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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1910)
6 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, -1910. 14 STUDENTS -OF 0. A. C. ARRESTED Police Chief Corrals Collegians Alleging Violation of ' "Move-On" Law. NIGHT IN JAIL GRAZED Prisoners, Representative, Some Seniors, Rally Around Fresh- man's Annual Party $10 Bail Lacking Trial Today. OREGON AGRICULTURAL. COL LEGE, Corvallls, Or., March 15. (Spe cial.) Fourteen college students, some of them seniors and In high standing In the institution, narrowly escaped passing the. night In jail because they pleaded not guilty of violating a city ordinance and failed to furnish ball. The collegians were arrested last Friday night by Chief of Police Wells because, when ordered to disperse, they did not conduct themselves to the sat isfaction of the official. ' - A crowd had collected around the college gymnasium, where the annual freshman party was in progress. They were attracted there by the expectation of witnessing fun in the way of sopho more interference with the freshman affair. Chief Wells was also there, de termined to prevent'any disturbance. To preserve order the Chief ordered the students to disband. They failed to disperse to his satisfaction and the arrests followed. The offenders were arraigned before Judge enmn this afternoon and pleaded not guilty to a charge of violating the "move-on" or dinance. The judge set the bail at J10 each, which the students failed to fur nish. Thereupon - the judge ordered them locked up, and seven men were sent-to the Countv Jail and as many to the. city bastile. They were finally re leased upon their promises to appear for trial tomorrow. The students insist that they are not guilty of any misconduct and are un willing to pay the fine. City authori ties, on the other hand, insist that the students are guilty and that they are determined to teach them that students are not exempt from punishment. The arrests and threats of imprison ment of the representative students have caused great excitement in the student body, and the trials, scheduled to commence tomorrow morning, prom ise to be well attended. The students are seriously considering hiring a law yer and fighting the case. The city of ficials are as fully determined to carry through their programme. The college authorities have refused to interfere, on the ground that it is not a case coming within their juris diction. OIL FOUND; FIRM FORMED With 925,000, Oregon City Capital ists Will Exploit Strike. OREGON CITY, Or.. March 15. (Special.) With a capital stock of 25,000 and the firm belief that tbey have struck oil on the Mumpower place at Stone, six miles from this city, six men today subscribed to articles of in corporation of the Home Oil & Gas Company. Louis Vierhus, Joseph Grant Mumpower, Lorenzo Dow Mum power, D.' NT. Byerlee. Harvey E. Cross and John William Watts are the in corporators. The company has leased properties in the vicinity of Stone and D. M. Watson, of Portland, has made exhaustive tests which indicate a plentiful flow of oil 1500 feet below the surface. RAILS LEAD TO PARKDALE Mt. Hood Railroad to Give Improved Service to New Town. HOOD RIVER, Or.. March 15. (Spe cial.) Work on ballasting the track on the six-mile extension of the Mount Hood Railroad Is progressing and a train sched ule over the entire length of the road will soon be. put into effect between Hood River and Parkdale. the new town, at its terminus in the upper valley. Parkdale is expected to become ' the center of business activity in the. upper valley. A large building containing a store ami ' public hall Is being erected there . and other buildings are contem plated. It will have 15.000 acres of fruit land and timber territory tributary to it. The railroad company announces it will provide an improved train service as soon as the road Is opened to the new town. COURT PLAN BARS DELAY Judge Calkins at Grants Pass De mands Prompt Preparation Pleas. GRANTS PASS, Or.. March 15. (Spe cial.) The Circuit Court convened here today, Judge Calkins presiding. Only equitable cases will be heard. Judge Calkins has made a ruling that all pleas, either in law or equity, must be made up without 'delay, and to that' end he visits this jurisdiction . once a month to catch dilatory pleaders. Under the old system demurrers and pleas usually waited until the regular term and Issues were subject to an other three months' delay before com-, 1"S to trial. Under the present plan the equity docket is kept clear. FARM GONE, FRAUD CITED . i . - Dayton Widow Alleges Her. $6000 Ranch Was Obtained Illegally. DAYTON, Wash.. March 15. (Special.) Mrs. Rebecca Watson, . an elderly widow, alleges that . she - lost her farm, valued at JtiOOO, to J. M. Coe,: through a fraudulent scheme. She filed a complaint in the Superior Court today. Coe, asserts Mrs. Watson, is living on the farm and refused to. give up the deed. She says she .was told, by Coe that . her relatives were seeking possession of