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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1913)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1013. PROPERTY IS HELD FOR U6 BABY Mother of E. B. Mygatt, Ta coma Suicide, Seeks Son's Supposed Wife Here. WEDDING EVIDENCE FOUND quested leave to depart for their homes in October. Those who left were accompanied to the scates of the Vatican by their com rades. At the moment of separation they cried "Viva Garibaldi." Some of them joined in singing the "Marseillaise." Never before was such a scene witnessed in front of. the Vati can. Yesterday the guards were relieved of their cartridges and today even their rifles were taken from them, as it wa discovered that they -had succeeded-Id concealing cartridges. Count Ceceepteri, commander of the gendarmes, has been ordered toehold his men in readiness for emergencies. They are in control . of all exits and have instructions to prevent any of the guards from leaving the building with out express permission or from -communicating with those outside. The entire neighborhood is patrolled by strons? forces of police. Serious trouble was - expected when the sruards were notified that all their demands had been refused and it had been arrane-ed that'anv of the eruards Missouri Woman Unable to Account I attempting- a demonstration should be I arrested by the papal gendarmes and I lurncu vvtrr iu inr JiHiiaii puuue lur transportation to the Swiss frontier. CHINESE REBELS IN- FIERCE BUTTLE Kiang Nan ; Is Attacked on Three Sides Japanese Reported Fighting. for Action of Portland Girl "Who Disappears After Denying Her Allegeil Marriage. AftAr rrnstiinfr tVie continent t r tr VA to her grandchild her son's part of the family estate, Mrs. C. R. Mygatt. of Independence, Mo., mother of Edward ' B. MyKatt, whose sensational suicide in Tacoma June 20 was followed by his supposed wife's denial of their rela tionship, is unable to find her son's wife and has enlisted the aid of the I Portland police. Ruth Frances My gatt, according to her mother-in-law. - and Ruth Frances Allen, according to " the young woman, the alleged mate of ' Mygatt, who formerly lived at 955 - Cleveland avenue, has moved from ' there and has left no address. Mygatt leaped from the Lincoln bridge in Tacoma in June and was killed on the railroad tracks below, - after an alleged attempt to hurl the young woman from the span. In the police station at Tacoma, - where she was taken, the girl said she ' was not married to Mygatt and that Jer two-months-old baby is the child of another and that Mygatt was merely . a. man violently- infatuated with her. In spite of this Mrs. Mygatt, the mother, came to Portland yesterday on her second attempt to locate the young : woman whom she claims as her daugh- ter-ln-law, and to -turn over to the . liahy her son's share of the family es tate in Independence. Evidence of Wedding: Found. Mrs. Mygatt. who is staying at a downtown hotel.has visited The Dalles and has found, she says, that her son and Miss Allen were married there, after Mygatt came north from I..OS Angeles. She is searching now for the surgeon who officiated at the birth of the baby whom she - claims 'as her ' strandchild. She has found that the young woman and her mother moved , from Cleveland avenue some time ago, but Just where they have gone she has not. discovered. ; Mrs. Mygatt will n from Portland to California, where she says she in ' tends to pick out a place for her son's i grave, in response, to his wish, ex pressed when ho was in California. In the then supposed distant event of his death. To leave the portion belonging " to the baby, still Intact, she says that -she will finance the burial from the ; funds which she herself saved for her cwn burial. "I do not understand why Mrs. Allen, tRiith's mother, should say that Ruth was not married to my boy," said the mother last night, "because he wrote ' roe when they were married, and he .wrote me when the baby came, I'nrt of Estate Awaits Bnbe. "It is beyond my knowledge why Huth should say that the baby's father was not my boy. 1 want to find them, .and to see that the baby gets his fourth of the family estate in Inde pendence. I had four boys before Ed ward died and his fourth of the estate goes to the bo by." On the notice board at'police head quarters, with Mrs. Mygatfs request, is a picture of her son and the young woman, which, she says, her son sent her. The two are seated, while over them a. man is extending his hands, as though giving a minister's benedlc - tion. After the suicide of Mygatt in Ta coma, the woman whom he had said -was his wife said her husband and the father of her child was a man named Allen, her maiden name, and that she could not' account for what she termed Mygatfs infatuation. Mrs. F. M. Allen, her mother, also named Allen, of whom she would tell no more as