aw. five I0USTOM ADVCCATLS SeiiiHEil SMS .AAA A A A J, 'T vtTTT"" NEW TODAY OUR FIRST DUTY IS TO OUR OWN TOWN SALEM PATRONIZE YOUR OWN MERCHANTS AND INDUSTRIES THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL SALEM. OREGON. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1938. reeo mm mmw mn JOURNAL WANT AD DEPARTMENT IS TEE BEST SELLING EEDI0K1 IN MARION COUNTY-TRY THEM FOR RESULTS CLASSIFIED ADVEaTDDJTO ATE Bate per word New Tody SMI insertion , Oae week (6 insertions) . Out aioath (26 insertions) 1 -Id ,17. The Capital Journal will not be re sponsible for mor than ens Insertion, for rrora ia Classified Advertisements, Bead jour advertisement tit first day It appear and notify aa immediately U exror occurs. Minimum charge, 16a. "WOOD sawing. Call 927; prompt serv ice. 12-28 HOUSEKEEPING rooms for rent. Call 1031 Union street. 12-27 WANTED Calves of all k;nd. Phone 80FU. - tf WANTED A nice party to room -with young girl. Phone 544M. 12-27 WANTED Carpenter work, work especially. Phone 720. repair 1-1 IP YOUR ROOF LEAKS phone 1074. 6t FOR a typewriter mechanic phone 937. 1-2J POUND Purse containing silver. J. A. Beeley. 1030 Shipping St. 13-30 BALED eats and cheat hay for sale, at $25 per ton, Bt. 5, box 93 Liteh Wd. tf Thinks This Will Encourage Growers To Put Oat Mos sier Crop. WAOTED To buy, dueka, chickens, all kinds of poultry. Highest prices. Cherry City Feed barn. 1-2 LOST 'Pair of gold bowed glasses, be? tween ear line on 5th street and Highland Ave. Call 1947J evenings, 'between 4 and 8 o'clock. ABOUT 3-4 acre, 6 room, semi-modern bouse, 6 blocks from eapital bldg., $2500, free of encumbrance, or small farm. Owner in town ono week. 556 Union St. 1-3 IF YOU must sell your liberty bonds, sell them to me. If yon ean buy more liberty bonds, buy them of me. I buy and sell liberty bonds. W. A. Liston, 484 Court St. tf I)B SALE Equity in good piano. Call Mrs. Prickey. Phono 742. tf EARLY fuggle hop roots for sale. J. B. Cooper, Independence. 12-28 WANTED Fat thin and fresh cows, Urge calves. Phone 142511. 12-28 FOR SALE 1 9x13 shaft governor, ngine and boilor complete, cheap, llox 268, Turner, Or. tf IXXSANBERRY plants for sele by J. P. Aspinwall, 'Brooks, Ore. Phone 35 ?12. 12-20 YOUWG business man wants room and hoard in Drivate family, elose in. Ad- rima. knit 196. Give rates. 12-28 BOY WANTED To strip tobacco at Salem Cigar Factory, 385 Chemck-etaSt. JXHi SALE At bargain, Maxwell tour injr, A No. 1 condition. Inspect car FOR SALE Five acres bearing orch ard, five room house, barn and out buildings, fine land, good soil, well located north of Salem on Pacific highway. A nice home and a paying investment. $2500. Modern house for rent. F. L. Wood, 341 State St. Washington, Dee. 86. Estimating a possible wheat crop of more thaa tm lion bushels for 1919, the department of agriculture for the food administra tion recommended to congress, to nida tion to insure payment of the (2.22 bushel guaranteed price to the wheat producers. The recommendations were mat M letter signed by Secretary Houston and officials of the food administration which was received by Chairman Lev er of the house agricultural committee today. The specifier recommendations are: That eongress extend beyond June 1, 1920, the right of wheat producers to dispose of their wheat to the govern ment at the guaranteed price with safe guards to protect tho government from wheat harvested in liC'U from being mix ed with the 1919 crop. That the grain corporation be continued or a new agen cy be created with power to buy, store and sell the wheat of the 1919 erop which may be offered to it and that it be furnished a sufficient appropriation to carry on its work. That provisions be made for protee- tion of the government against wheat or flour brought in from other coun Declares Recent Disorders As;s laicals Are h Cassa For Worry. FOR SALE 4 room house and lot N, liberty street for $W0. $25 down 1 v till -imiii, an interest, but tries. .ml insnirance! e S room house! .In giving reasons for the recommer. $500 $30 cash, $1 wee; a nice aidations, the lotter points out that the room house and barn 1950 N. Front 1918 yield wa8 917,100,000 bushels trora tnr ainon. 