.2 TTSE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1908. S PLEDGE He Could Not Carry Out Plat form Promises in First Term. WOULD IMITATE CLEVELAND Hostile Senate Would Block All Leg islative Plans and Only Second Term Could Make Their Execution Possible. OREGONIAN NEWS' BUREAU, Wash ington. July 18. Word comes from Den ver that Mr. Bryan "feels confident of carrying the Pacific Coast states on the Oriental exclusion plank In the Denver platform, strengthened, as he thinks, by the enlarged-navy plank." If this dis patch properly reflects the views of the Democratic nominee, it will be evident to any man who reasons that Mr. Bryan is building hopes on very unsound founda tions. For It is a recognized fact that throughout the next administration, the United States Senate will be Republican, and no Republican Senate is going to as sist in carrying out the pledges contained in a platform dictated by the Democratic candidate and ratified by the Democratic convention. A Republican Senate during a Repub lican administration has refused to leg islate along the lines laid down in the Denver platform; it has refused to bar the Japanese from our shores, and has refused to enter upon any such naval pro gramme as is favored by Mr. Bryan and Capt. Hobson. How much more readily would a Republican Senate turn down these . propositions, if advocated by a Democratic administration, especially if those two issues had proven instrumental in swinging the Pacific Coast Btates Into the Democratic column. Could Not Fulfil Pledge. . The plain fact of the matter is that Mr. Bryan, if elected, could not force Congress to put up the bars against all Orientals, nor could he force Congress to adopt a more liberal naval programme than has been agreed to by the present Republican Congress, which refused to respect the wishes and recommendations of President Roosevelt. No more could Mr. Bryan, if elected, put through the other numerous reforms to wnich he and his party are pledged in the Denver plat form. A Republican Senate would block the way. This situation renders absurd the 'an nouncement Mr. Bryan made immediately after his nomination, that he would not be a candidate for re-election if elected next November. This declaration, un questionably made In good faith, has placed Mr. Bryan in a peculiar position. If elected, he would either be compelled to fulfill his promise and retire at the end of his term, having accomplished none of the legislative reforms to which he and the party stand pledged, or put aside his declaration and run again, ' The Bryan declaration is neither aa forceful nor as convincing as the an nouncement made by Mr. Roosevelt Im mediately after his election, and in all probability it is not made for the same purpose. , Mr. Roosevelt had served near ly one full term when he came out with his1 famous declaration; he knew the powers and the possibilities of his office, and the demands of his party and the country. Mr. Bryan, on the other hand, speaks as one who has never occupied the White House; one who has not felt the power and responsibilities of the of fice of President, and moreover, he puts aside a second and not a third term. Could Only Get Compromise. Should Mr. Bryan be elected next No vember his administration would be marked by compromise legislation, such legislation as would meet the sanction and the approval of a Republican Senate. That Senate would not revise the tariff according to the Bryan idea; It would not consent to the Democratic pro gramme of labor legislation, or railroad legislation, or the trusts, or insular ques tions, or anything else. It would legis late, of course, but along very different lines from those laid down in the Denver platform. Such legislation would be most unsatisfactory to Mr. Bryan, for it would fall far short of what he is striving to bring about. ( Yet Mr. Bryan, in his advocacy of the so-called reforms outlined at Denver, was absolutely sincere, and It Is his hope. If elected, to see those reforms ac complished. He cannot attain that end if he serves but one term. Conceding, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Bryan shall be elected, he will be a sorely dis appointed man at the end of four years, and he will understnnd fully the cause of his disappointment. He will then reallie that only by accepting another nomination can