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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1912)
14 fJTF MORNING OREGONIAJ,. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1912. - POULTRY SHOW IS FINANCIAL SUCCESS For Second Time Portland . Chicken Exhibit Will Pay, Say Promoters. JUDGING VIRTUALLY ENDED "With Prize Ribbons Floating:, Owners Begin Trading and Buying Fowls, 150 Exhibitors Expected at Big: Banquet Tonight. With the Judging: virtually completed and the coops of the winners at the Poultry Show bearing: the names of their owners, visitors are now able to satisfy their curiosity as to where they may obtain eggs or birds of the prize-winning: strains, with the result that successful breeders are taking- or ders at a brUk rate. The exhibitors themselves are making the show the occasion for trades and purchases by which they hope to strengthen their flocks. The financial success of the show Is already assured by the large attend ance. It is the second show in the history of the association that has paid, last year's being the first. Other wise the present exhibition is the most successful that has ever been held and officers and exhibitors alike are elated. East Side Rejoices. Their satisfaction is shared by the people of the East Side, who aro pleased to see two such important events as the Land Show and the Poul try Show staged in their part of town with such splendid results. Last night the yellow badges of the bast bioe Business Men's Club were plentifully sprinkled among the crowd, that ag gregation of boosters making their at tendance the sign of their appreciation of the show's success. Tonight at the Hotel Clifford comes the banquet of the Portland fanciers for the outside exhibitors. Nearly 150 places have been reserved and all in dications are that the affair will be a pleasant function. Speakers will pay homage to the hen. George D. Holden, of Owatonna, Minn., recognized as one of the leading poultry authorities of the country, has been engaged as one of the Judges for next year. It is the policy of the as sociation to have new Judges . each year. Awards Are Made. The following are yesterday's awards: Golden Hamburgs: Hens First at d sec ond. James R. Forbes, Portland. Pullets Third and fourth and first cock and second cockerel. R t". Forbes. Partnritfi Wvandottea: Hens First and second, S. K. Jackson, Portland; third, fourth and fifth, Mrs. D. C. Clark. Forest Grove. Pullets Second and fifth, E. H. ie Brauwere: third and fourth, S. E. Jackson. Buff Orpingtons: Cockerels First and third. Frank Bishop. Sherwood; second, V. G. Upshaw. Tlgarrt; fourth. Charles P. Nel son. Montavllla; fifth. C. W. McLean, Port land. Cocks First, C. W. McLean; second and fourth, Charles P. Nelson; third, Mrs. Albert D. Larsen; fifth. W. L. L" pshaw. Hens First and second, Charles B. Nelson; tttlrd and fourth, C. W. McLean; fifth. W. L. L'puhaw. Pullets First. Charles Nelson: second and fifth. W. L- Upshaw; third. M. S. Boyes. Portland; fourth, C. WjMcLean. Silver-Laced Wyandottes: Hens First, C. H. Hodson, Newbers;; third and fourth, I. E. Staples, Portland. Pullets First, third and fourth. C. A. Hodson; second and fifth, T. E. Staples. Cockerels Third, C. A. Hodson. Black Orpingtons: Hens First. C. W. Mc Lean. Pullets First, second, third, fourth, John Belnholdt, Lents; fifth, C. W. McLean. Cockerels First, John Relnholdt; second, C. W. McLean. Silver-Oray Orpingtons: Pullets Second, Square Deal Poultry Yard. Hillsboro. Slngls Comb Rhode Island Reds: Cocks First and second, L. D. Elliot, Portland; third, J. L. Be Long. Portland; fifth, L. P. Clark, Portland. Cockerels First and fifth. E. F. Batten. Hood River; second, L. I. Elliot: third and fourth. Island Farm. Kldgefield. Wash. Hens First, fourth and fifth.' E. J. Russell, Portland; second, L. V. Elliot, Portland; third, W. B. Bundy. Pul lets First. W. B. Sunday; second, fourth and fifth. E. F. Batten: third, L. D. Elliot. Rose Comb Rhode Island Reds: Cocks Third. Mrs. J. J. Thurston. Independence, Or. Cockerels Second, H. G. Farrell, Port land: fifth, Mrs. J. J. Thurston. Hens First, Mrs. J. J. Thurston. Pullets Second and third. H. O. Farrell; fourth, Mrs. J. J. Thurston. Comlsh Indian games: Cock First and second. Philips Beck. Portland. Cockerels First, second and third, H. Weisenborn. Portland. Hena First, third and fourth Philips Beck; second. H. Weisenborn. Pit games: Cocks First, third, fourth and fifth. J. P. Limerick. Portland. Cock erels First. O. A. Hatton, Portland; ec ond and third. J. P. Limerick. HenFirst to fifth. Inclusive, J. P. Limerick. Pullet First and second. J. P. Limerick. 