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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1912)
THE MOKMAW OKEGOXIAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1912. FLAGSHIP ENGINEER WINS PROMOTION Robert S. Paul, of Beaver. Goes to Trans-Pacific Mail Liner Mongolia. CHANGE EFFECTIVE TODAY Chief of 'the Black Gang- Who Takes Step Upward Was Veteran In Service of Coast Vessel, Having ' Come From Newport 'ews. Robert S. Paul, chief engineer of the flagship Beaver, of the "Big Three' fleet, made his last voyage for the present on that vessel when she de parted from here Sunday, as he has been promoted to the position of the chief engineer .on the l'acmc aiau trans-Pacific liner Mongolia, regarded the aueen of that fleet. Stephen W. Undo, first assistant of the liner Man. rhuria. of the same line, has been transferred to the Beaver as chief en cineer. The changes are to become effective today and were learned here through advices received yesterday. Friends of Mr. Paul regard his advancement as a high compliment, for to be chiet or tne "black gang on one of tne trans-ra cific carriers means a tidy gain In sal arv. besides assuming greater respon giblllties. and. Incidentally, the engine, room and fireroom force constitutes a mall army, while on the coasters they number less than a score. Officer In Veteran In Service. On the Oriental run there are numer ous Chinese carried as firemen and oil' era. but the white contingent, includ ing the deck engineer; electrician and assistants, number as many as the Beaver carries in her engine - room crowd. Mr. Paul was the oldest ofifcer on the Beaver in point of service on that ves sel, for he was at Newport News dur ing the days she and the Bear, her slstershlp, were under construction, and with Captain William Kldston. brought ber to this coast. He was also on the steamer Kansas City when she made the run from the Atlantic side. She has operated on the Portland-San Fran-cisco-San Pedro route, but is now num. bored with the Pacific Mall ships op . erating along the southern coast. While no officers have been drawn from the Bear or Rose City there have been several of the Beaver's crowd ad vanced to the China fleet, a recent ac quisition to the line having been Cap tain Nelson, who was made master of the Beaver following Captain KIdston's withdrawal after the sinking of the Selja. Other Change Made. Captain Nelson went to the Korea as master, and with him as second offi cer went E. G. Smith, at that time third mate of the Beaver, while W. R. Hunt er, first officer of the Beaver, went to the Korea in the same capacity. C Valty. second steward of the Beaver, was assigned to the Manchuria, with the same rating. C. Scott, who was steward of the Beaver, was sent to the Asia as steward and H. Morgan, also second steward of the flagship at one time. Joined the crew of the Manchuria is the same. ISLAND MAY BE BUILT AT BAR i Boarcf Ix-aves to Study Means of Es tablishing Fixed Aid. At the termination of a session held yesterday a special board appointed by the Secretary of the Department of Commerce and Labor to investigate and report on the establishment of an aid to navigation at the outer end of the south jetty at the mouth of the Columbia, which will' undoubtedly be a lighthouse and fog signal station, deter mined to visit the scene and will de part by rail this morning. Major Mc Indoe, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, is chairman, and other members are: Major Kavanaugh, in charge of engineering projects in Washington; Henry L. Beck, Inspector of the Seventeenth Lighthouse Dis trict, and Edward I. Woodruff, inspec tor of the Eleventh Lighthouse Dis trict, headquarters at Detroit, Mich. Many plana have been proposed for the aid, but it is believed that the one selected will be to dump rock at the end of the Jetty and virtually construct an island on which the building will stand. It is also thought that the project will be undertaken as soon as an appropriation is made, because the Jetty will be completed during the coming season and as the trestle will deteriorate rapidly after being neg lected, it would mean additional and heavy expense to make repairs a year or two later so the material could be , transported. There is to be an "apron" built