he hope to fulfill the pledges made Recently at Denver, and he will put aside his emotional promise to the party' and "consent to accept" an other nomination, even though he may not be a "candidate for" renomlnatlon. Looking at the phraseology of the Lin coln declaration. It will be seen that Mr. Bryan could accept a renomlnatlon thrust upon him (provided he did not seek it) and still not break his word. Cleveland Forgot I.Ike Pledge. . In this connection it is recalled that Grover Cleveland in 18S4 madn a pledge similar to that given by Mr. Bryan, but he was a candidate again in 1SS8 and again in ls92. But Cleveland was actuated by a desire to reunite his party and placate others who had been more prominent than he. and who themselves had Presidential aspirations. His an nouncement that he would not seek re nomlnatlon hrought to his support men who had opposed him In the convention. There may have been some similar thought in Mr. Bryan's mind the day he was last nominated. His party needs re uniting now. Jun as it did in 1884, and there are doubtless many Democrats who would support Mr. Bryan for one term, but would hesitate about supporting him for two. It would be very extraordinary for an agKrersive man of Mr. Bryan's type, after four years of unsuccessful effort, to step out of the Presidency when he had reason to believe that, if re-elected with prospects of a friendly Senate as well as House of Representatives, he could bring about legislation which he has long advocated and hoped for. and to which he is flatly pledged. Men who know Mr. Bryan intimately do not believe he would relinquish a renoml natlon under such circumstances; hence the broadcast belief that Mr. Bryan, once elected, will be a candidate for re-election. Accepting the popular opinion as correct, the Issue this Fall is not whether there shall be four years of Bryan, but whether there shall be eight. Mr. Bryan, running for one term only, meafts little 'more than four years of Demo cratic control of Federal patronage, be cause the Republican Senate stands in the-way; Mr. Bryan, possible candidate lor two terms, may mean fulfillment of IN WITHOUT VALUE the pledge of the Denver platform In his second term (provided he la elected for a first). CROWD AT TAFT MEETING (Continued from Flr,t Pe.) fifth Precinct Republican Club, and Ben Reisland, its representative, presided. However, it was under the patronage of both the state and county committees and enjoyed the co-operation of ail other Republican clubs. Its purpose waa to ratify the nomination of . the National convention, and to organize Taft and Sherman clubs. Similar meetings will be held in all parts of the state from this time until the close of the campaign. Only Three Speakers. There were only three speakers. Senator Fulton, W. D. Wheelwright and Judge H. H. Northup. But they came forward with the real brand of political talk that sent the audience - into frequent rounds of uproarous applause. Mr. Reisland first introduced Mr. Wheel wright, after stating the purposes and objects of the meeting. Mr. Wheelwright started the precedent of referring to the Presidential nominee as "Bill" Taft, and the other- speakers followed it. He spoke briefly, but to the point', ana then the presiding officer Introduced the Taft Quartet which received many encores. Judge Northup made a great hit with the audience by declaring that the cam paign is a "fight between Bill Taft and Jim Sherman' against Bill Bryan and Jack Kern." He related, a number of anecdotes descriptive of Bryan's position after the election which caused tumults of laughter. Fulton Talks at Length. Senator Fulton was the last speaker. He spoke quite at length, though it was too warm, he said, and too early in the campaign to go deeply into the issues in volved in the coming election. An interested listener to the various speeches upon the stage was George H. Williams. who applauded vigorously Bra Klealand, President of Forty - Fifth Precinct Kepub- -lean Club, Who Presided at Taft Compansn Meeting;. when something Iras said that especially pleased him. Among the visitors from other towns who occupied positions upon the platform were Senator J. N. Hart, of Baker City: S. L. Cline. of Corvallis, and many others who are prominent in various parts of the state. . . . Fulton Wants Taft Clubs. Senator Fulton, in the