Page Eight COUNTY. BUYE GUID CLA KAMAS E Office Phone: Main 9109 CROWN STABLES PHILLIP SUETTER, Manager 285 Front Street HORSES BOUGHT, SOLD OR EXCHANGED. We buy for Cash or sell on Commission. Feed and Sales Stables. Special For Hire Rates to Responsible People. All Stock Guaranteed as Represented. Learn Window Trimming, Show Card Writing, Commercial Art at Portland Display Men's School 330-336 East Morrison St, Portland, Oregon Night Classes instructed by Portland's most prominent display men." For information regarding courses and tuition, call at school or phone East 639. , , . . Established 1882 The E. House Restaurant Come and See Us Open Day and Night Home-made Pies and Cakes a Specialty Steaks, Chops and Oysters Between Alder and Washington 128 Third Street, Portland, Oregon Office Phone East 743 Otto Schumann Granite & Marble Works JOHN C. BRUCHNER, Prop. Mausoleums, Monuments, Head stones and General Cemetery Work East Third and Pine Streets PORTLAND, OREGON THE Suddarth Studio PHOTOS THAT ARE DIFFERENT A classy up-to-date Studio on the East Side A. C. SUDDARTH 407 East Morrison at Grand Ave. GEO. W. CROCKWELL, M. E. Naturopath and Spinologlst ' 706-720 DEKUM BUILDING Portland, Oregon ELECTRIC TREATMENTS Specialist in Stomach Trouble, Chronic Diseases and Female Complaints. No matter what your trouble I can help you. Have .cured hundreds! Why not you? Consultation and examination Free. "Pay as you can." No knife. No operations. No incurable case taken. FREE TREATMENTS THIS WEEK. Modern Fireproof RITZ HOTEL FRANK A. CLARK President and Manager Park and Morrison Streets Depot and Morrison Car at Union Station takes you direct to the door. One Block North of Bus Station PORTLAND, OREGON Harley Davidson Motorcycle and Columbia Bicycles (The World's Leading Cycles) Sold on Easy Terms Bargains in Used Machines Motorcycle and Supply Co. Harley Davidson Service Center Third and Taylor, Portland, Ore. , (Ask the Cops) Phone: Main 2146 OREGON SHEET METAL WORKS FARM, BOAT AND RESTAURANT JOBBING AND REPAIR yVORK Tanks, Stacks, Hog Feed Bottoms, Silo Roofs, Black and Galvanized Sheet Iron, Sheet Tin, Copper and Zinc, Eave Trough, Conductor Pipe, Ventilating Systems, Sinks, Steam Tables, Re-Tinning. 146 FRONT STREET STUDY NATUROPATHY The MOST SUCCESSFUL SYSTEM of treating Disease. BEGINNING OCTOBER 2nd. .12 Weeks Post Graduate Course for Practitioners Three Years Course for Beginners. . Write today for particulars. 'Enroll now. Northwestern College of Naturopathy, Inc. 807 Dekum Bldg., Third Phone Broadway 6998. Open Day and Night Portland, Oregon Res. Phones: Tabor 6122, Bdw. 3054 Phone Main 6973 PAINTS Colors, gal. White, gaL $2.45 . 2.55 Pidcock & Hazel Paints, Oils, Varnishes 145 First Street Portland, Ore. MATTRESS MAKING One of Our Specialties. Mattresses made over $1.50. New ones according to weight. Carpets cleaned, refitted and re sized by experts. Fluff rugs made to your especial order. 9x12 rugs shampooed $2.50. Ship all work to us by express or auto freight and mail us Instructions. , PIONEER MATTRESS & CARPET CLEANING WORKS 1072 Lincoln Street, Portland, Ore. Aut. 237-07 CONVENIENTLY LOCATED FIRST AND' MORRISON TOURIST HOTEL OPEN ALL NIGHT Steam Heat, Electric Lights Hot and Cold Water in Rooms Brick Building. 75c per day up S3.50 per week up Free Bath to Guests. MRS. M. J. WALKER, Prop. Phone Main 4861 Phone Main 9143 Finke Brothers Manufacturers of all kinds of Barrels, Tanks, Fir and Spruce Staves, Heads, Etc Also Dealers In Oak and Hazel Hoops 183 Madison St. Portland, Oregon All kinds of second hand barrels and kegs bought and sold. We solicit Clackamas Co. Business. New Rugs From Old Carpets Satisfaction Guaranteed J AS. H. B1U.O. Prop. Artistic Colonial Rag Rugs Woven All Sizes 54-56 Union Ave. N., cor. East Davis Tel. East 6516 Portland, Oregon r PORTLAND, OREGON and Washington Sts. Portland, Ore. B. B. Body & Top Works Better Built Bodies and Tops Auto Tops, Curtains, Cushions and Seat Covers, Manufactured and Repaired. Auto, Bug and Truck Body Building and Repairing We install Wind Shields, Side De flectors and Plate Glass in Curtains. Oxy-Actylene Welding 345 Williams Ave. Portland, Ore. "v Telephone, East 1198 Auto Sign Painting. The Nelson Forge Works SHIP SMITHING & MACHINE FORGERS A modern shop equipped to handle all new and repair work. Machine Shop in connection. Telephone East 2183 231 East Water St, Cor. Main Portland, Oregon e Heavy forging a specialty., Traffic Laws are Enforced In Portland Avoid Theft and Damage by putting your car In Portland Parking Station