at the end of the Jetty as a pro tection against scouring; and the arti ficial Island would serve the same pur pose. LAUNCH MAKES SPEEDY RUN Chappell Would Have Been Saved if Afloat 14 Minute. Harry Jaeckel, night engineer of the harbor patrol launch, is given credit by Harbormaster Speler with having made the run from the boathouse, at the foot of Stark street, to the Morri son -street. bridge at 10:40 o'clock Tues day night in three minutes after Charles Chappell, an employe of the Chicago Belting Company, walked off the bridge to bis death. In a report ma-de when he went off watch Jaeckel said that he heard cries of help while seated in the boathouse. and immediately backed the launch into the stream and headed for the bridge. He found the drowned man's hat, he recites, and witnesses pointed to the spot where he went down. Har bormaster Speler says that had Chap pell remained above water 14 minutes, as alleged, be would have been saved with ease. The bead of the patrol force made an investigation, and the response made by the launch was within three minutes, he says. Hugh Brady, the municipal grappler, recov ered the body at 9 o'clock yesterday morning. ARC BEACOXS COMPLAIXED OF Pilots Request Harbormaster Will Take Action as to Lights. Arc lights established at 'the north end of Montgomery dock No. 2 and at the south eud of Martin's dock, for the guidance of the master of the jMwer Albina ferry, have been com plained of by the Columbia River Pilots' Association in a letter received yesterday by Captain Speler. harbor master. The river guides aver that when bound to or from the harbor with a deep-sea vessel, the illumina tions confuse them, and because of the Clare they are unablo to distinguish landmarks. During heavy fogs it was proposed that the arcs be placed so that the skipper of the ferry could make the run, as the vessel does not ply on a straight course, and during the last Winter there were two collisions in one night, owing to thick weather. Captain Speler says the matter will be referred to the county authorities and the objection to the lights might be overcome If they were shaded or screened. The same scheme was adopt ed with reference to lights on bridges that bothered the pilots. Marine Notes. Bound for Wellington, New Zealand, the American barkentine Koko Head cleared' yesterday with 1.445,560 feet of lumber valued at 20.24. Carrying 3.500.000. feet of lumber, the British steamer Frankdale left West port for Australia last evening, having completed the cargo she started here. The vessel is under charter to Balfour, Guthrie & Co. Hereafter the net tonnage of the Danish steamer Arabien. of the East Asiatic line, which is coming here to load wheat for Europe, will be 4598, it having been increased from 3004 tons at San Francisco when she was remeasured. In addition to passengers, the new steamer Avalon will sail Saturday for San Francisco with 900 tons of grain and 500.000 feet of lumber, and the steamer Carlos, also with passengers, sails today, carrying 700 tons of wheat and 400,000 feet of- lumber. As yesterday was a German holiday. being explained as the same in "Per OFFICERS WHO PASSED HIGH IN EXAMINATION FOR "wn Sr., Acting Captain Keller. Fadcrland" as Thanksgiving is in this country, no work was undertaken aboard vessels of the Kaiser's domain in the harbor, lining having been stalled on the big bark R. C. Rickmers and on the Elfrteda not even a hatch was uncovered. From San Francisco comes the news that the well-known schooner Virginia, arriving there this week from Wlllapa Harbor, met with a succession of southerly gales for 13 days and in a hurricane off Cape Blanco she was on her beam ends, her cargo shifting to starboard when the deck lashings carried away, and slight damage re sulted to the deck. Notification, was received from Washington by Major Mclndoe, Corps of Engineers. UjS. A., yesterday that the eight-hour law. which was enacted August 1. 