. THE MOItyiXG OREGOXIAy. SATURDAY. SEPTE3IBEK 4, l'JOD. 5 ISi FLOOD STRICKEN Cloudburst Overflows Rivers and Waters Sweep Part of District. HALF OF TULA DESTROYED Conditions There Equal Those at Monterey F.tsht Months Re- . quired to Restore Highways. Railroads Washed Out. , MEXICO CITT. Sept. 3. A special dls r patch received here from Morelia says that floods yesterday ruined a large sec tion of th Zamora district. A terrible cloudburst In the mountains caused rivers and streams to overflow and miles of f"rtile valleys arc under water. . Further details have been received here of the Hood that swept the town of Tula, in the state of Tamalpals, last Saturday. A wave between 45 and 60 feet high en pulfed the lower half of the town. Two hundred houses and the San Juan bridge re carried away and many lives were lr;. The storm raged for three days. Trrrible as are the conditions at Monte r.y. the correspondent declares they are J-!5t as bad at Tula and vicinity. Th3 entire northeastern section of the stat? Is said to have been laid waste. Railroad and telegraphic communication was destroyed and the population of Tula, some T- persons, was cut off from the rest of the nation for four days. It will be six or eight months before the high ways can be restored." Thirty bodies have been recoveredandmany bodies of sheep herders and mountaineers are being washed down into the valley below. ' High Water In Rio Grande. WASHINGTON. Sept. 3. The State De partment is In receipt of a telegram from C. A. Miller, the I'nited States Consul at Matamoras. Mexico, in which he says that the Rio Grande floods are higher pr.ian u?ual: that a telegram from Camar j states that serious damage has been caused to the buildings in the city and ranches near the river; that no lives were lost In the city, but 15 bodies were recovered in the surrounding country, and that there are probably many more, but the exact number Is unknown. Mr. Miller says that a telegram from San Miguel reports considerable damage to the buildings there, but no loss of life. The river is reported to be falling. SCHOOLS TO BE SUBJECT Evening Star Grange Will Hold 1 First Fall Meeting Today. This afternoon the Evening Star Grange. Patrons of Husbandry, which meets In the hall on the Section Line road, east of Mount Tabor, will con sider the subject of Improving country schools. State Lecturer J. J. Johnson assigned this topic to all the Granges of the state, and the general outline and plan of discussion have been furnished by State Superintendent J. H. Ackerman. and Include a study of all the conditions surrounding the n:ral schoolhouse loca tion of the schoolhouse, its general sani tary condition, its outhouses, methods of light, heat and ventilation, blackboards and method of employing teachers. Committees have been appointed to ex amine country schoolhouses and report on their condition and offer suggestions js to improvements. Addresses will be delivered and essays read by teachers and superintendents at the meetings of tne Granges. For the entire month of September the topic will be discussed, be ginning today. On Saturdays most of the Granges hold tlaeir monthly meetings, s.'me meetings falling on the first Satur day of the month. It is hoped to bring r.ut many valuable suggestions, both from the reports of the investigating commit ter and from the addresses. GANG THREATENS VICTIM Man Escapes and Tells Police of Being Robbed of $25. 4 Threatened with death if he complained to the police. W. J. Eddy, of Hazeldell, Or., escaped from a gang of men In the North End last night and ran to police headquarters, where he told a story of having been robbed by a woman in the rear of the Different saloon, at 292 Burn side street of J25. When he accused the woman several men In the place, all of whom are under police surveillance, told him if he informed the police of the robbery they would kill him. Patrolman Everett later arrested Julia Shea, a woman with a lore police record. In connection with the robbery. Acting Captain Keller sent Sergeant Klenlan with a detail of police and the entire neighborhood was searched for the men who threatened Eddy, but without suc cess. GREEK PRINCES REMOVED Ixe Commands in Army and Mili tary Leaders Are Promoted. ATHENS. Sept. 4. King George today will sign a decree placing Crown Prince Constantlne and Prince Nicholas, at their own request, on the unattached list of the army and granting the other princes in the army two or three "years' Ieavs of absence to study abroad. Brigadier-General Smolenskl will re place Crcwn Prince Constantino as com-V-ia-irtor-in-chief and Colonel Cortbas, the leader of the military movement, will be aitpoir.t'd commander