Twelve hours for only 25 cents. Night or Day. - F. J. Espel, Proprietor Broadway just above Heilig theatre. Pioneer Employment Co. 14 N. Second Street Headquarters for Labor and Farm Help Business Men's Clearing House Wilcox Building . HEADQUARTERS FOR BOOKKEEPERS ' OFFICE HELP, ETC. Two Big Offices can serve your every need. . Portland, Oregon 300 Steam Heated Rooms Ground Floor Lobby Rates, 50c to $1.50 Hotel Wabash C. P. JOHN, Proprietor. Corner Front and Madison Streets Foot of Hawthorne Bridge Telephone Main 2876 PORTLAND, OREGON We are always able te accommodate you. Broadway 464 Night Phone Tabor 2986 Oregon Welding & Machine Works WELDERS AND MACHINISTS N. W. Corner Fifth and Glisan Sts. PORTLAND, OREGON Scalp'Treatments Massage Dr. Marie Flinn, Naturopath DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN Electric Treatments for all aches and pains. Ladies Patronage Solicited. Phone Main 7413 380 First St. Portland, Ore. WHY PAY MORE? We will Half Sole your shoes for less and use the best California Oak Leather. Men's shoes half soled $1.25 to $1.35 Ladies shoes half soled 90c Ladies Rubber heels 40c We make all classes of shoes SCHOENHEINZ SHOE REPAIR SHOP "The Shop That Saves You Money" , Pacific Highway Garage Bldg. Oregon City Our Gift to The Bride FREE With the purchase of one of our DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS A solid gold handsomely en graved Wedding Ring to match Diamond Ring. CREDIT IF YOU LIKE. Reingold's Jewelers 147 Third Street Our Motto: "The Golden Rule" C. L. Becker Real Estate Farm Lands, Acreage, City Property For Bargains in cheap land ' "See Me" ZZVz First Street Across from Alder St. Depot PORTLAND, OREGON Established 22 Years In Portland The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. No operations. No poison used In our wonderful remedies, composed of the choicest Oriental roots, herbs, buds and bark, many of which are unknown to the medical science of this country. Our rem edies are harmless and have made many sufferers from catarrh, asthma, lung and throat, rheuma tism, nervousness, stomach, liver and kidney trou ble, female disorders, etc., happy. Many testimon ials given unsolicited by persons, male and female, who have used my root and herb remedies. Call or write for information. THE C. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. 162J4 First Street Portland, Oregon ARKER ilAKES llftEST READ Ask for BARKER BREAD ALL GROCERS HAVE IT. Phone EAST 6110 Buildings Bought, Sold, Repaired - Dolan Wrecking & Construction Co. Wholesale and Retail Lumber, Lath, Nails. Shingles, Doors, Windows and Plumbing Sup. plies, New and second Hand. Office and Yard 460 Belmont Street PORTLAND, OREG&N SEEDS WATCH US AND OUR SEEDS GROW. The new seed store with complete Fresh stocks of Tried and True Seeds Ask for Price List. Oregon Seed Store Main 6838 224 Yamhill St. Between First and Second Sts. PORTLAND, OREGON Nicolai Neppach Company. 227 Davis Street, Portland, Oregon GENERAL MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, GLASS HARDWOOD LUMBER OAK and MAPLE FLOORING Clergyman Is Said Father of Child Of 11 Year Old Girl SIDNEY, Ohio, Sept. 14 Prelimin ary hearing in the case of Rev. S. W. Irwin, pastor of a Methodist Epis copal church at Amelia, Clearmont county, charged with being the father of the baby son of his stepdaughter, Elizabeth Ladd, aged 11, was put over until tomorrow when called to mayor's court today. Irwin, arrested' at hie home in the little village where he presides over the spiritual destinies or one half the inhabitants, late yesterday, after the child mother had charged him with being the father of her baby, strongly protested his inpocence. He was brought here and nlaced in jail.. The girl, who until yesterday had declared she did not know who could have been the father of the baby boy. broke down under repeated grilling and said she had been intimate with her stepfather for more than a year. COMMITTEE WILL SCAN IMPEACHMENT CHARGE WASHINGTON, Sept. 15. Impeach ment charges against Attorney Gen eral Daugherty as the result of his petition for an injunction in the cases of striking railroad employes, as pre sented to the house Monday by Rep resentative Keller, Republican, Min nesota, will be considered by the jud iciary committee at a meeting tomor row at which Mr. Keller will be heard. The Woman's Column. y Florence Riddick-Boys. SAY IT WITH TOOLS Mr. Husband, if you. love your wife and would make her a lot happier, make it easier. Smoothe the path of her marriage with machinery labor saving