13 HT FUTU FOE 10 PER CENT, DISCOUNT FOR A FEW DAYS. DON'T DELAY THE MORNING- OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, -MAY 8, 1909- IB PLUG RE HERE YQHJ STL o a JGIH.F c THE LAST AND BEST LARGE TRACT ON THE PENINSULA If you want to make some of the easiest money that was ever made, go down to EAST ST. JOHNS TODAY or at the earliest possible date and look over the "situation of affairs." Study the situation well get your bearings by understanding the relative position of our property to the SWIFT PACKING PLANT, MONARCH LUMBER MILL, NORTH BANK DEPOT and other important factors in the development of the PENINSULA, you will invest every dollar at your command in EAST ST. JOHNS property. Our agents will be on the ground all day Sunday to show the property, and they will give HONEST INFORMATION and render every assistance to everyone interested. " 'i''3' fT 'gsr! ljiimnm!m -1 1' . j-j . f nnnnJWWiH rrbb t NEW $18,00Q SCHOOL TO BE BUILT ON OUR PROPERTY While improvements are. going on we will allow the above discount off any lot or block you select. Ask our agents to show plats where prices are plain ly marked. The present prices are EXTREMELY LOW and the 10 per cent we are allowing for a short time assures a SAFE and PROFITABLE INVESTMENT. There are some very choice lots left on the COLUMBIA BOULEVARD, SOUTH DEPOT STREET, OREGONIAN AVENUE and other cen tral streets which should be secured AT ONCE. The purchasers of these will reap fourfold profits. New stores, houses and factories are now building and no other section "of the BUSINESS and INDUS TRIAL CENTER of the Peninsula is assured of such progress. . . . EAST ST. JOHNS IS 2000 FEET NEARER SWIFT'S PLANT AND MONARCH LUMBER MILL THAN SWIFT'S TOWNSITE ITSELF, WHERE BUSINESS LOTS ARE SELLING FOR $2000. GO DOWN TO EAST ST. JOHNS TODAY OR TOMORROW AND INVESTIGATE CUT THIS OUT AND KEEP IT FOR REFERENCE No man with any reasoning power doubts the great expan sion that is bound to come to EAST ST. JOHNS, which is in the most commanding position on the Peninsula. The Columbia Boulevard, the great highway -of the Peninsula, runs through our property, and it will be the business district. The North Bank depot is onlv two blocks awav. With stores, schools and factories going up rapidly, VALUES WILL GO UP RAPIDLY.. Don't let tout monev sleep in the bank, INVEST EVERY DOLLAR OF IT IN EAST ST. JOHNS. ALL STREETS GRADED LOTS $275 Up TERMS 10 Down 3 Monthly WATER MAINS LAID HOW TO GET THERE AND WHERE TO GET OFF Take St. John' car, which leaves Second and "Washington streets every 15 minutes. ASK CONDUCTOR to let you off at EAST ST. JOHNS STATION. Our office is situated on the corner with the big signboard, where printed plats of our property can be secured and all infor mation of the property can be had. Agents will gladly show you over the whole ground, and assist you in every way in selecting a residence, business, factory or investment site, and you can rest assured that whatever you buy will prove a profitable investment. THE SP ANTON COMPANY PHONES M and A 2S28 270 STARK ST. SAYS HE GAMBLED 24. 1903. She said yesterday that he de serted her July 1, 1906, and she was granted a divorce. Wife Accuses J. J. Stewart of Buying Mining Stocks. BRINGS SUIT FOR DIVORCE Woman Also Charges Husband With Drunkenness and Brutality. Tales of Marital Woe Are Told in the Court. A mania for gambling in mining stocks and a love for the "cup that cheers" have not only depleted the pocketbook of John J. Stewart and shattered his wife's nervous system, but brought dis aster to his marital relations, if his wife, Mrs. Ida Plymate Stewart, is to be be lieved. Perhaps the purchase of mining stocks on margins would not have brought about the fatal result had Stew art been more successful, but his wife says that he invariably lost. She brought a divorce suit in the Circuit Court yes terday morning, asking to be allowed to again be known by the name of her for mer husband, Plymate. Mrs. Stewart says she married Stew art at Eugene, September 36, 1900. In 1905. she says, they moved to Monterey. Cal., where she was compelled to take in washings to support herself and her five-year-old son by her former mar riage. She says she was brutally beaten by Stewart, and that the money which should have been spent, for edibles went for mining stocks and liquor, kucena Stafford brought a divorce suit against Oliver M. Stafford in the Circuit Court yesterday. She accuses him with a statutory offense, although she says she has been to him a loving wife. They were married at Crystal Brook, Wis.. April 2. 