50 cash and $3 week, n'an aereaee of 64,707,000. 'the repor. IP at 1ST 8. Winter St. 12-28 1 interest; large 7 room House ana barn 1940 N. Front, $125l, $50 cash, balance $8 per week, taxes and in surance; good 4 room house, large basement, 896 N. Commercial St., $1100, $50 cash, balance $2 per week, insurance and taxes, but no inter est; a new 5 room house, large ce ment building 30x70 ft., 8 lota for $3000, $75 cash and $4 per week; large 9 room house, eorner Winter and Contjer for $4000, $250 cask, balance) $7 per week; vacant lots, nice location $250, cash $10, 50c per wook. 12 acre fine orchard with 4 acres of fine garden land, buildings and orchard, 500 cherry, 500 peach, 100 apples, bearing, for $4000, $200 cash balance $7 per "week; our home place 20 acres, 3 miles east for $8, UO0, $500 cash, balance $10 week, no-interest but taxes and insurance on any tract. B. B. Ryan. also savs the total storage capacity this country is 13,350,000,000 buBhels, and with promises of a large crop u 1919, this will have to be increased. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Do not imagine that because other cough medicines failed to give yon re lief that it will b the same with Chamberlain 'a Cough Remedy. Bea in mind that from a small beginning this remedy has gained a world wide repu tation and immense sale. A medicine must have exceptional merit to win esteem wherever it bceom&s known, BHITIAN ML CARE TrfWrT Between Salem and Dallas on SSTS ACt ph mf Fletcher Prefficts U. S. Will WANTED lExporieneed maid for gen ens! bouse work. Call morning, Mrs. Louis tLachmund. 925 Court. f THE Motor Inn garage now open. All kinds of auto ropairing, storage, etc. All work guaranteed. -2 WALL PAPER 15 cent per double roll .' DDward. Buren's Furniture Store, 179 Commercial. tf CALENDAR for 1919; large figures for Dractieal use. Uall on noraer Smith, the insurance man, naek bldg. McOor-1-15 WANTED-.Two dining room girls fo an out of town hotol, good out of town hotel, good pay. urn rgo '' afternoons. T OLD papers for carpets, etc., 10 cents per hundred, call at Journal office. MAXWELL for tale, $275. Torms. Me ehanically perfect. Highway Garage Phone 355. Call 1000 6. Com'L tf UBEBTY BONDS If yon must dir nn.n nf vour bonds, we will buy them. 311 Masonic bldg. tf -OKATTEL mortgages pay 10 per eent interest for short dates. I have con stant applications. Let me place your money for you. C. W. Niemeyer, 544 State street, Salem. ar.BOTT at money to loaa on good farms; low interest rates; five years . time; privilege to pap $100 or mnlti Ble on any interest date. Call or Write H, M. Hawkins, 814 Masonic Mdg, Salem. WANTED TO BENT FARM. Wanted to rent graia and stock farm for a term of years by an ex perienced party; will pay cash or hare rent. AddUesa C. a ft, eare or Capital Journal. i8"30 Be Greatest Maritime Nation Washington, Doc. 26. Advocating completion of the shipping program out lined by the United States Shipping Board, Senator Fletcher, Florida, chair man of tho senate commerce committee, today doclared that America has its chauco t0 become the greatest maritime nation. Flotcher told the senate tho present capacity of our shipyards was now dou ble that of England's. He defended tho LaFollette seaman 's act which with othor things, provided an increase in wages to sea faring men. Cost of ships in this country ranges from $180 to $340 a ton, Fletcher said. Senator Weeks, Massachusetts, ask ed Flotchor if it was true that a Pa cific coast shipbuilding firm had an nounced its ability to build ships lor the French at $115 a ton. Weeks also said that ho understood