the father of the child. After being held in the city jail at Tacoma for a day, the young woman, 19 years old, was released, and has since dis appeared. "When the reply to their memorial was read the commander and other officials, armed .with revolvers, stood ready to suppress any show of force. A letter was also read from Cardinal Merry del Val. the Papal Secretary of State, strongly condemning the atti tude of the guards. This was the last straw, as the guards had hoped that the Cardinal would favor - their side. They decided to maintain a relatively calm attitude, wishing, as they themselves expressed, "to obtain their rights through per suasion rather than violence." The guards were notified by their commander that their terms could not be accepted by the Holy See, as it was destructive of the principle of disci pline. He added that those who could not submit to the present military rule were at liberty to return to their homes as freely as they had enlisted. He concluded by declaring the organ izers of the agitation would be dis missed from the corps. QUEEN OFPlOiJEERS DIES MRS. SARAH JAXE HILL PASSES AT AGE OF 89. 1000 PEASANTS ARE SLAIN Foreign Naval Brigade Expected to Be Landed and Volunteers Are Being Organized to Stand Guard on Settlement. Oregon's Oldetst Woman In Point or Residence Expires at Home of Her Daughter. Mrs. Farah Jane Hill, a pioneer of 1843, who had been in Oregon longer than any living plo"heer woman at the time of the pioneer reunion here last month, in honor of which she .was elected Mother Queen of the order, died yesterday ot the home of her daughter,- Mrs. Hannah Cowells. In St. Johns, Or. Heart trouble was the cause.- She was 89 years old. ' ' ; Had she lived three days longer, Mrs. Hill would have been 90 years old. She was born in Indiana July 26, 1823. Mrs. Hill was the widow of the late Almoran Hill, who died two years ago. They were, married in Missouri in 1841 and crossed the plains together in 1843. Thev settled in Yamhill County and lived there until Mr. Hill died. At the time of his death they had been mar ried 60 years, longer than any other couple in Oregon. Though born in Indiana, Mrs. Hill came of staunch Connecticut stock. It Is told of her how she' converted her husband, who was born in Missouri. from a. strong Democrat to a good Republican before he died. She was not- a woman suffragist, but had a strong-personality. STORMS DELAY TRAINS CLOUDBURSTS IX NEVADA SERIOUS DAMAGE. DO AVestern Pacific Trains Detoured Over Oregon Short Line and Southern Pacific. ITALIANS FEAR "REDS" Socialist Programme Causes Scare Among Small Landowners. ROME. July 24. One of the eharac teristlcs of the approaching general elections is the great apprehension among small land owners in the eouth and the islands, and there will be a strong Socialist party in the new Chamber of Deputies. Many wfsh to dispose of their property because they fear that the 'Reds" will carj-y out legislative measures against prop erty. At the recent Socialist Congress here a resolution was adopted that the ex penses of the African War should be defrayed by taxing property, real and personal, 40,000.000.. ($200,000,000). Emigrants who are sending remit tances from America, with which to buy lands in Italy do not attach much importance to the Socialists' threats, as they feel that it is -not possible to carry out the suggested plan under the present Italian government OGDEN, Utah,. July 24. Cloudbursts today on the Union Pacific, Southern Pacific and Western Pacific Railroads caused passenger and freight traffic delays, the storm being the third serf ous onefor the Union Pacific during the last week. Reports that the tracks at Henlfer, where a storm swept last night, had been repaired, had Just been received when the railroad officials were In formed of the cloudburst at Castle Rock, where considerable damage was done, delaying traffic eight hours. Western Pacific trains were detoured by. the Southern Pacific and Oregon Short Line during the day because of a cloudburst which did serious dam age to roadbeds at Deeth, Nev. Through traffic on the Southern Pa cific also was retarded by a cloudburst at Croiconcia, iev., this morning, pas senger trains being eight hours late Streams of water five feet in depth are reported to have swept down the mountainside at Castle Rock. SHANGHAI. July 24. Southern reb els, reported to number 10,000, attacked Kiang Nan arsenal at 3 o'clock Wednesday morning. The defenders, not exceeding 2000, were strongly en trenched and, assisted by the navy, re pelled three . separate attacks. The fighting lasted until 7:30 o'clock. Ac cording to the estimates 800 rebels were killed. Another attack was also repulsed at 1 o'clock Thursday morning, the southerners being unable to gain any ground. Many . Civilians Killed. Reports say that only 3000 south erners were engaged In the attack, but