Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, March 12, 1913, Page 11, Image 11

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    11
realizing the value of concerted advertising, have united in a Weekly Bargain Day Advertising Campaign. Over seventy-five per cent of the population over 237,000 people of Portland now
reside east of the Willamette River. Loyalty always pays, especially when it affects your pocketbook. Watch this space below each week for East Side Bargain Day Sales. Come in and get
acquainted with your East Side merchants. ,The acquaintance and advantage will be mutual it will help you by saving you money, and it will help the East Side and East Side developments.
The East Side merchants invite you to patronize and help both yourself and the East Side by studying these East Side weekly bargain advertisements for WEDNESDAY of each week.
Today (Wednesday) will be Bargain Day on the EAST SIDE. Each article a genuine bargain, as advertised below. EAST SIDE BUSINESS MEN'S CLUB.
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 12, 1913.
SHILDE
BIG
WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL
This Chair is made of se
lected quarter-sawed oak,
has a full box seat frame.
The seat is of genuine
Spanish, or black leather.
We have other splendid
bargains in Furniture and
Carpets.
GEISLER & DORRES
386 BAST MORRISON, NEAR GRAND AVE.
Headquarters for Quick-Meal, All-Steel and Gas Ranges
Poultry Netting
Bargain
2-in. Hexagon Mesh
No. 20 Wire
SPECIAL
Wednesday Only
2 ft.
3 ft.
U ft.
5 ft.
6 ft.
Strowbridge Hardware & Paint Co.
106-108 Grand Avenue 404-406 East Washington
Buy "Moore" Shoes for Less Money
MOORE SHOE COMPANY
Here's Another Real East Side Bargain
$10 Felt Mattress
Independent
The Only Cash Furniture Store
MISSIONS IS TOPIC
Free Methodist Conference
Convention to Open.
SPEAKERS WELL KNOWN
Ministers From Japan, Cores and
' San Domingo Will Be In Attend
ance Sessions to Begin
on Thursday.
The missionary convention of the
Free Methodist conference, under the
auspices of the Women's Foreign Mis
sionary Society of Oregon, will open
tomorrow night In the Central Free
Methodist Church. East Fifty-fifth and
East Flanders streets, to continue daily
until Sunday night. Many distin
guished ministers will attend, includ
ing Bishop William Pearce, of Tutts
vllle. Pa.: Rev. August Youngren. of
Japan; Dr. C. C. Vinton, of Corea; Rev.
Roy Nichols, of San Domingo, and Rev.
W. G. McLaren. Portland.
Initial services Thursday night will
open with devotional exercises con
ducted by Rev. w. N. Coffee. Rev. W.
H. Boddy will deliver an address of
welcome." to which Mrs. Ethel C. Hight
will respond. Rev. A. Youngren will
speak on "A Plea for Foreign Mis
sions." Friday's programme: At 10 A. M.
Opening by Rev. H. E. Krelder; "Man
ners and Customs of the Dominican Re
public," Kev. Koy Nichols; consecra
tion services. Afternoon Opening, by
V. J. Johnston; "Home Mission Work."
by Mrs. Mary F. Coffee, of the Women's
Foreign Missionary Society; "The Ulrls
of the City." Emma Lovett; solo, Mrs.
Clara Heald: "To Whom It May. Con
cern," Rev. W. G. McLaren. Evening
Rev. H. V. Haslam, leader: "Experi
ences In Bazar Meetings.". Mrs. Grace
Edwards; quartet. First Church young
Dining Chair
Regular
$3.50
Special -
$2.20
high, roll of 150 ft. $1.10
high, roll of 150 ft. $1.60
high, roll of 150 ft. $2.10
high, roll of 150 ft. $2.65
high, roll of 150 ft. $3.15
Any $3.50 Shoe
in Our Store
-for
$2.85
TODAY EAST SIDE
BARGAIN DAY
383 E. MORRISON ST.
We Ghre Stamps
6o4
Biscuit 'tufted rolled edge
heavy art ticking the kind
West Side Stores charge $12 for
SEE WINDOW DISPLAY
Furniture Co.
in the City. 83 Grand Ave.
people; "Experiences In Corea," Dr. C.
C. Vinton.
Saturday's programme Charlotte
Johnston, leader; workers' conferences;
singing; question box. Afternoon Ju
niors' rally; talks by Mrs. Clara Upton
and Mrs. Grace Edwards.' Evening
Rev. W. H. Boddy, leader: "Heathen
Children's First Sunday School," Mrs.
Grace Edwards: "Free Methodist
Church in Japan," Rev. A. Toungren.
Bishop Pearce will preach Sunday
morning on "The Wherefore of Mis
sionary Zeal." In the afternoon a plat
form meeting will be held at 2 o'clock.
Rev. A. Youngren will speak at 2:30
on "A Larger Vision Needed." There
will be services in the evening.
