SL 0T THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1919. PAGE FIVE. Anniversary Tomorrow (Saturday) "we begin celebrating our Anniversary, by putting into effect a list of prices; that will undoubtedly be a welcome surprise to you. When you think of the Midget, here are a few things to bear in mind. We were first to inaugurate the cash and carry system in Salem, whereby you do not have to pay for an expensive delivery, and some one else's bad account. . ; . ;;..;. . - We succeeded in bringing about a reduction in the price of meat which still prevails. -i ! We have been fought openly and by all manner of subterfuges, but thanks to your loyal support we ! survived it all. It is not necessary to say anything further as the following prices speak for themselves. They Will Be In Effect for the r Entire Week Beef to boil per pound f..:...10c Beef to roast, per pound , .u....J ..15c Prime roast of beef , per pound 18c , T-bone, round and sirloin steak, per pound... ......l.2Qc Veal steak," per pound ,.....;... L:.A:..:2Q.c ? Veal stew, per pound .-. ......15c :: Loin veal cutlets, per pound ...... .....U 25c ' Legs of veal, per pound .....l..:..25c ! Sugar cured picnic hams, per pound ................ .!....28c Freshly smoked pig jowls, per lb . ......'...:............25c Dry salt pork, per pound ...i .......:.:..35c Pure lard, (guaranteed) No. 5 pail ,....$1.55 We do not SELL CHEAP MEAT, but we do SELL MEAT CHEAP 1 Midget Market f Originators of Low Prices 351 State Street The Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen in the Spokane district have j declared war on I. W. W. agitators found within the ranks of the '-Four L orennizatlon u organization. ,tmt4' Safe Milk .For Infant! l& Inralifc tlrCsokiif A nutritious Diet for All Ages Quick Lunch at Home or Office Avoid Imitation - and Substitutes DANCE IRMO REAL DANCE MUSIC At last a Linen Rug made of pure American-grown FlaX. , V. ,'-,- t - fii': '" .The most durable floor covering known and har monizing perfectly - with decorative needs of any room in the house. KIEARFIAX LINEN HIM EoradSaire'StoreT; Court Kolcfaak's AlHiy SurTCnderS TOIL 1 C D i ' V lO BOlSlieYlKl OSyS KepOn London, Sept. 12. The remainder of Jmil Wnhnt'i uiitlmrii orm. urnl- sistmg of 20,000 men has surrendered to the bolshevik forces, an ( official wireless dispatch from Moscow report ed today. " C. H. Pearl, president of the State Bank of Prosser, has sold his 30-acre orchard tract near that city for $10, 500. "Mr. Pearl retains the crop which is estimated to be worth $10,000. 1 "Uncle" George Webb, pioneer of Umatilla county and former state treas urer, celebrated his 95th birthday at La Grande last week. Reports coming in from various warehouses indicate that about 4,500, 000 bushels of wheat were raised in Umatilla countv this year. " ' 0 D V SATURDAY V1. -NIGHT RUGS ILTON'S Street sWILSOECOBlEDlfllEyiDDMSSi focur d'Alene, Idaho, Sept. 42.-tA partial text of the president's t'ouer d'Alene address follow? i "It was" with the most earnest de sire to ?ct in touch with you and the rest of my fellow countrymen that I undertook this trip, for, my fellow countrymen, we are facing a decision now in which . we cannot afford to make a mistake. We must not let our selves be deceived as to the gravity of that decision, or as to the implications or that decision. It will mean a great deal now, but it will mean indefinite ly more in .the future; and America has to do at this moment nothing less than prove to tho world whether Bho has meant what she said in the past. I must confess that I have been amazed that there are some men in re sponsible positions who are opposed to the ratification of the treaty of peace altogether. ' . ; "The settlement of thir treaty can not be maintained without the concert ed action of all the great governments of the world. At this moment the only people who are dealing with the bolshe vist government in Russia aro the Uer mons. They are fraternizing with the few who exercise control in that dis tracted country. They are making all their plans, that the financing of Rus sia and the commerce of- Russia and the development of Russia shall be as soon as possible in the hands of Ger mans and just so soon as she can swing, that great power, that is also her road ito tho east and to the domination of the world. If you do not guarantoo the titles that you are setting up in these treaties, you leave the whole ground fallow in which again to sow the drag on 's teeth with the harvest