the property by having a guardian appointed over her and that if she deeded the land to him she would escape that ordeal. Be lieving Coe to be honest, she .says,, she consented. . COLLEGE MORALITY HURT President Crooks, of Albany, Talks of Oratorical Contest Decision. ALBANY. Or., March 15. (Special.) President Crooks, of Albany College, said today the student body had not met yet to consider a protest on the oratorical contest at Salem, but that personally he regretted the action of the association. "Altogether the matter Is the saddest commentary on collegiate morality that has come to my notice in five years In Oregon," he said. "The only argu ment in' favor of admitting the orators without penalty seems" to have been that a majority violated the rule. The same argument among men might be used to Justify dishonesty, profanity or kindred evils. The offenders against the long-standing constitutional rule had no votes; they acted for themselves without regard to the honorable rules of the contest. "In no athletic event, track, baseball or football; or In no Intercollegiate oratorical contest; In no nigh school affair of any kind have known rules and constitutional provisions to be changed in favor of offenders. "Surely we have a right -to hold coaches and faculties of the offending institutions responsible for their rep resentatives' violation of the rules. It would have been far more sportsman like for them all to have suffered the penalty. These things I can say be cause Albany was fairly beaten by one whose oration was in strict compli ance with the rules." PRISONER'S CASE PUZZLES " Man Recovers From Stupor, Eats Double Meal, Relapses. VANCOUVER, Wash., March 15. (Special.) An unknown man who had been held In the city Jail because he apparently had lost all of his senses, regained his voice today and said his name is Thomas Gustavson. He does not know where he was or how he came to be here, and does not recall anything that has transpired for weeks. He had not eaten for days, apparently, bo when he had completed one meal at the restaurant, he ordered another meal and ate that ravenously. Gustavson whispered that he had been a sailor, but the last time he remembers working was in railroad camps. He had been In Seattle, but does not recall being in Portland, though he had been. Later this afternoon he fell into an other stupor and was not able to be wakened. The case is puzzling local authorities. WEYERHAEUSERS TO BUILD Large Purchases at South Bend Pre sages New Sawmill. SOUTH BEND. Wash., March 15. (Special.) Charles E. Foster, formerly of this city but now of Tacoma, has sold to the Weyerhaeuser Timber Com pany five acres of unimproved land on the tldeland Island opposite this city for 1 3000. Three years ago the Weyer haeusers bought 90 acres on the island avowedly for a mill site and recently they have been picking up considerable quantities of adjoining and nearby land. Including several blocks of unim proved town lots in this city. It Is thought by many that this sud den activity presages the building of a mill during the coming season The Weyerhaeuser Company owns nearly one-half of the standing timber in this county. Chehalis Investigates Paving. CHEHALIS, Wash., March 15 (Spe cial.) The Chehalis City Council last night voted to look over the paving situation in Portland and Vancouver, Wash. The trip will be made with a view of determining in the minds of the members the relative merits of various kinds of street construction. OREGON HAS FIRST CO-ED DEBATING TEAM Intercollegiate Contests Will Be Enlivened by Advent of Trio' of Young Women Out for Forensic Honors. in - 1 1 - UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, March 15. (Special.) For the first time in its history, the University of Oregon has a co-ed intercollegiate de bating team this year. Time was when it was considered well. Just a bit de trop for a college girl to aspire to the forensic platform, just as it used to be thought improper for her to play any game more strenuous than tag, but nowadays, when .women are making their way in all walks of life in com petition with men, public speaking In cluded, why should the co-ed be barred? This was the question the varsity girls, through their local literary society, the Eutaxlan Club, put to the faculty this year, and they argued their point so well there wasn't a dissenting voice when it came to a vote. Miss Birdie Wise. '12, of Astoria: Miss Fay Clarke, '12. of McMinnville, and Miss Corin Degermark, '13, of Port land, are the girls who have won their colors as the first feminine representa tives of the university in debate. All are vivacious, pretty and very much in earnest young women, active in stu dent body affair and Intensely confi dent of their ability to. win debating honors for their college. They made their - places in two. spirited tryouts against six other co-eds. Some of the men. debaters who went' to the contests expecting to sit back and -look on in a blase -and superior manner, came away much wiser and better