their casualty has greatly exceeded the original estimates. Many of the killed were civilians. The attacks were de livered simultaneously from three sides. The thick vegetation and insuf ficiency of men prevented the garri son from attempting a sortie and en abled the rebels to fall back to their camps and reorganize their forces. Reports are current that ' Japanese are fighting in the southern ranks. Foreign volunteers were called out to guard the settlement, A few shells burst in the French concession and several Chinese were injured, but no foreigners. Innocent Peasants Victims. The latest, estimates place the casu alties at 1000, for the most part inno cent peasants. The flagship Haichu poured a deadly fire on the attacking forces. It Is expected that a foreign naval brigade will be landed. Volunteers are erecting barricades around the ap proacnes to the settlement. Many shells from the arsenal fell into, the French concession, damaging the nouses, and much damage was one to the Chinese cities. Many of he Chinese fled to the French con- ession. It is reported that the French con- ul will intervene; owing to the dam- ge sustained in the t rench quarter. One French nun was wounded. In iew of the danger to the British set tlement the Shanghai Mercury de mands tnat the powers shall arrange a eutral zone. , DR. SEN 'BACKING REBELLION Northern Government Admits Its Desperate Position. LONDON, July 21. The Pekin cor respondent of the Daily Telegraph ends the ronowmg dispatcn: Dr. Sun Yat Sen, ex-provisional president; issued a manifesto last night irrevocably backing the rebellion-. Declaration of martial law -here shows that the - northern government admits its desperate position. This synchronizes with the creation of complete confederate government at Nanking. Parliament has not yet been dissolved, but it is unlikely that it will survive a week. - The chief newspaper organ of the Kwo Mingo Tang party has been sup pressed. - ' Foreign military experts believe the southerners are in far greater strength than has been supposed. A private dispatch says the south erners have not been repulsed from the Pukow Railway. Reinforcements are coming daily from Kiang Tung pro vince, where there are 60,000 troops. that was "Frauenstimmrecht." It was t a great reception in the House of Industries and several hundred women were there, some talking at the sup per tables, some on the platform, some up in the gallery; and in the babel of voices, whether or not one knew the German language, one soon learned the meaning of "Frauenstimmrecht votes for women, votes for women. 'On the following morn all Vienna was treated to a unique sensation.' One hundred and twenty carriages, each carrying at least four women, paraded through the principal streets, each fly ing a. yellow flag inscribed in black with the inscription "Frauenstimm recht!" In those carriages rode some of Vienna's most fascinating women. acting as guides and hostesses to other women from every country- in Europe women who, on their way to the big suffrage congress In Budapest, stopped off for a couple of days to attend the meetings and festivities of what ware named' one of the "Baby Suffrage Con gresses." There is scarcely a great capital in Europe in which the cry of "Votes for Women" has not been sent up, first in one language and then an other, and notwithstanding the firm belief of the Kaiser in the "three K's" as constituting the only proper sphere for women, there was a congress in Berlin, and yet another one in Dresden, where German women demanded "Frauenstimmrecht" In emphatic tones. In Austria the women who have taken up this movement are of a par ticularly brave and persevering nature. Indeed, they needs must be, for Aus tria is a discouraging country in so far as the hope of the early enfranchise ment of women is concerned. There is particular clause in the Austrian oCnstitutlon which is spe cially hateful to the women of intellect and ambition. It is known as "Fara- grapn 30. and It forbids women to torm themselves Into any political so ciety, or "verein." as it is called. There. fore, although the votes for women movement has begun in Austria, there is no proper society or association for the enfranchisement of women. ROBERT IS BAT01IER" CELEBRATED CRIMINAL LAW. YER HEADS PARIS BAR. WALLA WALLA IS HOTTEST Highest Temperature in United 'States Recorded in Washington. WALLA WALLA, Wash.. July 24. (Special.) For three. days Walla Walla has held the unenviable record of be ing the hottest place in the United State's, according to the weather map, and it is believed today's record will make it the fourth day. . The tempera ture climbed to 101, the second hot test day of the Summer. Rain is helping to ripen the grain, but the temperature is proving too hot for some of the harvesters who came in from the Eureka flat, saying they could not stand it. They were accustomed to mountain and timoer work. VATICAN IS IN SIEGE Swis Guard lutiny . as Holy See Refuses Demands. ROME. July 24. (Speclal. One of the Vatican was in a veritable state of siege. This was the outcome of the mutiny rf the Swiss guards, w-hose demands in the form of a memorial relating their grievances and setting forth conditions on which they would remain in the service were flatly rejected today. The three leaders in the movement were expelled from the Vatican. Four others left tonight and 12 have re UTAH TOWX- IS ENGULFED Mudslides Are Everywhere and Many Have Narrow Escapes. BINGHAM, Utah, July 24.