there were many shipbuilders now on the coast out of work, due to the sud den ending of the war and suggested that the shipbuilding companies be per mitted to take foreign contracts which are not now allowed. - Fletcher replied that he doubted if any American shipbuilding company would be willing to take contracts at less than $160. - Prince Max De Warburg Delegate To Conclave Amsterdam, Dec. 26. Prince Max De Warburg and Edward Bernstein will be German delegates to the peace con ference, according to the Berlin lage- blatt. This newspaper announcea mni the prince will bo in charge of eco nomic affair at tne eoniereuce, Plans Are Already Being Worked Out For Beautifr cation Of Cemeteries. By Frank 3. Taylor (United Press Staff Correspondent.) Berlin, Dee. 24. "We are all SoanVy ia aeserd wita President Wilson," de clared Philip Bcbeidemann, member of the uennaB cabinet, in an interview with the United Press today. This statement summed up his analy sis of the German attitude toward the peace settlement. Scheidemann said a stable socialist government Boon would be established, a responsible, constitu tional government to deal with the oi Ucg and tho United States. All dis orders in Germany will disappear short1 ly, he promised. The Spartacido move, mcnt, he asserted, is rapidly dying. 'Now that the date for a constitu tional assenbly has been fixed and the political situation is etablilzed, we must concentrate all our efforts upon bring ing peace and establishing our world position," behcidemann said. 'We are all heartily it accord with President Yvilson. I was ono of the firHt t rlic mvself unreservedly on record in fcupport of his program. I hope to see fulfilled in reality his ideas f justice and iair relations Deiween an rM-Anlna' Boheidempnn kaia ne was not wurrrou about the disoiders among the radicals and the Spartaeide attacks. ' , Radicals In Minority. I "It ia safe," he declared, "to re gard the assaults against public order, whieh we intend to suppress nuemiuu. ly as demonstrations of disorderly radi cals who are in an insignificant minori ty. The great majority with whom the workmen's ana soiuiers- council ei ricd their important resolutions justi fied ut ia naming our party tne ma- inrit.v rattv. The socialists have ap proved our authority to govern until tha ennatituent assemoiy esiaDiisnes h nnrmanent arovernment. Even the priv ilege elaes press 'has ceased talking. Tha. the eonstitutional government. when established, will be socialistic. It will be stable because the majority so cialists oppoee dangerous economic, so cial and political experiments. "There ia na louDt tnat me politi cal , situation- is clearing, important demand a 'usion of the minority and majority socialists which will be possible only aftei the Spartacides are put out of the minority. That will eome but the revolution uoes nui uup f on it. Until the eonstitrent assembly acts, the revolution rests on the broad shoulder of the majority socialist party-" ' .- Everybody'sliappy Let Us Keep Up That Glad Snule AH The Year THE CURTAIN HAS BEEN RUN DOWN ON THE BIGGEST HOLIDAYS BUSINESS IN OUR HISTORY. OUR BIG STOCK OF HIGH GRADE MERCHANDISE IS RIDDLED, AND WE ARE NOW BUSY GOING THROUGH ALL STOCKS AND PUTTING ON OUR "SPECIAL TABLES" ALL BROKEN LINES, WITH YELLOW PRICE CARDS TO CLEAN THEM UP. . -THIS WILL BE- funrnrmmtmBMtwmvwrrrrrtfrvrT n ' "i rTirrrnrTrrTj;-,-"-iir riiriip-ffiriiw'iriinim-i mi in"1 n i niniimii n m-- mmi nwn wiiiim Lookfor the YELLO W CARDS They are 'Money Savers London, Doc. 14. (By Mail.) Beau tification and care of thousands of cem eteries in every part of the world will be undertaken by Great Britain as one of her after-the-war dutios, Plans for the work already are being worked out by the imperial war graves commission, which recently sent to France Sir Frederick Kenyon who made made a survey of the situation, made recommendations for laying