6ingle Comb Anconas Cocks First, E. C Stevens. Sherwood. Or.; second. Dr. E. M. Hurd. Portland; third. Ancona Grove. Walla Walla; fourth. Mrs. F. K. Walsh. Hoqulain. Wash.; fifth, Ira N. De Line, OlymuU. :Wash. Cockerels First. Mrs. F. K. Walsh: second. Dr. E. M. Hurd: third Ancona Grove; fourth. E. C. Stevens; fifth. Ray Tarbell, Portland. Hens First and fourth. Ancona Grove; second, I N. De Line: third and fifth. Mrs. F. K. Walsh. Pullets First, Ancona Grove; second and fiftn. Mrs. F. K. Walsh: third and fourth, A. .E. Peterson, Portland. Buff Plvmouth Rocks: Cocks Flnsi. third and fourth. E. W. Elrod. Beaverton Or.; tecond, W. S. Colton. Walla Walla: fifth. E. C. Marnnlck. Portland. Cockerels First and fifth. W. S. Colton; second, B. F. Williams. MUton. Or.: third and fourth. E. w Elrod Hens First to fourth. Inclu de E.W. Elrod: fifth. B. F. Williams. Pullets First, third and fourth W. S Col ton: second. E. W. Elrod; fifth, B. F. Williams. . Golden Polish: Cocks Fourth. O. A. Hal ton. Portland. Cockerels-Third R. Nelson. Portland. Hens Second and fourth. O. A. Halton. Pullets Second, third and fourth, ""pjle "Same Bantams: Cock First. Beat rice and Helen Bauer. Portland; second. Jesse F? Stark. Portland. Cockerels First llrsT E E. Feehty. Portland. Hens First and fourth. Beatrice and Helen Bauer; sec ond and third. Jesse F. Stark. P""" First and second. Beatrice and Helen Bauer. APPLES PICKED IN SNOW AVenatehee Sells Fruit .Vbroad but 15 Per Cent or Crop Is Left. WEXATCHEE, Wash., Dec II. (Spe cial.) The latest apple harvest in the history of the Wenatchee valley will end this week, almost a month after the first snow. Never before have or chard workers here gathered apples while snow was on the ground. Grow, ers lost quite heavily from frosts, and in the Cashmere vicinity heavy snows and the weight of the fruit ruined many valuable apple trees. The last fruit shipments will leave here this week. Total shipping figures place the output of the Wenatchee country this season at S975 cars, or 20 per cent less than early estimates. Less than 35 per cent of the crop has been sold, over 1000 cars of fruit from here being stored at Chicago alone. Shipping returns show that Wenatchee sent more apples to European, South African and Asiatic markets than ever before by 100 per cent. Concert Given Tonight. A -fclgh-class concert for the benefit of the scholarship, fund of the Christian Brothers' College, will be given tonight- The affair is under the auspices of Professors Lucien Becker, Frank Elcbenlaub and Mr. De la Parrelle. The concert will be held In Alumni Hall, Grand avenue and Clackamas street. r ACTRESS VENTS PIQUE IN 15-MINUTE MARRIAGE Beautiful Valeska Suratt, as Sincere as She Is Charming, Tells of Adven ture That Led Through Vales or Veils of Divorce Court. ; i : :. r : :: : - ! ! ' stlVl i--llltf''-a - f T"''"' ' " " """''" -Immua ' " MISS VALEShU SURATT. I BY LEONE CASS BAER. WHEN vaieaKa suratt s tat auu perspiring manaser piloted me and my suitcase into that love ly lady's private car and Introduced me to the most press-agented Deauty of the American stage, I forgot for minute-that -I was to get a story about her, and wanted to embalm on paper my emotions, large and varied on how It feels to ride half the night on the wildly exciting Southern Pa cific in Suratt's wonderful bouse on wheels. in nthor words, the experience was so novel I wanted to interview myseii. She was so tired was Valeska that only sheer politeness kept her eyes open. If it had Deen me i a nave re f.ri utterly to talk for publication. and have sought the hay. But she is truly a wonder-girl. More and more as we chatted away In her dear little drawing room I grew to marvel at the many cruelly malicious and . wholly unwarranted morsels of gossip that .ho would - llke-to - know - hers and cant's, or the idly curious have given credence to. First of all Valeska Suratt-.is really hoautiful. and net. as one reviewer said in a criticism that damned with faint