- Eleven dwelling houses were destroyed and many persons had narrow escapes from drowning late today when a cloud burst descended from the head of Rat tlesnake Gulch, leading into Lower Bingham Canyon. The damage is estl mated at $50,000. RAILROADS PROTEST ORDER Parcel Post Changes Declared to In volve Loss of $20,0-00,000 WASHINGTON", July 24. Represen tatives of railroads yesterday formally protested to the Interstate Commerc Commission against the increase sizes of parcel post packages as pro posed in the extension of the service by Postmaster-General Burleson the -ground that it would cost the rail roads zo,ouo,ooo or revenue tney now receive from express companies. successor to Famous Defender of Dreyfus Is Young Man Much in Public View of France. PARIS, July 24. Maitre Henri Rob ert, the celebrated criminal lawyer, has uccii eieciea neaa, or batonnler," as in title is. or the Paris bar. His im mediate predecessor was Maitre La- borl. the famous defender of Dreyfus. To the distinguished order of "uoi-atu" Deiong some of the leadinsr nolitlcisrna of the day. Indeed, it may be said that both chambers of legislature are large ly recruited rrom lawyers and doctors. President Poincaire would have been prooably "batonnier" last year had he not Deen Premier. M. Barthou. the ac tual head of the Cabinet, has occUDied already the position. Other lawyers of distinction in the present Parliament are Maitre Millerand," late Minister of War, and M. Aristide Briand. his col league and superior in the Cabinet. The new "batonnier" Is particularly en vue. rne account or his career at the bar would be the record of the criminality of the last. 20 years. Though ne is still on the right side of 50. and therefore to be accounted young in the great profession he adorns, he has been a leading figure in "causes cele bres" during two decades. Of recent years his most famous client was Gallay, who embezzled large sum of money, from the Comptoir d K.scompte and then sailed the South ern seas in a sumptuous yacht with his mistress, "la belle Mirelli." He de fended Wache de Roo, who shot his mother, of whom he was very fond because she was going to marry again and recently he defended a woman who killed a rival to her husband's affec tions, and succeeded, thanks to Maitre Robert, in enlisting the sympathy of the jury. There is something irresistible in the IT CAR Must be disposed of. All this week we will have on display in our main show room some really legitimate, well-known cars for sale at a price that means a SAVING- of from $150 to $400. Yes, we mean to say we are giving that additional value. Come and find put. That's the best way. We Are Besponsible, Too H. L. KEATS AUTO CO. SAYRE TO HELP WIVE MISS WILSON'S FIANCE HEAD'S ABAXDOXMEXT BUREAU. 'It's, a Tough Job and You'll Hear Lot of Domestic Troubles," Warns Predecessor In Office. NEW YORK, . July 24. Francis B, Sayre. fiance of Miss Jessie Wilson. daughter of President Wilson, was ap pointed head of the wife abandonment bureau yesterday by Acting District Attorney Wasservogel. Mr. Sayre will take charge today. The young man is deeply interested in the study of social conditions and this position will give htm . plenty .of opportunity to follow his bent. "It's a tough job and you'll hear lot of domestic troubles," said Joseph O. Skinner, who has been In charge of the bureau, as he gave the books yes terday to Mr. Sayre. "I hope it won't scare you out of getting married," he added with a smile. the long-billed birds. Now fishermen returning empty-handed tell stories about "the big ones" that the birds swiped on them. Speecli of Thirteen Hours' Duration. Philadelphia Record. One of the Slav members of the reichsrath appears to have broken all records by discoursing for 13 M hours without a break. Mark Twain relates hearing a speech of nearly as long duration. When living in Vienna he attended a sitting of the reichsrath. which lasted 33 hours, of which 1C hours were occupied by a single speech. The opposition determined to obstruct, and the deputy's monologue was . contribution. "Mothlncr could do that." laucherl Mr. eloquence of this famous pleader, who sayre. uses a latitude unknown in the foreign The bureau sometimes gets as many courts to secure the verdict. Every . 