mchinery. It isn't that the men do not want us to have the conveniences of house keeping that they do not get them for us. It is often that we ourselves have failed to desire them enough. Per haps penurious ourselves to purchase them, penny wise and pound foolish. Or possibly, if we want them very much, we have been too mild about ex pressing our wants to our husbands and have not made them realize that we need such things. Most husbands are willing to get labor saving devices for the women workers, if they ever come to think of it knock them down with a daily hint. Men have the tools they need to carry on their business, the auto, the mowing machine, the binder but they do not realize how much modern machinery would lighten women's work. The fact that we have always gotten on without these things before is no reason we should continue to get along without them, uur miners got on very well with, the sickle and the scyth but no man would consider that now. Neither should his wife car ry in water from a well outside the house and carry the slop out. Many people do not realize how pos sible it would be to lighten the work in the farm and country home as well as la the city. Today many farm homes are equipped with electric washing machines and electric irons, the same power that pumps the water and vacuum cleaners. Power mach ines of some kind can be operated by and many farmers have an engine for this. Running water and a drain is' the first and easiest improvement to be made, and there is nothing which so relieves the wife of hard work and adds so much to family comfort. Think it over and figure. Times are growing better and you will find it more possible than yu believe. WOMAN-I-TORIALS The Indiana League of Women Vot ers is working to have the Mother's Pension. System reestablished so that mothers may be enabled to keep their children in their homes instead oC having them placed in institutions.' This is the home and community program of the American Farm . Bur eau: "To foster and develop all those lines of endeavor which make foi beter homes, better social and relig ious life, better health and better ru ral living in every sense." WOMAN-I-TORIALS To Make Their Dreams Come True Legislative Councils of Women are organized In many of the states, to look after the progress of such laws as appeal to women. These councils are composed of representatives from many' state organizations of women. It has often happened that women, interested in some law, have ceme to the state capital to see about it, and, by their hazy ideas of what they want and how their more hazy ideas of how1 to go about getting it, have annoyed their friendly representative, and take too much of his time and. have hurt rather than helped, the mesure they espoused. The Councils will prevent this. By advice, direction and watch fulness they will prevent duplication of effort and make womens' influence count just where and when she wants it to count. It's Through and Quits .A shining example of an organiza tion which, having done its wok, is willing to dissolve, is the National Women's Association of Commerce. For ten years it has been endeavoring to secure the admission of women to the various Chambers of Commerce and Boards of Trade in the country. Through its efforts 97 per cent of these now admit women. Attorney Florence King, of Chicago, believes that women progress faster working with men than alone. Thus the corol lary of the Bble proverb, "It is not good for man to be alone.' CLUB EVOLUTION There was once a club called the Pansy Club. Within a year it had changed its name to Woman's Civic Club. FARM, CHILDREN Malnutrition is found among chil dren on the most prosperous farms. Are you sure your children are eating the right things: milk, eggs, green vegetables, and fruits? There is also a child labor law in the country as great as in the manufacturing centers. The average life of child workers in beet sugar fields is only eleven years HAPPY THOUGHT Jog on, jog on the foot path way And merrily hent the stile-a; A merry heart goes all the way, , Your sad tires in a mile-a. William Shakespeare. AT THE BALL A little tulle, A yard of silk. A little skin As white as milk, A little strap, How dare she breathe. A little cough Good evening Eve. MRS. SOLOMON SAYS To .make a dusty straw hat look like new, brush it well with a bit of velvet moistened . with alcohol. 