THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1919 PAGE SEVEN (NEW TODAY IF THE TOWN U GOOD ENOUGH TO LI YE IN, IT DESERVES YOUR SUPPORT! JOURNAL WANT AD DEPARTMENT IS THE BEST SELLING EEDIUM IN MARION COUNTY-TRY THEM FOR RESULT frr.AHHTVTT.n ADVEETISIKO BATES Bate Pr wwd -New Today t ' h insertion One week (6 insertions) la . So 17 BOB SAX, El Two brood sows with pig; & A. Piokens. fit 8, box 104. 1-2 WH3TB Wyandotte cockerel for sale. Phone 205TJ. 1-3 WANTED To buy, docks, chickens, all kind of poultry. Highest prices. Cherry City h'eed barn. . 1-J! LOGANBERRY plants for sale by J. P, Aspinwall, Brooks, Ore., Phone 35F12. i-a Om noatb (26 insertions) The Capital Journal will net be re , sensible for mor than rna insertion,! for errors in Classified Advertisements. Head your advertisement the first day it appears and notify na Immediately it nor occurs. Minimum charge, 15s. IF rOUB BOOP LEAKS phone 1074. 6t " . .,- L7 , BXFEBIENCED maid aopir at once, '"W wr eaie. rnone wo or mi. ia Hotol Mariolu - ' iXXUN D iPai r shoes, owner prove and pay for ad. 1-8 WANTED Tip plants from Himalaya Iba-ry bushes. E. O. Chamberlain,' Hubar,d rOe. 1-3 "WANTED Work by experienced jan itor, P P 0 care Journal. 1-S WANTED Young man to work at Capital Journal. tt iW ANTED Washer woman to wart Monday mornings. Phone 658. tf WANTED To rent 5 or 6 room house. Address Box 64, McCoy, Ore. 1-8 iWANTED Wood chopper for 200 eords. Phoue 44F5. 1-6 FOR SALE Work team, 2400 lbs. Phone 44F5. 1-4 WANTED Work for one or two months; would prefer work in dry. Call 89!Ft. 1-2 !IX)B SALE Ford truck with Smith at tachment with new 4-inch tires. Phone 9SF2. , 1-4 WANTED Good Salem property for 120 acres timber, noar Airlie, value loOOO. Phone 2325. 1-2 FOB a typewriter mechanic phone 037. 1-83 FOB SALE Equity in good piano. Call Mrs. Prickey. Phono 742. tf GOOD dairy cow for sale. Phone 68P 2. 14 KOB aVlIiH Two 33x4 S D. N. B. iretono Ureg at bargains. 154 S. Commercial. ' 1-8 JWANTED Good true work horse, 1500 or 1800 lbs., for his care and feed, light work Phone 121. 1-3 SIX lady attendants wanted. Call at S8S State street, U. S. Labor bureau. IS GIRL6 or women wanted at the (Hove factory, 1455 Oak St. Steady work. 1-4 YOUNG woman to assist in kitchen. Apply Hotel Marion. 1-2 WOMAN wants day work, washing or housecleaning, occupied Mondays. Phone 704. Call Myrtle Apts. 1-2 FOB SALE Young New Zealand Bod does. Cherry City Babbitry, 890 Oak St Phono 1296. 1-2 WOOD choppers wanted for 100 eords of wood. Phone 704 from 6 to ,8 p. m. 1-6 FOB SaLE Horse, harness and hack, price $50 for quick action. Orote, box 65, Bt. 2, just past West Salem. 1-2 WANTED (Fat, thin and fresh cows, veal and large calves. Phone 1425M. 1-30 WANTED (Big fir stumpage, 3 er 4 mile from fair ground on good road. Phone 10SF18. 12-31 HK3HBT prices for chickens, poultry and hides.- Independent Market Co:, Pfaome 104. 157 South Oom'l ft. tf FOB SAI.B 1 9x13 shaft governor, engine and boiler complete, cheap. 'bot. 268, Turner, Or. t FOB SALE One fine R L Bed male, 8 years old; 150-egg Mandy Lee in cubator. Call lM7Jletweea 6 and T FOB SALE Chevrolet automobile, 1918 model in first- class condition to bo sold cheap. Leaving the city. Inquire at 660 Union St. 1-7 FOB SALE 10 acres fruit land. It quire between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m. ab rug and carpet works, corner Mill ,,. 80th., ( w. ' 1-4 WALL PAPER 15 cents per double roll upward. Bursa's Purniturs Store, 179 Commercial. . " CALENDAR for 1919; largo figures for practical use. Call on Homer 11. Smith, the insurance man, McCor oaek bldg. MS OLD papers for carpets, etc, 10 cents per hundred, call at Journal office POSITION wanted by man familiar with stationary engineering of all kinds. Steady, reliable. Address En gineer care Journal. tf WILL the parties near Highland who own pigeons please put tnem up as they are destroying the grain I have planted. Conrad Dillman. 1-2 ABOUT -4 acre, 8 room, semi-modern house, 6 blocks from capital bldg., $2500, free of encumbrance, or small farm. Owner in town one week. 656 Union St. 1-3 IP YOU must soil your liberty bonds, sell them to me. If you can buy more liberty bonds, buy them f mo. I buy and sell liberty bonds. W. A. Liston, 484 Court St. tf WANTED To rent small acreago, pre fer near Silverton or Pratum. Ad dress D-28 care Journal. 