Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1919)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM, OREGON. TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1919. PAGE FIVE INEW TODAY I JOURNAL WANT AD DEPARTMENT IS THE BEST SELLING EIEDIUM IN MARION COUNTY-TRY THEM FOR RESULTS CLASSITIED ADVERTISING BATE 9 Bete per word Mew Today: Each insertion . It no week (6 insertions) 5e One month (26 insertions) 17e The Capital Journal will not tie re-sponsible- for more than one insertion, for errors in Classified Advertisement Bead tout advertisement the first day it appears and notify us immediately if rror occurs. Minimum charge, 15c. WHITE Bock eggs for hatching. Phone 83F5. 181 (WANTED Girl for general house work. State School for Deaf. 1 25 IFOR HAXiK Or trade, a good range for milk cow. Call 1031 Union. 1-21 I)R SALE Two horses cheap. 595 Marion. Phone 2273R. 1-27 "WANTED- Jrside work by man aged 27. Address 7092 care Journal. -1-22 iW ANTED Orders for day old chicks. Phone 403R. - 1-24 FOR SALE Ford in good condition. 1309 N. Com'l St. ' ti FOR RENT Sleeping rooma in Hub bard l)ldg. W. H. 8 orris, agont. tf WANTED To buy cattle and calves, ny kind. Phone 1576W. 2-6 FOR a typewriter mechanic phone 037. 1-23 FOR SAJLB 'Five" year old Jersey cow will ibe fresh Feb. 10. Phone 53F22. 1-21 FOR SALE 150 Himalya blackberry cuttings. Adam Wurm, Rt. 2, box 24 1-23 X)R SALE Or trade fox beef cows, fresh, cow, giving three gallons a day. Phono 1578W. 1-22 WANTED Home for 10 year boy. Will work for board. Country pre ferred. 7110 care Journal. 1-23 (WANTED Three or four room house. J'exrmanent renter if suited. E J care Journal. 1-22 (WAlNTDro-Cheap car, Ford Preferred, or a wreck. Address 7112 care Jour nal. 1-27 OTNJ-'1018 auto license tag. Owner call at Journal office and pay for ad. . . 1-22 WANTED -Good milk eows. Must be fresh or goon to be fresh. Phone 49&U. 1-22 WANTEP F-:tiienced cook at once at Willa-.ttte Sanatorium. Apply 75 Ferry. 1-fti IjOST Saturday black bugle pin, giv er ia France. Finder please leave at Journal of ice. Reward. 1-21 iFOR SALE Two j'ne Butte. c p took c.rels and me Orpingtjii roostevV . Phone 60F21. 1-81 J1RLS and women wanted at the Olove factory, 1455 Oak St., Salem, Or. . 1-25 I'OR SALE One good work mare, cheap. Apply A. J. Krueger, West Salem. 1-21 FOR SALE Two brood sows due to farrow soon; also shoats. Skyline Or chards, Rt. 3. , 1-21 7 ROOM house, newly papered, jew roof, plumbing, $700. Term, to suit. F. L. Wood, Bayno bldg. 1-21 WANTED Oregon Champion gooseber ry cuttings. Fruitland Nursery, Sa lem, Rt. 6. Phone 111F21. 1-23 FOR TRADE A good, neat it room house with garage. Call 1644 or 2022 ia moraines. tf CAltPENTBRING, repairing or cement work. Call C. W. Nist. Phone 2495 K. IW LOST Bttween Salem and Gervais, 34x3 tire with rim; please notify N. N. Scversgn, Gervais, tr leave at Capital garago, Salem. 1-23 INOTOQR I will not be responsible for any debts uOLtracted by my wife, Mrs. Pesrl ' a' is. as slie has left mj home and board. Boaie Paris. 1-28 FOR SALE iCheap, 11 head si oats weighing 80 to 100 lbs. Write Inde pendence, Or. or phone 5QF4, Sa lem.. JOB SALE 1 9x13 shaft governor, engine and boiler complete, ekeep. Box 468, Tomer, Or. f FOB 8 ALB One fine R I. Red stale, wilil r IM-ffPir Hands' Lee ia- eufcator. Call 1947J betweea I 11 a. m. STALL PAPER 13 cents par double roll pward. Buren'i Furniture Store, 17 Commercial. UBERTY BONDS If yom must dis pose of your bonds, we will buy them. 314 Masonic bldg. tf PLENTY of money to loa oa good farms; low interest rat"; tin years time: privilege to pap $100 or mala ria on any interest date. Call or writ H. M. Hawkins, J14 Masonic btdz. Salem. tf FOB SALE 10 acres, house, orchard, good location; 16 acres close to Sa lem, a easy terms. B. M. Woods, first house north church, West 8a tHB, write' 445 Court 6U 1 22 WANTED Fat, thin and fresh eows, eal and large ealvea. Phone 1425M. 1-30 TOR SAIiEWhite faced Black Spaa- n eocacreis. a. A. Vanderburg, Kt. - - 1-27 'POSITION wanted as day nurse by middle aged lady. Inquire at 6ti6 North Summer street. 