1S92. but not before made applicable to floating plants, had been held by the Supreme Court to pertain to new vessels and repairs, so he has Issued notice to prospective bidders on the tugs J. C. Post and H. M. Adams that they will be expected to follow the regulation. That contract will also include barges, pontoons and pipelines for the new 24-inch suction dredges. The law does not apply to the dredges. because bids were accepted before the notification arrived. Movements of Vessels. PORTLAND. Nov. 20. Arrived Steamer Itobcrt S. Pud I. Beaver'a Calet Eulnnr, M ho Goes to-China l.iner Mongolia. Maverick, from Pan Francisco. Sailed Steamer Geo. W. Elder, for San Dleco ana WAV oorts. Astoria. Nov SO. Arrived at 7 A. M. Steamer -Geo. W. Fenwlck. from San Pedro. Arrived at t:js a. m. nnua urn tmm Ruanoi Avres. Arrived at 7:25 ana .f. n ii i m Btwim,r Maverick, from Kan vntn.iflco. . Arrived at 7:45 A. . M. Britlah -bark Heugomont, from Iqulqua. Ar rived down at 8:80 and sailed at 10:15 A. M. Steamer Breakwater, for Cooa Bay. Left up at 8:30 A, M. German bark Jers bek. San FrancliM-o, Vov. 0. Sailed at 5 A. x RtMmiir vaicon. for Portland. Arrived at 6 A. M. Steamer Beaver, from Portland. CTEA3IEK ENTEIXIOEMC& Dim t Arrlra, yam. From Osta Bear Ban Pedro. ... In port , Anvil iandon. ..... In port Su H. Elmore. Tillamook.... Nov. 21 Alliance Eureka Nov. 22 Bom Cltr San Pedro.... Nov. S3 Roanoke. ......6an Dieffo.... Nov. 24 Breakwater... .Coos Bar. ....Nov. 24 Beaver Ban Pedro. .. . Nov. 28 Geo. W. Elder. .Ban Diego.. ..Dec 2 la Depart. Nam. . Far nt Carlos San FrancltcoNov. 21 Yale S. y. to 1 A. . Nov. 22 Anvil Bandon Nov. 23 Bear Can Pedro.. ..Nov. 22 Sue H. Elmore. Tillamook. ... Nov. 22 Harvard S. F. to U A., Nov. 23 Washington... Coos Bay. . . . Nov. 23 Avalon San FranciacoNov. 23 Alliance EureKa . ... Nov. 24 Breakwater. ...Coos Bay Nov. 26 Rom City San Pedro. ...Nov. 27 Foanoka. .. .. . .Sac Diego. .. . Nov. .27 Beaver San Pedro. ... Dec 2 Geo. W. Elder. .aa Diego. ... Dec 4 Sailed at 8 A. M Steamer Aurella, for Co lumbia River. . Point Reyea Nov. 20. Paused Steamer Olympic from Portland, for San Pedro. Yokohama, Arnvea iora unnon, from Tacoma. Southampton. Nov. 20. Called Auaonia. from London for Portland. . , Colombia River Bar Report. Condition at the mouth of the river at 5 P. M.: Rough: wind 32 miles; weather, oloudy. Tides at Astoria Thursday. High. . Low. 10:11 A. M 8.8 feet4:02 A. M 2.4 feet 11:00 P. M 7.0 feet, 4. 53 P. 11 0.8 feet h( l ! i' ye v tj r 0 i !L SHAKEUP IN POLICE CAPTAINS EXPECTED Civil Service Commission Pre pares to Fill Vacancies From Eligible List. KELLER STANDS FOR BOOST Craddock and Lyon Due for Higher Positions, While Riley Slay Re tire to Rank of Sergeant as Result of Examinations. As a result of the creation yester- day by the Municipal Civil Service Detective Sergeant Craddork. Commission of an eliglb:e list for po lice captains, it is likely that a gen eral shakeup In police captain circles will come within the next few days. The general changes may cause Acting Captain Riley to return to the rank of sergeant, and Acting-Captain Keller, and either Detective Sergeant Crad dock or Patrol Sergeant Lyon to be es tablished aa captains, Keller perma nently. The eligible list was created after the Civil Service Commission completed the work of checking over the exami nation papers of 17 applicants for the police captaincy. It was found that Detective- Sergeant Craddock headed the list with a mark of 95.33 per cent. Acting-Captain Keller was second with a mark of 94.25; Sergeant Lyon, third with 80.05; Detective Sergeant T. J. Casev, fourth with 78.50, and Acting Captain Riley, fifth with 77.78 per cent. They were the only persons out of 17 applicants who succeeded in pass ing the examination. The first appoint ment to be made will be that to fill the vacancy created by the recent res ignation of George H. Bailey. Keller la Favored. It is believed about the City Hall that Keller will receive the permanent appointment because of the fact that he holds the position now and is friend of Mayor Rushlight. It Is said, however, that two members of the po lice committee are in favor of Ser geant Lyon because of his record not only In the police department, but also In the Spanish-American war. Mem bers of the Spanish War Veterans as soclations are doing their best to bring about his appointment. The other member of the committee Is said to favor the appointment of Craddock, who bears a good record in the detective department. The Civil Service Commission will present the DOlice committee with the three high names from which the se