THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. ORB. TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1918. THREE us2 ; Cecile DeMille's Glorious Masterpiece ! :'y t , , . ; 11 Wo can get along very nicely without fireworks on the Fourth of July, but many citizens should at least fly a new flag. uheQeal Test i of gasoline is in its boil ing pointsi In "Red Crown" they form a continuous uniform chain, giving easy starting, quick accel eration, power and mile age. Look for the Red Crown sign before you fill, STANDARD OIL COMPANY .(Califoraii). jfieGasolftie & 'Quality Bargain We will have many attractive prices to offer you on Bargain Dayj, At the present time when the prices of Merchan dise are increasing every day the thrifty buyer will take advantage of these special opportunities-We will have reduced prices on YOUNG MEN'S SUITS, LIGHT WEIGHT SUMMER SUITS, -r P0R0S KNIT. UNDERWEAR, s BROKEN LINES MEN'S SHOES. BOYS' KNEE TROUSER SUITS, NECKWEAR AND OTHER FURNISHINGS SALEM WOOLEN MILLS STORE Cecile YANKEES PREPARED (Continued from page one) line-si The rain swooping this section has rendered the front positions cold and wot, in contrast to the heat of tho past few weeks. In the meantime, the greatest air activity continues along the lines de spite the weather. Fighting and bomb ing planes headed for boeno territory, 1L- lit kiim fhwliM nf nrows. The Germans are bombing allied backareas ruinor.ed aboard the ship that the wire with the allies heavily retaliating. less operator had picked up ft "8. O. One American field hospital was so, endangered by enemy bombs that prep arations have Ibeen made to evacuate it but the nurses and doctors are still on the job. aetilleey is active By Frank J. Taylor ' (United Press staff correiondent) With the American Armies in Lor raine, June 11. Both artilleries were increasingly active on the Toul front yestorday evening ana last night. Ger man guns attempted to seek out a num ber lof American positions but were un successful. A heavy rain has caused cessation of aerial activities. The Americans1 here are eager to par ticipate in the big fighting and feel qualified to duplicate their comrade s fcatis in the Maine district. Eczema Wash A touch of D. D.D. to any eceroa sore or Hching eruption and you'll be able to rest ana Bleep onoe-more. Think-Just a touch! li (t worth tryjng? Get a tr.al bottle today. - i... - Your mone bach it Ue first bottle does not relieve you. . HD. UD J. O. Perry. Day - STARTS TODAY C DeMille's Glorious PASSENGER LINER (Continued from page one) voying destroyer stopped suddenly, sig nalled submarine in sight." and turn ed back. Kaciug away from the steam ship it uropped several depth charges overboard. Tab inference was that an other U-boat had ben destroyed. The ship was met about 150 miles from thiB port by a .United States hydro-aeroplane and a destroyer which escorted the lin er to port. Passengers also stated it was stated she was being attacked by a submarine. This could not be verified as officers of the vessel refused to talk. Interned German Shot Attempmg to Escape Chattanoga, Tenn., June 10. Arthur Huoller, a German wireless operator in terned at Fort Oglethorpe prison camp, was shot by a guard Sunday while at tempting to cut through the barbed wire stockade, it was announced late today. Hueler was shot through the ab domen and probably wil die. He was interned some time ago. Fed eral officers charged that he had been sending wireless messages to Germany telling of ship departures. ' - ADVISES GIRLS Women who work must give more than ordinary attention to their person al appearance if their names are to be long in the land of the pay roll, the dean of Detroit stenographers recently declared in a lecture to working girls. "Not all of us can afford an elaborate wardrobe," she said, "but the poorest of us can afford to buy good soaps