1-22 WILL call for chickens, eggs, veal and hides and pay highest prices. Cherry Ci:y Feed Barn. 1-27 FOR SALE Opal range, used one year, good condition. Phone Mrs. Carl Beckett, 64F15. . 1-23 OVER THE TOPOur prices the high est spot cash for men's secondhand suits and shoes. Capital Exchange, 337 Court St. Phone 493. tf FOR RENT Well furnished room. closa in, suitable for either one or two persons, bath and other conven iences. 640 Chemeketa street. tf FOR SALE-jCheap, 1000 lb. mare, S years old ; also one 220-egg size Pct aluma incubator, good condition. Phone 57F3. 1-25 WANTED Two girls or women, one to do housework and one to help with invalid lady and baby. Apply to Mrs. Bennett, 1625 Court St., Salem. 1-21 FOR SALE A. J. C. a Jersey bull, lour years old, from neavy produc ing strain. Address E. C. Eoff, Salem Rt 6, box 44, or phone 23F15. 1-21 TO TRADE Modern bungalow in Yew j-'arK wita large lot and Darn, value $2500, for acreage equal value, im proved or otherwise. Phone 1204. 1-21 FOR SALE 3 or 4 five-acre tracts im proved and unimproved at a l.ar gain. Phono 2501W2 nitj. 6 p. in 1-21 LOST A crank from auto between Clearwater stable and Great Western Oarage. Reward. Return to Journal. 1-23 LOST Jan. 17 pocketbook between Salem and Independence, containing about $25. Return to Journal office. Reward. 1-22 I HAVE a complete set of oak office furniture for sale; also includes Steel filing case. H. M. Hawkins, 314 Masonic Bldg. 1-21 My sevon room Capitol Hill, Seattle residence, cost me $5000 cash. Want to exchange for Salem, close in, im proved acrosgo. Byrne, 1017 Boren Ave., Seattle. 1-24 FOR SALE A bargain, 640 acres ex oollent wheat land Morrow county, 4 milca from lively railroad town. May take some Salem property. Price $15. Owner, hone 2498R. 1-24 FOR SALE Genuine Franquet wal nuts grafted on black. True Du Chil ly and Bacellana filberts. Middle Grove Nursery, Rt. 7, box 201. Phone 24F5. 1-31 TO TRADE Or sale, 13 aces bearing prune orchard with house, barn and dryer, on rock road, closo to Salein, for mercantile business or partner ship in same. Address O K care Journal. 1-25 EGGS for hatching, pure bred Ore gon S. C. White Leghorn and Ply mouth Rock, O. A. C. strain; also day old chicks 15c each. Order now for March delivery. Phone 42F25. Rt. 7, box 163. YOFNG MEN. 16 atid over, are eli . Jfiblfl ins ( overnmen railway mail ceiKS. WA uiiUii-'.-ianuiittUona soun For free particulars, write Raymond Terry, (former civil service exam iner) 922 Columbian building, Wash ington, D. C. 1-23 (BABY CHICKS FOR ALE White Leghorns $16 per 100. Black Minor cas $20 per 100. Starting with Feb. 15tih delivery. $5 deposit with order, balance payable week in advance of delivery. Order now and woid disappointment. C. N. Needham, P. O. box 412, Salem. tf SALE ef property, buildings and furniture of tha dismantled fed ora! radio station, Lents, Ore. There will be sold at tie Thirteenth VavuI niatnVt HAndauartera Stuart Building, Seattle, Wash., property be longing .to the Navy at Lents, Ore., together witn Duming ana iurniiure condomned as unfit for further use therein consisting of the site of the ex fedural radio station at Lents, Ore., of approximately 7 acres of land, 1 con orete building, 2 frame houses, 1 shed, 1 new dwelling, furniture, chairs, stoves and ranges, tables, tools and scrap mot T Thi 1 will be for cash to the (highest bidder by sealed proposals to toS opened at a. m., i? xeuruary, 1019, at the office of Supply Officer, Thirteenth Naval