of ormed men. "That, my fellow citizens, is what article X, that you hear so much talk ed about, in the covenant of the lea gue of nations, does. It guarantees the land titles of the world and if1 you do not guarantee the land titles of the world, there cannot be tho ordered so ciety in which men can live. Am erica is absolutely, necessary "to ' the peaco of the world. Germany realizes that, and 1 want to tell you now and here 1 wish I could proclaim it in tones so loud that they would reach the world Germany wants us to stay odt of this treaty. Not under any de ception. Not under the deception that we will-turn in sympathy towards her. Not under the delusion that we would seek in any direct or conscious way to serve Germany; but with the knowl edge that the guarantees will not be sufficient without America, and that inasmuch as Germany is out of the ar rangement, it will be very useful to Germany to have America out of the arrangement. iBecause, Germany knows that if America is out of the arrange ment, America will lose the confidence and cooperation of all tW other na tions of the world and, fearing Ameri ca Ts strength, she wants to see America alienated from the peoples from whom she has been alienated. It is a perfectly reasonable program. She wants to see Ameriea isolated. She is isolated, She wants to see one great nation left out of this combination which she neve! would again dare face. Evidences are not lacking, nay, evidences are abound ing that pro-German propaganda has started up in this country, coincident ally with tho opposition to the adoption of this treaty. I want those who have any kind of sympathy with the pur poses with which we went into the ar now to reflect upon" this proposition: Are we going to prove the enemy of the rest of the world, just when we have proved tltfir savior? The thing is intolerable. The thing is impossible. America has never been unfaithful and she never will be unfaithful. "Do not mistake the signs of the times, my fellow countrymen, and do not think that America is immune. The -foison that hag spread all through that pitiful nation of Russia is spreading ait through Europe. There is not a states It Plows. It Harrows. It Drills. It Cultivates. It Hauls Mowing Ma chines, Lawn Mowers and Loads of all kinds. It does tkb farm work ordinarily done by one hofse. It will cultivate onions, carrots and other vegetables grown ia rows as narrow as 12 inches 3 rows at a time, if desired. It's a Portable Gasoline Engine that will trot from job to job under its own power; runs the pump, saw, wash ing machine, feed grinder and any other machine capable of being oper ated by a four horse -' power engine. Are , yon interested! Full information tiieer- fully ' given on request. ON DISPLAY AT LIBEB.TT OARAGE ,.., 4M FEEBT BIEEET . A For Sale By '-" MARSHALL N. ROACH Distributor for Marion and Polk Countica 4U Ferry Street fial m, Or. man in Europe who d ies not dried Tha' infection of it ,a:td just so coi-a'm'y ps those people a-e d'scoitcerred, thrown back upon their own resources, disheartened, rendered cynical by the withdrawal of tho only -.'people of the world, ,: they trust, just so certainty' there will be universal upsetting of or der in Europe.' And if the order of Eu rope is upset, do yon think. .AmoricaJ is going to bo quiet? Have you not been reading in the papers of the in tolerable thing that has just happened in Boston! When the police of a great city walk out and leave that (ity to be looted, they have committed an intol erable crime against civilization; . and if that spirit is going to prevail, where are your programs! How can yon carry a program out when every man is tak ing what he can get How can yon enr ry a program out when there is no au thority upon, which 'to base it How can you carry a program out when every man is looking out for his own selfish interest and refuses to be bound by any law that regards the interests of oth ers! . 1 ; ' ; ! ;;!; There will be no reform in the wqj'ld for a generation if the condition of the world aro not now, brought to settled order, mid they, cannot bo brought to settled .order- without the eo-operatiilii "I am not speaking with conjecture, my fellow citizens. I would be r.shanied of myself if upon a theme- so grcHt-,af this I would mislead you by over state., ment of any kind. 1 know what I am talking about. I have spent six months amidst those "disturbed peoples on the othor side of the water and I can tell you, now and here, that the only people they depend upon to bring the world to settled conditions arc the people'1 'of American.