of the army corpa at Athens. - PERSONALJVIENTION. Hugh Hume, editor of the Spectator, loft last night for several weeks vaca tion at Seaside. L. J. Hicks has returned from a pleas ant outing at Crater Lake in Southern Oregon, where he spent several weeks. Mavor Philip Strelb and family, of Mil waukee, left the first of the week for TVillioit Springs, where they will remain three weeks Mr. and Mrs. R. TL Allison left for their home in Ashland this week, after mm ow X. a month In this city and Seattle. In Portland they visited Mr. Allison s sister. Mrs. W. F. Koehler. - Miss LucIIe Campbell, of Sellwood, "who left for Ping Yang. China, several weeks ago, to become a missionary nurse, writes her friends in Sellwood from Honolulu that she was. standing the voyage well. She will arrive at her destination this month. I A Rev. T. A. Thompson, pastor of the spokane-a venue Presbyterian Church. ji: fellwood. has returned from Ocean Park. where ne spent in pasi monin wun nil wife. He returned several aays before his vacation expired because of the death of Miss Mattle Schuyler, whose funeral he will conduct today. Miss Bernard has just returned to Port land from a four months" trip to New York and European fashion centers. . - R. R. Perkins, religious work director of the Portland Y. M- C- A., is spending a week in H. V. Stones cottage at Gearhart. W hile there Mr. Perkins Is reading proofs of a literary work; he has just completed. SALEM. Or., Sept. 3. (Spacial.) E. S. Tillinghast. superintendent of the Deaf Mute School, has returned from the East, where he went to attend a convention held at Chicago in June of the American Association for the Promotion of the teaching of speech to the deaf. While in the East Mj:. Tillinghast went on to the Carolinas for a visit with members of his family. ALBANY. Or., Sept. 3. (Special.) Eugene Shelby. Pacific Coast superin tendent of the Wells-Fargo Express Company, who has been inspecting the offices at Portland. Seattle and other Northwestern points, stopped In Albany tonight while -en route to his home In San Francisco and is a guest of his cou sin. Rev. Father Arthur Lane, rector of the Albany parish of the Roman Catholic Church. CHICAGO. Sept. 3. (Special.) North west people at hotels: From Portland T. S. McGrath. at the Congress. From Eugene E. W. Smith, at the Congress. WIFE OF FORMER SEATTLE MAX SAYS HE PROVED FALSE. Writes to Ixs Angeles Coroner She Took Poison Because She Was Deserted. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Sept. 3. (Spe cial.) Two letters received by Coroner Hartwell in the early morning mall and signed by Mrs. Peter N. Bergman, told of her intention to kill herself by tak ing poison and of her reasons for doing so, but so far her body has nofr been found. Investigation proved that there Is or was such a woman as Mrs. Berg man and that much of her written state ment Is correct. One letter follows: "I, Mrs. Peter X. Bergman, have taken poison and consequently there is no use holding an Inquest. Mrs. Peter N. Berg man." The other letter detailed her reasons. It follows: "I am about ready to take my life. My husband. Peter N. Bergman, has falsely deceived me. He Is a barber by trade, but recently has fallen heir to some money. He now refuses to give me what Is Justly due me. I worked after we were married. He spent all I had when we were first married. He admitted hav ing another wife in Chicago and said he vas going to try to make up with her. We lived in Seattle three years, we roomed at the Olympla Hotel. Yesler Way. Kenneth Hotel. First we lived at Slier apartment flats. 737 Mason street. San Francisco; California Hotel. Third street My husband worked for Johnnie Bernhard. 2-4 Hardy place, Stanford Ho tel." PROFESSORS THROWN OUT (Continued From First Page.) R. E. Hyslop was served with notice Saturday and action was likewise de ferred. Both gentlemen undertook to continue their duties, and at this Inter ference with the men previously In charge of the work of their respective de partments, to prevent a recurrence of their attempts to interfere w-ith the workmen, it became necessary to refuse them permission to go upon the experi mental farm. In the meantime it was" discovered they had extracted valuable records and correspondence and one of them had taken these to his home. In order to prevent further depredations their offices were locked and they were refused ccess to them. "Up to the present writing the offices, keys, correspondence. papers, rtaln valuable experimental work and a con siderable sum of money, together with other university property, are being un lawfully held, except so far as I have been able forcibly to obtain possession by virtue of