closing address, expressed confidence that Taft and Sher man would be the choice not only of Ore gon electors, but of the enttre country, and. heartily favored the formation of Taft clubs in every precinct of the state. He compared Taft with Bryan, said the lat ter was known among the Democrats as a "commoner" because he ran for office so often, and made reference to Bryan's statement that If elected this time he would not be a candidate In 1912. Mr. Fulton said he was glad of that, as the Republican party could now rest secure in that if Bryan is not elected this year he will run again four years hence, and bring defeat upon the Democratic party, "as he is in the habit of doing." Mr. Fulton said that Bryan had crit icised the Republican administration for the expenditures of the last Con gress, amounting to 11.800,000,000. But Mr. Fulton said that Bryan would not dare to specialize and name a single appropriation made which, if he had been in a position to do so, he would not have assisted in setting aside. The Army appropriation of $95,000,000, the Navy appropriation of $22,000,000. the $160,000,000 for the Postoffice Depart-. ment, making rural free deliveries pos sible all these, the Senator said, were necessary. Money for Rivers and Harbors. Fulton said that he advocated an ap propriation of 15.000,000 for rivers and harbors, and that this would be made at the next session. The Republican party, he said, did not wish to shirk the responsibility for framing the law when it was in power, but it also wants the credit which is due for the great good these laws accomplish. The financial flurry, of last Fall, said Mr. Fulton, was -but a Summer zephyr compared with .the tornado which blasted the country during a Democratic Ad ministration. He said there -is a growing feeling that there should be a more elas tic currency, and that this will be brought about at the next session of the Con gress. The' Aldrich bill, said the speaker, is but a temporary expedient. He then asked those assembled if they would in trust such vital issues to a Democrat who had stood upon three different platforms, and who would bring the value of the American dollar down by thefree coinage of silver. Bryan, he said, first came out on the free-silver platform, then landed on another pinnacle with the cry of im perialism, and has finally come forward with the anti-injunction platform. Anti-Injunction Plank. The speaker said that the insular pos sessions must be retained until the peo ple become self-govrning. He said that after he read over the anti-injunction plank, "that injunctions should not issue in any case where injunctions would not Issue were no labor dispute involved," three times, he was obliged to ask a Democratic neighbor what it meant. He received the reply that Bryan would ex plain. Mr. Fulton then went on to say that the plank was worthless, for in junctions are never Issued because of the labor dispute involved, but on the charge that one person Is about to Injure the property of another. The speaker said that the antl-lnjunc-tion plank waa hailed by Gompers with Joy because he is a Democrat, pure and simple, belonging to that class known aa 'Tion-partlsans. ' He said that the reason for the panic, in his belief, was that certain Wall street financiers wished to punish the Repub lican administration for bringing them to justice. Must Revise the Tariff. The speaker then said that the time has come to revise the tariff, and that this will doubtless be done at the next session of Congress. He believed Taft and Sherman, not Democrats, should be put at the head of the Nation during such a strenuous and critical time aa the next four years will be. jfV ' ;AJ ! fc -f a-tJ? -' 4 INDIANA liJ DOUBT One of Principal Battlegrounds in Present Campaign. DEMOCRATS HAVE HOPES Its Previous Spurning of Bryan 'Bal anced by Changed Conditions. Fairbanks and Beveridge MuBt Save the Bay. OREGONIAN SEWS BUREAU, Washington, July 18. Indiana is ac knowledged to be the most doubtful state now In the Republican column; that is, the most doubtful of the large states. Montana, Nebraska, Colorado and Nevada are all doubtful, but their loss would not mean so much to the Republican party as the state furnish ing the present Vice-President and the Democratic nominee for that office. Fifteen electoral votes are to be had In Indiana, enough