and toilet preparations for our skin and! hair. They pay big dividends in the business world.". - This veteran typist, admits -she is past 40, but says she keeps gray hairs away by using a preparation she discovered! several years ago called Q-Ban Hair Color Kestorer. She is enthusiastic in its praise, and says it not only chases away the gray hairs, but also helps her hair grow. The Dean is a marvel to her friends. itiiTiiflim t II y gfejij I I' 5- "vj f Si w 7 Ml " &&&& i DANCING HORSES AND SIN GIRL The sardine may not like its can, but the dancing and posing horses with the Sells-Floto Circus are mighty fond of their saddles, and the thirty pretty women in those saddles, when the big show band strikes up the latest one step during the performances, which will be seen in Salem, Thursday the 13th. Imagine, if you will, the hippodrome track circling the big top with some thirty blue ribbon hoTses stepping, gliding, swaying end pirouetting thru the intricacies of the 1918 variations Masterpiece Trading In Futures of Saimoa Prohibited Portland, ur., Juns 11. With an nouncement of new prices for canned salmon today it was learned that' trad ing has been abolished by the govern ment and that the new price is 25 cents a dozen cans over the price a year ago, The prices from the canner to the wholesaler are: One pound tails $3.50 per dozen, One pound flats $3.25. Half pound flats $2. Ovals, $3.95. Canners may sell only as they pack and not deal in futures. The government requires that cannen reserve 25 per cent of their output for government uses. Shad also will advance 25 cents over a year ago, the new price being $1.75 a dozen caus. Heavy Flour Reserves May Be Drawn Upon Washington, June 11. Emergency re- serves of flour totalling 500,000 barrels are piled in more than twenty cities throughout the United States for use in case of bread famine, it was learned at the food admirfstration today. Ihtse stores, equivalent to 2,250,000 TO KEEP ALERT : IT '41 jt RIDES PRETTY DISPLAY of the tanigo. Imagine the band slip ping from the one step to the fox trot, and from the fox trot to the waltz, wiU tho horses following in perfect rhythm and in faultless exactitude of steps. Such is the sight twice daily, and the circus men claim that the beauty of the number appeals to the crowds in the buze stands as few high school end menage acts do. Later In the act, as the horses pose in various group ings, the fair riders sing pretty chor uses of the latest song hits. . 10,000 Ad Displayed At Perry's Drug Store In the window of the Perry's Drug Store on 11S S. Commercial street, there is displayed a double-page adver tisement from the current issue of a great national weekly that brings the war on the sea directly home to this section, and to the store where the ad vertisement arrears. The proprietor of uia store naa a personal interest- in the advertisement also, for it relates to war work that he is doing for the Government. Furthermore, he helped to pay for it and the cost of the ad" for the single issue was $10,- 000. The advertisement asks for 50,000 men, between 21 and 3U, for service in the new Merchant Marine. In the language of its headline, it offers 50,000 jobs at sea" to clean-cut young Americans. It states that the v. o. bhipping Hoard will give them special training before putting then into actual sea service, carrying sup plies to our armies and Allies in the fightansc fields of .Europe. So much im portance is attached to this work that men accepted for it are exempted from call to military duty. The advertisement relates further, that "the BEX Alii STOKES through out the United States, nearly 7000 of them,- have been designated by tae Government as enrolling stations fot the U. 8. (Shipping Hoard. At tnese stores, right m their own home towns, vouna men mav now 'sign on' lor training and subsequent sea duty in the