District, 8tuart Building, Seattle, Wash. Schedules con taining form of proposals and terms of sale eaa be obtained upon applica tion in ftimnlr Officer. Stuart (Building, Seattle, Wash. Josephus Daniels. After drilling 1200 feet promoters of an oil well at Dallas lave abandoned the project. Tha turn of $18,000 has been appro priated for work on 28. miles of road ia Cowlits county. A wage bonns of $240 for the year beginning next July, for government emploves receiving $2500 or leas, was voted'Saturday night by the house. HOWTOSAVEONSHOES "cut of curiosity I tried a pair of Neolin Soles." writes W. P. Macartney of St. Louis, "and today, after five months of hard service 1 fail to notice any real signs of wear on them." This statement points the way to real economy in shoes. What your shoes cost, by the year, depends largely on how the soles wear .and Neolin Soles do wear a very long time. Moreover, they are exceedingly comfortable and waterproof scientifically made to be exactly what soles should be and so worn now by millions. They are available everywhere on new shoes and for re-soling. They are made by The Goodyear Tire & Rub ber Company, Akron, Ohio, who also make Wingfoot Heels, guaranteed to outwear any other heels. neolin Soles or tj, u.a.eu-tx. COMMISSION SENDS UII tR ABOUT KOADS Enlarges Upon Reasons For Not Wanting 5-Year lon trol Of Railroads. Supplementing a telegram sent by tho public serviie commission u- few days ago to Charles Elmqucst, president of the National Association of Baiway Utilities commissions, in opposition to continued governmental control of the railroads, the commission last mgjit mailed the following letter: . " We wish to further state that owing to the flagrant abuse of the power granted by congress during the past short period of control, we are very ap- preensive of the .result of a further extension of such power: "That the federal government, in or der to secure priority and the utmost fa cility in the movement of troops, ma nitions said supplies during our prepare' tion for and in the proseeution of the war, had the absolute right to assume control of the nation's transportation systems is nnquestions, hut now that the war is oved we have no hesitanety in pointing out the abuse of the power placed in the hands of the director gen eral. To our minds congress did not in tend to clothe the president with the power to indiscriminately initiate or increase rates. This should be appar ent when wo stop to consider the scope and obvious intent of the several was measures. Discussion of the Overman bill in tho senate indicates clearly that the authority granted tho president to initiate freight rates "was to bo exereis ed only in cases of real and pressing emergency, such as arose directly dur ing the war. Had No Public Hearing. "Congress made ample provision for the betterment and rehabilitation of such roads as did not meet certain stan dards of efficiency before the 8b pes cent horizontal increase was put into ef fect. This increase was made without the formality of public hearing; with out the advice of the interstate com merce commission and state commis sions, or without the consent of the sevJ eral states, and against the protests of the shipping public, and this, too, in face of the fact that tho itnerseate commerce commission and 47 state com missions have kept close supervision ov er railroad rates for years. This is an arbitrary exercise of power, in utter dis regard of the people and state's igbts. "The laws creating state commis sions prescribe the manner in which rate increases shall be made. Invaria bly applicant must justify tho necessi ty for tho increase by showing made NOTICE Notice is hereby given that I have impounded the following described dogs ia compliance with ordinance No. 1404, towit: One male Shepherd dog, weight about 40 lbs. One male Pointer bird dog, yellow ears, weight 50 lbs. One black male dog, smooth hair, weight 40 lbs. One black dog, white breast, weight 40 lbs. One male Better olrd dog, white and black spots, weight 38 libs. One male Setter bird dog, red and white color, weight 45 lbs. One male white mongrel dog, weight 30 lbs. One female bird Setter, black and white, weight 40 lbs. One male Collie dog, white on necx, weight 45 lbs. One male Fox Terrier, white with yollow head, weight 20 lbs. One male Fox Terrier, white and black spots, weight 24 lbs. The above described dogs will be killed if not redeemed by owners oa or before January 25, 1919, as provid ed in said ordinance. W. S. LOW, 1-25 Street Commissioner. DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP NOTICE Notice- is hereby given that ths es partnership heretofore existing be tween G. E. Halvorsen and W. P. Darns doing business under the firm name and style of Halvorsen It Burns, has by mutual agreement been dissolved. All persons knowing themselves In debted to said firm are hereby re quested to pay all indebtedness to (i. E. Halvorsen at the office- of the Yal ley Motor Co., 237 State street, Salem, Oregon. O. E. HALVOBSBN, W. P. BURNS, 1-21 BUHL Baaltary railklnc palls, nralnarsi etc, re atntar4 with Northwast Dairyman. Burred Milkers doas the work i 1 nn will savs enouck ia 1 year to say for its cest. Wa rarry a fuU line of Dairy Suaallea, Barn Equipment Silas, etc. Write us far lurga catalog containing; one of tha finest assortment of Dairy Bupplir in tha N.W. WON BOB CKISbELL 1 Front ML Portland. MSEGER11S10 WHO IS UBDiALLES" IVcssiass Compelled To Wait For Tnssphal itocessioa Into Eletz. . By Frank X Taylor. (United Press Staff Correspondent.) Meta, Dee. 22. (By Mail.) There is one group of Prussians that knows Ger many i whipped, though reports persist that the majority do not realise it yot. Two big machines full of sleek Prus sian railroad men pulled up at the pub lic square in Chateau-Salins, near Metz m k iu nun uuiv iu, aacuuu nun juu- ing a triumphant entry into the city from the south. . A rugged old poilu halted the Prus sians and covered them. They demand ed to pass immediately, since they were on their way to Nancy to turn over the Alas ti on railrooads to French rauroad m . .1 . . 1 -t x . 1 11 ia liuu icpibtiu uiguci. jriuuuv reached the general in command. He made his decision at once. "Give them a place where they can see well, and make them wait until the proces sion has passed. It will be a good sight for Prussian eyes." The two cars full of Prussians wero backed in the square facing the passing French warriors, who marched with vic tory in their movements to tho time of mertial French music. All the while the natives of Chateau-Salins were wild in their enthusiasm ver the poilus. Tho Pniinn watched without wine- j tiion i.nmmTitin0 amnnif themselves, but never to an outsider. As; v, m ;i ,t u Nn mm knows just what they thought, out tncy at least know who won the wtr. at a public hearing. "That the action of ths railroad sd ministration in relation to our raitroads was ill-timed and ill-advised mya be aathered from the obvious predicament ' of our short line roads and the extreme j handicap under which our many indus tries are mooring, owing u a giynui proportional increase in rates than com petitors more favorably situated with : regard to distance from markets in the middle west and east. Couldn't See Irregularities. "If the railroads are to eontinue un der federal control for. five years more it is hardly to be expected that the traffie directorate constituted as it i ol men wh for years have 2nd ton tul of the roads and who are responsi ble for the many diserimnations which the people of the west have patriotical ly