praise "a beauty on the stage and a freak off of it." If a glorious dead white skin of marvelous texture counts for anything v.i.tka Suratt bas that claim for hnaiitv If quantities of thick red gold hair all her own are an asset, ti is True she wears it as no member of the young ladies' sewing circle or llt'ry club would dare be caught dead with her'n that way. That ls.Valeska's privilege. Heaven knows the majority of us ribs do eccentric comedy stuff with our hair. I know 1 do. Glory-Eyes Have Golden Glint. If great big glory-eyes, hazel with golden glints, long at the corners ana saucilv challenging, like the pictures of ladies on cigarette boxes might by any chance be reckoned as first aids to beauty then Valeska has it. If H radiant, happy smile, and splen did flashing white teeth, that rival her own famous collection of pearls, could be listed among aids to help con vince the public one is a beauty, then Valeska is one. And she has the hand somest nose I ever saw an aristocratic high-brow nose. Her body or to use the favorite ex pression of the up-to-date ladles home dressmaker her "figser" Is youtn in carnate. She is young and slender and a most satisfying picture. you see Valeska Suratt's photo and facsimile autograph in the back of a Kpreamini? out that she finds perfect peace and happiness in Madame Somebody s corset, x o... the uncorseted cult. True she has a stay or two in some oi ner bowho but shucks tney aren i to keep even her temperament in reas onable bounds. Speaking of temperament, she doesn t trot It out and parade it. I'm only tak ing it for granted that she possesses such a commodity, since she has reached such heights in her career. She must have It I reckon, but I saw no evidences of it. Unless you'd call temDerament the wild, uncontrollable mirth that seized her when I asked her to tell me about her 15-mlnute mar riage. Marrlaco Only Vents Plane. "Oh, I don't know what ever did possess me that fatal wedding morn. chanted Valeska, shutting her eyes half way and laughing out of the cor ners through an almost tangle of long black lashes. "You see I had had a misunderstanding with someone I cared very much for and the world was very dull gray for that particular moment. Like the-little boy in the oicture. I was on my way to the garden to eat large fat worms, when one got In my path. It was Fletcher Norton. He was my leading man. I said, Fletcher, what are you doing this morning?" He said 'Nothing,' so I said, Well, come on, let's get married.' So we got in my car no, Fletcher didn't have one. I was paying him a salary and he hadn't saved up enough to get even an estate, dollar-down-dollar-a-ycar. on Long Island, which is the first aim of every true artist. "Well, we were married, with all the atmosphere of one of Laura Jean Lib bey's best sellers. Then we hurried back to rehearsal and-1 repented in haste. One month later I got my de cree. Don't ask me how. I really do not know. But I figure that I'm infi nitely more honorable in the transac tion than many women are who marry under the same Impulse and then make It a real crime by going on with it for better or for worse. Mine was bad enough, but It could have been much worse." Nieces a Great Joy. Guess what Valeska Suratt is most Interested in! It's her three little nieces and one little nephew. She pos itively radiates Joy when she chatters about them, and her greatest grief, she says, is that none of the girls is named Valeska. "You see there was mamma and aunties on the other side of the house to be considered before me. But I've got about two dozen little namesakes scattered all over the uni verse. - Mostly they are given the name Valeska from their romantic mothers reading my name in print and seizing upon it to tack for life onto their off spring. As I'm out sundry spoons, mugs for a good girl and dolls (every one has a birthday), It occurs to me occasionally that after all it maybe does not pay to advertise." You ought to see valeska a raiment. The Queen of Sheba and Cleopatra were pale drab slatterns of no par ticular cut and absolutely no taste in color schemes in comparison with Va leska. She's Interested in clothes and says so frankly. The thing that sticks with me long est about the charming Valeska is her sincerity. She doesn't four-flush. She Is a kindly and sensible