equipped with points on the question at debate than when they entered. "Resolved. That the ' United States should establish a system of Postal savings banks" Is the question which the young women will argue with the coeds of the University of Washington in their first Intercollegiate debate. The contest, as arranged by Debating Manager Clarence Steele, of Portland, will be held at the Washington Uni versity grounds In Seattle. Friday, May 6, with the Oregon girls defending the negative. The members of the team BEACH IS SURVEYED Hill Engineers Work on Line , From Hammond. ROUTE MAY BE CHANGED Extra. Fast Train From Portland to Seaside Said to Be in Prospect for Summer Electric Road to Push on, Is Report. SEASIDE, Or., March 15. (Special.) A force of Hill engineers and sur veyors is engaged running a survey from Hammond, eight miles from -rv8-toria on the Astoria & Columbia River Railway to Seaside and then on up the Necanicum River. Within the past week the lines have been run to Sea side and today the engineers are work ing about two -miles above Seaside. Despite the emphatic denials of mem bers of the crew that they are con nected with any railroad and the most emphatic denial that they are in any way connected with the Hill system, the engineer in charge of the work is a prominent Spokane, Portland & Seat tle Railway engineer. ' The 'survey skirts . the beach from Hammond to Gearhart, from which point it follows the county road to Seaside, continuing to the bank of the Necanicum. This survey evidently is being made' with the idea of heading off the Astoria, Seattle & Tillamook railway, on which it has been an nounced $50,000 will be spent in the next three months. Beach Line Probable. That in the . event ' of the electric road being pushed to a conclusion, as has been promised, the Astoria & Co lumbia River Railroad scenic line seems probable, for whereas at present the road runs from one to two miles from the beach, the route of the electric lin runs less than half a mile from the shore. The Hill survey is between this route and the ocean. In Seaside three months ago C. M. Fowler, travel ing freight, .and . passenger agent, said that the road would shortly be moved to the beach. Further proof of the anxiety experi enced by theHlll officials was evidenced by the receipt yesterday of information from prominent Portland officials that within a few weeks an extra fast Portland to Seaside train would be put in operation. It Is believed that the arrival from Philadelphia Sunday of Attorney W. L. Crisman and F. L. Smart, vice-president of the National Utilities Company, own ers of the electric road's rights-of-w,ay and surveys, is an indication the road is ready for actual construction work. ' It is generally believed that it is the intention of the electric road to push on up the Necanicum to tap the A. B. Hammond timber belt and it is thought thzt this explains the activity of the Hill men in running their lines to. meet the prospective competition. Option Points to Early Work. Further indications that it js the Intention of the electric road to rush work before Summer is found in the fact that what is believed to be a subsidiary company holds a 60-day op tion on the Kruse-GSarhart property. This option was obtained through a Seaside agent. . - Interest was added to the situation . 'X' are putting in all their spare time studying up on the question under di rection of Professor Gustav Buchen. debating coach, preparing intricate arguments to spring on their hapless opponents. Miss Wise, who will probably be lead er of the team, is a daughter of Mayor Wise, of Astoria, and has had consid erable experience in debating at the Astoria High School. She is a sopho more and a prominent member of the staf of the Oregon Monthly, the col lege literary magazine. Miss Clarke is also a sophomore,- and is society editor of the. Oregon Emerald and a member of the Lambda Rho Sorority. Miss Degermark, the only freshman on the team, is having her first experience as a debater. She is a member of the Gamma Delta Gamma Sorority. wnn iiwi 1 1 i m - M r- Even the ancient gods had Hat Fashions. This was Mercury's choice. Men of Fashion today choose GORDON HATS Saturday night by the arrival at the Moore Hotel of A. J. McCabe of the railroad contracting firm of McCabe brothers. McCabe left Seaside at day break yesterday, saying that he .was going to Nehalem on business. Further, a prominent contractor, at present In Seaside, was asked last week to bid on 20 miles of road, the work to be started In 20 days. As the sub ject was declared? to be confidential no further particulars could be obtained. William ("Dundee") Reid, original builder of the Seaside Railroad and promoter of the scheme to build a road from Astoria to Portland, by way of the Lewis and Clark River route, has several engineers in the field. He says that his funds have been supplied regularly from New York and that within 40 days active construction work will be started. Mr. Reld has been living in Seaside sev eral