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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1917)
f, i SIX THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, NOV. 5. 1 'J II BR mm ' I HEALTH Woman Tell How $5 Worth of Pinkham's Compound Made Her WelL Lima. Ohio." I was all broken down In health from a displacement. One of my lady mends came to see me and she ad vised me to com mence taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and to cse Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I began tak ing your remedies and took 55. CO worth and in two months was a well woman IIPHil after three doctors eaid I never would stand up straight again. I was a mid wife for seven years and I recommended the Vegetable Compound to every wo man to take before birth and after wards, and they all got along so nicely that it surely is a godsend to suffering women. If women wish to write to me I will be delighted to answer them." Mrs. Jennie Moyer, 342 E.North St, Lima, phio. Women who suffer from displace ments, weakness, irregularities, ntsr vousness, backache, or bearing-down pains, need the tonic properties of the roots and herbs contained in Lydia ii Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. . AUSTRIA EXTENDS ETJLE. Amsterdam, Nov. 5 The Munich Nueste Nacliricliten prints a report from Vieuna that Emperor Charles on Sun day, which is his name day, will be pro claimed king of Poland and also ruler of the Bout Slav states, embracing es pecially Bosnia and Herzegovina and that part of Serbia already occupied by Austria. ASK FOR and GET risers r The Original Flailed flliSk Substitutes Cost YOU Same Pries. ffflCAN ARTILLERY NOW FMTO M GERMI JERRI TORY Raid la Which American Pris oners Were Taken Reveals Troops' Location By J. W. T. Mason Written for the Unitod Press) New York, Nov. 5. The Gorman war 'of f ice 's location of the -first raid on American trenches as along the Rhine -Marne canal, indicates that American artillery is now firing its bhells directly on German territory. The western battlo front crosses the Bhine-Marno canal within easy artil lery range of the German boundary of Lorraine. By revealing the spot where i Teutonic raiders found the American trenches, the kaiser has been compell ed to" permit the German people to know that 'America's first bombard ment on the European battlefields jnuRt have caused demolition of positions up on tho German empire's own soil. The first announcement that Ameri can artillery had been engaged in ac tion in France wag made October 27, while the date of tho German raid on American trenches was November 3. For at. least a week, therefore, before the Germans sent a patrol to investi gate the sudden activity opposite the Lorraine border, American guns must have had Gorman ground under actual or potential bombardment. This is doubtless the reason why the Germans took such unusual measure to raid the Americnn trench sector by providing a barrage artillery fire and snttinnr off the American victims from all possible help during the period of the raid. Artillery ammunition is too precious to Germany , to bo thrown away in this costly manner often. The damage, however, that American shells had probably been doing on German soil for at least a week, makes explic able the apparently reckless expendi ture of barrage fire to assist a party of raiders. The Germans must be fearful of sen ing raiding parties against the Ameri can trenches without artillery protec tion, because of the extreme thinness of the German-Lorraine front. In Flan ders where the greatest fighting inten sity is occurring, the Germans have four men per yard. All along tho Lor raine border it has recently been semi officially estimated they have one man for every two yards. German raiding parties, therefore, can depend iittle on infantry Bupport in returning from the American trenches, and the raiders must have ar tillery help as if thoy were minature offensives- ;Lkw President of Railroad Mast Account for Funds Washington", Nov. 5. The supreme court today decided that M. H. Smith, president of the Louisville and Nash ville railway, must make public the pur poses for which certain funds were spent under iiis personal direction, ine ae cisiou follows a fight led by Ex-Senator Luke Lea, who charged the existence of a huge corruption fund to maintain a lobby, bribe state officials and corrupt legislatures. The decision means that the interstate commerce commission may from now on go into the innermost secrets of a rail road's