3 YOURS FOR THE ASKING! A FREE SAMPLE OF OUR DERMATIC EGG SHAMPOO. GET A SAMPLE TODAY THE MORNING OREGOXIAN, FRIDAY. AUGUST 9, 1907. Don't You Want a Phonograph? Here's one anyone can afford to have. It's no toy; only a real Phonograph at a special price, $2.75. "We have a win dow display of this machine, and you , can hear it play on the fourth floor. Open till 9 o'clock P. M. Remember the price only $2.75. Golden Rod Skin Food Have you tried it? It's a new one. The most convenient pack age to carry when traveling. For the ladies' toilet or fine for men after shaving, Remember t-A i t' L only We Have a Comb s yours at a bargain. A Celluloid Comb. Very strong;' 'both fine and coarse; assorted colors and transparent. Sold everywhere from 35c to 50c. Remember the price, only 23 A GREAT RAZOR SALE THIS Ss MAIL WEEK , f .S&s " ORDERS ONLY. ' "a!:a ' FIIXBIfc 97c-fcu 97c $2.50 and $3 IMPORTED RAZORS 97c Full Hollow Ground and Set Ready for Use. 1000 Fine Imported Sample Razors will be placed on sale at 97c each. These razors are from one of the leading: Importers of razors In the United States; The M. I. Brandt Cutlery Co.. of New York. They are all high-grade sampls. We secured the entire stock at a ridiculous figure. The assortment comprises all the well-known makes. Including the Wade & Butcher, Brandt, I. X. L., Rogers, Woatenholm Pipe Rasor, X-L-N-T, and 60 popular brands of all the famous makers. In fact, we have been selling the same identical razors as high as $2.50 and $3.00 each. Every razor is guaranteed perfect and set ready for use. Any razor sold that does not give perfect satisfaction can be exchanged. We call special attention to the BRANDT RAZOR. This razor is tempered bv a secret electrical process, assuring a uniformity of temper, and is fully guaranteed. The regular price of this razor Is $2.50; our price is 97c each. We Will Also Place on Sale 1500 of the Genuine Brandt Self-Honing Razor Strops. These strops are sold and advertised everywhere at $2.00. Our is 7c eacn. THE BRANDT SELF- HONING RAZOR STROP Is the best razor strop on the market today. The only razor strop In the world that hones and strops your razor at the same, time and enables you to obtain an edge which only an experienced barber can give. The . Brandt Self-Honing Razor Strop will put a keener edge on a razor with few strokes than any other razor strop. Your razor will show, and your face will feel the difference at once. Guaranteed never to become hard or glossy. Special attention given to mail orders. TSW pric Are You a Lover of Pictures? "We like to tell the truth. "We want you to see our new Gift Room, so we are going to give you all the profit on 1000 pictures. These pictures were bought for this purpose, and we know you will appreciate the price. These beautiful pictures in sepia finish, size llVxl-t1 inches, l-inch solid oak frames. Title on each one in gold and black. Many subjects to select from. See them in the Fourth-street window today. Remember the price, only 47. ft A Bargain Tip for Saturday "We will sell the celebrated "Woodlark" Linen Writing Paper, in pound packages, one day only. Remember the price, one pound for 24. ""Woodlark" envelopes to match above paper, made in two sizes. Sold regularly at 15c package. Remember the price, per pack age, only 8. We carry a full line of Desk Fixtures. From the Rubber Department Ladies' Spray Syringe, red bulb; very durable; two pipes. Sells regularly at $2.50; special today $1.69 Fountain Syringe, "The Ajax"; pure red rubber, four hard rub ber rnrmfitinnft : trnnrnntApil for . r 1 1 .. .1 - . QtefiVSk cial today SI. 73 jfcJjV Combination Fountain Syringe, 3 :l'lMi auar 3 hard rubber connec :'nu jv" tions; guaranteed one year; reg ular price $1.50; special today 98 Complexion Brush; an extra special for Saturday; coats you now 3oc. Remember, for one day at 19 fi Right to your door in a jiffy. Call Exchange 11 to all departments. Home Phone A 1139 Woo dairclj Clarke Sk Company The Largest Retail Drugstore in the United States YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD WITH US. OPEN A MONTHLY ACCOUNT. START TODAY T BUSINESS Mandamus to Rocky Mountain Phone Company. JUDGE BACH DEFINES LAW Orders Helena Office Operated in Spite of Strike or Franchise Forfeited Will Punish All Those Who Interfere. HELENA. Mont., Aug. 8. (Special.) Judge Bach In the District Court today had a hearing on the writ of mandamus to compel the Rocky Mountain Bell Tele phone Company to resume operations, which