a natural aid to nature in its work and is absolutely and entirely safe. By lie use tas abdominal muscle expand easily when baby Is born and bearing down and nwtchina; pains urine; the period are j avoided. "Mother's Friend" has been used by thousand of worae i f -r three generations and no woman t U,i fall to apply it night and morning, s. : t a bottle today from your druggist and write for Il lustrated guide book. "Motherhood and the Baby". It is free. Andreas Th Bradneld Regulator Co., Dept. If. 140 Lamar Bulletins, Atlanta, Oa. Station IsTestigatcs ment Station, with Dr. W. M. Atwood, n I t7 i f""11 puysiuiogisi, in cnarge. 11 is ex- ruzziing mine uisease because ot th many m- 1 ' ficultie in the problem it wil take ' O. A. C. Experiment Station, Corral-, ,evera' years to complete the study, lis, Sept.-24 Investigations of the Tne physiological troubles under in puzzling prune diseases that have I vegtigation are not controllable by caused serious losses to prune growers I "praying and other ordinary orchard in Oregon for a number of years, have j Practice- Among the symptoms of the been arted by the O. A. n. Esperi- disorder ars leaf roll, gum spot and Beautiful Bust and Shoulders re poealble If you will wear a scientifically constructed Bien Jolie Brauierev The drsffging weirht of sn nnrnnflned bnnt m rtretchee the supportiug luucie Uuvt the contour of the figure is spoiled. (ax-AN rmX the bast back when it be on?, prevent the full bant from , havinf the Kppearance of flab bin ess, eliminate the danger of nn a c Fl irra tfjt, drairginr muKleiand confine the "www " flosh or tha aaouldAr 7i vlnir m. graceful line to the entire upper body. They are the dafntteit and moat aerTiceableffarmenta lmjri liable come in all material and atylea: Crosa Back. Hook font, Surplice, Bandeau, etc. Boned with "Walona," tho rustles! ton Id if permitting waf bin witiiout removal. Hare your dealer hor yon Bien Jol le Braa-tleres, If not itock ed, we will gladly aenu him, prepaid, aauiplet to show you. BENJAMIN & JOHNBS, si Warren Street. Newark. N. J. ITALY ASKS UNITED STATES TO SEi AID Rome, Sept. 24. Plea for American aid for Italy "batteries, fighting di visions and thousands of aeroplanes" was voiced by the Milan Corriere Delia Sera today. "America still fails to understand that Austria's defeat is vital," the editorial asserted. "The United States is not warring against Austria her aid goes to swell the Anglo-French forces. Italy is not included in it. We are car rying on our work unaided." The newspaper demanded to know why Italy had not sent permanent com missioners to America, like Andre Tardieu, for France, and Lord North- cliffe, for England. German Raiders Active London; Kept. 24. German raiders penetrated British trenches last night incar La Bassee, Field Marshal tiaid reported today. They were driven out with heavy losses after a short fight in which a few British soldiers had been taken- On both sides of the Scarpe, the field marshal reported the enemy artillory active during the morning. South of internal browning of the fruit. Dr. Atwood will begin his work this full with ft survey of conditions in cer tain' prune orchards of Polk, Yamhill and Marion counties. Fall Dress Goods The Best Obtainable in 'Velvets Plushes Satins Worsteds. Georgette Crene and Crepe de Chine Worsted Dress Goods The largest and most complete stock of Worsted Dress Goods displayed anywhere in Oregon outside of Portland. Many Serges, Broadcloths, Velours, Wool Poplins, Silk and Wool Poplins, Gabardines, Wool Taffetas, and many other kinds in worsteds, . Also an EXTRA LARGE . SHOWING in Novelty Plaids, Stripes, etc. ; All new wanted kinds. Our worsted buyer has combed the East" era markets and as a result we are showing the best in worsteds that money and experience can buy. VEVETS Velvets for Suits, Coats, Dresses, Hats, Collars, Cuffs, etc. All of the 6taple colors and scores of the newest and most up to date shades. These velvets are from 18 to 42 inches wide. - We are justly proud of our stock of velvets, for it is the cream of the market. Every piece is worth the