1SSS. Site desires to resume her maiden name. Lucena A'Delle. Hannah Armstrong obtained a divorce from Dr. William 3L Armstrong yester day morning, because he deserted her. She said her husband wanted her to sij?n a i.'S.OOO' note with him last Septem ber for the purchase of an automobile. She considered the machine whicli he in tended to purchase too expensive, and refused to sign the note. On October 1 a bill collector came to the house. She Informed her husband. t which he promptly bubbled over with wrath, she testified, and seizing a glass sign which hung on the wall, mahed It on the floor. With that, said Mrs. Armstrong, the doc tor left, and has never returned, although he has been seen about town. Until last Fall the couple lived at 5S5 Commer cial street, where Mrs. Armstrong said she was obliged to take In boarders and do sewing in order to keep up running expenses. She said the cause for this was her husband's extravagance. She married him at Chicago. September 15. 1S97. Clreuit Judge Oantenbeln granted the divorce. Charles A. Center said lie was married at Marshall, Mich.. May 25. 1S92. and al ways treated his wife tenderly and con siderately. But Klmina Cemer left him in July. 1906. he said, leaving him. to care for their only child. In six months he will be free to marry again. Mary Sanbum obtained a divorce yes terday from Alson 13. Sanburn. because he desertid her In August. 1907. They were married -April IS. 1901. Bertha Rieg married J. M. Rieg June LOVE'S WILIj IS EXPLAINED Judge Bronaugh Tells How Estate Should Be Disposed OT. Judge Bronaugh handed down a de cision in the Circuit Court yesterday con struing the Intent of Lewis Love when he made, in 1902, a codicil to his will. The latter gave to Green C. Love, Fred D. Love and Mary C. Stafford property valued at approximately 1200,000 each. The property was distributed in 1907. Judge Bronaugh held that Lewis Love intended in his codicil to provide that Fred D. Love and Mary C. . Stafford should own their respective portions of the estate untrammeled by any interest on the part of wife or husband in either case, and that what property is left shall go to their heirs when they die. He also decided that Lewis Love intend ed in his codicil to make provision for the possible death of Green C. Love be fore the distribution of the estate in 1907, and that the estate having been distributed. Green C. Love's title is ab solute. The codicil provided that in case Green died before January, 1907, his por tion of the estate was to go to the other two heirs. Because of the ambiguity of the codicil Green has been prevented from making improvements on his por tion of the estate, located near Wood-lawn. ficlent to show premeditation and, there fore, to secure a conviction of first-degree murder. Lester W. Humphreys ap peared as special prosecutor for the state, while Attorney John F. Logan repre sented the defendant. MAY SAVE EXCISE PETITION Highly Probable That It Will Be Placed on. the Ballot. The excise board petition will go upon the ballot at the June election unless City Auditor A. L. Barbur can success fully combat a writ of mandamus, served upon him yesterday. The order for the writ was signed by Presiding Circuit Judge Bronaugh yesterday afternoon. The City Auditor is given Ave days in which to show cause why he should not place the question upon the ballot. The suit is brought by the state upon relation of Paul Ruder. In the complaint it is" asserted that the petition contains more than 3500 signa tures, and that it was filed April 7. The signatures are those of legal voters, it is asserted, although the City Auditor is about to leave the petition off the ballot because he has not found that 15 per cent of the registered voters have signed It. CLAVSOX IS IX DEFAULT Son Refused to Pay His Slother Monthly Stipend. William Clayson agreed to pay Annie M. Clayson. his mother. $60 a month for life. Circuit Judge Cleland found yester day afternoon that he Is in arrears to the amount of $1700. Mrs. Clayson had brought suit through Attorney John F Logan against her sou for -this amilint, and the case went in her favor by default. The agreement by which William Clay son was to pay his mother $60 a month was made while a lawsuit over his dead brother's estate was pending in an Alaska court. The brother, F. H. Clayson, was murdered while en route from Skagway to Dawson on the trail. The perpetrator of the- crime was sought out and hunged at Dawson. Pleads Guilty to Manslaughter. S. Osborne Edwards, indicted by the grand Jury on a charge of murder in the first degree for the shooting of Thom as J. McGalliard in the Richelieu Hotel on Sixth street last January, pleaded guilty to manslaughter yesterday morn ing. Presiding Judge Bronaugh, of the Circuit Court, received his plea and will pass sentence after hearing testimony as to the circumstances of the shooting. Deputy District Attorney Page informed the Court that the evidence was insuf- Bondsmen Must Pay Up. Mark Gill, Dr. A. B. Rockey and B. W. Gage must pay the St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company $900 as bonds for Laurin Pease. When Pease took a position as agent for the Insurance com pany the three signed his bond, guaran teeing his safe handling of the company's money. Later the company brought suit, and obtained a $1500 judgment against him. Failing to recover from him suit was brought against the bondsmen, and tried yesterday before a jury in Judge Cleland's department of the Circuit Court. PLAN BIG WELCOME Didn't Steal the Veal. William Rueddy was acquitted by a jury in 'Judge Gatens' department of the Circuit Court yesterday afternoon of the theft of 12 pounds of veal from the steamer Beaver, belonging to the Clat skanie Transportation Company. Rueddy was said to have been caught putting the veal In a gunny sack at 2:80 A. M. one night last month. Livesley Is Exonerated. George Livesley was exonerated at 5:45 o'clock last night of a charge of the larceny of $3000 by embezzlement from John Salsgaber. The latter had sold 100 bales of hops to M. Remstein. manager of a local brewing company, and Livesley Is alleged to have collected the money. Salsgaber alleged that it was never paid to him. . Sent to Reform School. Joe Mclntyre, 14 years old, was sen tenced to the Reform School from the Juvenile Court yesterday afternoon. Charges of the theft of chickens, and pigeons, and of having broken the plate glass window in the grocery store of Shaughnessy & Thompson, at Archer Place, were brought against the lad. Wemnie Suit on Trial. The suit of A. F. Swensson against the Overlook Land Company, E. ' Henry Wemme. George Joseph and Eva Joseph Is on trial on its merits before Presiding Judge Bronaugh of the Circuit Court. All day yesterday was spent in the making of the opening statements by the attorneys. , THE AVERAGE MAN. Fifteen dollars or twenty-five dollars is about what the average man cares to spend for a suit. Those we show at these two prices are the very best to be had at those figures. J. L. Bowman & Co., Fifth and Alder. THE HOT SALT BATH House at Hotel Moore. Seaside, Or., will open today. The early opening this year is owing to the number of people visit ing the beach. .The Hotel Moore is open all the ear. WE HAVEMOVED To ' 144-148 Fourth, opposite Honeyman Hardware Co. We have no connection with any other stores. Goodyear Shoe Company. BOCK, BOCK TODAY. The last car of Pabst's Milwaukee draught bock, beer for this season will arrive this morning. S. A. Arata & Co., Arata Bros. . Oregon Herbs (a tea) best remedy for kianey and bladder troubles. Nature's own preparation. 50c at all druggists. All Town's Prepare for the Portland Excursion. WILL START ON MAY 10 Many Places to Be Visited by Local Business Men Are Making Ex tensive Arrangements to En tertain . Guests.' The Portland Business Men's excursion promises to be the one great event of in terest in every town through which it passes to judge by the volume of letters and telegrams received from towns prof fering hospitality. So effusive have they been that in the office of A. D. Charl ton, assistant general passenger agent for the Northern Pacific, was a pile of communications a foot high. Every com munication represented some town wish ing to force hospitality upon the visitors. At the Commercial Club the situation was just as pronounced. In the list, of names published yester day were many of the older generation of business men men who remember the building of the N. P. from Seattle to Portland. One of these was in Mr. Charl ton's office talking like a boy about the excursion. "Yes. sir," he said. "I have never been through that territory since the days of the stagecoach. Behindhand, am I? Well. I've been far too busy watching my business grow to watch the country. The truth Is, I don't know a single thing about the Grays Harbor country, and. of course. I have never been over the North. Bank." Tom Richardson told of many others. HELPS SPREAD DISEASE It Is a murderous practice to spit in public places. The germs of consump tion are often present in the sputum carelessly deposited on the street or sidewalk. The sputum dries, is ground into powder by passing traffic and the garms are then whirled about in the air for healthy people to breathe. If the lungs are sore from coughing or other causes, the germs thus inhaled fasten on the sore spot and set up what is called "mixed Infection." No precaution should be neglected to quickly check a cough or cold. Much of the sickness to which we are sub ject has its origin in the "common cold." To break up a cold quickly the following simple -formula is recom mended: Take two ounces of Glycerine, a half-ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure and eight ounces of good Whisky. Mix thoroughly and take a teaspoonful every four hours. It is claimed that this mixture, which provides a quantity sufficient to