political conduct and may decide if certain expenses may be legitimately approved by it as "operating expen ses." Wilson and Roosevelt Boih Partially Blind CONSTIPATION IS A PENALTY CrA&E Nothing U so auential to bulla in advancing age as free dom and normal activity of the bowels. It makes one feel - younger and frejoer, and fore stalls colds, piles, fevers, and other dependent ills. Cathartics and purgatives are violent and drastic in action and si o lid be avoided. A mild, ef fective laxative, recommended by physicians and thousands who have used it, is far preferable. This is the combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin sold by druggists under tho name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It costs only fifty cents a bottle; a trial bottle, free of charge, can bo obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 456 Washington St., Monticello, Illinois. I Washington, Nov. 5. "Me frind , Tiddy, I obsarve is blind in one eye' and ine frind Woodrow can 't see out of the other," observed an Irish wit, byj THE OLD RELIABLE BLOOD BUILDER Still retains its supremacy. People still take Hood's Sarsaparilla be-' cause it is an old family friend, has proved its merit to three generations in purified blood, expelled humors, restored appetite, relieved rheuma tism, banished tired reelings. I It long ago became recognized as j the standard blood purifier and general tonic. It originated in a Boston physician's successful pre scription, and comprises medicinal roots, herbs, barks and berries such as are often prescribed for ailments of the blood, stomach, liver and kid neys. Buy it in the same style pack ago your mother bought it in, samd fine appearance, same pleasant taste, same certainty of good results. way of comment on the recent dis closure of the afflictions which beset the two great Americans. Now that the truth is out, the President may ex pect, at some future .time, to be ac cused of attempting to steal tho Colonel's thunder, for not until after Colonel Eoosevelt confessed to having lost tho sight of ono eye in a boxing match 'way back in 1905, was the pub lie let in on the secret that President Wilson, by excessive reading, had rendered ono of his eyes practically useless. The . President and the former Pres ident may each be blind in one eye, but nobody would have known it from looking at them. There is no outward indication that Mr. Wilisou or Colonel Eoosevelt is short on eyesight, and the secret is one that both might have kept, had not the Colonel, after a per iod of training, taken the newspaper men into his confidence, and told them of the boxing contest with Colonel Dan T. Moore, of the Field Artillery, back in 11IU5. Score one for a bit of Seattle spirit that showB the proper spirit. Instead of pouring confiscated bonded whiskey into the gutter it has been turried over to the Btate committee of tho national council of defense for use in hospials. Portland and Oregon officials please copy. ; "The Silent Man" will be William S. Hart's next screen offering. Athletics for All Men Bet Too filed, for Nsse Better-Body Exercises and Foundation Games Fit Students for Army Life . and for the Big Game O. A. C, Corvailis, Or.,: Nov. 5. Bel ter bodies for nil young men and physical fitness for the trnin of mili tary hardships and the big intercol legiate games, are the aims of the athletics required of students here. The big and the over-developed hus kies that need no "building" are no longer - grabbed up on their first ap perarance on the campus and given the "too-ninch" treatment necessary to "win the game." Instead every man is given a special examination to find out what he most needs and then the kind of drill that develops it, and as signed to play with his college-mates the games ho likes and needs. If de fective in bodily vigor he is given special corrective exercises. Two hun dred men are now taking corrective exercises. The foundation games not only strengthen the body and clear tho mind, but incidentally disclose the special athletic qualities, if any, that each man has. He is then graduated natur ally into thoso inter-collegiate sports I ' "-'mm 'Mul. i For . Protects him from chill -keeps him comfy. In-, slant heat. Easily car-, lied. Fuel cons'imcd on. ly when heat is needed, no waste. No tiaokq or odor, STANDARD OIL COMPANY (GAUFOWUA) 1 i IJ 1 rVJ-e 1.9 -umr . r i 1 iTr .'il n - it ... I Jr vrrK A1 PEARL, 4 olL JL nit'- fr ..