Mrs. Barbara Wegner Dies.
Mrs. Barbara Wegner died Monday
at the family residence, 788 Pacific
street. She is survived by her hus
band, Lewis B. Wegner, and two chil
dren, Adolph and Emli Wegner. She
was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Rademaker. The funeral will be held
this afternoon at 2 o'clock from the
residence. Interment will be made in
Rose City Cemetery.
SUBWAY DATA ON WAY
FEASIBILITY OF PROJECT IS
CLUB'S IXijrERY.
Time Will Come, It Is Urged, "When
Trade Traffic Will Outgrow
Bridge Facilities.
A special committee from the Greater
East Side Club, appointed several weeks
ago, is Investigating the feasibility of
building a subway.
Charles K. Henry, who made exten
sive Investigations of subways and had
surveys made for such subway, re
ported to the club that he considered
the construction of a subway the next
great project for Portland. According
to his investigations Mr. Henry said
there are no serious engineering
problems to overcome in the construc
tion of a subway under the Willamette
River, and that the landings on either
side of the river would not have to be
a long way back. The cost of this sub
way, he said, would not be much more.
Get Your .
Easter Clothes
. . Here Today . .
NO USE WAITING WE HAVE
ARRANGED SPECIAL TERMS
FOR YOU!
We want you to see and to know
the superior quality merchandise
we carry. We want yon to know
this store. To induce you to call,
you may select what you need for
Easter and pay for it later, at the
easy rate of only
.OO
A WEEK
These easy terms hold good up
to $35.00 purchases
PACIFIC
OUTFITTING CO.
CORNER GRAND AVE.
AND E. STARE ST.
Clifford Hotel
Bant-Sixth and Morrlaoa Sta
Offers a Shoppers'
Bargain Lunch at
the Griil
MENU
Wednesday, March 12
Cream of Tomato Soup.
Baked Halibut. Egg Sauce.
Olives. " Pickles.
Lamb Fricasse, Green Peas.
German Pot Roast, Apple Sauce.
Baked Short Ribs, Brown Potatoes.
Home-Made Sausage, Brown Gravy.
Mashed Potatoes. Stewed Parsnips.
Blanc Mane, Custard Sauce.
Tea, Coffee. Milk.
if any, than the cost of the Broadway
bridge.
The committee expects to get all data
ready concerning the subway for sub
mission within a few weeks to the
Greater East Side Club with a view of
getting a vote probably in 1911 at the
general election.
As proposed, this subway would be
for streetcar traffic mainly, with elec
tric cars running through it and con
necting at both ends with the regular
system, doing away with the need
largely of crossing the bridges. Time
will come, it is urged, when - the
ordinary traffic over the bridges, out
side of streetcars, will make the con
struction of a subway a necessity.
Hence the club has started the agita
tion in order to get a vote in the next
year or two.
The subway committee is composed
of the following persons: G. B. Datson,
Sunnyside Club; City Engineer Hurl
burt; M. O. Collins, Greater East Side
Club; Dan Kellaher, East Side Busi
ness Men's Club; L. E. Schmitt, Mount
Tabor Business Men's Club; E. D.
Curtis, Sunnyside Club; B. L. Baucom,
Laurelhurst Club; Walter Oeaberg,Rose
City Park League; H. T. Cummlng,
East Seventy-Second-Street League, of
Mount Scott.
Sunnyside Clnb to Meet.
The Sunnyside Improvement Club
will meet at Dr. Pettifs office. East
Thirty-fourth and Belmont streets, to
night at 8 o'clock.
H. B. M0YERJPASSES AWAY
Body of Late Brownsville Man to Be
Brought to Portland.
At Prinevllle yesterday H. B. Mayer,
for many years a resident of Browns
ville and a member of Albany Lodge
No. 359, B. P. O. Elks, died and his
body will be brought to Portland on
the 5:10 P. M. train on the O.-W. R.
N. today. The officers of the Albany
lodge, who will be here, will meet
the train and escort the body to the
Holman undertaking parlors, where the
funeral will be conducted tomorrow, t.t
arrangements for it being as yet incom
plete. A large number of the members ot
Albany lodge of Elks live In Port
land and these will join the officers at
the Union station in receiving the body
The officers of Portland lodge of
Elks are making the arrangements foi
the funeral at the request of Exalted
Ruler Bowersox. of Albany lodge.
Neckwear
Our
Wednesday Bargain
ALL 50c FANCY NECK
WEAR WEDNESDAY ONLY
"Mi mil riJ tmr--
New Spring
$1.50 Shirts
$1.15
WEDNESDAY ONLY
Any Heavy -Weight Suit
. in the Store '
$14.95
A.Pautz&Son
131 Grand Avenue
Near East Morrison St.
