Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1918)
SIX THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, ORE. MONDAY. MAY 27, 1918. :l li n ii 3 t j - ! 5 f fc 4 if s H i 1 1 ! I t s X i QUALITY HEADQUARTERS WHERE BISHOP ALL WOOL SUITS ARE SOLD Buy good clothes; you cant afford any others IT ISN'T SO MUCH A MATTER OF WHAT YOU CAN AFFORD to pay for Clothes as what you can't afford to waste. You want to be as well dressed as ever at the least possible expense. .It's a sign of American loyalty Here at this store we sell all-wool, well tailored Clothes of the finest quality. They'll wear a long time and keep their shape; save your money. You'll be as well dressed as you'll care to be. They'll be- Fred Fclton FlgEts Jack Dempscy July 4 J. R. Ilia Married i to Portland Girl Oregon City, Or., May 26 An inter-! f sting romance of the reent political; campaign became known here 1 ortland, Or., Mar 27. Fred Fulton will not fight" Willie Meehan Friday uight in San Francisco for the Bed Cross. iiike Collins, Fulton's manWr. made ' ,'flie,, Janlf K. Linn, wealth 'this announcement n.l-iv when hr r. ,,r of balem, and Miss Fains rived here with Fulton from Seattle. ' Portland, were married, Rev, Fulton has broken a bone in his right !b,,rt officiating. hand while training, said Collins. "We don't know yet how serious it is," said Collins. Collins announced Fulton has signed to fight Jack Derapvey in Danbury, Conn., July 4, for $12,000. 4 male ere today '$4' i. .v hop d'-al-j I V Motto, cf MVIAi . e. e. cii- mmM A, ....... i : i. : l j . . j I care nothing fit all for what is being said and believed in the lobbies of j Washington hotels, where the atmos phere s.'ems iiiake it possible to be- lieve what is believed nowhere els. Bac!r. up Boys ' 'On Other Side" "Have rou not felt the snirit of !the nation rise and its thought become , Mr. Lion was eampaiern manaeer fur B. Jf. Stanfield, aspirant for the repub lican nomination for United States sen ator and Miss Stoeker was a stenograph er at campaign headquarters in Portland Mr. and Mrs. Linn will leave June S for Alaska on their honeymoon. Miss Nellie J. McGreer, of Portland, accom panies Mr. Linn and Miss 8tocker to Oregon City and witnessed the wedding German Submarines Operate Further Oat scents and invalids quickly respond to the beneficial qualities of PORT-O-LTVE TONIC This pleasant remedy, . token just befor each meoi, enriches the rm poverished stood tone up and strengthens tho entirt system. Endorsed V Physicians. Sold ty most fwd druggists. By Cart D. Groat, BISHOP ALL WOOL SUITS $20 TO $35 HART SCRAFFNER & $25 TO $40 MARX ,a .".initio and common thought since jthese eventful days iu which we have :been eendin? our br to the other jfciitef I think you must read that j thought as I do, to mean this: that the I people of this country are not Oniy : united in the resolute purpose to nix ! this war, but are ready and willing to bear any burden and undergo any we-1 Irifice that St may be necessary for them to tear in order to win it. We j need not be afraid to tux theni if we i lay itaxes justly. They kiww the warj ! must be paid for and that it is they t ' who must pay for it, and if the burden . is justly distributed and the sacrifice! made a common sacrifice from which ( jnone escapes who. can bear it all, theyj will carry it cheerfully and with a sort of solemn pride. I always have I been proud rto be an American and .was never more proud than now, when ( all that wo have sa!d and all that we (lnited Press. Staff Correspondent) Our Men's Shoes Wear SALEM WOOLEN MILLS STORE Good Shoes For Men have foreseen about our people is com ing true. The groat days have come and the only thing that they ask for or admire is duty gria'ly and adequately lone; when their only wish tor Ameri- Washington, May 27. Ger man submarines are operating much farther out from their bases than heretofore, but still on the other side of the Atlan tic, according to navy depart ment advices today. These mes sages indicated that the U boats are taking a new course seeking to sink ships traversing other than the usual lanes. The navy today finished checking up on last week's feverish rumors of raiders and submarines off the Atlantic coast and found them to be en tirely unfounded. i One of these reports, not hith ereto published, was a wireless from a merchant man at sea. saying she was being chased by. a submarine. This has been checked up and proven false. lttffi;,lr',iiJliii-lHlliiililii.l,.iir.i..,i,iya.i-.. .,..xi,.,, ..:j..l,itrj5T,.j!,;ilJ.. ,1,,, gmmf I "ZsTrr Distributor, DANIEL J. FRY, Salem Market Was Unsettled In Wall Street Today cent bonds touched at 97.28. a new low record the i i no nmicru iruui, una Bnimremiv u- ca is that she may share the freedom , gun you can realize how that I sol she enjoys; when a gieat ccmpelling 'emiriy.ed my feeling as I came to yoit sympathy