lection of Dermanent caDtains will De made. The law gives the commission the right to select any one of the three desired, regardless of the mark. The names of more than the three at the head of the list cannot, however, be submitted to the committee at one time. Odda Favor Lyon. If Acting-Captain Keller gets the first appointment the position of Act Ing-Captain Riley probably will be be tween Craddock and Lyon, with the odds in favor of Lyon. In the examination the two principal subjects upon which marks were made were on practical questions and recom mendations from the chief. In these marks Sergeant Craddock : received grading of 96.6 on practical questions and 95 on recommendation, while Act Ing-Captain Keller received 100 on rec ommendation and 90 on practical ques tions. Sergeant layon received 65 on practical questions and 95 on recom mendation. The Civil Service Commission yester day refused to consider the applica tion of ex-Police Sergeant Cole for a rehearing before the commission on charges upon which he was dismissed from the service. The same order was made in the application of Thomas Kay for reinstatement 4n the department. TWO DIVORCE SUITS START Cruelty Charged by Complainants, One of Whom Is an Attorney. Charging cruel and inhuman treat ment, B. O. Skulkason, an attorney, has started In Circuit Court suit for divorce against Charlotte Skulkason. They were married at Bismarck, N. D., in 1896 and have two children, a boy of 12 and a girl aged 8. Mr. Skulkason contends that his wife Is not compe tent to have charge of the children and asks that the court award them to him. He offers to provide reasonable support for his wife. Mrs. Skulkason, the plaintiff asserts, has told mm that she has lost all love and respect for him. Although she has a ohlld 2 years of age and asks that it be given into her custody, Alice Glenn, who has insti tuted divorce proceedings against Michael Glenn, asks that her maiden name be restored. urainarny tne Judge before whom the case comes for trial advises that a woman, when there are children, retain the . name of her divorced husband so as to avoid the necessity for constant explanations. Mrs. Glenn wants to be known as Alice Durst, her name before marriage. She accuses her husband of extreme cruelty. PERSONALMENTION. Mr. and Mrs. M. Nolan, of Corvallis, are at the Bowers. F. H. Stanton, a Hood River orchard lst, is at the Perkins. C A. Croam, a wholesale grocer of Chicago. Is registered at the Port' land. B. B. Palmer, a Milwankee contrac tor, is at the Seward. E. St Curtis, a St. Louis railroad man, is at the Portland. W. I. Reed, a Rainier lumberman, is registered at the Seward. Frank A. Rowe, a Wheeler lumber man, is at the Cornelius. Carl W. Welkes, a sugar planter of Honolulu, is at the Perkins. A. C. Lewis, proprietor of the Pilot Inn, of Bend, is at the Seward. L. C. C. Laursen, a Tacoma lumber- man, is registered at the Bowers. Joseph Griffiths, a steamship man ager of Seattle, is at the Portland. S. B. Nelson, of the Pullman Agri cultural College, is at the Oregon. George W. Johnson, a Dufur mer chant, -is registered at the Multnomah. S. J. Campbell, an orchardlst of Freewater, is registered at the Corne lia. W. S. Thornber, one of the profes sors of the Idaho University, is at the Imperial. Herbert Smeed. a merchant of Ho sier, is at the Oregon, accompanied by Mrs. Smeed. Dr. James Withycombe. of Corvallls, is at the Cornelius, accompanied by Mrs. Withycombe. Chester Kelly, manager of the Ho tel Manx, of San Francisco, Is regis tered at the Oregon. V. G. Bogue, builder of the Western POLICE CAPTAINCY. Patrol Sergeant Lyon. ' Pacific Railway, is at the Multnomah, accompanied by Mrs. Bogue. J. T. Powers, a Tacoma merchant, is registered at the Bowers. H. Fowler, a Nampa stockman, is registered at the Perkins. E. M. McKeany. Northwest agent of the Producers' Fruit - Association of California, is at the Multnomah. Frank A. Seufert, a canneryman of The Dalles and its former Mayor, is registered at the Imperial. CHICAGO, Nov." 20. (Special.) The following- from Oregon are registered at Chicago hotels: From Portland At the Congress, John N. Casey. From Medford At the La Salle, B. J. Brevaid. AD CL0BT0 BOOST TEAL LOCAL MAX URGED FOR SECRE TARY OF INTERIOR. Officials of