to swing the elec tion, perhaps, and for that reason In diana will be one of the principal bat tlegrounds of the Fall campaign. Bryan has never carried Indiana; in fact, that state has been strongly Re publican in every Presidential contest since Bryan became a National figure, but conditions have changed since 1898, and there are peculiar reasons which encourage the Democrats to believe they can capture those 15 votes next November. When silver was an issue, Indiana went strongly Republican, but the silver question does not enter into the campaign this year. On the other hand, Indiana is represented on the Bryan ticket, and local pride will be of some assistance to the Democrats in their, fight for the Indiana electoral vote. Kern Will Help Bryan. While Kern is not a man to draw many Republican votes to his support in Indiana, yet he will aid largely In getting out the full Democratic vote for. the Democratic ticket, and when all the Democrats get together, In diana Is a decidedly doubtful state. It went strongly Republican in the last three- campaigns because gold Demo crats and conservative Democrats either voted the Republican ticket or remained away from the polls. The Democratic leaders, with the hope of the Vice-Presidential nominee, hope to get out the full Democratic vote in November. The Republicans are, to some extent, handicapped in Indiana this year be cause of the liquor question. Governor Hanley, who is . a . Prohibitionist, has taken steps which -have entirely elim inated the liquor and saloon element. These forces, quite powerful in them selves, .will be certain to Join .the Democratic procession. Kern's law partner is one of the attorneys repre senting the brewers and distillers be fore the Legislature. However, if sen timent in favor of local option - is as strong In Indiana as it has proved to be In some of the Southern states, this question may be a benefit, rather than a hindrance to the Republicans. Black Sheep- in Party. In Indiana, as in Oregon and Penn-' aylvania, considerable corruption has been disclosed among Republican officials.. During the administration of Governor Hanley the Republican State Auditor has been removed and sent to the peniten tiary; the Secretary of State was forced to resign and leave the state and two other state officials were let out for maladministration. The Republicans have undertaken to claim credit for having rid the state of unworthy public servants, but the Democrats will make the asser tion that the Republican party was re sponsible for installing crooks in office, and in the popular mind, this usually proves to be the winning contention. It will require the very shrewdest man agement on the part of Vice-President Fairbanks and Senators Hemenway and Beveridge to keep Indiana in the Repub lican column this Fall, but they will all be unusually active when the time comes. Fairbanks Big Factor. Fairbanks still has hopes of landing a Presidential nomination, and it will be to his credit if he can point to a Republican victory in Indiana this year, for he would be entitled to a large share of the credit for such a victory. Senator Hemenway, who is to have charge of Western Re publican headquarters, can hardly afford to neglect his own state, in view of its vast importance to the party. Nor can Senator Beveridge, who regards himself as the annolnted leader of the Republican party in Indiana, afford to let the state slide into the Democratic column. Beveridge believes he is chosen by Providence to keep Indiana in line, and his pride would be sorely hurt should Indiana give her vote to Bryan. Bev eridge, like Fairbanks, has Presidential hopes, and he does not want his record to show inability to hold Indiana in line against a candidate like Bryan. RECALL FOR JUDGE HANNA Prohls, It Is Said, Don't Like His Decisions on Medford Charter. MEDFORD, Or., July 20. (Special.) Reports are current to the effect that Judge H. K. H,anna, of the First Judi cial District of Oregon, is to be the subject of a recall petition, to be cir culated by Prohibitionists, on account of his decision sustaining the Medford city charter, which came up for action a short time ago. Leaders of the Prohibition movement here say that they know nothing about this move, and It is credited now to that party in Josephine County. . Some time ago it was reported that