Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1917)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM TUESDAY, OCx., Z, i917. TWO Children Cry for Fletcher's CM r ow Ml The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been la 030 for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of " and has been made tinder his per sonal supervision since its infancy. cucMiii Allow no one to deceive vou in this. AH Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good n are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIT Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has teen in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; -allaying Feverishjjess arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Si In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THI C MTAU W eejlPAWV. HtW YOK CITY, GERMAN DIVERS (Continued from page one.) r-avies must make a superhuman effort to overcome the louse ana growing de mand as to Atlantic transport today. "The whole system of publishing the figures of submarine sinkings by the allies is misleading and I have protest ed against it ever since it was adopted. I do not brieve that any substantial progress has been uiada In stopping sub marine depredations. Last week we were told officially that the submarine sink ings of British ships were the lightest since the policy of ruthlossnoBS com menced. Within a few hours, cables flashed the news that the sinking of French sips over the same period were the heaviest yut recorded. In other words, it is probable that part of the submarine force of Germany that is fighting the greatest naval battle of the world off tho south coast of Ire land was sent to the French coant to atop tho arrival of urgout necessities Try Making Your Own Cough Remedy Glvns brflMant cIosst shfnfl does not rub off or dust off that anneal to the iron that lasts times as long as any other. thatl -that H tour a Black Silk Stove Polish Is In a clans by Itself. It's mure mrruiy made and maUo trum better maurtals Try It on mar vufor prove, yourcooKfliuve or your trim ranire. If vou don't Ami it ihu best polish you ever used, your hitrdwara or grocery iIphIw it sutnonwii u w fund your vmry Drft" vZaR III Ton pan sm abont ft, and bar bettr rvmadj than thm rwMl mada kind. JtaaU liana. If you combined the curative proper tics of every known "ready-made cough remedy, you would hardly have in them 11 the cumtive power that lies in this imple "home-made" couuli syrup which takes only a few minutes in prepare. Get from any driurgiet 2V& ounces of Finex ((10 rents worth), pour it into a -pint bottle aud fill the bottle with plain iranuhited suirar syrup. The total cont from America for your daily growing army. Aimed at America. "Remember that the army that is principally menaced by the policy of op erating off the coast of France is the American army. The British army is supplied to an increasing extent as to meat, material and munitions, across a channel of twenty or thirty miles ade quately guarded. "the trench and Belgian armies arc is about (I") cents and fives you a full! at home ou their own soil. Tho giuut supplies for your boys have to travel nearly three thousand miles and across the very track of submarine ruthless uess. Of danger to actual trausports there Is proiulily little. Not one Can adian soldier has yet been lost nt sea out of the 400,0110 boys that have goue lrom Innuila to i ranee, submarine at fcsk your druraist for "24 ounces of 1'incx" with full directions, and don't accept anything else, A guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money prompt, ly refunded, goes with this prcDkraUon. Jha l'incx Co., Ft, Wayne, Ind. pint of really better cough syrup than you could buy ready-mude for $2.u0. jTaates plcasnnt and never spoils. This tincx and miliar syrup prepara tion gets rinlit at tho cause of a cough nd (rives almost immediuto relief. It loosens the phlegm, stops the nasty throat tickle and heals the lure, irri tated membranes that li no iliA ma t aknat anJ t,r.. ..I. I 1 .1 . A dav'a use will usually overcome the "1 ,n l'J uf "gagging, ' amunary - cougn ana lor bronchitis, 1 ' nunu croup, whooping couch and bronchial ' shipping is sinking so fust and the de asthma, there is nothing better. mauds for tonnage, owing to your need l'incx is a Bloat valuable concentrated j lr transportation, arc so rapidly in compound of genuine Norway pine ex- , creasing, that supplies have to bo put trait, and has been used for generation . 011 anv kin 1 of tramp steamer, irres break up Revere cough. . , ,,..tiv ,f its .o..,1. 