out and the care of the cemeteries which the com mission adopted. No private memorials will be permit ted in the cemeteries. Headstones will be identical for men and officers ahko as memorials of equal sacrifice. A corps of architects and landscape gardener soon will be 'sent to France to plan the central memorial for each cemetery and doaido on plans for its care and bcautification. To Erect Cross. It is planned to erect in each ceme tery a cross and another monument which, it is proposed, will be "onel ureat. fair stono, of fino proportions, 12 feet in length, lying raised upon three stops, of which the first and the third shall be twice the width of tne second, and that each stone shall bear in indelible lettering, some thoughts or words of sacred dedication." This stone in each cemetery will be near the NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT tot the Cost of Constructing s sidewalk T Archie Parker, George Parke, Margaret Parker, Virgil Parke and Wilda Parker: Yoa are hereby notified that the eity - of Salem has, by ordinance Ne. 1569, levied an assessment upon let T la block 13 ef Highland avenuo addition to the eity ef Salem, Oregon, ewned by you, in ttt8 sum of $82.25 for the . eost of constructing a cement concrete .sidewalk on the north aide of High land avenue In front of .and abutting poa said lot- Said assessmeB was en tered in the minor lien docket ef the ity f Salem on- the 13th day of De cember, 1918, aa charge and lien gainst said lot, and the same is now due and payable to the city treasurer. By order of the common conned, tfcis sofeiee ia served npoa yoa by publica tion thereof for ten days in. the Daily Onpital Journal, 4 dairy newspaper pnHished in the eity of Salom. Date of frist pubHeatioa aereef f December 20, 1918. ' BAHL BACH, ateeorder of the eity of SelM, Oregoa. Jan. 1 Big MiEtary Trucks To Be Used In Peace fas Paris. Dee. . (By Mail. What will become of the thousands of military i,tnmnhilps and trucks now in France is a question frequently heard. It is possible, according to some sources, that tho 'French transportation system may be practically revolutionized by ub of the famous .camions. The French slmy alone has thous ands of big trucks, which not only car ried supplies, but dasnea irom one iran of the front to another with troops. Should these trucks be turned to peace ful pursuits, railway traffic would be reduced greatly. It is likely they will play a big part in the work of recon struction, at least. Tunnel Under Strait Of Dover Is Projected HERE IS THE "HAPPY FAMILY", AFTER VISITING THE BIG STORE. $ JOIN THEM AND GET THAT SMILE wi You can always do better at it fi London, Dee. 11. (By Mail) Rail road tunnels under the Straits of Dover and' Gibraltar are projected as part of English and European reconstruction. Plans already havebeen prepared. It also is proposed to construct a railroad from Gibraltar along the north- eastern boundary facing east a. the western coast of Africa to Dakar, Cape ments will be made in all cemeteries ", P'an'? dt kS,Jft? in which Indians are buried to conform fTTTA UT WUU . -" . v -- . - . . 1 If 1 ! J .. n iournev irom tne Mtuutrraunui S. .. . :- Prince Max De Warburg is probably r-:-n Uot Wnldhnnri?. Kernstein IS ' 1 fl a socialist politician member of the reichstag. Schools and theatres are closed and the weaxin of masks i compulsory at Juneau, Alaska. I HAYN 1)1 i? m Ms3 BREAD to their cast and creed practices. Although the majority of British sol diers fell in Franco and Belgium, cerae teiies will nnmber hundreds in other lands, some of which are Mesopotamia, Palestine. Syria. Egypt, Gallopoli, MiO- ta, Mudros, Gibraltar, Bulgaria, Italy, Cvnrus and China It is expected worn oi esianiwMuns; the cemeteries will require several years. sandft of Britishers were Duriea wnere ther fell in France and Belgium th mnrlt will be made meet complex. To some cases it