he granted. He declared that the company had a duty to perform and that service must be resumed. He said he would punish any one who attempted to interfere with the lines, but the mere fact that one person persuades another not to work and uses no threats or force does not Justify the company in refusing to ,do its duty to the public, adding that the company must operate its lines or forfeit its franchise. It was immaterial what it cost to operate Its lines was the reply to a state ment of counsel that the company had not succeeded in securing help. Judge Bach said lie knew the company could get all the assistance reeded, If satis factory remuneration were held out. General Manager Murray of the tele phone company said he was preparing to bring damage suits against persons who had interfered with the business of the company and that more injunction suits would be tiled. A few inexperienced operators worked today. permanent peace in the Wyoming coat fields. The terms of settlement were: An eight-hour day, effective September 1; a wage increase of approximately 30 per cent more for eight hours than formerly was received; improved working condi tions all along the line, and the compa nies to furnish check-off men. Insuring union control In the mines. The decision affects 12,000 men. Building Strike in Washington. WASHINGTON, Aug. 8. A threatened tleup of the building industries of Wash ington reached a crisis late today, when the carpenters, bricklayers and other union workmen employed on many build ings were ordered out. Business agents of the building trades unions estimate that from 500 to 700 men will not report for work tomorrow. Officials of the Em ployers' Association stated tonight that they would have no difficulty in filling the strikers' places. Coal Miners Will Xot Strike. PITTSBURG, Aug. 8. At a confer ence this afternoon of officers of Dis trict No. 5, United Mineworkers of America, and officers of the Pittsburg Coal Company, all grievances that threatened to bring on a strike of 14,000 men were amicably settled and danger of a strike averted. STRIKE MKES FUEL SCARCE Each Party in Colorado Railroad Contest Claims Success. DENVER, Aug. 8. Vice-president A. D. Parker, of the Colorado & Southern Rail way, says the company put to work 25 more men today and that in a few days he will have the road in normal condi tion. Grand Master P. H. Morrissey, of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, says that the situation is uncnanged. He claims that the strikers are making heavy inroads on the ranks of the strike breakers and that most of the imported men leave the service of the company as soon as they learn of the strike. This the company denies. Today's developments show a serious shortage of domestic coal in Denver. NEILL GIVES LP MEDIATION Finds No Basis of Agreement on Colorado Road. WASHINGTON. Aug. 8. The Gov ernment has failed as peacemaker in the strike of switchmen on the Col orado & Southern Railroad, and Labor Commissioner Charles P. Neill an nounced tonight that all hope had been abandoned of bringing about a satis factory adjustment of the differences between the railroad company and its striking employes. Mr. Neill and Chairman Knapp, of the Interstate Commerce Commission, undertook to act as mediators at the request of Vice- President Parker, of the Colorado & Southern, who declared that in calling the strike, P. H. Morrissey, grand master of the Order of Railway Train men, was violating the union agree ment signed at Chicago last year. "It has been impossible to find any common ground on which the contend ing parties can agree," said Mr. Neill "and I do not see that there is any thing more the Government can do." The negotiations, he said, insofar as the Government is concerned, are at an end. The carrying out of Mr. Morrissey's general strike order will mean a gen eral tleup of the freight traffic and the crippling of the passenger service from Greely, Colo., to Texline, Texas. PEACE AT WYOMING MIXES Operators Sign Contract Making Concessions to Union. , DENVER, Aug. 8. The joint conven tion of the United Mine Workers of America and the operators representing every mine in Wyoming reached an greement this afternoon which means STEEL CAPITAL AT GARY NEW TOWN TO BE GREATEST OF ITS KIXD IX THE WORLD. $45,000,000 Additional Has Been Set Aside by Steel Trust to De velop Plant and Model City. CHICAGO, Aug. 8. (Special.) Satisfied that Gary, Ind., will be the steel capital of the world, the directors of