10 avoid disappointment, be sure to 1 Edison and Hi. Work. "Admit tho comparative -success of the convoy system; admit the bravery and ingenuity of the British and Ameri can captains of destroyers; admit the worth of soin 0 of Mr. Kdison 's ingen ious devices. There vet remains the serious statement bv the greatest auth nrity on shipping in Great ltrituin t hut tho United states requires 500,000 men to be engaged in shipbuilding; that von must build three times more than the British have ever built iu one rear and five or six times what vou have previously accomplished iu like time. I "I am well aware that progress is ; being made here and in Great Britain, but are you getting the six million tons a year that your controller of sipping ,'s'ntes to be the minimum necessary to rnke successful what he truly describ ed as your 'greatest military effort.' j "The problem is almost eutirety an i American problem. Tbe stoppage of food I supplies from this country to Great Britain vuu: I he trying, but not Intnl. j Ko far as our shipping is concerned we 'are not onlv able to look after all our ewn needs, but we are cheerfully allo cating much tonnage to France aud Italy. We are glad to do ao by reason of our admiration for their work. Must be Equipped. "It is vi.al that hand in hand with the equipment of the splendid young men now flocking into your canton ments, must rise an rmv of shipbuild ers. The men mho build the ships iu Great Brita" regards themselves, and rightly, as performing equal service with the men who fare death ia the trenches. I believe that the time willj come when the workers in the ship-1 lote 1 1 -f ot.irancts SW-francisco r. 1-.yJL II I I M gsw Tinest Location-, lacincjltnion Stjuare -fOOOTSoom? from29per"Day appreciated by IXscriTTundingTrauam ike'WoAdovcr. CameslDoodsf " OCIETY By ALINE THOMPSON ,TEE m OF m RS. B. J. MILES left Thursday I VI for an extended sojourn in the east, and was accompanied as far as rortland by her uaugnter-in-iaw, Mrs. Donald W. juiles. Mrs. Miles expects to remain east until early next spring and will spend the greater, part of her stay in Des Moines, Iowa, with her daughtor, Miss Marguerite Miles, who has been in the east for the past year or so and has been devoting her time to settlement work. Miss Miles met her mother in Ames, and accompanied her from there to Des Moines. During her absence Mrs. Miles also will visit relatives in Chicago, Oska loosa and elsewhere in the east. Mr. and Mrs. George Broughton have returned to their home in Port land after passing a few days in Salem as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. . V. Hazard. Mrs- Louis Josse of Salem, who has been a house guest at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Barker, on Lane Btreet, will return to her residence n (Salem Monday afternoon. Koseburg Eevicw. Mrs. Frank Clcecher and her daugh ter, Miss Dorothy Clcecher, who have been the guests of Mrs. George P. Fox lor several days, returned to their home in Portland Sunday. m Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Watson motored to Salem from Albany for a visit to Mr. and Mrs- Andrew M. Han sen of Mill street. They returned home last night. .Tiulpfl and Mrs. A. M. Crawford of Portland, were the week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Smith of 17bo Cen ter street. a j From Minneapolis comes the an nouncement of the marriage of Miss I Anna N. Nyquist to Archie Vale Dun-' canson, which took place in that city last week. Tho brido taught English inj the Washington junior high school of this city for two years and has many friends in Salem. Duncanson is assistant city engineer of Minneapolis and thoy will make their homo in that city. Mrs. E. W. Walton had as her guests for the week end the Misses Minnie Morrill and Alice Smith of Hillsboro. Mrs. L. H. Compton has had as her guest Mrs. E. B. Combs of Portland, wifo of Second Lieutenant Combs who with Lieutenant Compton, is now -en route to Camp Green, Charlotte, North Carolina. In a week or so Mrs. Compton and Mrs. Combs expect to join their hus bands. - Friday night Murlnrk hall room was the scene of one of the prettiest danc ing parties of the month, when the Chi Omega girls, assisted by the Z. A. O. girls of Corvallis, who are petition ing for a Chi Omega charter, entertaiu ed with a benfit affair to raise funds for the lunch room which the Chi Ome ga maintain at Albina Homestead school. 80 successful was the party that the little'ehildren of that district are assured of having hot lunches dur ing the cold days of the coming win ter. It was decidedly a college func tion, a sort of fresh ie glee sophomore hop, junior prom and senior ball all rolled into one. That it was the first anair of the season among the college set, made it the gayer. Patronesses for the evening were; M,rs. William D. Wheelwright, Mrs. Thomas varrick Burke, Mrs. P- J. Mann, Mrs. E. R. Giltner, Mrs. Vincent Cook, Mrs. Emery Olmstead, Miss Gil lctt, Mrs- C. C. Colt, Mrs. William Tru fant Foster and Mrs. Andrew E. Por ter. Among the out of town guests were Miss Naomi Bockwith, Miss Eulalie Lindsay and Miss Helen Harrington of Salem. Portland Telegram. Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Cates of Portland, who were here the greater part of last week attending the Btate fair, motored home Sunday- Sunrey of White River by State Engineer Work on the survey of White Eiver and its tributaries in Wasco county will begin immediately, according to John H. .Lewis, state engineer, who leit to I day for an inspection of conditions in the field. I An automatic guage will be install ed near the mouth of the river to de termine accurately the amount of water ' now used in the development of power, also one on the Clear Creek on the head waters of the stream to determine the conflict in use with irrigation, as well as the amount of water available for storage. ; t Water measurements will be conduct ed throughout the year and- field work commenced in the spring to determine I the extent of irrigation and other rights as a basis for adjudication proceedings which will be undertaken by the State Water Board as soon as this survey work is completed. Congressional indignation might vent itself in one convincing retort to Mr. Hcflin and then go on with something useful. What's $50,000 amoilg congress men! ' . : it; tJH i OUR CORNS Pain Stops .t Once Corn Lifts Off Clean There is nothinp in the world like, "Gets-It" for eorns. Just apply it according to directions, the pain stops at once and then the corn lifts off as clean as a whi't'e .0 fuss, 110 bother, no danger,, ."G-ts-It", you know, is safe. M'Miops 'fve used it. more than yards and factories the men in the mines and mercantile sailors will also get crosses, the medals and the ribbons that are now given to the soldiers and naval men. "Whenever you set your eyes on one of your fine young soldiers, send this thought coursing through your brain: All his sacrifice will be in vain if you cannot give him the food, the arms jvnd the housing he will require in France, every ounce of which has to be transported rcross the submarine zone.' "Let me urge and urge you again that the increased sinkings of the French ships are significant and what is aimed by tho Germans is the ruin of your effort to supply your own men with everything that they need in France." .Stop Itching Eczema Never mind how often you have tried and failed, you can stop burning, itching eczema quickly by applying a little zemo furnished by any druggist for 35c. Extra large bottle, $1.00. Healing begins the moment zemo is applied. In a short time usually every trace of eczema, tetter, pimples, rash, blackheads and similar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the akin and making it vigorously healthy, always use zemo, the nanalnfinT atltioonti? HntllH. It IS not 8 P-" JU""M 1 j " greasy salve and it does not stain. When - ..... . . . 1 LI . i. . . Otners tail It is tne one aepenaauiu umi mem ior SKin trouDies 01 an kuius. The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O. I mhwi amu-.ii., 1 "1. .' 'e-'iMlw S3M ''', V . J 1 V (-aw A !i . Aw Ik ' if ' f V f s Daat Waste Time nollriiw.H "Gett-It" Never Kaila. all other corn remedies combined, and it never fails. There is no need for you to go through another day of corn agony. But be sure you get "Gets-It." Ac cet nothing else, for remember, there is positively nothing else, as . good. "Gets-It" never irritates the live flesh, never makes the toe sore. You can go about as usual with work or play, while "Gets-It," the ma'gic, does all the work. Then tne corn poels right off like a banana skin, and leaves the toe as smooth and corn free as yonr palm. Never happened before, did itt Guess not. Get a bottle of "Gets-It" today from any drug store, you need pay no more than 25c, or sent on receipt of price by E. Lawrence & Co-, Chicago, 111. Sold in Salem and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by J. C, Perry, P. J. Fry. THREE WERE KILLED SAYS WEEKLY REPORT Industrial Accident Commis sion Also Records Many Minor Injuries . During the last week September 20 to 27, inclusive, there were reported to the state industrial accident commission 439 accidents, of which number three were fatal. Following is given the name, address and occupation of the fatally injured workmen: P. J. Cassin, Cake, Oregon, mining. J. J. McDonell, Umapine, Oregon, tra velers on Public Highway. ' Eobert Clark, Umapine, Oregon, Tra velers on Public highway. Of the total number reported, 395 were eubject to the provisions of the compensation act, 12 were from public utility corpoiations, and 30 were from firms and corporations which have re jected the provisions of the act, and 2 were from a corporation operating un der the provisions ot the law, said tvfa were travelers, being injured while on public highway. Following is shown the number of ac cidents by industry: Saw mill, 120; logging, 36; construe tion, 32; painter, 4; box factory, 5; meat packing, 13; shipbuilding, 62; Iron and steel works, 38; B. E. oper ations, 27; telephone and telegraph, 2; tank and pipe company, 6; shingle com pany, 2; machine shop, 6; flour mills, 4; mining, 4; garage, 4; can manufactur ing, 4; cooperage,4; cannery, 3; paper mill, 7; travelers on public highway, J; dredging, 2; planning mill, 2; junk deal- . (Continued from Page One.) Francisco; is known in the northwest as a highly valued instructor at Ep worth League institutes. She has al ways shown a great interest in young people and will be thoroughly appreci ated by them. New Faculty Member Mrs. Delia Crowder Miller takes the professorship in the department of pub lie speaking. She received her prepara tion at the Northern Illinois Normal school, tho University of Indiana, Cur ry's Boston School of Expression, the Passe gymnasium, and as a private pu pil of Leland T. Powers. For nine years Mrs. Miller has been traveling in the European countries of