1100,000 Menaced With Starvation In District of Smyrna LONDON, Sept. 15. One hundred thousand persons are menaced with death from starvation in Smyrna, said dispatch to the Evening News today. More than 1000 Christians are report ed to have been massacred by Turks. Fourteen Americans are reported missing at Smyrna. The Turks are al leged to have carried off pupils of the American girl's college. Part of Smyr na has been destroyed by fire and the conflagration was spreading at latest reports. The whole city is threatened with destruction. The situation in the entire region of Smyrna is described as serious. It is reported that Great Britain is sounding the other allied powers to de termine whether they would consent to a Near East peace conference in a fortnight. A note has been received from Italy, but it is noncommittal in tone, merely expressing the hope that the allies will carry out the original program for the Venice conference. Indications from Paris are that France and Great Britain will act in unity. The British foreign office has been advised that the Turks deliberately rounded up and shot many Armenians in Smyrna, .s. BY JEWELL IS ALLEGED CHICAGO, Sept. 15. An affidavit alleging that Bert M. Jewell, presi dent of the stricking shopmen, had possibly viorated the federal restrain ing order, was read in federal court here today by Blackburn Bstreline, government attorney. , "This presents a very serious situ ation," Judge Wilkerson declared, and asked if the goveruaient had any fur ther evidence that the injunction had been violated. The affidavit was signed by I. C. Beldon, Aurora. 111., attorney. Beldon stated that he read in a Chi cago newspaper on September 4, an alleged statement from Jewell urging his men to "hold fast." This date was after the restraining order was Issued. The statement credited to Jewell said, in part: "Everything is now ' assured. We have reached the point where the country and the government admit the power of the strike. Our job now is to realize our strength and hold fast to gain a greater victory than that won by the union miners." reports indicating that violence had order was issued. Attorneys for the strikers declared there had been no injunction viola tions. JAPAN SAID NOW READY TO RECOGNIZE SOVIET TOKIO. Sept. 14. Only formal diplomatice announcement of Japan's de facto recognition of the Moscow government of Russia remained today to complete such " recognition, it was believed here. Negotiations at Chang Chun be tween Japan and Russia already have advanced' to a point where, it was be lieved, such recognition already virtu ally had been accomplishtd. A general Russo-Japanese agree men was considered an immediate probability. Japan has officially instructed her delegates at Chang Chun to agree to the discussion of all matters pertain ing to Russian affairs if the Moscow delegates will first agree to discuss other Far Eastern questions. This offer is looked upon as a liberal over ture by Japan to Moscow. OBEY" IS TAKEN FROM EPISGOPAL'S SERVICE PORTLAND, Sept. 15. The bride's vow to "obey" and the groom s prom ise to endow her with all his worldly goods were definitely stricken from the marriage ceremony by the Episco pal convention yesterday, when the House of Deputies confirmed the ac tion of the House of Bishops upon this portion of the prayer book. Confirmation of the action of tne convention will have to be made at the next convention three years hence to make the change permanent. Announcement was. received yester day in the upper house that the Right Rev. Rennie Maclnnes, bishop of tne Church of England in Jerusalem, will arrive in Portland "tomorrow with a message from the Archbishop ,of Can terbury. A joint session will be held to welcome him, and his message is expected to carry something of im portance bearing upon the movement toward unity of churches. Fourteen Injured By Explosion of Pittsburg Bomb PITTSBURG. Pa., Sept. 14. Four teen negro and Italian men and wo men were injured today when a pow erful bomb was exploded under the veranda of a house in Braddock, a suburb. The fnr". of the explosion caved in the sides of the building and blew bits of the plaster onto the sleep ers. Some dropped down on the heads of other occupants. Between the noise of the explosion and the subsequent crashes of falling debris the negroes were greatly alarmed. Nobody was fatally hurt, however. I NEW CLUE IS FOUND IN MURDER AT SOMERSET NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Sept 18. The Somerset county authorities to day were trying to trace a mysterious telephone call which is believed to have lured to their violent death Rev. Edward WHall, wealthy rector of the church of St. John the Evangelist, and Mrs. James