Fruitgrowers' Associa-. tions Outline Plans for Adver tising Oregon Apples, The Portland Ad Club will conduct a strong campaign to influence Fresl dent-elect Wilson to appoint J. N. Teal, of Portland, to his cabinet at the head of the Department of the Interior. Yesterday at the weekly luncheon a motion was carried unanimously cal ling for the appointment of a com mittee to daw up resolutions and send them to the President-elect urging his consideration of Mr. Teal in making up his cabinet, and the members of the Ad Club went on record as willing to take the lead in a campaign for Mr. Teal, which shall continue until the matter is settled. The following committee will draw up the resolutions for submission to the President-elect: Phil S. Bates, F. A. Freeman and R. W. Schmeer. Leading members of the Oregon State Horticultural Society were present as guests of honor and the programme following the business session was de voted to the "Oregon apple." E. O. Morgan, of the Irwin-Hodson Company, was chairman of the day. W. F. Gwin, general manager of the Northwestern Fruit Exchange, sneak lngr on the uses of advertising in aiding apple values, pointed out the results that had been obtained by the adver tising campaigns of California orange growers, and urging that the same methods be adopted in Oregon to ex plolt Its apples. "A 'buy them by the box" campaign,' he said, "would soon increase the sales of apples throughout the United States immensely, if properly and persistently conducted. "Oregon," he continued, "has de veloped wonderfully within the past few years in exploiting through aaver Using of her apple lands. You have done well in advertising the lands ow it is time to advertise the. prod ucts from those lands, and the same co-operative, community methods that have been used In the great advertis ing machine that- has been built up in the Northwest by its various commer cial clubs and boosting organizations will accomplish this purpose effectively and profitably." C. A. Malboeuf. secretary of tne rTuit Exchange, and A. P. Bateham, president of the Horticultural Society, and C. A. Randall, representing the apple-grow ers of Southern Oregon, were also speakers. ELIZABETH SHARKEY DIES Mother of ex-Councilman Succumbs to Brief Illness. Heart trouble superinduced by asthma brought about the death Tues day night of Mrs. Elizabeth Sharkey at her residence. 456 East Seventeenth street, after only a brief illness. Twenty-seven years ago, Mrs. Sharkey, who is the mother of John P. Sharkey, an ex-Councilman of the city, arrived in Portland from West Virginia. She was born in Ireland, on St. Patrick's day, 1835. She accompanied her par ents to America in 1S42. They settled in New Brunswick, Canada, where her father took care of his brother's es tate on Lake Lomond for seven years. Then they moved to St. Johns, to West Virginia, and finally to Portland, In 1885. . One brother, Patrick McClement, of Baltimore, Md., and seven children sur vive her. All seven, three sons and four daughters, live in Portland, and all were present when Mrs. Sharkey died. Their names are: Edward J- ft- s Pimples Removed The Calcium Sulphide Treatment Does Wonders to Every Kind of Skin Eruption. Tou don't want to wait forever and a day to get rid of your pimples or other skin eruptions. You want to got rid of them right now. Iext ween you may want to go somewhere where you wouldn't like to have to take the pim ples afong. , - You can get rid of them just in time by .taking Stuart's Calcium Wafe-rs. They obtain as their main ingredient the most thorough, quick and effective blood cleanser known, calcium sulphide. Remember this, too, that most pimple treatments reek with poison. And they are miserably slow besides.