Judge Hanna was about to resign, that he might assist his son, H. K., Jr., in his law practice; but his friends are now urging him to retain the office, for the present at least. War on Needless Noise. NEW YORK, July 20. New York's crusade against unnecessary noise is on in earnest under Police Commissioner Bingham's order, and although Sunday is an off-day for street hawkers, sev eral arrests were made. Several too vociferous push-cart men were among the victims. Today the police, under instructions. will begin their first week-day's work in an effort . to sup press the noise-makers. Vendors, scissors-grinders with bells and bugles, old-clothes men, unnecessarily noisy vtliic'es, trolley cars with flat wheels and other nuisance-makers are under the tan. ' Ballplayers Escape Indictment. SALEM, Or.. July 20. (Special.) The Marion County grand Jury ad journed today without returning any indictments against the members of the Salem baseball team for playing on Sunday. - Parasols $32 Of extra good quality silk, in all the leading colors ; some have fancy bor ders, some in plain colors. Have one matching your suit to complete your costume. Hegular values np to $5.50, at this very low price, each $3.49 Tt ettl For Hot Weather Window Screens, 39c values, special at.oO Gas Plates, 2-burner, $4.50, special.. $3.50 Gas Plates, 3-burner, $5.50, special. .$4.40 Garden Hose, 50 feet, 34-inch, sp'l... $4.95 Hose Reels, $1 value, special price, ea..8(C Lawn Sprays, $1 value, special price, ea..80 W i c k 1 e s s Oil Cook Stoves, 2-brnr..4.50 Galv. ' Iron Sprinklers, 89c value, sp'1...40 Combination G r a nite Iron Gas Stove Sauce pans, special, set. 85 Covered Lunch Baskets special, only 30 Picnic Plates, doz.3? Lemon Squeezers.. .4 pt waves play. ling Worth $2.50, on sale for Worth $3.00, on sale for D ted ecora Cups and Saucers, small sizes, regular price 73c, on sale AQf. at this special price," ea. "''C Stone Bowls, for mixing Q cake, 6V2-in. size, sp'l., ea. '. 71,2-inch size, special, ea. . 10 Cups and Saucers, china; large size coffee cups; on sale 1 O at this special price, ea. CUT GLASS REDUCED Sugar and Creamer, regular price $4.o0; on sale at this fljO QC special price, set Vases, reg. woi Vases, reg. worth t" 1 Af $16.50; special, ea Berry Bowls, regula Berry Bowls, regular O? C A C price $6.50 ; . sp T, ea THE SUMMER-PORCH NUMBER Or UDlES'nOFiE JOURNAL WINS BRIDE Br THREATS RATHER THAN BE HAUNTED, IiADY SAYS YES. Sequel Is a Divorce Case in Which Wife Tells How She Was Won , to Become Alley's Wife. ST. LOUIS, July 19. (SpeciaI.)-After two unhappy matrimonial ventures, Mrs. Marie Sezer, 78 years old and well-to-do, wan induced to undertake a third when William Axley. aged 66 and a widower, threatened to drown himself and return to haunt her if she refused him. Her divorce suit against Axley. nearly three years after their marriage, is now under advisement in the Circuit Court. As Mrs. Sezer spoke little English, and Axley less German, their courtship nat urally lacked fluency. She lived alone in her home at 1610 Carr street, and Axley lived three doors west, doing his own cooking, washing and mending. For sev eral years their conversation was con fined to the following: , "The tip-top of the mornln to you, Mrs. 6ezer." "Guten morgen. mein herr." In the Fall of 1905. according to testi mony at the hearing, Axley varied the salutation a bit. "The tip-top of the mornln" to you," he said. "Will you lend me JIT' "Guten morgen, mein herr, ja wohl," she answered, producing the dollar. For five mornings this scene was re peated. Then the widow introduced a var iation by positively declining to lend any more money. A few mornings later Axley encountered Mrs. 6ezer at her front gate. Said he: ing i uesaay 3 Every Bathing at Fourth Less Dont start ... and pretty the regular Materials are most called-for colors, prettily trimmed with braid, to match. They are absolutely fast-color bathing suits that service. Reg. Prices fTffTf'T'Ff T 7CC o p- $2.50 to $8.50; choice $1.88 Worth $4.00, on sale for Worth $5.00, on sale for $2.25 HAVI LAND Chi ina AND n other o ar gains DECORATED HAVLLAND CHINA Chocolate Pots, regu-, tfjl Q7 lar $2.95; sp'l., each. -P Sugar Bowls, regular $1.25 OA values, special price, each..O"C Creamers, regular price CO 85c, on sale, special, each. .OOC POTTERY VASES Haiid-painted and shaded in del-' icate colors, at special low prices : $3.00 values, special, ea..