the United States Steel Corporation have decided to invest an additional $15,000,000 in the construction of the model city and steel plant just across the Indiana state line from Chicago. Information that the directorate of the steel corporation had set aside the extra $45,000,000 for the pur pose of developing Gary was received at the New City today and caused a rapid advance in values and a buoyant sensa tion through the humming town. The $45,000,000 is in addition to the original appropriation of $75,000,000 esti mated as the necessary outlay for the building of the plant and for the forma tion of the city which will house the score of thousands of workers who will be em ployed at Gary when the final plans of the teel kings have been consum mated. The excess appropriation is to be used in widening the scope and extent of the steel plant proper. The cost of the building of Gary is Included In the first estimate which was made when it was proposed to transform a deserted acreage of drifting sand into the greatest steel manufacturing city of the continent. Three thousand men were at work today building Gary and additional help is being employed by the battalion daily. The accomplishments of the steel magnates in the construction of the plant and the city since the first spadeful of sand was turned June 16, 1U06, almost surpass comprehension. LAND-FRAUD CASE BEGUN Hearing Opens In District Court In San Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 8. The case of United States Government against John A. Benson and E. B. Perrin, ac cused of conspiracy in securing, by fraudulent means, 1000 acres of land in Tehama County, was commenced before Judge de Haven in 'the United States District Court this morning. Twelve Jurors to try the case were chosen and the United States District Attorney, Robert T.- Devlin, stated briefly the allegations of the Govern ment, charging the defendants with Inducing the State of California to make representations to the Federal Government so that certain lands were transferred to the state and after ward acquired, by fraudulent means, by the defendants. 17. P. Stock on 5 Per Cent Basis. NEW YORK, Aug. 8. The directors of the Union Pacific Railroad Company declared a' regular quarterly dividend of 2H per cent on common stock this afternoon. The last dividend amount ed to 2 H per cent, but was not desig nated as regular at that time. The directors have declared a semi-annual dividend of 214 per cent on the pre ferred stock. MILLIONS FUR G E King of Siam Enriches Jewel ers and Goldsmiths. BUYS HALF OF OFFERINGS Chulalongkorn Invests $3,000,000 in Diamonds and ' Gold and Silver Plate Hires Cable to Distant Capital. BERLIN, A8T-' 9- King Chulalong korn I will leave Berlin tomorrow for Cassel, -where he will be the guest of the German Emperor and Empress. Stories of the extravagances of the Siamese King continue to excite and amuse Berlin.- It is considered certain that he has bought $3,000,000 worth of diamond? and gold and silver. Two gold services among the selections cost $800,000 each. The King is occupying nearly the entire floor of one of the principal hotels, several apartments of which have been given up to an exhibition of jewels and precious metal work, which were brought here from London, Paris and elsewhere by dealers expecting to sell most of the wares and who were rewarded for their enterprise, as the King took about half of all that was offered to him. The King has shown unusual inter est in the dispatches in the newspapers referring to the situation on the fron tier of Siam and Cambodia and received with extreme consideration the news paper report which brought him intel ligence on the subject. He arranged for a news service from the Siamese capital during his sojourn in Germany. Molitor murder. The confrontation was of short duration and took place in the presence of officials. After it occurred Olga Molitor left the prison. The authorities decline to give evi dence of what took place at the meet ing, nor will they say anything about Olga's present whereabouts. JAPANESE - MEXICAN BATTLE Railroad Workmen In Mexico Fight With Deadly Effect. MAZATLAN, Mexico. Aug. 8. A tele gram received here late last night an nounces that at El Fuerte, a construc tion camp on the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway, a pitched battle took place yesterday between gangs of Japa nese and Mexican workmen. In which three Japanese were killed and three seri ously injured and three Mexicans were mortally wounded and one killed. The trouble is said to have started sev eral days ago, when a dispute arose be tween a Japanese and a Mexican. HI DESPAIR RUSSIA WILL ' XOT BORROW Kokovsoff Denies Rumor Opposi tion to Rebuilding of Xavy. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 8. Minister of Finance Kokovsoff denies that the Russian government has any foreign loan in contemplation and says he does not intend to carry out any credit appro priations before the expiration of the two years period stipulated in contracting the last loan at Paris in April, 1906. The Novoe Vremya today published an editorial in which it protested against re building the Russian fleet, basing its ar gument on the overwhelming superiority of the German and British Naval forces in the Baltic and of the Japanese in the Pacific. Ten or 15 years, according to the paper mentioned, will not give Rus sia time to create a fleet capable of suc cessfully competing for the command of either ocean, hence the Russian warships would again be compelled to seek the shelter afforded-by the coast batteries. Under the circumstances, therefore, the Novoe Vremya says, the better poliiiy is to build fortresses, ' torpedo boats and submarine boats. BOMB FACTORY IX SCHOOLS Moscow Police Capture Rebel Arse nal and Twenty Students. MOSCOW, Aug.' 8. The police today searched the Imperial technical schools and discovered the central revolutionary laboratory for manufacturing bombs of a new pattern and tremendous explosives, regular supplies of which were being shipped to various interior points. The police seized a number of bombs, six hundred time fuse appliances, a typo graphic outfit, and some forbidden litera ture and arrested 20 students of the schools. Belfast Is Settling Down. BELFAST, Aug. 8. The dispute in the coal trade here has been settled and work was resumed today. uie troops again took possession of the Btreets to day, the factories are reopening and the normal condition of business Is gradu ally returning. Fears Insult to Cardinals. ROME. Aug. 8. The Pope today coun termanded all the receptions planned in honor of the anniversary of his corona tion, fearing that the Cardinals might be Insulted in the streets while on their way to and from the Vatican. MetTger's spectacles, $1. 342 Wash, st Chinese Sailors Forced to Go on Hunger Ship. DRAMATIC SCENE IN COURT cuffed, and had to be lifted bodily. They were handcuffed In pairs, and 12 of the most unruly were fastened together by a chain. They were marched downstairs, loaded Into two express wagons, and guarded by half a dozen Federal officers on their Journey to the Howard-street wharf. The Chinese were then taken aboard the Tolosan In launches. They sat stoically in the boats, but, as they neared the ship, many again broke out in sobs and expostulations against going aboard. The German officers were disposed to feel very bitter against the men . who had testified against them at the hearing. Abandoned to Mercy of Brutal Ger man Officers, Who Half Starved Them, They Rave With Anger and Defiance. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 8. A dramatic scene was enacted in United States Com missioner Heacock's courtroom today. when It finally dawned upon the 24 Chinese who deserted the German ship Tolosan that they would have to go back to that vessel. They had listened with anxious faces while the negotiations were being made between the Chinese vice-consul and the German consul. When their representa tive finally announced that he had done all he could for them and their case was hopeless. a concerted wail of despair went through the courtroom. Some of the Chinese threw themselves on their knees before the vice-consul and wildly im plored him to save them from a voyage back to China on the Tolosan. Others beat their heads on the floor, tearing their hair in their frenzy of mingled rage and despair. United States Marshal Elliott and his deputies tried in vain to restore order. Sobs, curses, shouts of vengeance, cries of anger and declarations of defiance echoed through the courtroom. It was a quarter of an hour before the men could be quieted. When the time arrived to take the men to the Howard-street wharf, there to em bark in launches and be taken to the . Tolosan, there was another uproar. Many of the Chinese refused to get up from the floor, even after they had been hand- M17ST GO BACK TO THE SHIP Deserting Chinese Sailors- to Be Surrendered to German Consul. WASHINGTON, Aug. 8. In the matter