FOSTER TELLS OF NEEDS
CARHXE DIRECT TO COLLEGE
IS SOUGHT BY REED.
President of Institution Gives Sug
gestions Which May Be Submit
ted to Commission.
W. T. Foster, president of the Reed
College, In a communication to the
East Side Business Men's Club, sug
gests routes for new carlines in the
vicinity of the college. These sugges
tions will be considered, and in time
submitted to the State Railroad Com
mission. President Foster said in his
letter:
"A carline by a fairly direct route
from the city to Reed College is greatly
needed. A glance at the map will show
that there is no considerably settled
area within the city so poorly served as
the area of which tbe Reed College is
the center. The greatest transporta
tion need of the college is a carline
starting from the West Side, following
the Sellwood line as far, say, as Hol
gate street, thence east on Holgate to
East Twenty-eighth, thence south on
East Twenty-eighth to Fifty-third ave
nue', which Is called Kelly avenue;
thence east on Fifty-third avenue pos
sibly as far as East Seventy-second
street, where it would connect with
the Mount Scott line. A line reaching
Kelly avenue would reach the border
of the Reed Campus nearest to the
city.
"A more direct route would be by way
of Mllwaukle avenue to Inaley avenue,
and thence straight to the north bor
der of the campus. For example, we
are promoting for May 9, 10 and 11 a
conference of the Pacific Northwest on
the conservation of human life. Un
doubtedly, the attendance at this con
ference will be limited only by the
transportation facilities. As it is, we
shall have 000 persons In attendance.
"The proposed carline on East Thirty-ninth
street from the O. W. P. tracks
on the south to Columbia boulevard on
the north would be a great convenience
to many Reed College students residing
on tbe East Side. Students coming
from Laurelhurst. Richmond. Sunny
Pebble Ford
Whiskey
1.05
A BOTTLE
Wednesday Only
Penney Bros.
379-381 East Morrison St.
Phone E. 287, B 2426.
Good Plate
Corn Beef
12V2C lb.
SPICED CORN BEEF
15c lb.
CENTRAL MARKET
Kindorf Bros., Props.
130 GRAND AVE.
Phone East 412.
Wednesday Only
Women's $1.50 White Voile
and Lawn Waists
Beautiful White Voile Waists, with dainty embroidery fronts, low, round or
square necks and short sleeves.
Pretty White Lawn Waists either high or low neck, long or short sleeves.
Some with tucked fronts and trimmed in fine lace and insertion. All sizes.
$1.25 and $1.35 Wool Suitings 87c
All wool, 48 and 54-inch Suitings
white stripes, plain gray, red and
Leading East Side Department Store
$5.85
urn
GOLDEEN FURNITURE CO.
side and Mount Tabor would find this
line a great convenience."
BIG FILL IS TO BE MADE
Work Will Be Done in Asylum Ra
vine Soon.
The Pacific Bridge Company is com
pleting arrangements to fill Asylum
Ravine, between Belmont and East
Taylor, East Ninth and East Tenth
streets, where the company recently
purchased property to the amount of
$75,000 from the Hawthorne estate.
It is proposed to take care of the
flow of water from Hawthorne Springs
by making an entrance to the sewer in
East Main street. This will enable the
company to proceed with the fill with
out interruption by the water. This
fill will result in the opening of the
streets through that district. A track
will be laid In to connect with the com
pany plant located at East Water street
and material will be taken from the
bottom of the river, gravel and sand.
It will take several months of con
tinuous work to make this fill, which
will average about 25 feet In depth.
This Is really the last big fill in .Cen
tral East Portland east of Grand ave
nue, except the south half of the
Asylum Ravine between East Taylor
street and Hawthorne avenue, which
belongs to the Hawthorne estate, and
which may be filled during the latter
part of the year. All the streets
through the old park tract have been
opened and it only remains to fill up
the ravine to Hawthorne avenue. This
is considered one of the most Impor
tant improvements projected for Cen
tral East Portland during the year.
GRAZING LAND BIDS OPEN
Requests to Use 200,000 Acres Tem
porarily Are Received.
Binds fof the temporary nse of more
than 200,000 acres of Government graz
ing land along the Deschutes and John
Day Rivers were opened in the office
of the . United States Reclamation
Service Monday and as soon as the
territory can be divided and the prices
figured contracts will be awarded.
The prices offered ranged all the
way from 2 to 20 cents an acre per
year. Virtually all the territory of
fered has been Subscribed for.
For Wednesday Bargain Day
(REMEMBER THIS IS FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY)
Raincoats Our Entire Stock in
Three Lots
$1.98 $3.98 $8.75
In the $8.75 lot are Coats that sold for $14.50 and $15.75.
Oar reason for this sacrifice, we never carry over any gar
ments from one season to the next.
The Stevens Coat & Suit Shop
388 and 390 East Morrison St.