- A chill will go to their heart' ' a diseouijigeiiieiit will conic down upon them, a cynicism will tukc possession of them, which will make progress impoB sible, if we not only do not take nart. but flo not take part with nil bur inighl and will all'diir genius. Everybody who lovch justice end who hopes for pro grams of reform must support tho un qualified adoption of this treaty. I send that challenge put to the conscience of every man in America, that il he knows anything of the conditions of the world, 'if he knows anything of the present state of society throughout the world and really loves justice an(i pur poses with which we went into the war treaty with Germany. I do not wt-nt to say thut and have if proved by tragedy, for if .this treaty should be refused, if it should be iunairod, then amidst ths tragedy of the things that would lollov every man would be converted lo tnc opinion thut I am now uttering, but 1 Clo not wunt to see that sort ot eonvw siou. I do not want to see aa oia of Wood and of chaos to convert men to the only practical methods of justice, My Icllow citizens, there are a great many things needinglto be reformed in America. We aro not exempt from those, in subtle influences which lead to uli, sorts of incidental injustice. W our selves are in -danger at this prescut nuc mont of minorities trying to coutiol oui affuirs and whenever a minority tries to control tne attans ot the country it is fighting agaiut the interest of the country just us much as if it were trying iu upset tue government. : If you think that you can afford to livo in a chuotic world, then speak words of eiicouri.ee" ment to the men who are opposing this treaty, out it you want to havu vour own fortunes held steady, realizo that tne rortunes of tho world must bo h. steady; that if you want, to keep our own boys at home after this terrible experience, you will Be that boys elso-" whore are kept at home. iou will say, 'well, why not go in with reservations?' I wonder if vn,i know what that means. If tho KP.int of the United States passes a resolu tion or rntitication and says it ratifies on condition that so and so and so is umlerBtood, that will hiive to be re-i.h mitted to every signatory of the treaty; ind what grieves me ia that it wiU have to be submitted to the German assembly at Weimar. That goes against my di gestion. We cannot honorably urn, .,t. thing in that treaty, which Germany has signed and ratified, without Germany, consent; whereas, it is perfectly feai-iM . my fellow countrymen, if we put inter pretations upon that fronts t1,!1, u. language clearly warrants, to notify flic other governments of the world that w, do understand the treaty in that sense. It is perfectly feasible to do, and perfectly honorable to do that, because ,mark you, nothing can be done under this treaty through the instrumentality of the coun cil of the league of nation's except bv a unanimous vote. F. C. Kelly and the eitv of War renton will construct a spur railroad track across the Co utnbia river high way connecting the H. P. & H with the F; C. Kelly mill. i roiessor ueorge A. Alden, dean of wiuamette nni versify, reports the gift of a half internet in 3iWiO acres of wheat land near I'rosser, Wash., to the university's endowment fund. A three-toed cougar which had kill ed more than 100 sheep in the Vesta CTcek eountry, was killed a few davs aKo by Owen Burk of Mjontawno. Four prisoners in the countv jail at Seattle mutinied Saturday, attacked and beat up a fifth prisoner, and re fused to return to their pells until forced to by the jailors. Pour hundred Fhriners ' visited A Grande Hnlunlav tt ot.,i,l .u. tlon of 6S novices, the latget gathering jof Shriners ever .assembled in Oregon leutside of Portland. To Conduct ft wllfilftsnlA n.l vrt.' !1 meat business and operate packing and refrigerating plants, a company with a capital stock of 20 000 has been or ganized at Baker. " - " n'"" ' " ' " " 1 ; '''' .'; ; . - .,.' .. ,. .,, v. . . . ,-; : "i'.i-t y .. ... 