the orders given me." CONDENSED NEWS BY WIRE ertn Th deficit In the Imperial Gov ernment for UKS is said to amount to $;i0, 500.000. Rockv Ford. Cola At Thursday's "water melon day" 10.000 m;lons were consumed tn addition to vast quantities of cantaloupes-. Washington Nicaragua has adjusted the clnlm of the Emery Con.pany, of Boston, for settlement of damages suffered by annul ment of its mahogany timber-cutting con cession. Wellington The President has appointed Roland B. Harvey, of Maryland, secre ary of the legation and Consui-Oeneral to Rou mania and Servia, and secretary of the Diplomatic Agency in Bulgaria. Washington San Salvador has heen celebrating the August festivals In henor of the patron saint of the city of San Sal vador, and ail government offices were closed the greater part of the week. London The English suffragettes who were arrested August 10. in Downing street in connection with the- plcketirg of Premier Asquith's residence, were sentenced Friday to pay fines of $1 J each, or spend seven days Jn Jail. Portsmouth. England. At the month of Portsmouth Harbor the Isle of Wight steamer, Durhes? of Kent, was run down by a government transport. There were 40 passengers on board the Duchess of Kent, but ail got ashore safely. Cincinnati Responding to an alarm of fire. William Willis, captain In the Fire Department at Norwood, found his own home in flames and the bodies of his eon. Elbert, and Vlrlis English, being carried from the place. Both had been suffocated. Washington While alighting from a car. Professor WIHU I- Moore. Chief of the Weather Bureau, fell and fractured an arm. Much to the su -prise of his friends, after having the bone set. he proceeded to his -wn of nee and performed his customary duties. CAREY ACT LAND OPENING "S.000 of Idaho's choicest acres in the famous Goose Creek Valley, Cassia County. Project financiered and con structed by the Kuhns. Write for book let to the Twin Falls Oakley Land & "Water Company, Milner. Idaho. I.fidleft, We Guarantee Tbem. Genuine Seal Handbags. They are leather lined, have coin purses and card cases, are of the finest workman ship and latest designs. A strictly high grade bag at a low-grade price. New arrival of high-grade Sponges and l hamols. STIPE, TAYLOR, DRUG CO.; 189 Morrison St. Marriage T.lcenses. SWAXSON-SODERSTROM Emll Swan ton citv; Huldi Soderstrom. 3, city. PAVIS-RICKETTS Earl Davis, over 21. Everett. Wash.; Mary Rlcketts. over IS. cUv. INGRAM-MARTEN J. TV. Ingram. 20. citv: Lizzie Marten. 2-. city. HOLLAND-MEANS Thomas Holland, 29, citv; Bertha Means, lrt. city. WOLF-H AYMAN Otto Wolf. S2. city; Florence Hayman. 1!. city. Weddlnc and visltlnsr cards. W. O. Smith Jb Co.. Washlncton bide. 4th and Wash. HAMBURG " BELLE BEATEN BY UHLAN But Time "Is Slower Than Made by Loser, Allowing for Slow Track. HAMBURG BELLE FAVORITE Second Race of Series for World's Trotting Championship Does Sot Equal Record Soprano Wins Horsebreeders' Race. READVILI.E. Mass., Sept. . 3. Over a Track fully two seconds slower than when the great Lou Dillon startled the world with a mile in two minutes, th9 trotting gelding Uhlan defeated Hamburg Belle in straight heats at the Readvllle track to day in the second meeting of the pair to decide the trotting ohampion shlp of the world. Hamburg Belle was a favorite before the start at odds of 5 to S, because of her success last week In the Initial meet ing of the cracks at Cleveland. At that time she earned the world's record of 2:OH4 for trotters In a race, two seconds better than the previous mark, which had stood since the Cresceus-The Ab bott race at Brighton Beach in 1903. fhlan'a Many Victories. Uhlan is a 5-year-old gelding by Bin gen out of Blonde by Sir Walter. Jr. He was bred by Arthur H. Parker, of Bed ford, Mass., once the owner of Bengen, for which he paid $32,000 at auction. When Uhlan was 3 years old, Mr. Parker sold him to Charles Sanders, of Salem, Mass., for 12500. The same season Uhlan won a race to a matinee wagon over the Headville track in 2:13i- In his 4-year-old form. Uhlan won all his races excepting the American Trotting Derby, securing a record of 2:074. the fastest race by a gelding of that age. This season his single defeat was by Hamburg Belle at Cleveland, where he previously had won, tieing the gelding race record of The Ab bott in 2:03. He repeated this per formance at Buffalo and bettered it to day by half a second. Results: Summary of Results. Championship trotting match, two in three Uhlan won two heats. Time. 2:04. 2:CVHi. Hamburg Belle also started. American Hosebreeders- Futurity, purse I8.-.00. two In three Soprano won two heats. Time. 2:09, 2:0SV Csarlna. The Wolverine, O'Nell. Betvaila. James. Meteor and Nancy McKerron also started. 