-fr J Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is the Joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic con stipation and torpid livers, i Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No griping is tho "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablets, They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. 11 you have a "dark brown mouth" now and then a bad breath a dull, tired feeling sick headache torpid liver and are constipated, you'll find quick, sure and only pleasant results from one or two lit tle Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take one or two every night just to keep right. Try them. 10c bud 25c per bos, All druggists. PERFECTION OflS HEATER FOR SALE BY that lio is best fittted for, where ho is in position to do the best for his school and to do it with tho least strain and injury to himself. Tho military value of this work is seen in tho success of the French in capturing one of the strongest forts on the western front almost without the loss of a man, after having "rehearsed" for tho exploit for many weeks. This work is directed by tho depart ment of Physical Education men, in charge of Dr. A. D. Browne, who lius succeede'd in getting tho wholo school to playing. Co-operating with him are the departments of Health, tho Military and tho inter-collegiate sports under Coach Jos. A. I'ipnl. WILLAMETTE ELEVEN TO FLAY on November 10. t Clinch Miitlicws has had his sqi:ad out every ni;;!it since tho beginning of nclioid, but all his men are inexper ienced. ' Tlio men who will pruhnbly be used by Ciui'h Mallicwa uro: Carter, Hpies :0r Day; iruurd. mclnjire, Hoffman, , l.nw.-um, yu;eUlsiy; tncklcs, Hasler, ' I'urv, Curtis; end;, Nichols, Williams, !Siirlis. .Meddler kccium to have tho ! ounr'oi'bnek i.o.sition, while Dimick and OIhou have been playiii!! the halflmik i positions. Wp.pu'o has been showing i well at fullback. Football 'interest is making itself more apparent as a result, of tlio an nouncement' thnt Conch ' Mathews tun scheduled a game with the University of Oregon freshmen to be played here FOB CROUP Dennis Eucalyptus Ointment Ft, arm OKn JlBI ROfl mX?' fiWTfjWJ 'JM ?MT oT'W iaitiiiHffaili'itniiMti n m i N 11 i a ft i I 1 j 1 i ri fa ii 3 i WMk w cm ram r-ff 1 nmm im mm rw am n mm i"tv" Ti ri TT! lha.gMaMaMilfl Sato .raay oroRe e ; A Hi TTv, Ail Records -1 g JUl Wti Lilies at i l I I t I I i i i I E 1 11 ILPMSL l tile. Price Slide C OSIO ompany: Be on hand Tuesday and get in the great rush for these wonderful bargains. We are going to clean our shelves of all the odd and broken lines of Shoes including thousands of pairs of the new est up-to-date Shoes that can be produced, this includes dozens of lines that we are exclusive agents for. We are increasing cur already large force to take care of the crowds Tuesday Many people were unable to be waited upon Saturday, but with our increased force we will be able to take care of everyone Tuesday, so be on hand when the doors open. SOME OF THE NEW THINGS PUT ON SALE FOR TOMORROW EXTRA SPECIAL Men's 16-inch double soled veal calf Boots with buckle tops, a Shoe that would sell from $10.00 to $12.00 go at EXTRA SPECIAL Broken lines Men's Work Shoes, most all sizes, tan and black, up to $5.00, while they last $4.95 $2.95 EXTRA SPECIAL Ladies' vici, button and lace, black, new styles, Cuban Louis heels, a good $4.50 Shoe goes at EXTRA SPECIAL Men's Dress Shoes, gun metal, button and lace, $4.50 grades, new styles, now go at 11 M EJ 14 a hi a m u m it is I 11 tl Ei II tl II Ii II II II II u Men's Dress Shoes Ladies' Dress Shoes Boy's and Children's Shoes 0 y All $5.00 Men's Dress Shoes, tan and black, lace All $4.00 Ladies' Dress Shoes, button and lace, Bovs' ?6-00 and $6.50 high top Boots, black pSClUlS and button, to go at to close out and tan, now go at $3.95 . $2,95 $4'95 will be thrown out each AU $6.00 Men's Dress Shoes, tan and black, lace All $5.00 Ladies' Dress Shoes, button and lace, Children's $4.00 and $4.50 Shoes, black and day Watch the w;ndows and button, to go at to close out. tan, button and lace, now go at $4.95 $3.95 $3.35 This is to be the biggest All $7.00 Men's Dress Shoes, tan and black, lace AH Ladies' Dress Shoes, button and lace, to All Children's Shoes, $2.50 and $2.75 grades, kid price cutting event in and button, to go at close cut and cloth top, button and lace now go at c . , , . $5.95 $4.95 $1.95 Salem s history. n It 11 II El II II tl II M II II II n ii w a ti li M Shoes elby Shoes D UK EsSLlL i in !! i mi ia'iiliiu Mf i, . mm W itch Elk Boots aM Band Boots Wizzard Arch Supports