months keeping an eye on his engineers but announces his intention to return to Portland next month. x SETTLERS FIGHT TRUST WASHINGTON WATER POWER MUST ANSWER TO IDAHO. Governor Brady Opens War After Receipt of Petitions From Prop erty Owners of Panhandle. BOISE, . Idaho, March 15. (Special.) The executive and Judicial machinery of the State of Idaho has been started by Governor James H. Brady and Attorney General D. C. McDougall against the Washington Power Company and its big bear-trap dam. It is alleged by the panhandle eettlers of the Gem State that this dam Is the cause of the flooding of vast and valuable tracts of land in the vicinity of Post Fall. Har rison and other northern cities and towns, for upon receipt of the big me morial petition signed by over 300 land owners. Governor Brady instructed the Attorney-General to advise him at once as , to what legal steps the sjtate could take to bring relief to the settlers and prevent the company from overflowing and submerging the lands located in that section. - When seen today. Governor Brady de clared that the Washington Water Power Company could. not tread upon the toes of the state without Interference and not only will Jie see to it that Heyburn Park on Lake Coeur d'Alene is not submerged, but he will look into the lease which was given by the State Land Board dur ing the administration of Governor Frank R. Gooding to the Washington Power Company to determine whether or not it is valid and can be revoked. He wishes to be fair to both the com pany and the settlers, realizing that .both have their rights. It is alleged that the company has done thousands of dollars' worth of dam age to rich lands along the Spokane River, shores of Lake Coeur d'Alene and other streams in Kootenai County by erecting this mammoth dam to generate electric and water power which it trans mits to surrounding cities and the mines. Spokane is the principal feeder, while the big mines In the Coeur d'Alene mining district are practically operated through the power furnished by the company. While the dam erected is a gigantic power service it has raised the water in the lake and the rivers, .with the result that the bottom lands have been flooded to the loss of the settlers, who aver that their farms have been ruined. Complaint Is also made that the domestic water used In the cities has been polluted through the submerging process. To re move the dam meant ruin to the Water Power Company and a great loss to the towns and cities and mining districts depending upon it for their power. To allow it to remain will also bring great loss to the. settlers and danger from a sanitary standpoint to the nearby towns. Intermingled with these issues is the added entanglement due to the fact that the Washington Water Power Company has title to part of, the lands, having purchased them from the settlers while they have permanent leases on others. The issue at stake may yet have to be settled by Idaho's chief executive and Judicial department. That the situation has become critical and the settlers are beLng rendered des perate by the attitude of the water com pany In completely Ignoring their rights or possession to the land in the vicinity of the reservoir and bordering on the lake and rivers whose shores are con tinually flooded, is disclosed in the nu merous petitions and letters which are coming into the Attorney-General's of fice. "WETS" WIN, AT ELGIN "Drys" Elect Mayor but Council Is Anti-Prohibition. ELGIN, Or.. March 15. (Special.) In the election here yesterday the "wets" won a decisive victory by electing two Councilmen, the City Marshal. Recorder and Treasurer. The "drys" elected their candidate for Mayor and one Council man. The new Council i four to one against prohibition. The newly-elected officers are: H. H. Weatherspoon, Mayor; R. Blumensteln, H. H. Hug and William Morelock, Coun cilman: L. Denham, Recorder; J. B. Thorsen, Treasurer; William St. Peters, Marshal. Right to Road Basis of Suit. VANCOUVER, Wash., March 15. (Special.) The case of E. T. Hatch vs.' D. Cawley, et al., is being tried in the Superior Court before Judge Donald McMaster. Cawley insls-ts he has the right to use a certain road running from his farm across Hatch's place, and that it has been established as a public -road by prescription from con stant use. Hatch alleges the use of the road was permissive only and no rights accrued because of . the use. peciai- From 9 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. Only TodayWednesday Something Here for Everyone in Town Shop Morn'gs ,75c ounce Pinaud's Extract now for. .59? 75c Williams Toilet Water now at. .59 75c Roger & Gallet's Extract now..59 75c 4711 Toilet Water, sale price at. .59? 50c' Eastman's Extracts, sale price. .33 25c Pears' Soap, 9 to 12:30, special. .15N 25c Cuticura Soap, special price at. .16 25c Euthymol Tooth Paste, special.. 16 25c Bathasweet, 9 to 12:30, special. .16 25c Spiro Powder, special price today 16 $2.00 Bath Spray, with brush, now. .$1.49 35c White Bath Towel, special price.. 