1 MAXWELL for sale, $275. Terms. Me chanically perfect. Highway Garage Phone 855. Call 1000 S. Com'L tf LIBERTY BONDS If you must dis pose of your bonas, we wiu ouy them. 314 Masonic bldg. tf m 11 1 PLENTY of money to toaa on gooo farms; low interest rates; five yeara time; privilege to pap $100 or multi ple on any interest date. Call or write H, M. Hawkins, 314 Masonic bldg. Salem. tf TO THOSE looking for genuine aruHS land opportunity, here's a ehanoe, $50 an acre for 80 acre in prune dis trict adjoining going prune orchard, half in cultivation, balance timber, 6 mites south on good rock read. B. M. LaFore, Phone 1251W. I NOTICE OF AS&ESSMSNT tor the Cost of Constructing sidewalk To Archie Parker, George Faster, Margajet Parker, Tirgil Parser a Wilda Parker; ' You are hereby netified that tha city f Salem has, by ordinance si. 18S9, levied an assessment npoa 1st J m Mock 13 of Hlchland areaus additita to the city of Salem, Oregon, owned by you, in she sua of 988JS for she cost of constructing a cement aanareta sidewalk on the aorta aid af High' land avenue in front of and abatsiaf upon said lot Said isMsnaeH waa en tered ia the miner lian docktt f Ms city of Salem oa the 13th day f De cember, 1918, as a ofearje and lie against said lot, and tha same it aaw due and payable to the aity trcaaarer. By order of the common tbaneil, tstia aotiie is served wpon ye by paWiea tion thereof for ten days la the Daisy Capital Journal, dairy newspaper pobiished ia the aity of Salem. Data of frist anbUeatiea Ma is December 20, 191$. BAfiL RAOH, Recorder of the city af Salts, Oaop Jaa. 1 JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY IF the woman who was with the party of four at the1 Needle Shop at tour twenty Sat. will return the purse at once will save trouble. 1-1 LOOT 1919 auto tag on Silverton doad between Middle yrove scnooi house and Salem, No. 26034. Finder leave at Journal office or call 91 F13. I"3 10 AOBE prune ranch, good improve ments, 3 miles from Salem, wish to exchange for larger ranch, not oyer $4000. 40 acres all in cultivation, first class valley soil, also block in town which the 40 acres join, splen did improvements, family orchard, will take Salem residenco not over $2000 and give easy terms on the balance, price $9500. 1 acres good improvements, giod orchard, in Sa lem limits, only $1200. 600 acres, 150 bottom, 450 hill pasture, good im provements, $3000 worth of live stock and equipment, on good road, will take $17,500 and give easy terms Socolofsky, 341 State St. tf mMmmimmmmmmm During "InTentory" we have put a policeman in every department of the Big Store with orders to "Move On" all broken lines, short lengths, and odd lots, of our strictly high grade merchandise. This Cop will save you money our Special Tables Look for the Yellow Place Card, With the sign of the Cop. Always bear in mind, Meyers never carries cheap, shoddy, inferior merchan dise, and you are never shown old accumulations or somebody's bankrupt stock and when you deal with MEYERS you are patronizing your own town- READY TO WEAR Coats Furs Dresses Price broideries We have made up two lots of the Short Lengths LOTNO.l LOTNO.2 Ladies' Sweaters Entire Stock Of Our Highest Grade Sweaters sold for $25.00 Ginghams, Linene Shirting Flanellette, Sateen, Crepes Holiday Shopping Hit This Stock Hard to make final clean-up h Price Ladies' Underwear The Famous "Merode" a strictly high grade underwear, sold only by the Best Merchants, Garment CHILDREN'S Handkerchiefs If you miss the specials in these, you are passing good bargains. We are de termined to clean up this box stock 3 in a box a box 19c Women Stranded Across Ocean From Home Keturn London, Dee. 17. (By mail.) Amer ican, British and Dominion women, tranded on the other side of the ocean from home, are oping to be repatriat ed very aoon the British government fcaa decided. i flirty thousand Canadian women are ia England touay, waiung m mu to be lifted so they ean return home. The first lot of them sailed late in No vember. Others will follow a3 rapidly as possible. The number of American women is negligible, according to the American consulate. The American government did not put any obstacles in the way of Ameriean women wishing to cross the ocean, as did the British govern ment, and the Ameriean consulate in England has been visaing women passport all along. Tttose who are stranded here remained voluntarily rather than risk U.voats. The British government's decision to refuse passports to British women dur ing the war left English women in for eign lands completely cut off from their homes. Jf O Ness, n ef the best known contractors of Montana, wa, shot and killed at Great Falls by his wife, who attempted to end her own life. This "Cop" will pro tect your pocket book. Look for his move on prices. You can always do better at Look for the sign of the "Cop". It's a move on prices. STANDARD OIL TANKER OUT OF SAN FRANCISCO BELIEVED THE LOST Left December 19, And Or dinary Trip Only Taks 4$ Honrs. Seattle, Wash, Jan. 2. The Stand ard Oil company tanker George W. Loomis, with a erew of 19 