10 cases of abandonment in a dav. GKXERALS STRIPPED OF RAXKS Pardon Offered for Soldier Who Ar rests or Kills Leaders. PEKJN, July 24. A manifesto has been issued stripping General Chi Ho Mai, ex-Minister of Commerce, and General Huang Sing, ex-Generalissimo of the revolutionary army and now commander of the southern armja, of their ranks and orders, offering a re ward to any of their followers who arrest or kill them and a pardon to all rebels- who surrender, except the leaders. MOTORCYCLE IS CRUSHED sort of appeal to sentiment and sensi bility seems to be allowed by a French judge, and "avocats" do not scruple to employ the arts of the stage to move the hearts of the good men and true who listen. In a judicial spirit, to their oratory. One of the finest speeches delivered at the par by the new batonnier was in a theatrical case. Octave Mirbeau, author of a particularly stringent play, Le Foyer, which "exposed an Aca demician, summoned M. Jules Claretle, director of the Comedie Francaise, to show cause why he should not produce the work. It was an action such as Paris loves, and counsel on both sides excelled themselves. He has the prodigious activity of great lawyers, of great workers who apply organization to enable them to accomplish more than the normal man. He seems to give more time to enter tainment and to social life than the majority of his confreres, who allow all their energies to bo absorbed by. the Palais de Justice. At his table one meets a particularly interesting society, ministers of the re- It will be Mr. Sayre's duty to look Into every one. "Two Important points to remem ber," Mr. Skinner told him, "are to make sure that the wife and minor children are in destitute circum stances." 'But suppose the wife gets along by taking In washing?" queried Mr. Sayre. "She is destitute just the same," re plied Mr. Skinner. Surgeon Passes Scene of Accident in Time to Save Life. public, dukes of the old regime, princes not natch them fr of the empire. He removed the bar- occasionally they a A Bird of a Fish Story. Winsted (Conn.) Correspondent Phila delphia Record. Two clever kingfishers have estab lished a home in a gravel bank within a few rods of Highland Lake, where fishing boats assemble every morning. The birds watch operations from the holes in the bank, and when tlje fisher men begin to pull in fish, generally perch and rock bass, the kingfishers swoop down upon the fishermen, seiz ing the fish as they are lifted above the water. Sometimes the fish are so se curely hooked that the kingfishers can. from the hooks, but re borne away by ' Thrown against Broadway bridge when his motorcycle ricrs which others set up. Perhaps the greatest claim of Maitre I Robert to public gratitude is his eara- .. , v. i. 1 Dai K II m lavor ci reraeay iui juychuc crime. ne nas aenvereu Btverm swerved and overturned, I. Geller, of ujaT attentlon to the part home lnflu 675 First street, was so. badly injured en.ce plays In the development of the yesterday that his removal to the I orecocious lawbreaker. Good Samaritan Hospital was neces- in person Maitre Robert is tall and sary. The opportune arrival of Dr. W. slim, and he possesses the character M. Killingsworth, Jr., saved the wheel- -istic strong law of the successful legal mans me, tor two arterieB in me necK wrestler. He Is one .of the figures oil "DATHING SUITS have taken a plunge the-'re down to naked prices. For river, nata torium or ocean sid e you'll need one; come in today while the assort ment is good. Both, two-piece and union suits. Men's $1.50 Suits, $1.15 Men's $2.50 Suits, $1.95 Men's $3.50 Suits, $2.65 The great "walk-out of sweaters, suit cases and trav eling bags still continues. Belter lend a hand. Furnishings Department, Main floor. BEN SELLING Leading: Clothier Morrison Street at Fourths.. . had been several and Geller was rap-! Idly bleeding to death. The surgeon was passing in his automobile shortly after the accident and gave first aid. At Good Samaritan Hospital Geller was said last night, to be in serious plight. He has a crushed arm, broken jaw, broken collar bone and other pos sible injuries. the time. LASH LAID ON ROYALTY Whipping of Women of 6 0 Years Ago. Irving Batchellor in "Grlggsby." Their fears were three idleness, God and the poorhouse. Whatever the men might do or fail to do In Grlggsby, it was the part of the women to work and save. They squandered to save; squandered their abundant strength to save the earnings of the family, the souls of husbands, sons and daughters, the lives of - the sick. If ever they thought of themselves It was in secret. Their hands were never idle. Tfoung man, I maintain that a lady cannot He; but it ain't always best to believe her. Tou didn't expect that she was goin' to toss her heart into your lap at the first bid, did ye? They don't do that, not if they're real cunnin'. They