and ambitious girl and she works like the oft-re- ferred-to Trojans. one has the cour age of her convictions and she cuts a wide, circuitous path about stupid, un interesting people. She's the most misrepresented woman on the Amer ican stage and some day, when I've got time, I'm going to write a book on Just that very little subject and call it "The Vindication of Valeska" or "Ain't Jeal ousy Simply Awful?' LILLIE IS APPRE OKEGOX CITY MAX WALKS 35 MILES WITH DAUGHTER. shotgun. Lillie then jumped from the attio and, seizing the girl, escaped with her. Sheriff Mass and a posse scoured the neighborhood all night in search of the man. Prisoner Telephones From W'asb ouffal Tbat He Will Return Without Extradition. OREGON CITY. Or.. Dec ,12. (Spe cial.) William Lillie, who held his wife and George Brown, Constable, at bay at his home- near Parkplace Wednesday and escaped with his daughter. Hazel Lillie. 16 years of age, was captured today at Washougal, Wash., by Constable Gus M. Olson, of that place. Sheriff Mass went to Washougal tonight and will return with the prisoner tomorrow. Lillie telephoned Deputy Sheriff Staats that he was willing to return to Oregon City without requisition being issued. When arrested he had the shotgun with which he held his wife and Constable Brown at bay, also a large rifle and a S8-cali-ber pistol. The girl was placed In the custody of the Jail matron at Washou gal and will be brought to this city with her father. Lillie informed the Constable who arrested him that he and the girl had walked from Park place to Washougal. about 35 miles. Constable Brown. Mrs. Lillie and the girl went to the Lillie house to obtain clothing. They 'did not know Lillie was at home, as it had been reported that he had fled to Bellingham. Wash., after a warrant was issued for his ar rest As the Constable climbed into the attic where the clothing was kept he was surprised by Lillie, who had a BOND ISSUE PROTESTED Xew York Central Stockholders De . clare Road Is Trust. COLUMBUS, 0 Dec. 12. A protest was filed here late today with the State Utilities Commission by stock holders of the New York Central Rail road against the application for an is suance of $24,000,000 of bonds by the railroad for improvements in Ohio. It Is declared that the railroad Is a trust and a suit will be brought for its dissolution under the Sherman law. The letter of protest was signed by C. H. Venner & Co., bankers, of New York, as stockholders in the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad and the Michigan Central Railroad, and also by the Continental Security Company, of New York, as stockholders In the Mich igan Central. Representatives of the protesting stockholders are expected here Mon day, when the application for the issu ance of the certificates will be heard by the utilities board. In the letter the stockholders of the subsidiary lines declared that action leading toward a dissolution would have been Instituted sooner had not the Union Pacific case, in which a decree dissolving the Harrlman merger recent ly was given, been pending in the Uni ted States Supreme Court. COIlSTlCTil PUT LIABILITY LAW Judge Bean Decides Foreman Cannot Be Held to Account for Accident. A LAW DECLARED INVOLVED Kansas City. Mo., ranks next to Philadel phia among; ths large cities of the coun try for Its religious habits. A census re cently taken enumerated 22,000 names, and among- these 47 per cant were affiliated with some church. Federal Court Denies Motion to Re mand Personal Injury Suit Against Paper Company to State Circuit Court. Holding that a foreman or a super intendent cannot be held personally accountable for the negligence of his employer In personal Injury cases. United States Judge Bean made an Im portant ruling on the employers' lia bility law enacted by the people of this state t-o years ago, when be dismissed the motion to remand to the State Cir cuit Court the personal injury suit of Victor Mollne against the Crown Columbia Paper Company and Frank Shell. Without entering into an extended discussion. Judge Bean held that the initiative law of this Btate on the sub ject was difficult of construction for the reason that It failed to provide that the superintendent or foreman should in any way be held responsible for .injuries resulting to any workman resulting from