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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1918)
THE BAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, ' OREGON. FRIDAY, FEB. 8, 1918. Is i Men's and Women's Sweaters at Closing Out Prices Boys' Knee . Pants Suits .at Closing Out. Prices Boys' Long Pants Suits Prices Deeply Cut Extraordinary Values On Men's Umbrellas Hansen's Dress, Wonderful Auto and Work Values in . GLOVES BOYS' -' FOR SHOES MEN n tne Economy Basement, also ' $1.25 values $1.10 Extreme $1.50 values $1.35 Bargains ' $1.75 values $1.58 In $2.00 values $1.80 $2.50 values $2.25 MEN'S $1.75 values $1.58 T $3.00 values $2.70 bHOJa A WONDERFUL CLOTHING . OPPORTUNITY A Splendid Stock of Men's Suits and Overcoats at DEEP CLOSING OUT PRICES WE CARRY THE GORDON HAT $3.50 Hat $2.45 $2.25 and $1.75 now $1.35 One Assortment Stiff Hats .... 50c Closing Out Prices On Florsheim's Beacon's and Emerson's Shoes FOR MEN Corner Ceort and Com! Stat, Salem t RUSSIANS STRONG (Continued fiom page oh) will bo that kind of a peace, or no peace, they assert. The Znamia Taude, organ of the so ts'" OLD-TIME COLD CURE DRINK TEU Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy- Take a tablcspoonful of this hamburg tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacupful at any time. It is the moBt effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving conges tion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely vege table, therefore harmless. cial revolutionaries of the left, -said to day th&t the Germans would hardly dare break off negotiations now and "wo must continue our policy of deep ening the German revolution." Referring to Foreign Minister Trot sky's reference in his exclusive inter view with the United Press to an elas tic policy, the Novayazishiin (news paper) asked whether Russia should permit German annexations in the west even if they were rejected in the east. The Bolsheviki roply to this that if the Germans "are able to annex tprri tory on the western front it is the al lies' fault, as they failed to join the Brest-Litovsk conferences. Turkey Will Stand Pat Amsterdam, Feb. 8. "While we are aware of the great value of peace, Tur key will never conclude a separato peace at any price," Halil Bey, new Turkish foreign minister, declared in an address before the chamber, accord ing to Constantinople dispatches re ceived here touay. Ualil said Turkey was in complete agreement with Heitliug and Czernin and added: "We will hold on until some conc rete success is attained. We will make only such concessions us are coiupat- loio with our honor and national dig niity." . b : J Vty Mi i , rt- ;r 1 - mm mtlm Bay w ill IS ifeii Mtsatfett Day Brusfloff Arrested Copenhagen, Feb. 8. General Bru siloff, commander in chief of tho Rus sian armies under Kerensky, has been arrested in Moscow, according to Ber lin aispateiies received touay. . Brusiloff was appointed commander June 4, 191 1, and resigned two months later becauso he could not fully agree with Kerensky 's democratic attitude toward the armies. He was succeeded by General Korniloff. Expell Allied Diplomats Washington, Feb. 8. An unconfirm ed dispatch to tho state department from Stockholm, dated Feb. 7, received today, says all allied embassies and diplomatic representatives have been expelled from Russia and are en route to Sweden. The state department said the la3t word from United States Ambassador Francis was a dispatch dated February ST 4 Cabinet Resigns Amsterdam, Feb. 8. The resignation of the Austrian cabinet has been ten dered to Emperor Carl, according to Vienna dispatches here today. The Suppose there were also a Gasless Day Suppose the fuel administration In his efforts to conserve the fuel supply of the country found It nec essary to designate one day of the week as "Gasless Day?" Suppose on that day the use of Gas for any purpose whatsoever was forbidden? - Stop and think just how vitally such an act would af fect practically every man, woman and child la this nation and yon begin, to realize what a tremendous part gas plays In modern civilization. Through the Gas mains flows the veiy life blood of the city. Shut off the Gas supply even for