like to hang on to their hearts an' make ye bid for 'em. They want to know how much you'll give; and they're right, absolutely right. It's good business. A girl has to be won. CORNER BRINGS MILLIONS Fifth Avenue Property in New York Traded to Phipps Estate. NEW YORK, July 24. The north west" cof ner ' of Forty-seventh street and Fifth avenue, once the prop erty of Columbia University, has been transferred to the Henry Phipps estate in exchange for-cash, property in Pitts burg and real estate in West Twenty- first and Twenty-second streets at Fifth avenue. The transaction involves between 6,000,000 and $7,000,000. VIENNA WOMEN SEEK VOTE Other European Cities Also Centers of Activity. LONDON, July 24. (Special.) Mary Mortimer Maxwell in a letter to the "Daily Chronicle" from Vienna, says: "The Viennese women are among the smartest women in the world. They are smart in personal appearance, smart in dress, smart in manner, and smart in intellect. A few nights ago I saw some of the smartest of them, and they were all talking about one thing, dis cussing sometimes earnestly, some times vivaciously, only one subject, and; Carter -Faces Trial for Princess and; Two Princes. BERLIN, July 24. A Princess and two Princes of the house of Isenburg, belonging to the highest German no bility, were horsewhipped recently by an angrv carter whose norses tneir automobile had alarmed. Prince Alphons, Princess Antoinette and Prince Victor von Isenburg were motoring to Altenburg, where they were to viBlt the Dake of Altenburg, head of another formerly sovereign house of the Empire, when they en countered a farmer with a load ot wood. His horse shied before the auto mobile and unset the load in the dltcn. The driver lashed out with his whip at the nrincess and the princes as they rolled by, leaving angry wealts on tne faces of all three. He now faces trial at Gera for his misdeed, which a cen tury ago would have been almost high treason. - Ski Runner Is Killed. -Pf arrer a good BERNE, July 24. (Special.) Paul Baumgartner, aged 80, climber and an experienced ski-runner, has been killed on the Turmlihorn, mountain In the Niesen range, 8170 feet high. Herr Baumgartner was roped together with a friend, and when they were passing a difficult spot a stone suddenly fell from above and struck him on the legs, causing him to lose his footing. His companion held the rope securely, hoping to save him. but the rope broke on a sharp rock, and Herr Baumgartner fell over 600 feet down a moraine and was killed. ' "When you find that you are get ting in the habit of -worrying un necessarily about your work ; that the daily grind is wearing out your nerves, it is time to bring yourself to a sudden stop. You are facing a nervous breakdown. Don' t pride yourself that you can keep up through will power alone. Iser vousness cannot ba willed away. You must get rid of the cause. There is only one thing to do and that is' to build up your blood. Dr. "Williams' Fink Pills enable the blood to carry to the weakened nerves the nourishment that they need and have proved of the great est benefit in even severe nervous disorders. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by ail druggists at 50 cents per box or six boxes for (2.50 or by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company. Schenectady, N. V. WRINKLES HOW TO REMOVE IN 15 MI1VTTTES, HOW TO PREVENT FROM COMING, Inclose 2c stamD for n&rticulars. Satis faction guaranteed. Free demonstration at our office. 9. second floor. SSS'A Wash ington St., Jept. x Hours i to 5 p. fi. Portland. Oregon. Phone Mala 3271, AsejuUi U'SLatcd. Territory for Sale, Great Northern Railway Summer Excursions to the East Tickets on sale daily until September 30. Going limit fifteen days from date of sale. Return limit October 31; stcpovers allowed in each direction. Atlantic City and return.. $111.30 St. Louis and return 70.00 Boston and return ....... 110.00 Detroit and return $ 83.50 Pittsburg and return..... 91.50 Montreal and return 105.00 Baltimore and Washington and return... $107.50 New York and Philadelphia, and return 108.50 Chicago and Milwaukee and return 72.50 Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo and return 55.00 Toronto, Buffalo and Niagara Palls and return 92.00 St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth. Winnipeg, Omaha, Council Bluffs, Kansas City and St. Joe and return 60.00 Go East on the ORIENTAL LIMITED; leaves Portland daily at 7 :00 P. M. Through Standard and Tourist Sleepers to Chicago in 72 hours. Return same way or any other direct route if desired, without extra charge. Ticket and Sleeping Car Reservations at City Ticket Office, 122 Third St., or at Depot, 11th & Hoyt. -fmTr JHfr' H. Dick a on, City Passenger and Tick et Agt. Telephones Marshall 3071, A 2286. Visit GLACIER NATIONAL PARK this Summer. to September 15. Ask for Booklet. Season June 15