wells up iu their hearts for Ymd how it seemed to strengthen the men everywhere who suffer and are purpose which I tried to express in oppressed; ana they fee at last tor tne tnese lines. high uses for which their wealth has been piled up and their mighty power "I nincuiuulri ill and counting ndither rsessicn. Wood nor treasure now that their fin- Congress Is Praised have admired the work of this nl day of opportunity has ccnic, rejoice ,'with the executive has been PRESIDENT WILSON (Continued from page one) fliilion ami ketip our industrial system free of siuvulatiou and waste. We shnll naturally turn, therefore, I .uppow, to l,r'?,'h ,ho '. . . ' '. with any sort of coutul Will J'l U M IP.. UUI 1IW O UIIU lllAUlilT0 for the additional taxes. Hut the war profits and incomes upon wJiich the iin'tenscd taxes will be levied will be the profits and inrcjnes of the colon Wiir year 1918. It would be manifestly km fair to wait until tbn early months nf .1019 to ay what they are to be. It lininht ho difficult, I should ilmagliio, !t' run the mill with water tlmt ilitid alieady gono over the wheel. Taxes Due June, 1919 "Moreover, tnxea of that sort will Inut be paid until the June of next ear and the treasury must anticipate Hli em , has yet been attempted. What are the (bonkers to think of the certificates if they do not certainly Know where the money is to come from which is to tuke them upf Aud how are investors to ap- those bonds leiue or knowl edge of their own affairs if they -do not know what taxeji they are to pay and wlhnt economies unit adjustments of their business they must effect t I 'cannot assure the country of a Biiccess f nl tidministratien of the trensury ill litis if the question of further taxa tion is to bo left undecided until 1919. "The consideration that dominates every other now and makes every oth er eem trivial and negligible, is the winning of tihe war. We are not only in the midst of the war, we are at the very peak and crisis of it. Hundreds or tnoiiAMikix or our nun, carrying our hearts with them and our fortunes, are Traitors . won't like this photo play. Neither will It must use the nionev ther ore Ho produce bofors it is duo. It must soil in the fields and ships are crowding whnrt tinio certificate of indebtedness, faster and faster to the ports of Franco (In the autumn a much lurger scalo of ttnd England with regiment after regi Jong time bonds must be ejected than iniout, thousand after thousand, to join tthiun until the eiumy shall bo btviton aiut brought to a reckoning with man kind. There can bo no, pause or inter miswion. The great enterprise must, on the contrary, Ihi pushed with greater and greater energy. The volume of our might must steadily and rapidly bo augmented until there can be no question of resisting it. If that Is to bo accomplished, gentlemen, money must sustain it to the utmost. Finances Must be Provided "Our lflinn,ucial lrogrnm kmist no imoro be left iu doul ur suffered to lug than our ordnance program or our ship progimn or our munitions program ?'or our prognni for making millions of sunn ready. These others are not pro 'grniuis, indeed, but merely plans upon imner, unless there is to be an unoues- ,'timuahla supply of money. That is the wit nation aud it is the situation which creates the. duty, no choice or prefer erne of ours. There is onlv one way to 0ft6i that duty. We must meet it with out S'Uisliness or fear of cotiSi'iiiences. Spies for they are smoked out by the tremendous expose of- I J I'olitics is adjourned. Tho elections will go to those who think least of it; to those Who go to the constituencies without explanations or excuses, with a plain record of duty faithfully and disinterestedly performed. ifcecordg are Kept "I, for one, ami always confident that tho people of this country will give a just verdict upun the service of the men who act for them when the fui'ts are such that no man can dis Kiiiso or conceal them. There is no dan ger of deceit now. An intense aud pit iless light beats upon icvery man and every action in this tragic plea of war that is now upon tho stage. If lobby ists hurry to Washington to attempt to turn what you do in tho nvntterxif taxation to their protection or advant age, the light will beat also on them. Ther-o is abundant fuel for the light in tho records of the treasury with re gard to profits of every sort. The prof iteering tho cannot lue got at by the restraints of conscience and love of 'country, ein be got t by tnxatipn There is such profiteering now and tho information with regard to it is nmilnlilo audi indisputable. Duty Must be Done " I m advisiug you to aet upon this mutter of taxation now, gentlemen, not txvuuse l (to not. know that you can see and interpret the facts and the duty they impose just as well and with as clear a perception of the obli gations involved as I can, out because there is a enrtnin