(Near Grand Avenue)
WB MEVf
TO BE
KNOWN
BT THE
VALUE
$8.56 Solid 495
Golden wax finish; has auto spring
seat upholstered in Spanish leather;
home FURNISHERS
J60-
VbtASIJfORmONST.
White Enamel and Birdseye
on sale.
in light gray mixed, brown mixed,
navy serge.
95c
W. H. Markell &
East
Will Buy This Iron Bed Com
plete With Springs and Mattress
Wednesday Only
The Bed is just exactly as pictured, is full size and is shown in
five different colors including Vernis Martin. The Springs are
made to fit with two-ply woven wire top and the mattress is 40
pound cotton top on excelsior A regular $10 outfit A M Qg
you may buy Wednesday only at pO03
A Reasonable Furniture Store
EAST BURNSIDE AND UNION AVENUE.
EAST SIDE LINE WILL BE SEVEN
MILES LOXG.
Peninsula or North Portland Pipe
Will Be SO Inches in Diameter.
Projects Are Important.
Work has been started on two large
reinforcing water mains on the East
Side one to supply the Peninsula dis
trict, and the other to reinforce the
supply south of Division street. The
Peninsula or North Portland pipe line
will be 30 inches In diameter.
Foreman Edward Gray has started
work on this pipe line at Fremont and
East Thirtieth streets. It will be laid
to East Fifty-ninth, on Halsey to East
Sixtieth street, and thence south to
East Madison, where it will connect
with a pipe already laid to the higher
reservoir. This w ill complete the
reservoir end. It will extend down
the Peninsula in several directions,
one line running to the Columbia
Boulevard and tbe other branches ex
tending in other directions and reduc
ing to 16, 12 and 10 inches. This pipe
line is expected to take care of North
Portland tor a number of years. In all
it will be seven miles long when com
pleted. The other reinforcing pipe line now
being laid on East Fifty-second street
to Division from the south eventually
will be extended through to a con
nection with the higher reservoir. It is
a 24-inch main and is for reinforcing
the .districts south of Division street
including Sellwood, Woodstoek, Wav-erly-Richmond,
Kenilworth, and It will
be extended finally to Grand avenue.
These two mains are the most impor
tant projected for the year, although
there are others to be laid during the
coming months.
Tale Gets Gun-Record Men.
NYS8A. Or, March II. (Special.)
A shooting scrape occurred last week
near Mitchell Butte on tbe Owyhee
River, In which Hank (Chicago) Mo
Net succeeded in puncturing the foot
of his opponent, Kulp. Both have gun
records, but each seemed to be afraid
of the other as their record shows.
McNee fired seven shots and Kulp
several, only one of which took effect.
WE MF.
TO BE
KNOWN
BY TUB
VALl'K
also other
Library
Tables,
Go-Carts,
Dressers
black and
Co.
Morrison, Corner Union Avenue
J
The trouble was over a ditch which
McNee was putting across Kulp's prop
erty. Sheriff Kerfoot took both bel
ligerents to Vale.
POLICEMEN TO BE GUESTS
Heights Residents to Fete Officers
Who Raided Ayers Place.
Policemen usually hear of It promptly
when they are dilatory In their work,
but recognition of good service seldom
Is given as it is to be accorded to
Sergeant Harms and Patrolmen Long
and Wise. In consideration of their
success In causing the arrest ot Lu
cille Ayers. the three officers are to
be the guests of honor at a compli
mentary luncheon at the Commercial
Club Thursday. The feast Is to- be
spread by the Willamette Heights Club.
Members of this organization have
been fighting for a year to bring about
the suppression of the Ayers placo,
which is in the midst of their exclusive
residence district, but not until the
men of the "moral squad" undertook
the job did they meet with success.
To Improve Expression
as Well as Complexion
(From Beauty's Mirror.)
No face is really beautiful that lacks
expression. Do you realize that contin
ual use of powders and creams tends to
spoil pliancy of skin and elasticity of
expression? Why not quit cosmetics
and use something better, which won't
clog the pores or make the skin either
dry or pasty? Ordinary raercoltzed wax
acts quite differently from any cosmet
ic. It wonderfully Improves any com
plexion, giving it life and expression.
By gradually, harmlessly peeling off
the thin veil of outer surface skin, it
brings to view a pure, soft, spotless
complexion, delicately beautiful and
youthful. Every druggist bas this wax;
it is seldom more than one ounce is
needed. It Is spread on nightly like
cold cream and washed off mornings.
In a week or two the transformation
is complete.
Wrinkles do not, of course, enhance
the expression. Neither do the pasty
things many use to eradicate them. A
treatment free from all objection Is
made by dissolving 1 oz. powdered sax
olite in H-pt. witch-hazel; use as a
wash lotion. This soon removes even
the most obstinate wrinkles. Adv.
I