the continent and Groat Britain and a major number of the United States, givin- lectures and recitals in chau tauquas and lvceunis. Her work at the Oregon state fair last week was not her first intrdduetion to Salem, as she appeared on the Chautauqua program two years ago. She is popularly called "the Ben Hnr Lady." Twelve years were spent in conducting her owu school in Boston, Mass., and another in Boise, Idaho. PCPE BENEDICT (Continued from Page One.) Wgut I ndrrwood & Underwood BEAUTY IN THE FUR COAT YOU MAY NOT LOOK AS BEAUTIFUL as Mis Ciarr Whitney does in this three qnarter length otter coat, but then von ran make an attemiit at it if voa are in side of a coat like the one in the picture, you are not nly warm, but yon have the comfortable glow of 1 feeling richly and expensively dother- r'urs have that el feat somehow on the j humblest women. with a bitter editorial attack in the Corriere d 'Italia on German Foreign Secretary Kuehlemann. Through these two editorials he held the Vatican had contrived a diplomatic hint to Germany, as well as a bit of counsel to the Ger man people, and especially the Ger man Catholics. Another direct intimation of the Vat ican's position on development of th people's rule was in the pope's words of greeting to a new Bussian diplomat accredited to the holv see. Interviewed by the United Tress to day, this Eussian flatly denied that the pope favored a reactionary Russia. He said his holiness expressed personal sym pathy with Russia s democracy, regard ing the revolutionary movement as poli tical and social evolution. "I found the pontifical find agreed," this diplomat asserted, "that peace is the exclusive prerogative of parliaments repsible te the people, or the people; themselves." t SHIPLETS Display of : r - - Correct Fall Garments and Accessories For. the Well Dressed Woman, Not only have we assembled an unrivalled assort ment of Women's and Misses Suits, Coats and Dresses, but our stocks of accessories are most complete. . Waists That are extremely dainty and beautiful, featuring every new style in cut, fabric, trimming, and color. Neckwearew Collars for those who want the newest things first. PetticoatSSilk and Sateen; some with shirred ruf fles, some with scalloped bottoms. Changeable and colors. Hosiery Fibre Silk, Lisle;, white, black, colors. Undermuslins Indescribed dainty and alluring gar ments for the woman who loves dainty things. Corsets-Modart and Warners-The new styles shaped in authoritative lines of fashion that will serve as a perfect foundation for the new costume. Quality Merchandise at Popular Prices. U. G. SHIPLEY CO. LIBERTY STREET ers 2: woodsaw, 2; oil company, 2; and for the following 1 each Bukery, or chard company, rubber mills, pile driv ing, harvesting, woolen mills, caudy manufacturing, plasterer, farming, pack ing company, creamery, cider works,' tin shop, cement manufacturing, hard ware company, brass works, sugar fac tory, meat market, furnituro manufac turing, painting, biscuit company, juice company, hotel cook, passenger. ,- ' ' - ! Congressmen , Campaign ;!, ,. for Liberty Bond Issue Washington, Oct. 2. With adjourn ment near many congressmen are re turning to their districts to aid the lib erty loan campaign today. By the end of this week or the mid dle of next, the session is expected to finish its work, leaving 435 representa tives and 90 senators free to tour, up and down the country telling the caus es and purposes of the war. Since few bills of major importance are still .pending, leaders are encour aging the opening- of this campaign now by permitting leaves of absence in almost every case where they arc asked. With not much else to occupy its at tention, the house intends to spend this afternoon listening to personal privilege speeches by members whose loyalty has been questioned. Represen tative Mason, Illinois, says he will ex plain the reports that ho favors a re peal of the conscription law aro un fair. What ho advocates, he said, is an amendment prohibiting service in En rope unless the drafted men specifical ly volunteer for it. - Representative Lundccn, Minnesota, is expected to reply to Roosevelt's charge that he is a "shadow Hun," ana it speaker Liam win permit 11, a reopening of the Het'lin-Norton con troversy is likely. , AT SALEM STATE HOSPITAL . Monmouth, : Or,, Oct. 2. Willie Strong, aged 10r years," son of E. W. Strong, a Alonmouth business man, who wag last week taken to the state hospi tal tor the insane for treatment, died Friday night. Several years ago tho lad sustained a blow on the head from a lulling piece of wood, to which acci dent the trouble is atributed. The fu neral was held from the Evangelical church. BeautlHes s.nHmi tn the akla a delicately clear. pearly white complexion. Brines back the soft smooth appearance of youth. Results are instant and improvement CtfnaUmt. Gouraud's Oriental Cream Send 10c tor Trial Slzt IFERD. T. HOPKINS & SON, New York I cwi L'a'tm,'VI The very highest point in has been reached in Mumbles, made enfyof ihs whole of tha Durum Trhcat, plus anew and delicious flmxnr Look for this slgjhatura C l17-K.T.C.r.C 1 jgj I ' I'll AllWheaf. Plf . I ReadytoEai I " Iff