solemn satisfaction in shining with you the responsibili ties of such a time. The world never stood in such cajio before. Men never before hail so clear or so moving a vision of duty. I know that you will begrudge tho work to be done here by lis ho. more ithan the men begrudge ua theirs, who lio in the trenches and sal ly forth to their donrh. Thore is a stimulating comradeship knitting us all together. And this task to which 1 invite your immediate consideration will be performed under favorable in fluences if wo will look to what tho The way in which the two 1 ., S .. I . i , 1 with the executive has been generous to sieiid and to be spent through a rand admirable and it is not in any soir- ong nltililt of suffering and terror, it of suggesting dutv neiilocted. but in order that they aud men. everywhere only to remind you of the common may see the dawn of a day of righte- i'cause and the common obligation that onsnesn and justice and peace., bhall I have ventured to come to von to ne grow weary when they hid us act? day, "ilay 1 add tins word, gentlemen: .lust as I was leaving the white house 1 was tulil that the expected drive on JOURNAL WANT ADS SELL New York, May 27. The New York Evening financial review today said: Tho market was unsettled through most of the session, with industrial , 8.vstem9, prices inclined to weakness, losses ranging from one to four points or so. The rails were in distinctly better form, although gains over Saturday were at best little more than fractional. There were a few soft spots and more or less shifting about. The undertone, however, in that department was rela tively firm. In the last hour losses broadened among the industrials. United Ntr.tes Steel, for example, which had sold at 10", dropped to below 105 and Baldwin Locomotive lost over nine points. The rails withstood tho general pressure in good form. Liberty loan 4Vi per The Astoria central delivery system is a thing of the past, the Budffet 'says, and in the future the respective mer chants will conduct their own delivery As appears from an item in the Sunt the first ripe strawberries seen at Suth erlin this season, as was perfoctly fit ting aud proper, were from the garden of Mrs. J. C. Saueerman. ASK FOR and GET orlick's The Original Malted mk For Infante and Invalids Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price at LOWF RICES i It "iu Yfc beast d Vtrn' The private life of the man who made the war laid bare. :: LIBERTY THEATRE Three Days Starting1 Thursday, May 30. - t ,s- - v - ?rv i 1 v t - - 'i -tA ' I . i - J .'1 " ;:v r cj-: ' H ' ' i mTi1 ' aV9T A ONE DAY THE MIGHTV ARM OP THE Pi.MH GCBrMaj ftOPLB WILL RiACH OUT ANO CRUSH THt BE ASF Of BERUW (SttNt FHOH THE KAISER TUB BEAST Of BERLIN) HOMING TO THE LIBKRTY THEATEH NEXT TirURSDAY. FRIDAY AN'D SATURDAY The will back of Germany's war and the ruUilossnest of German war tneth ods will b brought home to eitUens of Salorn as never before when "The Kaiser, lUu of Berlin" i shown i the Liberty theater, in this city, starting Thursday, New York saw the film over two weeks ago, and New York went wild) with excitement and patriotic enthusiasm, while the American Defense Ho- j r-nj uuuiTBcu ii Ha-.iuu muni pviviui pincv ui arivruc pnuiuciiun inn uas been brought out since America entered the war, - .... WE HAVE STILL LEFT SEVERAL LINES OF SHOES THAT WE ARE HOLDING DOWN TO te GREAT DISSOLUTION SALE WE WANT MORE MONEY That is the reason we started our Great Dissolution Shoe Sale. Shoes for Men, Women, Misses', Boys and Children, in buck, patent, kid and white fabric. Ladies' Patent Oxfords $4.35 The very newest lasts and patterns, very stylish. Brown Oxfords ..$4.65 Brown Calf, up-to-date style, military heels' A bargain. Black Kid Oxfords $4.35 Beautiful late designs, long toe, very choice. White Fabric Oxfords $3.15 A fine weave white fabric Oxford, turned sole and covered heels, new lasts. Very light cool and summery. Black Kid Oxfords $4.65 Fine soft kid, light turned soles, military heels, a very swell and easy fitting Oxford- And Men's Shoes of every description at Hard Times Prices. SHOES FOR THE KIDDIES We make a specialty of our "Children Department arid "Correct Fitting" is our slogan. For play use these can- ' Smoke Elk 'Skuffers, vas shoes, leather soles, nice, easy, splendid lace skuffers, sizes 8l2 wear, 12 to 2, $3.29; 8 to to 11 at $1.33. In 5 to 8 11 at $2.89 and 5 to 8, at $1.28 at $2.29 Baby Service- Shoes in Black Kid turned soles, sizes 2 to 5, no heel, 95c Spring Heel 99c Fine for every day wear la 8 to 11 at $2.55. In Patent Button White Cloth Top, 5 to 8, $1.80. 2 to 5, $1.49. Wsstit and Children's Black Kid, White Cloth top in lace, sizes 12 to 2, $2.93. Boys' and Youths', in all kinds, sizes and prices . Buy now while you can saye the $$ . Come in and look oyer our bargains. We have shoes, to . satisfy. 167 North Commercial St Salem, Oregon