14 The children like BAKE-RITE BREAD because IT'S GOOD. Good all 'the way through from top to bottom. There is no more healthful food for grow ing children than good "bread. Give them all they want, but BE SURE IT'S BAKE-RITE. Take a loaf horns today if you have not already tried it. Let .the children be the judgesthey'll tell you IT'S GOOD. PIES cakes,; PASTRY" Bake-Rite 14 If mm GUARD HEAD Eugene Officer With Long Ser vice Record To Command State Troops. As was ' generally 'anticipated, .the checking up of ballots in tho hands of Adjutant General Htraffrin this morn ing showed that Col. Creed C. Hammond of Eugene was tho favorite all -down the' lino 'of the, Oregon companies of national guard. Colonel Hammond hiis been' connected; with Oregon's military forces for .a number of yours. From 1882 to 1895 ho was a private in company C, Second infantry, "of the Oregon National Guard; from Deeembcr, 1899, to December, 1900 he was first sergeant Sep. company O and company A, 4th infantry; and first sergeant of company A. 4th infan- Iry, to March 1901; then he was ad vanced to second lieutenant of 4th in fantry, holding rank until July, 1903; Then he served for some months ae first leutenant of 1st Sep. Batt. infan try, later- assuming tho rank of captain of this same, unit, serving in this posi tion until 1907. . Then he was mad major of the 4th infantry and; served until December. 1911. Following rtta he'servedas colonel of the Oregon Const Artillery, in which position ho was re-1 twined until March, 1917, when he was i cuuiiuiBBiuueu ror service in the world war, remaining in the service until Inst July. ' ' Lnuraf I. Littlefiold has resigned as postmaster at Hkullspiings, On, and rci-ommends ''discontinuance of the office. - , , Moro than ,100 students arc now en rolled in the Pendleton hiuh school, Hiving it the lnrsest enrollment it has ever had. Extra Help CSr I YOU CAN DO BETTER AT Mm - Suits "" - Remnants 4 1 The'Remnarit'Store of0;t!h carried over uuung from last BIG VALUE FOR SATURDAY Flannel wlrth Just arrived a Bi Line of Wo1 Remnant. You can S " $1.50 Save as much as 1-2. Come! 25c Yd. Mill Remnants of 'Remnants of Table High Grade Shirting Cloth Comforts A 40c Quality 64-inches widP Values $5.75 to $;!5.00 Saturday Price ; xZ&ua -'? 29c Yard 2 1-2 yd. lengths, $2.29 : 20 Per Cent Less The hi'e for s ' NewAuswoe:r The best in Salem Saturday Price $6.95 to $7.50 50c Pair 98c - Meil:l th- ? Silk "a Men s box Ladies' Union Suits a qamnte lot , ttts PHce , to see them. al2v 14.Z17 Kabo Corset . . - New une Live The RemnantStore Model r, . Lovvest $1.50, $2.00 254 North Cmmetx;ial Street - ' Pnces.(Look. $3.00 , - . . A. D. Thomson, Prop. this line over Sanitary 457 State Street 3 Q Three Earth Shocks I 3 Knroka, CSal., Sept. 1?. A slight earthqc.iike shock at 10 o'clock 'this fmorning was followed lit noon iby two 'sharp shocks with a jerky up and down -I motion, it was tho mOst tevero tremb - lor hero in months. ,"" " ' New Japanese Ambassador To United States " Named Washington, Sept. 12. Kijiuro Shi dehara has been chosen as ambassador to the United States from Jnpiui, it was announced at the Japunese em bassy here today. , " He wss formerly vice minister ot foreign affairs in the - Japanese gov ernment und succeeds Viscount lshu. Eetumed service men of Kodinond have effected an organization and ap plied for, a. charter in the American Legion. Tho ITmpqtia Growers' association's cannery at Boseburg is employing HO persons with a payroll of more than 2()00 a week. . Permanent organization of uu as sociation to hold annual fuirs in Al bany was effected at a mooting at- urnay or representatives from yaripus r.D .1.. .......... . '" . . . A campaign to enroll 500 new mem bers in tho Salem Commercial elufa will' start Wednesday... Development of allj of Marion countv is the nuruoso of I the organization 1 Koot crops in the Warren neighbor - hood nro almost j, complete failure. iWlijut yields, however, iii some . in stamys were 55 ounhels to tho acre. , Twelve sticks ofc high grade dymi- mite, wrapped in a; carpenter's upron, i , were found Momliiv nmlit hidden un- mam. tho cottage, of Mis. Boshen at Nyo Wanted for Saturday Bakery FRESH EVERY DAY li!wr-aw,w,''l,'4'''' fk 5 ft 9 - '' f'- ! f-iA 'r. !""" V- v 1 a v PAULINE FREDERICK. itJmw,mJ Goldwin Picfaiv NOW HHOWlNCt HEATEB AT iK UBKISTV T ' Work, is progressing rapidly on the- j reconstruction of 'tho big paeking plnnt of the Nebergall ilettteoiii)Hiiy ut Al bany, which wa destroyed .by fire a few. wenlss ago. ' - j At" 1(1 Kivcr Wednesday a motor I truck plunged diwn ft 2.1 per cent grade ; 01p Sixth strert and demolished the , nonioo'r 4!. Frohn. No ouo was ser. ' louslv injured, . . ' . I ConhiictH have been let for tho pav ing uf three streets in Frcewuler. . " Th f! ilrater lake Wednesday to " Uie deptn of four inches. .. M i i'i's'l "'';V'siiS': 1 N r:B'jr A i ft r i I i i i