2:0S pace, purss JlOQrt, two In three Ella Ambulator won secona and fourth heats. Time, 2:Ti, 2:07 4. Rollins won third heat. Time. 2:OS". Geraldine won first heat. Time. 2:09. The Bosun also started. 2:11 trot, purse $1000. two In three Baron May won second and 'third heats. Time, 2:08. 3:08. Demarest won first heat. Time,. 2:10',. Dr. Jack, Bell Bird, A. Laundry and Birch Leaf also started. American Horse Futurity, pacing, purse $2000. two In three Maggie winder won two heats. Time. 2:12. 2:124. Miss Eva Wilkes and La Copla also started. The Blue Hill Handicap, trotting, purse $2000, $1000 to winner and graded to $"i0 to sixth horse, one and one-half miles dash Peter Balta won, Olga W. second. Ralph Wick third, Almaden fourth. Lady Jonea fifth. Joe Onward sixth. Time. 3:15. Mc Dougall. Lester Boy, Albert V., Boxter and Prince Lavalard also started. The Neponset Handicap, pacing, purse $2000. $1000 to winner and graded to $50 fnr sixth horse, one and one-half miles dash Annabell Lee won. Alleen Wilson sec ond. Hal Raven third, Brenda Yorke fourth. Baron Whlpps fifth, Hallle Direct sixth. Time, 3:11 V-- Mendollte also started. BANK WILL FEEL PROBE (Continues From First Page.) Instituting civil suits against the stock holders to recover the amount of their subscriptions for which they are liable under the Oregon law. "My stock In the Oregon Trust and Savings Bank was fully paid," said E. E. Lytle, vice-president of the sus pended bank,' yesterday, "and I have the receipts to show for it. I do not propose longer to stand for the Inti mation that I am a bankwrecker, and shall assist in running down the charges which have been made against .the directors of that institution. I am determined to find out who was re sponsible for the bank going Into the hands of a receiver, and I shall do It if I have to expend $25,000 and bring a man like Heney. or one having his authority, to Portland to make the In vestigation." Rumor Lytle Was Duped. When asked if as a director and an of ficer in the defunct bank he would re spond to Receiver Devlin's sugestlon and take over the Unitetd Railway bonds to the amount of $75,000, which he assisted in selling to the bank and which are In cluded in" Its assets, Mr. Lytle would not make any statement. The feeling mani- ! festetd by Mr. Lytle In encouraging an investigation of the management of the bank prior to Its 6usp-nsion is natural as it is said that he himself was duped by some of his associates in the whecked Institution. According to the report, when Mr. Ly tle bought an interest In the bank about a year before it went out of business, he made the purchase of W. H. Moore and W. Cooper Morris, president and cashier, respectively. To them he is said to have paid $35,000 for stock to the amount of $25,000, and it Is said the books of the bank do not show that one cent of this amount ever was paid Into the bank's assets by Moore and Morris. Books In Bad Condition. It Is known that the books of the bank are In a deplorable and an unin telligible condition. It is understood that there Is a shortage of about $200, 000 In the bond account, while approx imately $100,000 of notes are missing. A "surplus" fund of $50,000, which was used effectively for advertising pur poses, it is reported, was entirely mythical so far as existing and repre senting that sum or any part of it as a tangible asset. Another unexplalnable circumstance which only adds to the mystery of the game of high finance played between the bank and Gus Lowit, manager of the Golden Eagle Drygoods Company, Is the fact that notes to the amount of $S6.000. representing the loans made by the bank to the Golden Eagle, were recently found among the bank's ef fects. These notes were all stamped as paid, and a further suspicious circum stance in the same connection is the fact that In every Instance the name of the maker had been torn from the note. ( If these notes had been regularly executed, depositors are inquiring why it is that they should be allowed by the management of the Golden Eagle ' iii High time for high shoes. Every variety in shape and price that is reliable is here. Our Fall display shows 27 different styles in the Lion Special $4 Shoe, a regular $5 value, as shown by exclusive shoe dealers. Lion Clothiers 166-170 THIRD ST. to remain in the possession of the bank. Still another question suggest ed by the' same interested inquirers is. if the notes were paid before the bank suspended, why was the same obliga tion liquidated through the receiver ship into which the dry goods house recently passed. As a matter of fact Receiver Devlin under order of the court was required to accept from