U. S. Merchant Marine." The personal interest of Mr. Perry in common with other ttt.A.Auu drug- s, in this striking war announce ment, is contained in the concluding words of the advertisement, which are "This uso of the stores and the-ex pense of this advertisement are a con tribution by the BEXALL STORES to the cause of .Liberty." bushels of wheat, have been held by the food administration at great industrial testers since early last winter. With the present flour and whoat stocks practic ally exhausted it is possible that these reserves will hav,e to b0 drawn upon They constitute a two weeks supply for I ho centers in which they are stored. Industrial centers where the popula tions would bs most helpless in caso of bread famine, wer8 selected as reserve Lcities. Gililam county, according to tho Con don GloUe, holds the record "for hav ing the smallest list of delinquent taxes in the state and paid less for having the list published than any other county." " 26 KILLED IN (Continued from page one) William H. McGrath, Cleveland, O. Charles Maggoino, Syracuse, N. Y. Edward C. Pitt, Rocky Mount, N. C. Marion D. Thompson, Levering, Mich. Noel Troncy, 52 Hallam street San Francisco. Victor Tuttlo, Newport, Mt. Henry Urbanowski, Detroit, Mich. Edward F. Weil, Cleves, Ohio, Paosct Zaico. Russia. Died From Wounds Sergeant Fred S, I.urphy, Framing ham, Mass. Privates Dewey G. Burr, Bristolville Ohio. Bernard Hurst, Oldenburg, Ind. Died of Disease Lieutenant Edward Hines-, Jr., Chi cago. Corporal Arthur H. Kuoni, Sauk City Wis. Privates Louis Jass, Horatio, Ark, Louis Erwin, Bethel, Tenn. Alfred J. Gratton, Bennington, Vt. Henry Howard, Franklinville, N. Y. Alex Miller, Raymond, Miss. Died From Accident and Other Causes Privates Williim GlyM, Hunting ton, N. Y. Michael Keating, Brooklyn, N. Y. Edwin V. Ruoff, Brooklyn, N. Y, Wounded Severely Lieutenants Edmund Corby, New York. Jataes V- LawTcnee, Atlanta, Ga. Corporals Donald E. Carey, Green field, Mass. Harry Carter, St. Clair, Mich. Wilbur M. Claggett, Sullivan, Ind. Noah A. Echard, Kresman, W. Va- Theodore Pantchuck, Chicago. Edward Sheehan ,Wetfield, Mass. Gilbert Ward, McDavid, Fia. Eoibert Whittaker, Schanton, Fa. Bugler Harry S. Givens, Parkers burg, W. "Va. Privates Fred It, Abney, Kennctt, Mot. Couch Atanasoff, Jackson, Mich. Henry O- Beavers, Johnson City, HI Hendry Boronki, Buffalo, N. Y. Clark E. Bunting, Montpeller, Ohio. John W. Erwin, Cleveland, Miss. John J. Goss, Milwaukee, Wis. William Patrick Griffin, Brooklyn, N. Y. Van Buren Hair, Eleaz, S. O. James Hartncy, Minneapolis, Minn. Wiely J. Heft, Hitntsvillo, Texas. Horbert Hlnkle, Lily, Ky. Henry I Link, Menominee, Wis. Harry McCann, Edgorton, Wis. Elmer W. Mcl'ee, Philadelphia. James Mcintosh, Covington, Ky, John Malenchak, Scw Vork. Henry W. Morrow, Albemarle, N. C. William H. Myers, Shirley sburg, Pa Edward A. Nosbaim, Chicago. Patrick Oleary, 605 Alasga street, Butte, Mont. Philips Peterson, Hammond, Ind, George Purcella, Duncott, Pa. Arthur Randall. Mio. Mich. Charley L. Skinner, Charlotte, Mich. DONT WANT WHEAT FOODS When I can havo PostToasties (made of corn) says Ogovtnt, If mI ! i When you need service on the bearings in your car, truck or tractor, you want it quick. You do not want to lose the use of the machine for a week or ten days or more. We are the authorized local agency of the Bear ings Service Company, national service representa tives for Timken, Hyatt and New Departure bearings. Motorists, garage men and repair men can best be assured prompt, expert, dependable bearing service by dealing with us. :' M Halvorsen & ' " . Aathuristd Atn9 Bearings Service Company pMNiiWWiiUWJWyIW'yiHIB''H)Mi'BpiilBlHIWJH-mlW''IIWIW Emery C. Smith, Denton, Texas, Lee E. Smith, Pinoville, La. Henry Bnell, Birmingham, Ala. Edward Snyder, Cincinnati, Ohio, Charles Stahl, New York. Aylor B. Stone, Chestnut