23? $1.50 Chamois Skin, special price at. .98 $1.50 Water Bottle, special sale price. .69 10c Cloves (Woodlark Pare Spices) . . 8 10c Pepper (Woodlark Pure Spices).. 8 10c Allspice (Woodlark Pure Spices). . 82 10c Cayenne (Woodlark Pure Spices) . . 8 10c Choice Mixed Bird Seed, sale at. . 8? 25e Cotton Seed Oil, special price at. .17 35c Absorbent Cotton, special sale at. .29 50c Formaldehyde, pint bottles, sale. .39 $1.00 Wagon and Buggy Sponges at. .49i $1.00 Atherton Whisky, bonded, sale. .79 $1.00 California XXX Brandy now..79c $1.00 Strawberry Cordial, sale price.. 49? 50e Catawba Wine, 9 to 12:30, special. .33 $1.00 Hand Mirrors, 9 to 12:30, price. .48? $5.00 Garden Hose, special price.. 83.45 25c package Toilet Paper, special at. . 6 5c pkg. Vegetable and Flower Seeds.. 1 35c and 40c Tooth Brushes, 9-12:30.. 25 p 25c Tooth Brushes, 9 to 12:30, special. .15? $1.00 Ideal Hair Brush, sale price at. .75 $1.75 Adams' 545 Men's Style Brush 81-25 Fourth find Washington Sta. GRANGE IS ANGERED Scorn of University Faculty Precipitates Fight. PRESIDENT IS ACCUSED Farmers Declare President Macliean Treated Agricultural Professor UnfairlySegregation Is Like ly to Be Demanded. BOISE!, Idaho, March 15. (Special.) Bitter Is the feeling among the majority of the rural residents of this state against James A. Maclean, president of the Uni versity of Idaho, and other members of the faculty over the removal of Professor French as the head of the agricultural de partment. It is said that Mr. French Ignored the special committee sent by the State Grange to Moscow to investi gate the cause of the removal of French and. which subsequently reported that conditions at the educational institution were not the best for its advancement and declaring that the removal of President MacLean might relieve the situation. There Is a clamor in Orange circles for the- segregation of the agricultural de partment from the university and its re moval to the southern part of the state. At the last session of the Legislature last Winter a strong attempt was made to effect this segregation, but through the THE SLEEPING SICKNESS WHICH MEANS DEATH How many readers have heard of this terrible disease? It prevails In that far-away country Africa especially the Congo district. It Is caused by the bite of the tsetse fly. When It bites a person, "the sleeping symptoms begin and finally the sufferer sleeps until death occurs. Contrast this with the peaceful, balmy sleep of health. Is there any thing more wearing than to lie awake at night, tossing about, nervous, with cold feet, hot head and mercy knows what else? Short of letting the tsetse fly bite us we would do almost any-, thing for relief. How can we pre vent ' it? Mr. George Hayes, of Union City, Pa., writes: "I had lost my appetite, was all run-down, could not sleep nights. I had tried every thing without relief. Vlnol was rec ommended, and to my eurpriee. It helped me at once; gave me a splendid appetite, and .now I sleep soundly." What Vinol did f or Mr. Hayes. it will do for every run-down, nervous and overworked person who cannot sleep. WOODARD- CLARKE & CO., DRUGGISTS, PORTLAND. Bargains Gold Fish Each 25c Just In WE DO combined efforts of the northern Senators and Representatives "it was blocked. The next session will witness a renewal of the fight for the segregation and prominent men declare that this will be accomplished. But with the entrance of the State Orange, composed of some of the most prominent men of the state farmers stock raisers, sheep and cattle men and others into the controversy, the situation has so developed as to Indicate that either the president of the University of Idaho must ' go or institution must part with its agricultural department. The trouble at the university started when Professor French, recognized as one of the expert dairymen of the West, and who was at the head of the agricultural department, was asked to resign. The charge against French was that he was not working in harmony with the faculty and as head of his department was not giving satisfaction. Mr. French In due time presented his resignation and left. He had hardly done so before the charge was openely- made that President Mac Lean had represented to Professor French that the board of control had demanded his resignation, when the board knew nothing of the action of the president and had not authorized him to make rep resentations to Mr. French. The charge was also made that In presenting the resignation of Professor French. Pro fessor MacLean had represented that Mr. French had voluntarily resigned. The Women Suffer Agonies From Diseased Kidneys And Most Women Do This, Not Knowing The Real Cause Of Their Condition These poor, ruffering women have been led to believe that their misery of mind and body is entirely due to "ills of their sex". Usually the kid neys ana bladder are responsible or larg-ely so. And in such cases, the kidneys and bladder are the organs, that need and must have attention if there is to be a cure. You cannot