the Golden. Eagle receivership about $24, 000 in full settlement of the bank's claim, which aggregated $106,000. There Is also another report which tends to strengthen the suspicion of many depositors that the suspended, bank was at no time solvent from the day it began business until it suspended two years ago last August. This report is to the effect that the record of the bank's business on the opening day showed notes to the amount of $S7.500 with depot Its of be tween $7000 and $SO0O, while expenses at that time had been contracted to the amount of $2700. The same record shows that the actual earnings of the bank for the day were $1.66. Still another unusual circumstance Is reported in the fact that it has been impossible for Receiver Devlin or Presi dent Reed to find anywhere among the books of the bank any record of its In corporation, its amended articles of in corporation or the minutes of a single meeting of the board of directors. There is said to be every evidence that the bank was cenducted solely on a "get the money" basis, without any attempt ata keeping an Intelligent record of Its busi ness or the disposition of the funds re ceived. Inaccuracies Are Frequent. Inaccuracies by the wholesale have been found In the system of bookkeeping that was employed. Frequently items amount ing to several thousand dollars have been found to be carried on the debit side of the ledger when they were in fact lia bilities. Since Receiver Devlin took charge of the bank and compiled a list oi the de positors and the amount of their ac counts as shown by the books at the bank, it is known that many depositors have called at the bank bringing with them their deposit, books which showed numerous entries and aggregating sev eral thousand dollars more than had been credited to them on the record books in the bank. In view of what has been learned of the real condition of the rec ords and accounts as kept by the bank, the depositors will Impatiently await the result of the examination which is being conducted. W. H. Moore, president of the defunct bank, was out of the city yesterday but it le known that he has notified Re ceiver Devlin that he does not Intend to take off the hands of the receivership certain wheat and agricultural lands which he assigned in trust to Receiver Devlin shortly after the bank suspended. At that time Mr. Moore placed an ap praised value of $175,000 on the lands, de claring that he could sell them in the market wi'.hin 90 days for that amount. The land Is now lifted as an asset of the bank at $112,000 and It was for this con sideration that Receiver Devlin asked Moore to lake the land back. FINE DISPLAYOF GRAINS Multnomah County . to Make Fine Showing at Stale Fair. That Multnomah County can grow first class grain Is shown In the fine collec tion just completed by Andrew F Miller, and packed In long boxes ready for ship ment tomorrow to Salem for the State Fair, at his home In Sellwood. Mr. Miller said yesterday that ihe had finished col lecting grains and grasses for the State Fair exhibit, and would complete the veg etable and fruit displays th!s week. In the grain display Mr. Miller secured 32 -specimens of wheat and 16 of oats. He said the grain specimens are much finer than secured In former years, and were obtained around Gresham and Falrvlew, and in the Columbia Slough district. However, Mr. Miller says that the fruit will hardly come up to the overage of former years, but will be fairly good. The vegetable display, yet to be collected, he says will be as fine as ever. The dis play will be saved and probably will be used at the Grange Fair, which will be held In Gresham October 6-10, as has been done In former years. Mr. Miller has collected the State Fair agricultural display from Multnomah County for sev eral years, and has won premiums in the past. CONCERN GIVEN FOUR DAYS Deschutes Irrigation & Power Com pany Has Till Tuesday. The Deschute3 Irrigation & Power Company, in the Federal Court yester day morning, was given until Tuesday by Judge Bean to show caus-e why a re ceiver should not be appointed to take charge of the affairs of the company. Attorneys Stearns and Hall, for the company, insisted that in view of the fact that the bill of complaint had been filed but one day, they had not been given sufficient time In which to pre pare their case. 