$2.00 Reg. price $1.50, special. $1.00 Reg. price $2.00, special.. $1.34 Reg. price $1.00, special. . .67 Reg. price $5.00, special.. $3.34 BARGAIN TABLE Of decorated German china, in a large assortment of fancy odd pieces; berry bowls, fruit plates, olive dishes and chocolate cups and saucers and man v other use ful articles . . ONE-THIRD LESS Take OneWithYouon Your Vacation Nothing you carry with you on your trip to the beach will give you more pleasure than the Summer porch number of the Ladies' Home Journal. When you relax, you want to read. You will be glad to have your favorite mag azine to pick up at these times. We will supply you. Copies are on sale at our Pattern Counter, or .at the Sta tionery Department, at 15c each. If you will be gone more than a month, we will mail you another number. You can't invest 15c to better advantage, if you seek comfort, pleasure and information at. small cost. Some of the interesting feature's in this number are : The Mystery of Miss Mott, a continued story by Carolyn Atwater Ma son. Needlework for the Summer Porch, by some of the best authorities in America."" The most Amazing Army in the World, by C. Wm. Bebee, of the New York Zoological Society. Summer Boarders are written about in a most interesting manner by Sarah Tyson Rorex. You will be pleased with this article, whether you are a Sum mer boarder or take them yourself. REMEMBER! All This Costs You Bat Fifteen Cents "The tip-top of the mornln' to you. Will youi marry me?" "Nein," replied the widow promptly, "I will not You're too young only a boy." Axley was then 66. "Then I'll throw myself into the Missis sippi," he said, with an air of despair, "and I'll come back and see you after I'm dead." Mrs. Sezer trembled. She thought of her big house, vacant save for herself, and de cided that she could never again enjoy a wink of sleep with the ghost of a suicide on the premises. So she changed her mind and said: "Ach, Mr. Axley, I'll marry you." The same day they sought the office of the marriage license clerk. When he de manded $1.50 the bridegroom found him self deeply interested in the scene on view through the window. The bride re lieved his embarrassment by producing the fee, she testified In her divorce suit. They went to a priest. He performed the ceremony, and asked $10. As the bridegroom assumed an abstracted air, the bride once more came to his pecuniary relief. 1 At her home she ejected a tenant, re papered and refurnished the room he had vacated, and placed it at the disposal of her new husband. She bestirred herself, she says, to cook, mend and care for him according to the best which her long ex perience had taught her. But the bride's rheumatism proved to be the little rift in the lute of their happi ness. Axley found that one of his honey moon duties was lifting his portly bride to a sitting position in bed each morning, as she was unable to assume that posture unaided. ' He acted as a human derrick for a week and then said: "I'm not very strong. I guess I'll sleep upstairs after this." The bride had to hire a carpenter to rig a pulley and cord over her bed, by the help of which she was able to lift herself. After that, she says, she saw her hus band only at meal times.. He was work ing as a watchman, was away all day and retired to his room right after supper, according to his wife's testimony. Suit We Own Than Regular for the beach without a . bathing suit, and don't price for one. There sale on here right at the height of the season, at the time when all who swelter here are planning cool days where the alpacas in various grades; $3.00 Worth $6.00, on sals for Worth $7.50, on sale for $3.75 $4. 75 a Pair and Up For Lace Curt'ins For your cottage at the beach or for your Portland home that you take such pride in these curtains are decidedly ornamental. 'Tis a sale on a large number of short lots that we have grouped at special prices. Included are Soutache and novelty effects, Arabian, Brussels and Irish point; they are white or cream color, full size and width, and many grades. Read the following items and see how well they are reduced Regular $8.00 val- "7d ues, special for J J $10.00 values, special. . ..$5.95 $11.00 values, special $6.65 $12.00 values, special $7.50 $12.50 values, special. . ..