trouble we .took to obtain it, and is a iredit to our buyer's judg ment. Have you decided on a certain quality or shade? If so, it is here for you. - PLUSHES This very popular and equal ly scarce fabric can be found in abundance in our Dress Goods Department. Some of the colors are : Black, African Brown, Russian Green, Char treuse and Taupe. Just the newest and most wanted shades. In the handsome Crushed Plush are to be found such rich shades as Taupe, Black, etc. This fabric has no equal for coatings. Its popularity is in creasing each year. Every piece comes 50 inches wide. GEORGETTE CREPE Our wonderful quality and color range in Georgettte Crepe is the talk of the valley. We have about SEVENTY DIFFERENT SHADES waiting for your approval. If you want a certain shade for a waist or to combine with your dress you will find it in the assortment. Eveiy piece comes 40 inches wide. The quality of these Crepes will surprise you. Nothing better has ever been dis played in Salem. CREPE DE CHINE One of the choicest and most complete showings of Silk Crepe de Chine in Oregon. The ' same shades that are carried by Marshal Field of Chicago and like firms. Six distinctly different grades, and dozens of colors in each grade. The most stylish and popular shades shown anywhere are in our stock. All our Crepe de Chines are 40 inches wide. SATINS Our enormous stock of Sat ins is now ready for your choosing. You will find these appropriate for Suits, Dresses, and combinations with wor steds and velvets. We show six grades in Dress Satins, among which any desirable shade can be found. We have the ever famous Cheney Sat ins, Skinner Satins, Gilt Edge Satins, Satin Charmeuse and Satin De Luxe. The widths are from 36 to 46 inches. P This Store Will Be Closed AD Day Wednesday, "Salem Day" at the mm State Fair ARGENTINE DECIDES TO ACCEPT PEACE iTE-pi BERLIN This Action, However, Re garded As Only. Tempor - arily Satisfactory" (By Charles P. Stewart) (United Press Staff Correspondent) Buenos Aires, Sept. 24. For the im mediate present, at least, Argentine 's determination to declare war against Germany is to be held in abeyance. Government officials today accepted as "temporarily satisfactory" a mes sage from . the German . government, transmitted through the Argentine min ister at .Berlin, disavowing Count Lux burg's utterances and denvine that the kaiser approved of Lnxburg personally. The fact as emphasized, however, that this disavowal does not constitute the full, free and formal reply demand ed in Argentine's ultimatum. Its re ceipt, however, stops the chamber of deputies' immediate consideration of the government's plan of declaring state of war with Germany. Public interest was transferred from the German situation today to the more pressing crisis of the nation-wide strike. At 1 a .m. today all railway employes struck. Complete paralysis of all rail communication seemed certain. The sit uation is admittedly of the most serious character, as many cities lack large supplies of food and fuel. denly begun to realize lue power which! mmmvmwi'm the Unit,! Rtato. ; r..: . ; weild to safeguard the future of de-H mocracy. If the war continues, the kais ; " er knows that America will be able to II accomplish the downfall of German me-: I diaeralism. i m Ho is, therefore, desperately promis-! ,j ing one thing after another, honim? " the allies agree to peace before Ameri ca makes the HohenzoIIerns subservi ent to a democratized Germany. Until the promise of German democracy is given and its workings have begun, the will -not have been defeated. Lens and northeast of Lens there was artillery activity during the night. Russian Troops Fight Petrograd, Sept. 24. Russian troops met the German offensive in the Riga region with a counter attack south of the Pskov high road, the war office announced today. uhe enemy lost heav. il.v. "After a fierce struggle we occu pid positions in the sector of Silzemi" the war office said. "The enemy lost severely, leaving over 400 corpses on the field- We captured 60 prisoners and ten machine guns." MUNISH NEWSPAPER . (Continued from Page