Level, Va. Henry B. Thomas, Marceline, Mo. John H. Tritit, Gastonia, N. C. Robert Wilson, Mondovi, Wis. Henry O. Wintermuto, Belvidcre, N. J. Bonnie ZovowynskI, . Middletown, (kmn. Wounded in AcUon, Degree Undeter mined Sergeants Norman A. lien, Omaha, Neb, Harry M. Greene, Avoca, Iowa. Walter P. Jones, Sidney, Iowa. Charles N. McCoy, Hamburg, Iowa. "See 'Gets-It' Off Peel This Corn." Leaves the Toe as Smooth as the Palm of Your Hand The corn never grew that "Gets- It" will not get. It nevor irritates tho ilesli, never makes your toe sore. Just two drops of "Uots-it" ana prestol the corn pain vanishes. Short ly yon can peel the corn right off with your fingers and there you aro pain-free and happy, with tua toe as smooth and corn 1'reo as your palm, ' 1 Gts-It' ' is the only safe way in the world to treat a corn or callus. It's the sure way the way that never fails. It is tried and tmo used by millions every year. It always works. "Gets It" makes cutting and digging at a corn and funning with bandages, salves or anything else entirely unnecessary. "Gets-It," tho guaranteed, money- back corn-rcanover, ttio only sure way, costs but a trifle at any drug store. M'f 'di 'by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, Illinois. . . " Sold in Salem and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by J. C. Perry, D. J. Fry. NEW TODAY LITTLE ZOE RAY In DANGER WITHIN An Extraordinary Bluebird Feature LATEST WEEKLY "RURAL RIOT A 2-Reel Comedy With --HUGHE HACK - The Fattest of AH Screen Comedians THURSDAY IWL PETROVA" In Her First New Feature M I need a new Bearing Quick A 1 Barns rr Herbert W. Pace, Corning, Iowa. Corporals Eli Gascoigno, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Otto A. Ivecke, Creston, Iowa. Jesso Rhoades, Delta, Iowa. Mechanio Gordon A. Moore, Knox ville, Iowa. Privates Ben C. Parker, Keokuk, la. Jack H. Bovens, Decorah, Iowa. Cecil Boden, Donald, 8. D. v . , Frank Bruno, Wyola, Mont. Lorenzo L. Burgess, Palo, Iowa. Clarence Culver, Creston, Iowa. ,j Lemard L. Davis, Thayer, Iowa. Ernest Dayton,' McCoole, Md. Dewey D, Dunkerson, Fontanelle, Ia Lewis K. Ewing, Keokuk, Iowa. William, M. Fredericksou. Creston. Iowa. Lawrence Gilbert, Council Bluffs, la. Albert Hoibart, Ceuterville, Iowa, John E. Grey. Casper, Wyo. Frank Husnick, Milwaukee, Wis. -Charles H, Klohs, Le Mars, low:). Alonzo Larson, Creston, Iowa. William.. Mayberry, Council Bluf fs, Iowa. . ' Jarvis W. Moore, Macon, Mo. Hertiian Nelson, Council Bluffs, la. Omaer Ormundson, Jowell, Iowa. Russell S. Osborne, Battle Creek, la Clarence M. Parcel, CenterviUe, la, Frost P. Patterson, FojitaneJle, la. William C. Pope, Toccoa, Ga. Richard Pratt, Mount Savage, Md. John W. Pace, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Mack Reed, Kollogg, Iowa. Robert F.' Sandcmau, Creston, Iowa, Melbourne J. Smith, Macon, Ga. Rex L. Snyder, Creston, Iowa. Glenwood H. Spain, Sioux City, la. ; Thomas B. Stack, Keokuk, Iowa. 8. N. Teig, Radcliff e, Iowa. WANTED, JUNK And All Kinds of 2nd Hand Goods. Full Market Prices Special Prices paid for Sacks. Get our prices beore you selL THE TEOPLE'S JUNK & 2ND HAND STORE 271 N. Oom'l St. Phone 731 it ))c )(c )c sc sc sjc s(t sc )c )t )( 3K L.M.HUM I care of Yick So Ton Chinese Medicine and Tea Cs. Has medicine which will eure any known disease. Open Sundays from 10 a. m.' until 8 p. m. 153 South High St. -Salem, Oregon. Phone 83 oft4ciccsicifc9fcifcsc4(cit4t4i Used Furniture Wanted Highest Cash Prices Paid for' Used Furniture E. L. STIFF ft SON Phone 941 or 608 f( jf( sjt C 3(c 38 3C )jf )( st lt I WANT TO BUY Your Junk and give -you a square business deal. I always pay the highest cash prices. I WANT YOUR SACKS AND BAGS I buy all kinds of used goods, 2nd hand furni ture,' rubber and junk. Get my prices before you sell THE CAPITAL JUNK CO! The Square Deal House 271 Chemcketa Street Phone 398