Mills, leader of" the choir. It is known that the woman receiv ed a call on the telephone late Thurs day night, and it is believed that the clergyman received a similar sum-' mons. Mrs. Hall, wife of the clergyman, under examination by the county au thorities, admitted that she was the "mystery woman" who was seen en tering her home early Friday morning. Despite the result of the investiga tion, conducted jointly by the iNew Brunswick police and the county au thorities, insufficient evidence had been found today which to make an arrest. It was rumored, however, that one arrest and perhaps two might be made within 25 hours, but County Detective Totten refused to discuss the report. The funeral services for Dr. Hall were conducted today by. Bishop Al bion W. McNight of Trenton. The funeral of Mrs. Mills will take place tomorrow. Mrs. Hall admitted that she had gone to the church early Friday morn ing because hes husband was missing r and she was alarmed Shy wanted to ascertain, she said, if he had been detained at the (church by chur affairs. . At the same time, Mills, husband of the slain woman, admitted that he, too, had visited the church. He said he was anxious over the non-return of his wife. He visited the church to find out if she had been detained teT church choir work. Taking as a clue the cryptic phrase "Charlotte talks" in one of the torn letters scattered about the bodies, the police called Charlotte Mills, 18-year-old daughter of Mrs. Mills, to find out what she talked about. James Mills, a pale nervous little man, apparently younger than his wife, who was 35, was questioned by the detectives and proved a complete alibi. He trusted his wife implicitly. Mrs. Hall, who is a member of the Stevens family, said to be part owners of the chemical firm of Johnson & Johnson, is reputed to be worth $1,500, 000. She was said , today to be in a state bordering on collapse as the re sult cf the tragedy and to be unable to offer any suggestion as to the iden tity of the murder or the motive for the cr-me. j RiotS Break Out aS 1,000 Shop Men go Back To Yard Jobs CLINTON, Iowa, Sept., 18. A riot broke out here at the Northwestern shops this morning, when 100ft, "Shop men returned to work. Replacement men at the plant of the Chicago & Northwestern here were driven from the shops by returning shopmen who resumed their duties this morning, pending final adjust ment of the strike. CHICAGO, Sept. 18. More than forty thousand striking shopmen were expected to return to their jobs on eastern roads today. At the same time negotiations were launched to - send thousands of addi tional men back. Bert M.' Jewell, president of the shopmen, left here last night for New York when it was reported that peace settlements with the New York Cen tral and the Southern Railroad were called off at the last minute. Jewell refused to discuss the failure to reach an agreement with the New "York Central, but intimatfc that the difficulty was a minor one and that an adju V.ment would be effected. A similar situation existed on the Southern. Five Are Injured In Crash Upon Curve At Medford Races MEDFORD. Ore., Sept. 18. Five persons were Injured, two seriously, in the first accident of the Jackson county fair Sunday afternoon when an Essex special, driven by Earl Q. Jop lin, of San Francisco, left the' track on the southeast turn, crashed through a wire fence and knocked the under pinning from a thirty-foot water tank tower upon which six spectators were seated. The car left the track in a cloud of dust, hurtled several feet in the air as it struck the fence and plowed through the base of the tower, which fell as though it had been dynamited. The tank was empty. D. M. Lowe; owner of the tank, made a futile effort to save two boys sitting near him when he saw the car start from the track. He was pinned be neath the wreckage and was serious ly injured internally and his left arm and shoulder badly bruised. Changes In Burial Restrictions Made PORTLAND, Sept. 14. The House of Bishops, of the Episcopal - General Convention by a vote of 47 to 43, went on .record this morning in favor of stricking out the rubric in the com mon prayer book which denied church burial to certain persons. The rubric provided that burial service shall not be used "for ' any unbaptized adult, any who died ex-communicate or any who. laid violent hands upon them selves." The amendment now goes to the House of Deputies for consider ation. Bishop Frederick W. Keator, Bishop Edwin S- Lines and Bishop William Lawrence led the debate fav oring the revision.