One.) still in control of Germany's destinies, reduction of armament would be no guarantee that the kaiser's war mad ness couldn't break out again. The only difference would be that the kaiser would have a smaller initial striking force, the next time, while his opponents would have proportion ately smaller defensive armies. The kaiser's plea that moral right should dominate the world is also with out any peace value. There is overwhelming evidence that the kaiser ia at the head of a system which counts deception and falsehood as a legitimate means, of attaining na tional ambitions- Nothing the kaiser may say and no pledge he can give would have any binding force upon the German government as long as an irre sponsible autocracy dominates the gov ernment. The present is the most critical timo of the war for the kaiser. He has sud- Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA POPE'S SPECIAL AGENT By John H. Hearley (United Press staff correspondent) Rome, Sept. 24. An ecclesiastical "Colonel House" has apparently been developed in the person of Monsignor Ceretti, the papal secretary of state for extraordinary ecclesiastical affair Ceretti is absent from the Vatican to day. He is reported to be in a secluded spot for a few days' quiet study of the central powers' attitude. Monsignor Cereti is regarded as in a position to give Pope uenedict accu rate advice on American affairs. Be fore becoming bishop of Australia he was attached to the papal legation in Washington. He is a student of Pres ident Wilson's writings and an admir er of the United States constitution. Ceretti recently visited the Uuited States en route to Rome from his Aus tralian bishopric He was not known internationally until the entrance of the United States into the war and the Vatican's peace offer made him the pope's right hand man with respect to American affairs. Vatican Optimistic Borne, Sept. 24 The Vatican was op timistic today of ultimate success in its peace efforts. 'feace is at best a gradual, often painful, development, Vatican otii cials told the United Press. "Efforts are not always appreciated and under stood. But the papal endeavors are re sulting in glow but sure gains toward peace. Kaiser ftiak.es Speech Amsterdam, Sept. 24 "'If the war continues it is not Germany's fault," Kaiser Wilhelm declared in a speech to veterans of the Kumanian cam paigns on the battlefield of Focsani, dispatches reported today. The trerman emperor made a detail ed tour of the Rumanian battle line. Allies Will Not Beply London, Sept- 24. The allies are ad hering to their plan of letting Presi dent Wilson's reply to the .pope's peace offer stand as the answer of all enemies of Germany, according to all indications today. intimations trom Rome that the Vatican expected sepa rate replies from other allied belliger ents fuiled to change the situation. SALEM FEEDS FIRST (Continued from Page One.) Also that the men were seated quicker and better fed than at any place on their travels. " , - The train was met at Commercial and ferry streets by the Salem Chftr rian band and escorted to the armory. Under the management of Win- Gahls- dorf who had entire charge of the din ner, the men were seated and served within five minutes of the time the first man entered the building. lhe general spirit ot the men was heerful, showing itself especially i shaking hands with the young ladies and bidding them good bye. The cars were generally decorated with mottoes such as "Soak der Kaiser," and "Hin denberg's Day is Done" and names of the towns from which the men came. Great credit for the dispatch with which the men were served is due to ill (1 II U H 11 II n ii n ii ti ii n M M n ti II 11 H 11 ti 11 El a ii II ti II- E1 El 11 11 II U El El U II II II 11 II 11 El 11 II II 11 11 fl 11 in igiii mt ssi wil tut i i inn f ' - M rr " r "THE LINE COMPLETE" 1 n - M Showing Automobiles of all pnee and power y ranges and from four to eight cylinders. JJ We selected these cars because we honest ly believe each to be the best of its type each the most value that can be had for the money its price represents n 11 ii !i ti II !! II 11 II ti L! ii ti Each One a Wonderful Car TRUCKS REO DUPLEX if y m n ii ii ti u ii ti ii ii ii ii ti ii n u ii TOURING CARS REO FOUR REOSIX MARMOR COLE 8 DORT STEARNS The Northwest Auto Inc. DISTRIBUTORS "The Line Complete" Portland, Ore. F..W. Vogler, Pres. C. M. Menzies, Mgr. EtWBw?' n :i ri ii u ii ii El II ti II 11 fl n tt n u ti a n n H II m m m ii M II 11 n si H El II 11 II II II 11 PI U ii 11 11 fell E22I13SS232S2EI ii n El 11 u M II 11 U 11 11 El M 11 H II 11 li H ft 11 El U 11 H n M em 11 m n ii ti ii U li II ii El ri ii the committee of the Red Cross that worked so faithfully that the soldiers might feel welcome. r or serving the one meal, 10 gallons of cream were required, 125 gallons of coffee, 57 pounds of butter, 650 pieces of deep English apple pie, each piece weighing one pound and 220 loaves of bread, largo size. Anyhow, those who so generously vol unteered their time for the Liberty boys may feel well repaid from the fact that at no place had the men been, given such a cordial welcome, nor hail been given a meal that was so deeply appreciated. In leaving, the men all seemed in the best of humor and es pecially those who had saved their big. pieces of pie. When tho final call fpr the remain der of the men on tho first draft ia made, early in October, it is probable that Salem will bo called on to servo four or five train loads of troops. sawiMuiauiayiaaiaauaiiMiik jnS3B3S33S 5BBnnS3SS3B mil vjr cm w t . r. 1 he Rind of 1 ooth Work We Demonstrate m u li 11 El 11 n n n You people of Salem and State Fair visitors see the Painless Parker demonstration car on the streets of the city and witness the novel spectacle of a licensed dentist extracting teeth free from a minature per fectly appointed dental office on the floor of an auto truck. To people who love to nurse prejudices, this is a very terrible thing. It makes the noble art of ,tooth plumbing so common. It isn't the way you've been taught to believe dentists should act. It savors of street fakerism. - . , Well, folks, you're dead right. We are trying to make dentistry commonand we don't care a whoop whether it savors of street-fakerism or riot. We're trying to bring a knowledge of dentistry to people who would never patronize a dentist unless we did just this very thing. The reason ninety per cent of the people dodge the tooth mechanic is because they have it . fixed in their ' skulls that going to a dentist is just the same asbeing tortured and robbed. To the ordinary individual a dental office is a chamber of horrors. He'd rather let his molars fall out of his head than take a chance with such a proposition. It's just ignorance and fear with him and you know that fear is fostered by ignorance. When you appreci ate that the every-day dentist fosters ignorance and-opposes our public demonstrations and lectures, you can see that the responsibility for the present state of things rests with him. We are showing people that dental work isn't mysterious, isn't painful, isn't costly. Just to prove it, we stand our machine on the street corner and pull teeth without misery and without cost. We explain - the actual work that has to be-done in bettering or replacing teeth, and we tell the facts about the actual cost of these operations. . One great reason why Painless Parker appeals to the wage-earner's sense of fair play is because he believes in and uses the medium of public lectures and demonstrations of his painless dentistry. PAINLESS PARKER, DENTIST STATE AND COMMERCIAL STREETS, SALEM Sixteen Other Offices San Francisco (2), Oakland, Stockton, Sacramento, Fresno, Bakersfield, San Jose, Santa Cruz, Los Angeles and San Diego, California. Portland and Eugene, Oregon. Tacoma and Bellingham, Wash. Brooklyn, N. Y. tsnwmwvpvwptvnpo wavm mm m mm imn mnpunM wwwuw w wiwmi fl""" n ' " ' " 1 11-110 tt -tt irmm inn 1 wn m mm .mm m m wi.ii mn mm 1 asa.iwiiirt is.ii.siMsM tfc mm ami mm 1 fc mm am it md ! iiii.i...tsMiMi-wilM imtkM mm mm m mum mm nmm tm .Wi.TiMMn Ma, ti mI 3 0 7 n ii 11 11 El 11 El 11 fl 11 M II 11 II II II 11 11 11 11 II II ri ri n 11 11 ti 11 11 11 11 11 n ti