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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1918)
SIX THK I )A ILY CA PITAL JOUIcNAL, SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1918. The youngster's idea of "goodies" made with Kream Krisp is to get his hands on them. Mother's idea is to use nothing but Kream Krisp for shortening and frying. She said so at the last meet ing of her cooking club. That the mem bers unanimously adopted her idea is evident by the following endorse ments she has received from them: "Kream Krisp is the most economical shorten ing or the market." "In all my recipes I use less Kream Krisp than I ever did butter or lard, and get more satisfac tory results." "I can always depend on my baking being suc cessful because measurements with Kream Krisp are accurate,making the results uniform and sure." "I am for Kream Krisp because it doesn't smoke up or leave any odor in my kitchen." "I use my Kream Krisp again and again, because no matter what I fry in it, it doesn't absorb the flavor. And after straining it I can put it back into the can as good as new." . "1 don't think I could make creamy, fluffy cakes or rich, flaky pie crust without usin g Kream Krisp." Try Kream Krisp today, and your own uses of it will U. K. these endorsements. BROWN COMPANY Kream Krisp Department, Portland, Me. Putvfy IZgetable The UniversatlSftoriening mrmmm if jr ieiiiiiiiiiii ii r in 1 1, . isa Eft WW A MBS SAVE ) SERVE : buy teas savings stamps ::: UNIVERSAL 6H0RTEHB1 PHf I O V" ALL jl ii n urn i-i ACTS OFREICHSTAG Tells Reichstag That All Re cent Enactments Meet His Approval Bov. . Howdy! If you only knew to bacco you'd get a pouch of Real Gravely today. Then you'd have a sat isfying chew, a good tasting chew. It lasts so much longer that any CLIMATE IS NOT MEM VALLEY Cffieial Weather Records SbwNa Rai'cal Changes la Past 16 Years. The oldest inhabitant who nils feruuud tuul tells folks how I ho climate 'is chunking in the Willamette valley j really has uu vital statistics to sub mtantiat his statements, for the plain fact is the climate in this part of the jvallt'v has not changed daring thc.)n$t sixteen years. If the pioneer weather story dates back to tlip days when the first bnture went out in 1889 or even to s genera- : -i : i. , .. .i... -: . ... over for several months, then no one may refute bin word as during those days the government had no official observer in Snlcra, But beginning along in 1900 a few weather records were kerf while bcBiniiinir in 1SU2 there w3 a cartful record kept lu tJa-j loin, giving the temperature, both max imum and m ininiuin of each day, th rainfall and stage of the river. These are government records and are on file will the weather observer in Salem, with the state weather recorder in Port land and with the department of agri culture in Washington, D. C. - Dunne the past sixteen years the av eruge maximum temperature for the. Month of October was 63 and the av erage minimum temperature for the outh 41. For all these years there has been no radical changes of temperature for the month. IV the three veara previous tn 1918. the maximum tem perature was at an average of 63 for October. During two years since 190 it has averaged less than 60. October of 1913 was the coldest, as that year the average maximum ws only 58. It 'was in the year 1916 that the October nights were eoldest, as the average . minimum was 38. . 1 The average mean temperature for ' October during the pat 16 years is 33. I jt utowtk U- was ,H. The cloudy days of Ovtnbcr of 1918 is about, average with the past sixteen year, as there was 13 days cloudy and on 15 days of the month there wis rain. October of 1917 was the only ni'Tuth since iho of ficials' records have been kept in j which there was so rainfall at all. This Amsterdam; Nov 3. On the occasion of the constitutional amendment com ing into force, says an official tele gram from Berlin -Emperor William addressed to Prince Mavimilian of Baden, the German imperial chancellor,, a decree iudorsing the decisions of the reichstag and avowing his firm deter mination to eo-operate in their full de velopment. The emperor's decree remits: Kaiser Surrenders Eights. "Your grand ducal highness: I re turn herewith for immediate publica tion the bill to amend the imperial eon-1 st:tntion and tin. law of