the negligence of him self or his employer properly to safe guard the employe from accident. Oral Ruling Made. The ruling of Judge Bean was oral and was delivered in court in disposing of a motion to remand the case under consideration to the State Circuit Court for trial. The defendant corporation was organized and exists under the laws of California, but owns a paper mill In this state. The plaintiff was an employe of the defendant company and while engaged in his work alleges that he was injured through the neg ligence and carelessness of the com pany and its foreman in not keeping a certain machine that he was operating in good repair. It is also alleged by the plaintiff that it was the duty of Shell, as foreman, to supervise the ma chine and keep it in repair. The complaint further alleges that the company and its foreman were guilty in not keeping the machine in suitable repair, being in violation of the initiative act of 1910. The case was transferred from the state court to the Federal court at the instance of the defendant. The motion of the plaintiff to remand the case was based on the ground that Shell is a resident of this state and that the action being Joint as to the company and Shell, is not removable to the Federal Court by the non-residence of the defendant. Plaintiff Has Option. "The rule is," said Judge Bean, "that where an injury is received through the Joint tort of two or more persons the plaintiff can sue either one or both at his election and that if he sues both and one is a resident of the state, the other, although a non-resident, cannot remove the action to this court, be cause it is not a separable controversy, and further that tbe motive of the plaintiff in Joining a resident defend ant, so long as he states a course of action against him, cannot and will not be inquired into on motion to Remand. "In other words, if bis purpose in so Joining a resident defendant was to prevent removal to this court, that would be no ground for this court as suming Jurisdiction. So that this ques tion here stands, as I take it, on whether or not there is a cause of ac tion stated against Shell, or whether it is possible under the facts as de clared by the affidavits to amend the complaint, so as to state a cause of action against Shell. Shell's Obligation Discussed. "Now, there is no allegation in the complaint nor do the facts show that the injury to the plaintiff was due to any positive act either of mis-feasance or non-feasance on the part of Shell. The charge is that h was the foreman employed by the defendant corporation and charged by it with the duty of keeping this machine in repair, and that he neglected that duty, and upon that ground alone it is sought to bold him responsible for the injury to the plaintiff. Now, negligence is the fail ure to perform some duty which the defendant owed to the plaintiff or to the general public and unless these conditions bring it within this rule. there is no cause of action stated against Shell, and the motion to re mand should be overruled. Initiative Law Cited. 'There was no relation of employer and employe between Shell and the plaintiff, and Shell owed no duty to him to keep Ms machine in repair; that was a duty that his employer owed; Shell was the agent of the employer charged with that duty, and for his negligence the employer was liable. It do not understand that the law would make Shell liable, as long as he had nothing to do with the accident. any more than to make a blacksmith or a repair man, whom the company may have employed to repair this ma chine, liable for an Injury that re sulted to some one In operating the machine. ' 'But It is claimed that this action is brought under the initiative law and that that law makes the foreman or superintendent personally liable for an Injury to the employe when he is charged by the employer with the duty of keeping the machinery In repair. Employers' Duties Specified. 