a single day and thousands of homes are darkened at night, thousands of dinners are served uncooked or cold, thousands of rooms lose their cheer and warmth. Shut off the Gas supply and the hot bath lecomes an Icy plunge, and ironing slow, fretful dru gery. Without Gas Indus try could not keep pace with progress the manufac ture of high explosives to supply our troops and our Allies would cease. We call your attention to the foregoing facts, only ' that you may realize more fully how essentially the welfare of this community is associated with good Gas Service. The Gas Company 237 N. LmEgTYSTREET" r-- rVJ.,.JJ,.,J.,fj. RELIEVES ui iiLyuiiNDiEsra DYSPEPSIA-GASTRITIS - SOUR STOMACH ETC, IN FIVE MINUTES OROilEY BACK POWDER on TABLETS 50 EVERYWHERE PFDMMJV HJIQ TFAD I uuirmiii uno ilhii OF ECONOMIC BOYCOTT Manufacturers Are Most Alarmed Oyer Supply cf Raw Materials i Washington, Feb. 8. Germany is launching a counter drive within the central empires to offset growing fear of an allied economic boycott after tho war. "Secret agreements," to be pro mulgated by Germany and the greed of other nations wjll smash any boy- coit, ueciares me semi-oiiieiai wolrt Agency in an article prepared for wide distribution iu Germany and Austria, a copy of which hag reached this government. ' By compensation agreements it would be easy for Germany to prevail upon countries to make exchanges se cretly or openly. If individual states take up business connections with Ger many openly or secretly there will be many ways to get raw materials. "As soon as the chain of agreements with regard to an economic war is broken, England will bo the greatest sufferer. An exchange of goods, not carried on' according to natural eco nomic laws, will make the costs of pro duction greater, export more difficult and inland .consumption more expens ive, all to the detriment of English la borers." Italy, according to the Wolff articlo "cannot long do without Germany, its best market for vegetables, fruits, silks, cts. The natural market for Rus sian grain, hemp, bran, wood, eggs and many raw materials, is Germany. Many countries need goods which they can not eret only froan Germany, such as coal, coke, potash, sulphate of ammo nia, chemicals, dyes, etc." ELLrANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Druggists refund money if it fails. 25H TUSCANIA DEATH ROLL !AY BE REDUCED BY ONE HUtW More Survivors Thought to Have Landed at Various Points On Coast Belfast, Ireland, Feb. 8. The Tus cania death roll may be reduced bv 100 through landing of survivors at other points, on the Irish and Scottish coasts, it was estimated here this afternoon. The British admiralty's estimate of the casualty .list is 210. THREE ore ATU RDAY 9 P. M. rlisnntrhes worn dated February 7. Austrian Previer Karon Von Zydler Sanded the resignation to trie neau or, the dual monarchy. American" cabpaign (Continued from page one) NDHA NEVER LET HER 111 GET GRAY Kept Her Locks Youthful, Dark and Glossy with Com mon Garden Sage and Sulphur When VOU darknn !,: Sage Tea and Sulphur, "no one can tell sMng has got Marshal Von Hindeuburg because it's done so naturallv so ev-Suess'nS an 'iat ls "'"fty tne 'lrsl enly. Preparing this mixture."thongh,l w'ore ia the amp- If v)n. Hindenliurg at home is mussv and tmnhlAn.a I were contemnlatin.ff a major offensive For 50 cents you can buv at. anv drni at thin time aaainst the Americans he SHIPPERS OF IIATIGH ALIVE TOIflTERESTS Railroad Control Legislation Will Hold tenter ot Mage Next Week Washington, Fob. 8- The "8. O. " call was sent to shippers of the country today, to protect their inter csts in the railroad control legislation which will be taken up by botn branches of congress next week. Clifford Thome, former chairman of tho Iowa state railway commission auj now representing a dozen large ship pers organizations through the middle west, urged them to exert their fullest pressure to obtain enactment of a rate fixing clause which will leave that power with the interstate commerce commission. Thorne claims that failure of tho house committee to adopt the senate rate matang provisions has brought the fight to the floors of congress. The house measure leaves tho power with