March 17 I 1879, relative to the representation ofi the imperial chancellor, which has been laid before me for signature. "On tho occasion of this step, which is so' momentous for the future history of the Gorman people, I have a desire to give expression to niy feeling. Pre pared for by a series of government acts, a new order conies into imico which transfers the fundamental rights of Iho kaiser's person to the people. iivemiui -enoa uiosea. "Thus comes to a close a period! Fred Lockley, Y. M. C. A.,'TeIIs 01 wnieu will, stand in nonor belorr: tho ayes of future generations. Despite nil stmggles between invested author; ity and aspiring forces it has rendered possible to our people that tremendous development wlnsh lmperishably re vealed itself in the wonderful achieve ments of this war. 'In tho terrible storms of the four years of war, however, old forms have been broken up, not to leave their rums behind ,but to make a place for a new vital form. "After tho achievements of tlieso times the German people can claim that no right which may guarantee a free and happy futuro shall bo with held from them. Kaiser Offers Co-operation. "The proposals of the allied govern ments which aro now adopted and ex tended owe their-origin to this convic tion . I, however, with my exalted al lies, endorse these decisions of parlia ment in firm determination ,so far as I am concerned, to co-operate in their full development, convinced that I am 'here by promoting' tho weal of the German people "The kaiser's office is one of sovico to the people. May, then, the new ordor release all the good powers wliich our people need in order to support 'the trials which are hanging over the em- piro and with a firm stop win a bright futuro from the gloom of the present. "Berlin, October 88, 1918. (Signed) "WILHELM B. I. Countersigned' "MAX, Prince of Baden." IS YOUR HAIR FADED AND GRAY? man can chew this class of tobacco without extra cost. goes further that's why you can get the good taste of this class of tobac co without extra cost, , PEYTON BRAND Real Gravely Chewing Plug 10v a pouch-37? worth if ' SERVICE THAT WINS THE SOLDIER HEART the Gratitude of the Boys at the Front. "One of the discoveries) men are making over here," Fred Lockley, of the Y. M. 0. A. nnd of Portland, Ore gon, writes from London, "is that . more pleasure can be bad out of giv ing than getting. .Many a man who has spent money freely in the old days ' to buy pleasure Is finding that he gets more pleasure over here by the spend ing of one's self In the service of other "A few months ago I went out with a fellow Y. M. C. A. secretary to hunt . up out-of-the-way detachments of troops. A stable guard here, a ma chine gun company there, a platoon somewhere else. We carried our goods In an automobile. When you nse Journal classifi ed ads get what you want them to-they work fast. AGED PIONEER BUSIED AT GER 1 VAIS. The body of Mrs. Catherine Murrayj- ayetl J, an early pioneor of Urcgon, was shipped hero Sunday for burial in the Catholic cemetery, in charge of Un dertaker John Weiss. Deceased formerly lived near Wood burn for a number of years, .after which the family moved to Montana, but sho was living near Molalla when she died. She is survived by a daugh ter and a son. Gervais Star. HAVE PETITION READY. COMMODORE PLANT DEAD Does It idake you Appear Older than You Wish? Is it lifeless, lustreless streaked with those, whitening strends that add so many years to a woman's looks If so, there is a simple harmless way for It The men can't do enough to mi: n-o juumiui vruiur aim ueuuiy SHOW lilCir gratitude. can uc regainca. Not by dyeing; but 'by the gradual, natural restoration of tho color, vigor and gloss with Q-Ban Hair Color Re storer. Q-Ban invigorates tho scalp, kills dandruff and brings back the original dark color and lustre grailuallv and evenly to liair that is gray, streaked with gray or faded. Positively not a dye. It will not stain the scalp, wash) or rub off, or nitertcre with shampoo ing or waving. It is easily applied. The Unakers of U-Dan have tbden known for a generation us specialists in tlio f ron t nifiTit nf tha linir ftnlit iw all reliable druggists everywhere on I Money-Back'Guarantec.Prico 75c. A petition wn8 prepared and circu lated the past woek ,directed to tho We had county court asking for the improve- plenty