acquiesced in to -this time, could ever be made to see the irregularities of many of the present rate relation ships. A review of freight tariffs will disclose that many of the rate struc tures have been made for the benefit of partienlar favored:" localities, ship pers or jobbers. If regulation by torn missions, state arid interstate, have not yet eliminated all discriminations, it is follow to thing that an appeal to the very men responsible for these existing conditions will bring about, any relief or betterments. "We believe we are fuly justified in opposing further extension of time of fedora control of railroads by reason of our many futile attempts during the nast year to secure recognition in be half of the people of this state in mat ters of glaring irregularities end dis crimination." ONE DAY INVOLVED III SUPREMECOURI CASE 15 Days Are Required In Ad vertising Bond Issue, But ' Only 14 Were Given. u the decisions handed down by judges of vne, supreme eourt this morn ing, there mi one in which the question of oaf day was involved. The case was the Leyctjck Improvement Co. against the Nor'n. 7'nit Irrigation district. In the opinion written by Judge Bean it noted that 15 days notice are required in an advertisement of a bond issue and in this ease the notice wag only 14 days, Judge Been holding that the no tice was one day short of a legal notice. Other decisions handed down were as follows: Henry Eldredgn, appellant, vs. Mill Ditch Co. et si; appeal from Mauhour eounty; suit in equity to enjoin and set aside execution sale of water rights and ditch property. Opinion by Justice Burnett; Judge Dalton Biggs reversed and ease remanded. In the matter of the estate of An drew 3. Bturdcvant, deceased, Vivian J. Bturdcvant . et at, vs. Mark Sturde vant et al; appellants; appeal- from Umatilla county; opinion by Justice Burnett; Judge Biggs reversed end case remanded. Boulevard Drainage System vs. Effie J. Gordon et al appellant; Malheur eounty; snit to restrain defendant from turning excess water from irrigation into ditth owned by plaintiff; opinion by Justice Benson. Judge Dalton Biggs affirmed. J. M. Wisdom, appellant, vs. William Arnold et si; appeal from Douglas coun ty; suit to eolleet money for services alleged to have been rendered for de fendant; opinion by? Justice Burnett; Judge J. W Hamilton reversed. Helms Grooved end Dubber Co. vs Henry Copenhagen et al, appellants; appeal from Multnomah county. Mo tion to dismiss appeal for an injunction and for citation for contempt denied in an opinion by Justice Bean. M. YanTassel appellant vs. Jefferson eounty; motion to affirm judgment of ineu. xne pouu ;w w tiona, and for the many disorders com andrerK)rtodthcm to hisUcutenant who!mon t( in a eg . ufe, Dr, DAILY HEALTH TALKS The Many Mysteries of Nature - v (By L. "W. Bower, M. V.) Yon ean take a onion seed and a pansy seed, and plant them s:de by side in the same spot of ground. In one case, yon get an onion, with its peculiarly strong odor, and ia the other you get a flower of rare beauty. You can plant a poppy seed and get opium (a dan gerous, habit-forming drug), or tyou eaa piaat rhubarb seed and get some thing that helps constipation. No sci entist, living ? dead, can explain these mysteries of nature. Behind the invisible Kfe germ ia each seed is hid den the deep secret that nobody under stands. Everything growing out cf the ground seems intended for gome ve in establishing' natural conditions. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., long siuce found out what is naturaL'y best for women's diseases, lie learned it all through treating thousand of eases. The result of his studies was a medi cine called Dr. Pieree'e Favorite Pre scription. This medicine is made of vegetable growths that nature surely intended for backache, headache, weak ening drains, bearing down fains, per iodical irregularities, pelvie inflamma- Pierce's Favorite Prescription is made of lady's slipper root, black cohosh root, unicorn root, blue cohosh root and Oregon grape root. Women who take this standard remedy know that in Dr. Pierce'g Favorite Prescription they are getting a safe woman's tonic so good that druggists, everywhere sell it, Favorite Prescription should have the full confidence of every woman in America because it contains no alcohol and no narcotic. iDr. Pierce knew, when he first made this standard medicine, Ithat whiskey and morphine are injur- ious, and so he has always kept them out of his remedies. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, JST. Y, for trial ykg. Tablets. Judge T. E. J. Duffy allowed per cur iam. Emma G. Bobinson, appellant vs. Grant Phaif.loy,appeal from Multnc- mch. eonn,ty. Motion to dismiss appeal overruled; opinion by Chief Justice Mc Bride; Judge Geo. B. Bagley, Judge of lower court. Petitions for rehearing were denied in Caitano vs. City of Atheaa and in Miller vs. Fisher. Passengers On Rochambeau Repaired Ships Machinery Halifax, N. 8., Jan, 21. Passengess aboard the French liner Rochambeau who repaired Iho ship's machinery when it became damaged near this port are responsible for the fact that she was ready to proceed on her way to New York today. The Rochambeau was forced to put in for bunker oal when her eripp machinery and bad weather detai her. Mechanics on the passenger list went to work and jgot the engines in alcerbg FOR THROAT AMD LUNQS A Calcium compound that will brlns" M" lief in mny nciuia and ohronto cun Provide ia h&nleflt form, a basio rem edy hlshly rpcnmmnded liv gclenca. Con tains no harmful drvra, Try them today. 50 cent a box, including war tax For aala br all dnincM Kckmao Laboratory, rhlliuMpbla , ryiftajr'VifHSsvs,vaajaaS'vwilvs'1 A W T ire u 1 n&mvrnruir Sleeping in unheated bed-rooms IS extremely healthful, PROVIDED that you take the chill out of the bed before retiring. No matter what the temperature of the night, you can go to bed on your porch or in unheated bed-rooms, with windows wide open, the frost attacking the outside world, and your bed may te made "as warm as toast." As a matter of fact, it is quite impossible to describe the sensation of sleeping out-of-doors on a frosty, crisp night, in a perfectly warmed and dry bed. BE LOYAL TO YOUR Lace and Embroidery Dep't Putting on Special Tables all broken bolts of Imported Lace Nets They are divided into six (6) lots, marked for quick Clearance 19c, 27c, 37c, 49c, . 69c and 98c This is your opportunity. The most of these "Nets" Cannot be Replaced Dresses, Suits, Coats One-half Price The store is replete with big Money Savers in every department, and bear this always in mind, "Meyers" only carries strictly High Grade Merchandise. You can always do better at shape to eontinue the voyage. A new passenger - arrived in mid ocean when a daughter was born to Lieutenant and Mrs. T. M. Wilson of Tennessee. The ship carries the 339th field ar tillery, mainly from Iowa, Minnesota and a number of war workers. The national war labor board ha or dered the Detroit United Kailwaye to retain in its employ the women now serving as conductors. 6aaiSMafcSiasaMSM Tii-rr- T" -ft fVpP7 '.tit ' i f i Jj t i'A 1 f , 'rS ft r- nneate ea-AXGoms PORTLAND RAILWAY OWN HOME TOWN. ft m The "Special Move-On Con" Has Just Gone Through the JURY WON'T INDICT LEBAUDY MBS. Mineola, N. Y., Jan, 21. The grand jury today rcfusod to indict Mrs, Ma rio Augustine Labaury for the murder f her husband, Jusquoj Labaudy "Emperor of the Sahara." , 1 The International Ladies' 'Garment Workers' union, with a membership iJ 35,000 in Now York, Saturday author ised tho calling of a strike. LIGHT & POWER CO.