tho president. The senate measure leav es it with the commission, but gives tho president the right to lnitiute rates, as carriers now do. ' Unless the senate provision is adopted tho commission may be re duced to nominal control such as it used to have," Thorne warned. ' Nobody has suggested that ' war power' overrides the rights of railroads The rights of shippers are just as sa cred as those of the roads." The railroad legislation will reach the Senate floor Monday with pros pects of few talkless days until the measure is enacted. Dissenting mcui bers of the interstate commerce com- ittee plan to present their varied views n spite of the plea of President Wil son and Chairman Smith for rapid oc tion. Senator Cummins, who will present his minority report to the senate Mon day, will center his attack on the com pensation feature of tne bill. He fought in committee to cut out the guarantee of any surplus to the roads during tho government control. lne total surplus guaranteed in the com mittee bill, he says, is nearly 200,000, 000 annually. Senator Poindcxter, who has present ed his views in a report, expects to car ry his fiht to the floor. He will fight the trine limit and rate fixing fea tures of tho bill- Women IJere Saved. An Irish Port, Feb. . Mrs. Cot- tins and Mrs. Karson, stewardesses, and only women aboard the Tuscniiia. slid down ropes into a lifeboat when the transport was torpedoed. 'A number of troops in the boat next to ours were thrown out," Mrs. Cottons said, in describing her ex periences today. ''We were immediately surrounded by men swimming in the isy water. There were only two men in our boat able to manage the oars, but wo did our best as swimmers were encount ered. We -gathered them in until our boat was filled to tho danger point. They were still swimming about the sea, calling for help. Gradually other A. group Of soldier survivors over boats rescued them." heard Mrs.. Cottins' recital. "Dos, and you kids did as much a-3 the best man m the world," cried one. "I saw you." FOR GOOD MOVING MONDAY TO TACOxMA BUY NOW VHILE YOU STILL HAVE THE CHANCE rick .Benjamin B CLOTHES The House That Guarantees Every Tackage Survivors Get to Work Belfast, Ireland, Feb. 8. Undaunted by their experiences in the torpedoing of the transport Tuscan'ia, American soldiers buckled down today to prepare themselves for revenge against the Huns via the American front in France, Two trainloails of survivors were sent to a military camp somewhere in Great Britain, where thoy will undergo training as soon as tho equipment lost on tho Tuscniiia has been replaced. Tho majority of these were medical corps men, engineers, foresters and aviators. Fifty In Hospitals Belfast, Ireland, Feb. 8. There were about fifty survivors of the transport Tuscania in Belfast hospitals today, suffering from exposure and 5n juiies received in the torpedo explosion. American army officers were check ing up the names of survivors lodged in hotels here and making casualty lists, which will bo forwarded to Washington. SENT TO MXtTTARY PEISON a ter being wounded in an air battle. - Little righting Yerterday. Berlin, Via London, Feb. 8. "There was little fighting yesterday in any of Wounded: I). A. Craven, Penfield, Pa R. L. King, Portland, Oregon. Marshal Hnig today. Only Artillery Fire London, Feb. 8. Hostile artillerv fii-n tho theaters," the German war office i 3"rig the night in the neighborhood reported today. j of Flesquieres was reported by Field A number of enemy troops wore taken prisoner on the east bank of the Meuse, southwest of Ornes, the war offico an nounced today. German artillory continues its activity French Forces Eaid. Paris, Feb. 8. French forces aided enemy outposts west of -Forges on the left bank of the Mouse, said today's official statement. Portland Man Killed. Ottawa, Ont., Feb. 8. Tho following Americana are mentioned in today's Canadian casualty lints: FOR COUGMS AND COLDS A' hnndy Cnlolum compound that Bftfe Eunnla aKalnut chronic lutic and throat troubles. a tonic-reirtoraifv prepared without harmful or hlib4t-formluB drugs. Try thern. toUay. SO cents a box, Including war las l-'or uilp by oU DniRuM, . JCckuuiu Laboratory, i'hiladelphla