$8.00 $13.50 values, special. . ..$8.75 He admitted in the suit that during the eight months he lived at Mrs. Axley's home he gave her only $8. She denied that he ever gave her a nickel and declared that, on the contrary, she settled nearly $100 of his debts. In July, 1906, he left the house on being asked to fry his own potatoes for supper and took bachelor quarters at 1513 Frank lin avenue, where he has lived since. Mrs. Axley charges him in her suit with desertion and general fndlgnities. She was born in France, and at the age of 23 married Nicholas Loriette, so that she might cease working, for her. father, a plasterer, who made her climb on the scaffold and handle the trowel as if she had been a man. She and Loriette came to St. Louis 55 years ago, and she has lived in the same block ever since. After 43 years of married life Loriette died. A year later she married Conrad Sezer, the only one of her husbands she lo-ed, she says. He drank himself to death, she declares, in three years. For ten years Bhe lived alone, and then came Axley and the present divorce suit. Two Drown at Stockton. STOCKTON, Cal., July 20. Charles Jacobs, a barber of this city, and James L. Conley, a barkeeper, formerly of Oak land, were drowned in the San Joaquin River, near Stockton. Fifteen people were on a pleasure and fishing trip in a launch when the two men. while trying to pass each other on the, outside of the cabin, fell into the water and were drowned. Jacobs was active in local Democratic politics and was for a short time a police and fire commissioner. He leaves a wifa and two children. v Lee Statue Pleases Them. NHW YORK. July 20. Judge George T. Christian, of Richmond, Va.. is here from Providence, R. I., where with other mem bers of the Virginia commission he in spected the new Valentine statue of Gen eral R. E. Lee, designed for Statuary Hall in the National Capitol. They are Hose Display In the Knit Aisle, Monday, you will find a special showing of Ladies' Hose, in the plain cotton, embroid ered boot lace and allover lace ef fects, in all the different shades; also a large showing of infants' and Misses' Sox in plaids, lace and plain lisles, in white, black, pink, blue and cardinal. You should see these. peciais Beach Linens T ablecloths, heavy Scotch homespun cream new color damask, with fan cy colored border; val pay ue $2, special.. $1.65 Richardson's Table is Damask, full bleached linen, 2 yards wide, 12 patterns in the lot; our $1.00 quality, at. .78 Heavy Bath Towels, extra large and full- the bleached; 40c val.29 White Table Oil Cloth, slightly imperfect ; on special sale, yd.121 12V2c Ginghams, hun dreds of yds., in plaids, checks and stripes; all colors, sp'l., yard..9 All-Wool Oregon Flan nel, black or.ly; excel lent for ba'.hing suits and skirts; value 50c the yard, special. 29 $4.50 $5.63 $15.00 $16.50 $17.50 $18.50 $19.00 $21.00 $25.00 values, special, values, special, values, special, values, special, values, special, values, special, values, special. ..$9.85 .$10.75 .811.50 .$12.35 $12.75 .$13.95 .$15.00 greatly pleased with the statue. Virginia has been represented for years in Statu ary Hall by a figure of Washington, but the other niche to which the Old Domin ion is entitled has all this time been va cant because the Legislature was willing to accept none but Lee's statue. Wireless Message From Ship. MONTREAL, July 20. The Point de Amour signal station in the Straits of Belle Isle reports that it was in wireless communication with the British cruiser Indomitable today. His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales, Earl Dudley and other distinguished visitors to the Que bec tercentennary celebration are on board. McBride Visits Aberdeen. ABERDEEN, Wash., July 30. (Special.) Ex-Governor Henry McBride came to Aberdeen ths evening and will remain on Grays Harbor until Wednetday. He comes to look after his political fences. He was tendered a banquet and later held an Informal reception in the lobby of the Hotel Washington. 100 Doses $1 True only of Hood's Sarsaparilla, the one great blood purifier and general tonic. This remarkable medicine has effected many radical and permanent cures that are the wonder of the world. It eradicates all humors from pimples to scrofula. 100 Doses $1 In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as Sarsatabs. 100 doses $L