'Now "this initiative act of 1910 is difficult to construe. It is somewhat confused in its language, and courts have had difficulty In construing it ever since the attempt to enforce it. It has never been definitely and per manently construed by the Supreme Court of this state, as far as I am ad vised, but as I take It, this, act in the first section imposes certain positive duties upon employers and contractors and persons in charge of work, among which are the duties of seeing that the ropes and appliances are thoroughly in spected and tested; another Is that they shall build scaffolding upon which men work in a certain manner and in a certain way;- they shall see that all dangerous machinery, walls, openings and shafts are properly covered and that electric wires shall be Insulated and installed in a certain 'manner, so that employes may work in and about them- with safety, and a general pro vision that they shall adopt all known devices for the protection of life and limb of their employes which can be used without impairing the efficiency of the machinery. . These are all pos itive duties Imposed upon the master, and they are duties he cannot dele gate to any subordinate employe. Court Cannot See Canse for Action. "But there is no provision In this act that I can find that undertakes to make the foreman working under the contractor personally responsible for a failure to discharge any of these spec ified duties, or duties provided in the statute. Thar is a duty imposed upon the employer, and every man that cats for htm is his agent for that purpose, and I cannot find, as I said, anything in this statute that undertakes to go beyond the common law liability as far as a subordinate employe is concemed "For that reason, in my judgment, this complaint does not state a cause of action against Shell nor is it pos sible to state one under the facts as they are disclosed by the affidavits and the record .In this case, and for that reason the motion to remand will be overruled." FOREIGN INQUIRY COMING Egypt and China Look to Oregon for Railroad Ties. Portland Jumber interests yesterday received an) 'inquiry from a railroad contractor at Alexandria, Egypt, for quotations on railroad ties. The Egyp tian company is in the market for 600,000 ties. Such an order would ag gregate about 20,000,000 feet board measure. In the past, ties for the Egyptian railroad have bren supplied from the pine districts of the Southern states, but as the prices for Southern pine have advanced, a market for Douglas fir ties manufactured In Oregon and Washington is sought. It is said that ties manufactured of Douglas fir are of a superior quality as well as lower in price than the product of the South. . In addition to this inquiry, a tenta tive order also has been received from China for 4,000,000 feet of railroad ties. SUICIDE IS FRUSTRATED Polish Widow in Xeedy Circum stances Will Be Cared For. Two applications for poison to be used for the purpose of suicide were made at down-town drug stores yes terday morning by Sophia Borusclwiskl, a young Polish widow, and her event ual success probably was prevented by the vigilance of Patrolman Hennessy, who, after witnessing the first at tempt at Third and Morrison streets, followed the woman to Fifth and Wash ington streets. There he saw her make a second ' attempt and took her into custody. The woman, who was accompanied by her little son, said that she had been ejected from the home of her late husband's father in St. Johns, was pen niless, and saw no other way out than to take her life. Arrangements will be made to have, her properly cared for. Historical Society to Meet. A large attendance is expected at the annual meeting of the Oregon Histor ical Society, which will be held at the City Hall Saturday, December 21, a 2 P. M. The annual address will be given by C. B. Bagley, of Seattle, secretary of the Board of Public Works of that city, anl an Oregon pioneer. Mr. Bagley cane across the plains to Oregon .n STOMACH STARVERS EAT ANYTHING NOW No Indigestion or Upset. Stomach for "Papa's Diapepsin" Userb. Every year regularly more than a million stomach sufferers in the United States. England and Canada take Pape's Diapepsin, and realize not pnly imme diate, but lasting relief. This harmless preparation will digest anything you eat and overcome a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach fiv minutes afterwards. If your meals don't fit comfortably, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that is a sign of Indiges tion. Get from your pharmacist a fifty cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a dose Just as-soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or in