LIBERTY The: 3 Matinecs- tion of reserves apainst a refolute en emy is always a dangerous policy. The only reason why Von JJindon- burg has divided hig forces is because his espionage system ha been unable to ferret out the designs of the Am erican chief command. General Pcr- store the ready to use nrermratmn im'- proved by the addition of other ingre dients, called "Wypth's Sage and Sul phur Compound." You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this throuph your hair, taking on small strand at a time. Bv mornin? all gray hair disappears, end. after an- otner application or two, your hair would under no circumstances separate his reserve man power into independ ent units. Instead of separation, he would concentrate at a given sector and would lanmh his blow with all the force at his command. Tho division of the German reserves between Metz and southern Alsace, therefore, suggests not only that Von and0TuxuWUtifUlly 'larkened' e,CS8yHindenbu'r.? has' been 'puzzled by G.n- Orav. fided fcair, though no disToce. is a sign. of old age. and ss we all de sire a youthful and attractive frrear- n"e, get busv at once with Wveth ' Sae-e and Sulphur Comnound and look years younper. This ready to use pren amion in ft delvfhtful toilet reouisite and not a medicine. It is not intendej for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. ! eral Pershing's preliminary strategy, but also that the German general staff is content for the present to rest on the defensive against the fast growing American strength along the Alsace Lorraine border. Further uneasiness in German mili tary circles over the possibilities of the coming American offensive is shown by reports that Von Hindenburg Portland, Or. Feb. 8 Shorn of the military habiliments he affected in posing as an army officer, Miles Owen presented a sorry spectacle in federal district court today when he appeared for trial wearing badly worn miscel laneous garments gathered in the county jail corridors. Owen was sentenced to serve is months at McNeill's Island for imper sonating an officer. Asa lieutenant, he succeeded in cashing a few worthless checks, it is alleged. and Lundcndcrff are now malting their headquarters along the Kliine. This un doubtedly means that Germany is go ing to take no chances by using sec ond rate coimnaiiders ngaint the Am ericans. The two military dictators of Germany are assuming full control themselves of Goniiny!'s defense) against the I'nited Stales. They may be tooling the German people with tales of contempt for the American army but they are not "fooling them selves. " TURKS BEATEN (Continued from page one) WEDNESDAY ilv 12"13'14 f lilCClTrtS'"!, WEDNESDAY V.iSr v"TrSK. THURSDAY I Wll I II AM FOY Presen8 the most stu IflLLIHri I UA pendous cinema success in history. Playing everywhere to the largest and most discriminating audiences in motion picture his tory. Direct from its 6 months run at the Lyric Theatre, New York, at $2.00 a seat. suit the Arabs allied themselves with the British, Join American Forces. Paris, Feb. - 8. Uay C'laflin Bridge man and 1. X. Hall, American aviators, have been transferred from the Lafay ette cscadville to the American army, it was announced. Official confirmation was received today of the dcuth of W. II. Taylor, aged 23, a member of Lieutenant (iuy lu'iner's squadron, in an unequal bat tle with German airmen. Taylor's home was iu Koslyu, L. I. Bridgeniun, whose home is in Lake Forest, 111., is 22 years old. Ue won a scrgeantcy in the escadrille last summer. There is no I. N. Hall in the official personnel of the escadrille. Tho only Kali is Norman Hall of Colfax, Iowa, who was decorated with the military medal and war cross last summer, af- THEB A BAR A AS CLEOPAT RA The Siren of the Nile Depicting the love adventures of Egypt's Vampire Queen, who over turned the world with her beauty and her wiles and ouercd the two greatest men of her time. v - V con- v; -ft. at to Corn Him You dent miss wheat when you eat 1;'- 0ST fOASTIES la it's Gorgeous Sellings and countless scenes of pictorial beauty it sur passes all other, film prod uctions. Prices Nights 50c. Reserved Seats 75c. Matinees Adults 50c. Children 25c. V: v X w: 'if I