- Stuart's Calcium Wafers have not a particle of poison In them. They are free from mercury, biting drugs or venomous opiates. This is absolutely aruaranteed. They cannot do any harm, but they always do good good that you can see in the mirror before your own eyes a few days after. Don't be any longer humiliated by having a splotchy face. Don't have strangers stare at you, or allow your friends to-be ashamed of you because of your face. Your blood makes you what you are. The men and women who forge ahead are those with pure blood and pure faces. ' Stuart's Calcium Wafers will make you happy because your face will be a welcome sight not only to yourself when you look into the glass, but to everybody else who knows you and talks to you. We know that Stuart's Calcium Wafers are beyond doubt the best and quickest blood and skin purifier in the world. Try a package today, 50c at your druKists. Sharkey, John P. Sharkey, William T. Sharkey. Mrs. Katherine Southard, Mrs. J. M. Casey, Mrs. Mary J. Sweeney and Mrs. A. .R. Zellars. Rev. Father D. J. O'Brien will offi ciate at the funeral services, which will take place tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock at the Dominican Church, East Third and Clackamas streets. The bur ial will be at the Mount Calvary Ceme tery. HOOD RIVER DRYS WROTH ILLICIT SALES OF LIQUOR ARE " ALLEGED. City Council Would Tax Druggists for Funds to Ferret Out Vio lations of "Booze" Law. HOOD RIVER, Or., Nov. 20. (Spe cial.) With members of the Home Pro tective Association, a recently organ ized club here, presenting argument for an ordinance to control the illicit sales of liquor, the session of the Coun cil Monday night was one of the live liest held here this year. The Home Protective Association was represented by A. W. Onthank and W. S. Nlchoi, who declared that the club had been organized for the purpose of seeking information previous to the general election when the liquor question was voted on by the citizens of the city. They claimed to have found many vot ers who supported the dry ticket at the election but who declared that they would not do so again unless some ac tion were taken to curb illicit sales from which the city drew no revenue. Under the ordinance proposed by the association an occupation tax will be levied against druggists, the funds thus collected to be used in ferreting out cases where there is a suspicion of violation of the local option law. Furthermore they will make druggists keep a strict inventory of all wet goods handled and be ready at any moment to throw open their books to inspec tions of officers. Drunkenness, except that of tran stents alighting from trains, their liquor having been purchased in wet towns, is a very unusual sight here, and the Council was rather incensed at the insinuations made by the dry repre sentatives that a great deal of the liquor was being purchased through local channels and that drunkenness was a prevalent condition. Dr. Nichol, who with Mr. Onthank, presented to the Council the arguments for the association, is a former drug gist. He declared that the sale of liquor by druggists was a difficult thing to regulate. "I know," he said "for I have sold liquor and have sold liquor illegally. Under existing con ditions it is almoBt Impossible for any druggist to remain in the business and not make such sales. The rules that we are promulgating. will be welcomed by all druggists who want to do busi ness on a legitimate basis." The closing for repairs of the pri vate way of the O.-W. R. & N. Co. to the freight station and warehouses of the Apple Growers union has caused a heavy traffic of freight over Sixth street and this thoroughfare has been made almost Impassable., Citizens in terested- in manufacturing asked the Council for temporary relief; that a new street be opened between the manufacturing district and the freight depot. LUMBER RATES TO CHANGE Southern Pacific to Readjust Tariff on Subsidiary Iines. Lumber rates on branch and sub sidiary lines of the Southern Pacific In Oregon will be readjusted after the first of the year to conform with main line rates, where such rates are ?5 a ton and over. Tariffs providing for this change now are being prepared. As they must be published for 30 days before going Into effect, it is probable that the ad justment cannot be made until Janu ary 1. This will place lumber moving from Oregon points to territory west of Ogden, Arizona and New Ilexico on a parity with lumber moving from Oregon points to territory east of the Ogden line. The differential on the1 THE FIRST T LOOK OLD Easy Way to Preserve Natural Color of the Hair and Make It Grow. A harmless remedy, made from com mon garden sage, quickly restores gray hair to natural color. The care of the hair, to prevent it from losing its color and lustre, is Just as Important