testinal griping. This will all go, and. beaides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digests It Just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in flv minutes from all stom ach misery Is waiting for you at anv drug store. These large fifty-cent cases conU.1. more than sufficient to thoroughly lure almost any case of dyspepsia, in igestlon or any other stomach dia--der. 18S2, and was a resident of Marlon County for about 10 years. FAMILY QUARREL IS AIRED Judge Recommends Separate Estab lishments for Combatants. "He ruined my family, I don't want him to ruin my business," pleaded Sam Hue, Chinese merchant. In defense of a charge of assaulting his white son-in-law, Frank L. Gross, with a hatchet. The trouble started, he said, when Gross, after effecting a marriage with Miss St-m, daughter of the defendant, persisted In loitering about the mer chant's premises at Second and Oak streets, getting in the way of cus tomers during the Christmas rush. The Court decided that the strict maintenance of separate households would be the best means of preserving peace, and continued the case indefin itely cn that understanding. CALL AND INSPECT OUR HOT WATER Out-Door Broodier 160 CHICK CAPACITY Contains Twenty-six Hundred Inches of Floor Space PRICE DELIVERED $15.00 WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF POULTRY SUPPLIES OUR BEST FEED WHEAT $26.00 per Ton $1.35 per Sack We Have Day-Old Chicks for Sale Co-Operative Supply House INCORPORATED East First and Madison Streets, Portland, Oregon 3TF Where you look for distinction in dress there you will find Sfftiaftttw Worn by those who can afford the best Chosen by all for economy' take. . Rich, durable, moderate in price. $1, $1.50, $2. MalchcJ'menJlr; stife fn a gaarante envelope with every pair. Sold at the best stores in town Write us (or handsome booLIet, "Through My Lady's Ring " McCALLUM HOSIERY COMPANY Northampton, Mass. mm CONSTIPATED, HEADACHY, BILIOUS. TONGUE' COATED 1 GASGARETS SURE Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indignation, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head aches come from a torpid liver and clogged, constipated bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with ' ndlKeated food, which sours and fer ments like garbage In a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold mis ery foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything; that is norrlble and nauseating. A Caacaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your Liver active. Bowels clean and regular. Stomach sweet. Head clear, and make you feel bully foi months. Don't forget the children. M 1 Hi Jj 10 CenfS. Never grip or Ackeo. "CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.", NO SKIMPING Altho' the high-grade ready-to-wear, suits I sell are now priced way "below their value, I still guarantee you a fit. An experienced tailor makes the necessary al terations free of charge. $15.00 to $18.00 values ' NOW $10.00 $22.50 to $25.00 values NOW $14.00 $27.50 to $30.00 values NOW $16.00 JIMMY DUNN Room 315 Oregonian ' Building. Take Elevator Also Majestic Theater Building. E. SICHEL CO. We're all framed up to check off your Xmas shopping list all the Gifts for Men Collar Bags ' Shirt Cases Traveling Cases Pajamas Necktie Cases Umbrellas Gloves Tie and Sox Sets Monogram Belts Neckties Shirts 10i Monogram H'dkfs You want snappy up-to-date goods that means you want us. 286 Washing on it HOW TO TREAT AILING CHILDREN a- r ni,iun ninv hard and work hard at school, which with rapid growth uses up an enormous amount of energy and vitality that must be replaced. 4... . . i- tr-.i all the time. w nen a cdhu - .... no appetite, weak, delicate and sickly we guarantee Vinol, o11dellc11,,us,.c? . I. will build them up. create a hearty appetite sound flesh and muscle usbus, puis blood, and make them strong. Mary Lang or aiio, ' , .unhnnil I have been lyver sint-e -" . . . j.iit and my blood has been thin and poor. Many different forms of treatment did me no good, but las? Spring I took Vinol and now am so much aironB " . innv It. I don't know when I have felt so well and vigorous aa I have since w's aB f- . n- ,n An 1nt what we It vinoi - - say we will Rive back your money. Woodard, t""" - P0"1""- .kin troubie try our Saxo Halve. We guarantee it.