of Writing paper and envelopes jment of the Pacific highway, for free distribution, and chocolate, The petition that will be presented cookies, chewing tobacco and smoking J to tho county court Friday morning tobacco, cigarettes, razor blades, will hnve tne signatures of practically tooth paste and things of that kind for a" tnose interested in the matter sale. American war service workers w,l liVe n Hubbard or who come to were busy everywhere. We found Sal- Hubbard to trade. The court will have vatlon Army lassies making doughnuts ' n noed to hosi'ato in" the matter if a for the boys and K. of C, secretaries K,anco is takon a tn names, to recog givlng help. Books furnished by the ?ize, 8. noe? of improvement. Hub American Library Association were to , rd EterPris" : be seen on oil sides. J ' - 1 .i - "TJnaflr. r. 'n-lhn a -! ' M drove down the road and found a score or so of men at machine gun practice. The officer gave the, men half an hour recess to buy goods. "At another place we came in sight of a lieutenant drilling a platoon. I saldto the lieutenant: How soon be fore you dismiss the company? We have Y. M. 0. A. goods for sale.' "He said: 'Right now. Sergeant, dismiss the company r ''And ten seconds later the company was In line waiting to buy gdods from our traveling 'Y.' Grateful is no name .New York, Nov. 5 Commodore F. Plant, financier and yachtsman is dead here today after a short illness. He Was founder of tho Connecticut College for. Women at New Haven. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY 'S FOR STUBBORN COUGILS AND COLDS Dr. King's New Discovery has a fifty year record, behind id , It built St reputation on its produc tion of positive results, on its surenesl la relieving the throat irritation of colds, coughs, grippe and bronchial attacks. ''Dr. King's New Discovery? Why, my folks wouldn't use anything elser' That's the general nation-wide esteem in which this well-known remedy is held. Its action is prompt, its taste pleasant, its relief gratifying. . Half a century of cold and cough Jiecking. All druggists. 60c and $1.20. Bowels Out of Kilter? That's nature calling for relief. Assist her in her daily duties with Dr. Kind's New Life Pills. Nnt a ntlrcrativa in the usual dose, but a mild, effective, corrective, laxative that teases the s into action, 25c. year it was 2.S3 inches. The following table shows October for each year beginning with 19U2 giv mg rainfall in inches, mean tempera ture and number of cloudy dnvs. Rainfall M'n t'p'ture C'l- days 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1010 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 l'Jlfl 1917 1918 ...1.70 ...1.65 ...2.62 ...4.2H ...2 38 . ... .86 ...4.?S ...3.24 ...1.80 ... .81 ...3.22 ...2.78 ...3.21 ' ...1.54 ...1.43 ..none ...2.83 53 53 55 50 55 58 54 61 58 52 50 50 55 56 52 54 54 ' 21 14 11 11 18 15 18 13 20 17 Hi 1!) 14 7 6 .j Get Rid of That Sourness, Gas aud Indigestion When your stomach is out of order or run down, your food doesn't digest. It ferments in your stomach and forms gas which causes sourness, heartburn, foul breath, pain at pit of stomach and many other miserable symptoms. Mi-o-na stomach tablets will give joyful relief in five minutes; if taken regularly for two weeks they will turn your flabby, sour, tired out stomaeh into a sweet, energetic, perfect work ing one. Veil can't be very strong a:il vig orous if your food only half digests. Your appetite will go and nansea) diz ziness, biliousness,, nervousness, sick uriuH-at- ana cuimipauon wui loliow. I Jii-u-H stomarn taoiers are sinau and easy to swallow and are guaran teed "to banish indigestion and any or all of the, above 'symptoms or money back. For sale by Dan! J. Fry and all leading druggists. fc Breakfast in a room r'Wjwf fitfiJlT -5 made warm and cozy ( at&firhi I ikfTTtJ v by Perfection Oil Heat- J 1p' J M x Instant heat at the BHlKa. W touch of a match. Kr4T I No smoke or odor. f fr-wSJ UH4 ' - Long hours of steady, ImSM'! Jt f comfortable warmth on ULJjlJL s- one filling with Pearl jST'j sl Oil, the ever-obtainable 1 faf" iML v fueL E foS 5I"iHX A Portable. Economical. XL IT -"If Sf . .. ... f HXAT ! Jff, I" f J Buy Perfection Oil I WITH V T'i R 1 STANDARD OIL ' "if 5. COMPANY - , PERFECTION or, STOVES FOB SAXE BY p T,. 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