men, last sighted off tne uregon eoasi oy u steamer Washtenaw, is believed to be lost. The vessel left fian Praneisco for Coos Bay, Ore., December 19. The trip 4S hours.' Siatted off the Oregon oast 36 houra after sailing the tanker Has not Deen aecn siaee. Officer of the 13th naval dis trict todav expressed serious concern for the safety of the tanker. Accord ing to these officials the United States lighthouse vessel Bose, searching in the Coot Bay vicinity for the missing steamer, has reported na success. The George W. Loomis was com manded by Captain E. E. Lapehase. The majority of the crew lived in an Francisco. The Loomis was ths first tanker to be constructed by the Standard Oil eompany, being built by the Union Imn Wnrkn. tsn iVancisea in 18D0. The steamer wa 175 feet in length with a beam ol Zi teet. ne was 614 gross tons. 6he operated for some time between Puget Hound ports and Alaska. Eavs Heard Nothing San Francisco, Jan. 2. Standard Oil offices at 8:30 a. m. today had heard no word from their tanker, the Oeorge Loomis, which left here for rv Dee. 19. Thrv' exrress con fidence however, that the staunch lit tle vesael will weattter tne storms on the Oregon coast. A revenue cutter from Seattle has been searching for the Georg Loomis for two days. WtMa from tht office of the adju tant jreneraL under government frank,' agreeing to aend an honor roll to re-j eipienta for 1, were eritieised in the senate Monday by Senator Borah as "a picaynnish petit lareeny system." ' State House Notes Between 12600 and 3000 apvtons for 1919 automobile licenses were on hand this morning in the motor ve hicle degistration department of the secretary of state's ufTiee. More than "30,000 ears have now been registered for the new year. This is about half of the total number of ears in the state. Thirty one rrtridents in the vicinity of tiwiss Home, Lane county, have pe titioned the pDblic service commission to require the Willamette Pacific rail way eompany to install a statioa agent at Swiss Home. They contend there is ample business at that point to warrant this move. When the Marion county grand jury which investigated the state poniten tiary, makes its report to Circuit Judge Kelly tomorrow it is espeeted that some indictments wilt he retnrn ed as a result af the alleged parole sellinjr at the state prison. Wh'-n the jury filed its first report, aeveral weeks ago, criticising the business manage ment of the prison e mention was made of the parole selling scandal, so it is expected that that subject will he treated when the jury reports to morrow. During the year 1918, Ocorge H. Kais er, scale expert for the public service commission, made 50 tests upon 28 scale ia the state, and only two scales were tested which were not sealed as being accurate. One of these two scales' is owned by the Oregon Pacific Kastern Railroad company at Cottage Orove and the other is owned by the Portland Eailway, Light and Power eompany at Linncuiao. Mr. Kaiser, ac cording to hit annual report, was em ployed 105 days in tosthig scales and tbe cost for salary and expenses was $1152.83. The average ecst per text was $20. About Croup If your children s o subject to ereup, or if you have reao ;n to fer.r tbsir be ing attacked by that disease, yon should procure a bottle of Chamber lain 't Cough Remedy and study the di rections for use. so that in ease of an attack you will know exactly what eeurae te pursue. This it a favorite land very successful remedy for ereup, asd it is important that yea observe jthe directions carefully. I Linn county will have ths lervttes of a county agent, hit salary to be paid fcy popular subscription. L G. Hulia's Position Here Only Temporary Lester G. Hulin, of this city, win has been named as assistant tate treas urer, announced yesterday that his up peintment is only for a period durir.j; the session of the state legisluhu, after which time he will return to bin duties as cashier of the Fimt National I bank of Springfield. While It is not officially announced, it is generally understood that Joseph (i. Richardson, of Portland, who in a member of the legislature, will receive the appointment as assistant treasure. Me eould not serve in that capacity while a member of the legislature, w Mr. Hulin, who is a personal friend f rtate Treasurer O P. Hoff, a formes Lane county man, will fill the poitic until the Bession U over. In the meantime O. H. Tenner, of h I First National bank of Eugene, will fiil ;Mr, Hulin 't place in the prinafie"' , lank. .. i Mr. Hulin expects to spend Thursdsy , Friday and flaturday of this week in the office of the state treasurer t. familiarize himself with the work nasi will assume his duties there Monday. Eugene Begiter. JOURNAL WANT ADS PA,