'Attorney C. E. S. Wood made a determined effort to have the court act at once in appointing' a re ceiver. North Dakota Governor Here. Governor John Burke, of North Dakota, accompanied by Mrs. Burke, arrived in the city yesterday, and is a guest at the Portland. Governor Burke declined to be interviewed, on the ground that his trip has no particular significance, being purely a vacation. About 2.000.000.000 barrels of oil, or enough to All the Panama Canal twice, was produced in the United States during the last 60 years. , . ! Mi i j 9 SELECT GAMBRINUS BREWING COMPANY PHONES A 1149 MAIN 49 PORTLAND, OREGON THIRD JILTED BOILED A: PARKER IN TOILS FOR THREAT TO KII-L. v. Mrs. lorothy Dent, Woman in Triple Case, Accuses Him of Pointing Pistol at Her. Accused of pointing a revolver at Mrs. Dorothy Dent and threatening to kill her because she had Jilted him in the same manner she is said to have treated two previous wooers, "V. A. Parker, son of "Citizen" Parker, occupies a cell In the County Jail. On complaint of the woman In the triple case Parker was arrested last night by Constable Wagner and Deputy Constable Klernan. He is held in default of $2000 1 ail and will be haled before the Justice Court this afternoon for preliminary hearing. Parker says he was jilted by Mrs. Dent for Leo Myers, employed by the Schu mann Monument Works. Going to Mrs. Denfs home yesterday afternoon and finding Myers also paying a visit, he is said to have p'ulled a revolver and, after commanding Myers to sit with his arms folded, threatened Mrs. Dent's life. This Is testified by Mrs. Dent and Parker s rival. Barney Butler, a barber, employed at the Portland Hotel, also figures in the case, according to Parker. Butler and he were good friends until, says Parker. Mrs. Dent Jilted him for Parker, after securing $75 of his money on a note. A few weeks ago Butler sued Mrs. Dent and got judgment. Constable Wagner and Deputy Klernan went to Mrs. Dent's home at 232 Mill street and attached her furniture in executing the Judgment. Mrs. Dent claimed she did not own the furni ture, saying It belonged to Parker. The officers went away errlpty-handed. Parker later heard of this and informed the peace officers the bill of sale of the fur niture to him was fictitious, although, he said, he gave her $300. Wagner and Klernan returned and told Renew Your Rosy Cheeks L festfuilintjkklsuiil Thin, impoverished blood is what makes people pale and anaemic. This weakened and common con dition demands prompt attention to avoid the development of a spe cific disorder. At this stage IrleesTTonic cannot be too highly recommended. Combining the staunch vigor of bar ley malt with the tonic properties of choicest hops, it forms a liquid food that is rapidly transformed into rich, red blood and rebuilds and revital izes the muscles and nerve tissues. Insist TJon It Being ahst, . a9 buiiTfesi'iiiiiQ'iPiiSiMS; Order a Dozen from Your. Local Druggist The Bottled Beer of Quality The beer that makes, but never loses friends, "GAMBRINUS SELECT" always the same, always in demand, always to be had in first-class places. Order a case from your grocer, or call up the brewery both phones prompt delivery. Once obtained, we never lose a customer. PRICES:- 1 dozen large bottles beer :. : .$1.75 2 dozen small bottles beer. $2.00 In shipping to the country we charge ex tra for case holding 2 dozens, 50c, or for case holding 4 dozens, $1.00. For returned empty bottles we allow, de livered at depot, or wharf in Portland, 40c per dozen quarts. 25c per dozen pints. Returned cases are credited back at origi nal cost. Mrs. Dent what Parker had said a-. I threatened to take the furniture, when Myers paid $75, liquidating the Judgment. Then followed a dramatic scene in the Dent home, when Parker appeared to in form the woman he was responsible for the success of the execution. Parker Is the son of Horace Walker Labor Day Excursions Via Astoria & Columbia River Railroad Clatsop Beach Resorts HOLLADAY SEASIDE GEARHART PARK MORRISON (Columbia Beach) SKIPANON (De Laura Beach) fpS-OO Tickets Good Going Saturday, Sunday and on Monday Morning Trains. Returning Sunday or Monday. REGULAR TRAINS Leave Portland 8 A.M., 6 P.M. Leave Seaside 7 :40 A.M., 5 P.M. SPECIAL TRAINS Leave Portland Saturday, 2:30 P. M. ; Monday, 7:45 A. M. Leave Seaside Sunday, 6:40 PM.; Monday, 6:40 P. M. " For parlor car reservations and detailed information as to train schedules, etc., call at City Ticket Offices, 122 Third St., Near Washington. 255 Morrison St., Corner Third. Grand Central Station. We could make our whiskey cheaper if we would use cheaper materials. Some gay you cant tell the difference. WE KNOW BETTER. If we were to cheapen the quality of our whiskey we wouldn't call it Good Bottled S Parker, called "Citizen," owing to his activity as a Democratic politician. The Parkers live at 1595 East Seventh street, Sellwood. Estacada is a delightful place to sp9nd a week. Best of hotel accommo dations at reasonable rates. TO ROUND TRIP old In bond 4 itj ULJkuiL'"' BOmrjMjBONO