as to care for teeth to keep them from dis coloring. Why spend money for cos metics and creams to improve the com plexion, and yet neglect your hair, when gray hair is even more conspicuous and suggestive of age than wrinkles or a poor complexion? Of the two, it is easier to preserve the natural color and beauty of the hair than it is to have a good complexion. All that is necessary is the occasional GRAY HAiR DON To SEATTLE, TACOMA CHEHALIS, CENTRALIA AND INTERMEDIATE STATIONS TO SOUTH BEND AND GRAYS HARBOR BRANCH POINTS NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY 7:10 A. M., 10:30 A. M.. 3:45 P. M. Three daily daylight trains, of smoking cars, coaches, parlor cars, dining cars. First-class and modern. ' 11:15 P. M The night train, of coaches and standard and tourist sleeping cars. You may enter sleeping cars at 9 :30 and may remain in them at Tacoma and Seattle until 8:30 A. M. ELECTRIC-LIGHTED LIKE SERVICE RETURNING THREE DAILY TRAINS In and out of .Aberdeen and Hoquiam, to and From Portland, Tacoma, Seattle. TICKETS: 255 MORRISON STREET Corner Third St. Main 244 Phones A 1244. Portland. A. D. CHARLTON, A. G. P. A. it CASGARETS" BEST FOR THE BOWELS No Headache, Bad Taste, , Sour Stomach or Coated Tongue by Morning. It is more necessary that you kee your Bowels, Liver and Stomach olean, pur and fresh than it is to keep the sewers and drainage of a large city free from obstruction. Are you keeping clean inside with Cascarets or merely forcing a pas sageway very few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? This is important, Cascarets Immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system the constipated waste matter and poi-. son In the Intestines and bowels. No odds how badly and upset you feel, a Cascaret tonight will straight en you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months. Don't forget the children their little ln sides need a good, gentle cleansing, tOOk Eastern shipments was removed a few months ago. This tariff will affect all mills on the Tillamook line, the Corvallis & Eastern and the Salem, Falls City & Western, as well as those on the vari ous Southern Pacific branches. COt.D CAUSE HEADACHE AND CRIP. LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine nraovei th cause. There In only one "BROMO QUININE." Look tor signature ot E. W. GROVE- 25c HATE CASTOR OIL To Clean the Little One's Stomach, Liver and Waste-Clogged Bowels, Give Gentle "Syrup of Tigs." Look back at your childhood days. Remember the physio that mother In sisted on castor oil. calomel, cathar tics. How you hated them, how you fought against taking them. With our children it Is different. The day of harsh physio Is over. W don't force the liver and iO feet of bowels now; we" coax them. We have no dreaded after effects. Mothers who cling to the old form of physic simply don't realize what they do. The chil dren's revolt Is well-founded. Their little stomachs and tender bowels are Injured by them. If your child is fretful, peevish, half sick, stomach sour, breath feverish and its little system full of cold; has diar rhoea, sore throat. stomach-ache; doesn't eat or rest well remember look at the tongue, if coated, give a teaspoonful of Syrup of Figs, then don't worry, because you surely will have a well, smiling' child in a few hours. Syrup of Figs being composed en tirely of luscious figs, senna and aro matlcs simply cannot be harmful. It sweetens the stomach, makes the liver active and thoroughly cleanses the lit tle one's waste-clogged bowels. In a few hours all sour bile, undigested fermenting food and constipated waste matter gently moves on and out of the system without griping or nausea. Dlreotions for children of all ages. also for grown-ups, plainly printed on che package. By ail means get the genuine. Ask your druggist for the full name "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna" prepared by the California Fig Syrup Co. Ao- cept nothing else. OF AGE. BEFORE YOUR TIME use of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a preparation of common gar den Sage and Sulphur, combined with other valuable remedies for dry, harsh, faded hair, dandruff, itching scalp and falling hair. After a few applications of this simple, harmless remedy, your hair will gradually