will be impossible to trans fcr the battlefield graves. tESL-FOSTErLBAKINjim "If your competitor talks about you, put him ea yout pay roll. No matter what he says, jnst so- he DIXIE BREAD South America in five days. Connections from England and France would be almost as quick. MOXHOUSB HOW FRENCH CITY Washington, Dec. 26. MulhouM, formerly Mnlhausen, i a leyal French i. Vow mnnii'irial lommission Because of the fact that thon-toofc B firteHty and adopted reeolwtiea ef pratrtmle lor Kseriy, Paris diplomatic eables stated today. Senator Wants Peace Delegates To Help Ireland Washington, Dee. 26. Senator Phe lan, California, today Introduced a res olution requesting tho American dele gation to the peace conference to do all in their power to obtain self deter mination of government for Ireland. AA similar resolution has been intro duced in tho bowse and a number of hearings have been held on the ques tion of Irish home rule. Phelan bases Ireland's claim en Pre sident Wilson's statement regarding self-determination of government for small nations. COASTER IS KILLED ' San Francisco, Dee. 26. ' A new Christmas coaster today lies at tho bottom of a Christina Day tragedy in which Peter Doyle, aged 10, ite owner, was killed and Mary Seanlon and Han nah Scanlon were seriously injured. The boy was playing with the coast er ia the street. A five ton pumper of the fire department, responding to an alarm, swung to one side of the street in an-effort to avoid hitting tne ooy. The front wheels f the big truck caught him and the truck crushed in to the ricanlou girls, just as they were going to the table to eat their Christ mas dinner. LOSES FIGHT FOE. ESTATE JOURNAL WANT ADSPAf .-s awav ua.aa.si t -- .......r.... -----.Aa imamwiaia'SiaiawonHia . - - - - . $y.iTSi HRriAitrft aa ra as Journal Classified ads bring results. FOUND DEAD UNDEB ELEVATOR Portland, Or., Dec. 28. Albert Dur- aud was fouud doad today under the freight elevator shaft of th( depart ment store whero he had been employ ed as janitor. None witnessed Ulie accident which caused the death of the sixty year old man. It is believed he was caught in the machinery and was thrown under the elevator which crushed him, GEE MANY AND TURKEY BREAK Paris, Dec. 26. Copies of the Vos sithe Zeitung received here, declare re lations between Germany and Turkey have been severed. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY VON DEB MARCKEN DISMISSED Amsterdam, Dec. 26. General Von. Dor Marcken, leader of a monarchist plot, has been dismissed cy tho Ger man war minister. We Chefcge uou toet Belter results ti?3n weanvfl Uou wilh a little Want Ad , Try'onc to-morrow set San Francisco, Dec, 2. Frederick Wallace Shares ef Taeoma, lost his fight today for half the $2,(100,000 es tate of the late Frederick W. Bhuron when the state supreme eourt affirmed the decision of the lower eourt ia de nying the claim. The Taeoma moil, who was a second eoiuua- ef Frederick W. Sharon, contended that he was adopted by the deceased in 1892 and that, there fore, ho was entitled to a child's share of the property. GIBBOKg CASE POSTPONED Los Angeles, Cal., Dee. SC. At the reaucst of the district attorney, the case of Mm. Frank Gibbons, accused of poisoning1 her hnshand, was postponed today to January S, by Justice B. S. Brown. The report of Dr. Lymaa B. Stookey and Frofciwor Arthur B. Maes, city chemist, of the analysis being eonflnct ed of the content ef the dead man's stomach in expected within twe day The aogar exportation commission created last January will handle Cuba's Vwnn3t sugar crop for 1918 and 1919. Hi That School Appetite Children, when they are growing, need a bite just home from school, and at other odd times. Always keep a box of crisp Snow Flakes in youi pantry, hasdy for them. Don't r$s for, crackers, say now. Flakes. Your fjocer can"supply"you. I." - '.' ,.- Illy H i a I .- '-SOSM .VmfiC Coast Bkcirii&. ;