cure one organ or part of the human body by "doctoring" another part which has little or nothing' to do with the part that is diseased. Those torturing, enervating" sick headaches, dragging- pains in back, groin and limbs, bloating' and swelling of the extremeties, extreme nervous ness or hysteria, listlessness and con stant tired, worn-out- feeling1 are almost certain symptoms of disordered . and diseased kidneys, bladder and liver. And when these conditions exist, there must, of necessity, be taken a genuinely good medicine which is intended for and will cure these diseases. Other; wise, a cure cannot be expected. De Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills have, in thousands of cases, been demon strated as remarkably beneficial in all such conditions of female organism affording' the most prompt relief and permanent benefit. They have never failed, in any single instance, to accom plish these results, when given & faith ful and honest trial. As an illustration of what these Pills will do, Mrs. P. M. Bray, of Columbus, Ga., writes that she was very ill with kidney trouble, and that she is now well and that these Pills are what cured her. These marvelously effective Pills at once operate to cleanse the en tire system of the deadly uric acid poi- SAVE MONEY $3.50 French Ladies' Brush for only 2.25 $1.00 Princess Hard Rubber Combs.. 72 35c Braid Pins, 9 to 12:30, special. .15 50c Braid Pins, 9 to 12:30, special. .27t 50c and 75c Barrettes, sale price only. .292 25c Hair Ornaments, special price at.. 52 50c Side Combs, sale at low price of. .25c 50.c Turbans, from 9 to 12:30, special. .19c $8 Coronation Braids at this price. 84.50 40c Box Stationery now on sale at. .21 50c Box Stationery now on sale at..277 25c Highland Linen Bond Tablets at..l9 25c Mascotte Playing Cards for only..lQf 15c Linen Tablets, plain and ruled.. 9? 10c Linen Envelopes on sale today at. . 7 25c Collapsible Drinking Cups, today. .X77 50c'll4-ineh U. S. Poker Chips at. .37? $1.00 Post-Card Albums, hold 300 cards, from 9 to 12:30 today only at..69? $1.50 Woodlark Fountain Pen, sale. .9S .$1.00 Liquocide, from 9 to 12:30 only. .757 50c Liquocide from 9to 12:30 only. .36 $1.00 Hood's Sarsaparilla on sale at..75c $1.00 Ayer's Sarsaparilla on sale at..75 $1.75 S. S. S. from 9 to 12 :30 at. -81.39 $1.00 Pinkham's Compound selling at. .79c $1.00 Pierce's Prescription on sale at. .79f? $1.00 Pierce's Discovery selling for..79? $1.00 Peruna on sale from 9 to 12:30. .79c $1.75 Pond's Extract, 9 to 12:30.. 81. SO $1.00 Pond's Extract from 9 to 12:30. .80 50c Pond's Extract from 9 to 12:30. .40c 55c'qt. S. W. Floor Paint, any color. .39 65c Paint Brush from 9 to 12:30 for. .3S 50c Bath Tub Scrub Brush soiling at. .37 50c Pair Scissors on sale today only. .33? 50c Pocket Knife from 9 to 12:30 for. .34? 25c lb. Lawn Grass Seed on sale at.. 16c 30c lb. White Clover Seed on sale at. .19c 10c pkg. Nasturtium Seed, dwarf or tall 6c 50c Gillette Blade Stropper on sale at. .33? $1 to $2 Shaving and Hand Mirrors.. 48c PICTURE FRAMING s State Grange then took a hand to in vestigate and a special committee was eut to Moscow. Its report recommended that the university would be better oIX If President MacLean would retire. A general rally was held at Moscow by the students and members of the faculty after the report of the State t?rance com mittee was published, and not only in structors but members of the student body branded the State Granpe as an asso ciation composed of men not fitted to pass Judgment on either President MacLean or the agricultural department. In commenting on the actions of the faculty and the students, A. B. Kimball, one of the prominent members of the Grange, in an address before the asso ciation at New Plymouth said: "They refer to the modest and generous report of our committee from the State Grange as petty, mean and biased and without even taking the trouble to read that report assert that the committee at tacked the university on the grounds of immorality. Could there be anything moro petty than this appeal to the passions of a people who would be righteously In dignant towards any who cast unfounded aspersions at their innocent sons and daughters. If a university training in volves a college spirit as narrow and bigoted as this, let us hnpu that tho agricultural department will be moved from Moscow to some place where it will not be smothered by too great learning.' 7 .''"'1'V'Y son as well as of all other aflfete and poisonous elements that may exist ir the system stimulating-, rejuvenating and building' up every organ of the body. They are very pleasant to take, and can in no case, produce any deleteriom effects upon the system as syrupy, alco holic, liquid preparations are apt to do. E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, 111., want every man and woman who hav the least suspicion that they are afflic ted with kidney and bladder diseases to at once write them, and a trial box ol these Pills will be sent free by return mail postpaid. Do it to-day