be restored to its natural color. In a short time the dan druff will be removed, and your hair will no longer come out but will start to grow as Nature Intended It should. Don't neglect your hair, for It goes further than anything else to make or mar your good looks. You can buy this remedy at any drug store for fifty cents a bottle, and your druggist Will give your money back if you are not satisfied after u sin sr. Purchase a bottle today. Tou will never regret it when you realize the difference it will make in your appearance. Agents, Owl Drug Co. SIGN FREE ADVICE TO SICK WOMEN Thousands Have Been Helped By Common Sense Suggestions. Women suffering from any form of fe male ills are invited to communieata promptly with the woman's private corre spondence department of the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus has been established a confidential corre spondence which has extended over many years and which has never been broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without the written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confiden tial letters to get out of their possession, as the hundreds of thousands of them in their files will attest Out of the vast volume of experienes which they have to draw from, it is mora than possible that they possess the very knowledge needed in your case. Noth ing is asked in return except your good will, and their advice has helped thou sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor. should be glad to take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. Ad dress Lydia E. Pink ham Medicine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to have Lydia E. Pinkhani's 80-page Text Book. It Is not a book for general distribution, as It Is too expensive. It Is free and only obtainable by mail. Write for It today. - A BALD-HEADED WOMAN Shorn of Her Crown of Beauty, Loses In Lore and Marring. Hair is certainly most necessary to woman. Who could love and marry a bald headed woman? What charms could one array to offset such a dis figurement? A woman's goal is usually love and marriage. Her crowning glory Is her hair. The loss of her hair mars her beauty, happiness, . and success. Yet, right here in Portland, there are thou sands of women who are neglecting or injuring their hair to such an extent that it is only a matter of time when it will be utterly ruined. Many women destroy the beauty of their hair throuxh thoughtlessness or Ignorance of certain facts. They use curling Irons over-heated, or to excess, which destroys the natural oil of the hair, causing It to split, break, and come out. They do not shampoo their hair often enough, or too often. They use soaps or preparations which con tain ingredients positively harmful to the scalp and hair. As a result of such treatment, dan druff is created, the hair loosens, loses color, falls out,' and baldness com mences, unless proper and prompt pre cautions are taken in time. Then again, microbes and certain diseases bring about unhealthy scalp and hair conditions. Almost anv woman may rid herself or dandruff and diseased scalp and hair if she will but use the right remedy. We have that remedy, and we will positive ly guarantee that it will either cure dandruff and baldness or it will not cost the user anything. That's a pretty broad statement, but we will back it and prove it with our own money. We will return your money if you do not find that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic Is an entirely satisfactory remedy that will promote hair growth and overcome scalp and hair troubles; that It will grow hair even on bald heads, unless all life in the hair roots has been extinguished, the follicles closed, and the scalp is glazed and shiny. It gets its name from the fact that it grew hair In 93 out of 100 cases, where it received a thoroughly hard, impartial, and practical test. We want you to try Rexall "93" Hair Tonic at our risk. You surely cannot lose anything by doing so, while you have everything to gain. You had bet ter think this over, and then come In and see us about this offer. You will be well repaid for your visit to our Btore. Sold only by the Owl Drug Co. Stores in Portland. Seattle, Spokane, San Francisco. Oakland, Los Angeles and Sacramento. NOT CLEANS Km j