last the average family an entire year, will break up a cold in twenty-four hours, and cure any cough that is curable. It is better to purchase the ingredients separately and prepare the mixture at home. The genuine Virgin Oil of Pine com pound pure is prepared only by Leach Chemical -Co., Cincinnati, O.. and is put up only in half-ounce vials, each vial securely sealed in a round wooden case o Insure its freshness, and purity. "They are just like boys." he said. "Everybody is so enthusiastic that we are kept answering phone calls all day. They want to know just what we are going to do, and, of course, I can't tell them all at once. But it's surprising the number of old fellows don't quote me as calling them old who have never been over the route since they passed through by stagecoach." Has Prepared Booklet. The N. P. has issued a smart little booklet describing the excursion. The edition is strictly limited, and only those going on the excursion will receive the souvenir. Copies will be presented to the different organizations visited and to people of special prominence met by the business men. The first page of the booklet is occu pied with an address to the town visited. It says: "As business men of Portland, we are advised of the progress being made by the people of the State of Washington, but we desire to give ourselves the pleas ure of seeing it personally and meeting you. our neighbors, face to face. "We come to renew old acquaintances and make new ones. "We come as commercial representa tives of the chief city of ;the incomparable Columbia, of which Washington owns more than Oregon. "We come dirring-this pre-Exposltion period to again thank you for joining in making the Lewi3 and Clark Centennial Exposition the most substantially bene ficial of all the efforts in that direction anywhere in the United States. "We come to assure you that we have the same interests as yourselves in doing everything in our power to make the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific a surpassing suc cess. "The week of May 10-15, 1909. spent in visiting many points In the 'Evergreen State," will certainly be advantageous to us, and we feel that this getting to gether of the people of the Pacific North west should become a habit." Only Four Chances Left. AH but four reservations for the trip have been made, and application for these must be made today to Tom Richardson or to A. D. Charlton. Towns along the route are even now resorting to threats to get the business men to take lunch or dinner with them. A letter from Elma, Wash., says the business men are crazy to entertain the visitors for 45 minutes. "We are going to prepare lunch for them, too." We have raised all the funds necessary and we want you to wire that you'll be here to eat with us." says the letter. The threat follows: "If you don't eat with us, I am afraid the reception will fall rather flat." ' It was explained to Elma that abso lutely rigid preparation and engagements prevented stopping for lunch, but in def erence to the feelings of the Elma com mercial men, the stay .was lengthened to 30 minutes, making the stop one of the longest on the trip. Facts for Weak Women Nine-tenths of all the silcnM -f wnmj a..-. j: - wmwm uu-w U UUlfc UbiiugciUCUl Wa7 U1V ease of the organs distinctly feminine. Such sickness can be cured is cured every day by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. It acts directly on the organs affected and is at the same time a general restora tive tonic for the whole system. It cures female complaint right in the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, examinations and local treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, and so abhorrent to every modest woman. We shall not particularize here as to the symptoms of those peculiar affections incident to women, but those wanting full information as to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred to the People's Com mon Sense Medical Adviser 1008 pages, newly revised and up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of 21 one cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only; dr, in cloth' binding for 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. :;.'fl - v. TT s.4 - ' VV- 9 y mwm r?mmm CENTRAL CONVENIENT DESIRABLE ERLOOK BEAUTIFUL VIEW BY DAY FAIRYLAND VIEW BY NIGHT. Overlook will always be one of the most desirable residence districts in Portland. It is overlooking the river, close in, has three good car services (take Mississippi, Union or Williams avenue car and transfer at Russell and Shaver streets). Improvements in. Bull Run water, cement walks, graded streets, electric lights, both telephones. LOTS 50x100 FEET. PRICES REASONABLE TERMS EASY. OVERLOOK LAND CO. h. wemme, Pres. and Mgr. AGENTS ON -THE GROUND. Fhone M. 216. 207 BURNSIDE STREET.