of conflict between the German Consul and the Chinese vice consul at San Fran cisco over the desertion of the Chinese crew from the German tramp steamer Tolosan, the Department of Justice de cided today that the deserters should be surrendered to the German Consul. Ex plaining Its action, the Department is sued a statement today saying: The attention of the Government was called by the German Ambassador to the arrest at San Francisco of 24 Chinese mem bers of the crew of the German steamer Tolosan. and their beina; taken before & commissioner to be deported to China under the exclusion laws. As there is a treaty with Germany providing for the arrest and return to the German consuls of desertlnir seamen. a question arose whether the Chi nese should be deported today on the Man churia or be turned over to the Consul. As the German steamer proposes to take them back to China, ana as we have no right to object to a Chinese crew on & foreign ship, and as the department could see no Inconsistency between the treaty and the deportation law. the District Attorney was directed to advise the commissioner to deliver the deserters to the Garman consul. It Is understood that the deserters com plain of their treatment by the officers of the Tolesan. This may be simply because, being deserters, they feel bound to gtve some excuse for leaving the ship. However this may be, the German consul has under the treaty authority to settle all disputes between the master and commissioner, and they will doubtless obtain redress from him, If they are entitled 'to any. Two Husbands in Trouble. The cases of J. W. Kimby and John Beck, charged with nonsupport by their respective wives will be tried before) Judge Webster today. Beck, who is col ored, is the first husband of that race arrested under the new state law. Mrs. Ida M. Beck says he has not supported her since last May. Bail for the twt men was fixed at $250. Metzger's eye glasses. $1. 343 Wash. St." It the Joy of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How weet the picture of mother and babe, an eels smile at and commend the thought and aspirations of the mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant mother must pass, how ever, is so full of danger and suffering that she looks forward to the hour when she shall feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood with indescribable dread and fear. Every woman should know that the danger, pain and horror of child-birth can be entirely avoided by the use of Mother's Friend, a scientific liniment for external use only, which toughens and render citable all the parts, and assists nature in its sublime work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this ereat crisis in perfect safety and without pain. Sold at fi.oo per bottle by druggists. Our book of priceless value to all women sent free. Address mttAPriELO RCBULATOK OQ-. AtmnfM. Bm. MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO Will Be Erected at Waterloo by Owner of Ground. BRUSSELS. Aug. 8. A' simple Druidi cal stone is to be placed at Waterloo in commemoration of Victor Hugo. The sponsor of the movement is Count Louis Cavans, who has directed the activities for the preservation of the souvenirs of the great battle, and It. is he that has given the ground upon which will be erected the simple monument. The in scription will be "To Victor Hugo, Im mortal Bard of Waterloo." The memorial will be dedicated toward the end of the year and a feature of he exercises will be a banquet at the hotel where Hugo wrote the celebrated chap ter of "Les Mlserables." Metzger & Co., headquarters Brauer'a hand-painted art china. 342 Wash, st I OLGA MOLITOR NOT PRISONER Only Went to Jail to Be Confronted With Llndenau. MANNHEIM, Aug. 8. TheYe is no truth in the report that Olga Molitor. for the murder of whose mother Karl Hau was recently sentenced to death at Karlsruhe, has been arrested and imprisoned. The reports that she had been taken into custody are caused by the fact that she came to the prison here this evening to be confronted with Baron Llndenau, who was arrested yesterday . in connection with the Correct Dress For Ladies and Misses Washington Street,' Between Park and Seventh H. B. LITT Friday and Saturday PRESENT WEATHER CONDITIONS MAKES IT NECESSARY TO OFFER All Lineil SuitS, Formerly $45.00 to $75.00 At $19.00 All Linen Suits, Formerly $17.50 to $45.00 At $9.00 All Linen Suits, Formerly $12.50 to $17.50 At$6.00 NO ALTERATIONS NO CHARGES NONE ON APPROVAL i