AMERICANS ARRIVE Off DUTCH STEAMER Nieuw Amsterdam Reaches New York After Being Held Up Three Times on Trip. SHOTS HALT LINER TWICE Last Kncounter With Warship Is With British Cruiser Essex; Word" Brought That Six Yale Men Are Missing in Germany. NEW YORK. Aug. 18. The Holland America liner Nieuw Amsterdam, flying the Datch flag and having on board many Americans who had fled war stricken Europe, arrived in this port last night after being held up three times by warships on her trip across from Rotterdam. On August S. five hours and a half out from European shores, she was stopped by a Dutch torpedo-boat de stroyer. ' Forty minutes later a shot passed across her bows and three Brit ish ships surrounded her. Yesterday when 376 miles east of Sandy Hook the cruiser Essex came alongside, after the Nieuw Amsterdam had slowed down in response to two shots from the Briton's guns. Each time she was held up the passenger liner satisfied the warship that she belonged to a neutral nation and was allowed to proceed. Passengers Number 2039. The vessel brought to New York 2039 passengers, most of them Americans. Coming across Captain Baron, of the liner, did not attempt to conceal his vessel's identity, and at night burned all lights as usual. She sighted last Wednesday a liner with four stacks, painted gray, flying no flag, speeding toward England. Captain Baron be lieved her to be the Cunard vessel Mau retania in attempted disguise. Before the Essex stopped her yester day the Nieuw Amsterdam had been In communication with the cruiser. Upon sighting the Briton the liner did not slacken speed, believing her iden tity was known. Brought to at the warning of the shots, the Nieuw Am sterdam waited until the cruiser was so close as to distinguish officers at the rails. As the Essex sped off again cheers of the steamer's passengers fol lowed her. It was believed the cruiser had gone to Join the Drake and Good hope, the latest of Britain's seven cruis ers to arrive off the American coast, rharch Services Held. Before the Essex was sighted church services were held on board the Nieuw Amsterdam, at which prayers were of fered for peace and especially for pres ervation of American neutrality. A voluntary relief committee during the voyage aided persons of wealth at home, but who. stranded without cash broad, had been unable to purchase the best accommodations on the ship and had been obliged to take steerage quarters. The passengers spoke highly of the treatment they received. The ship was well provisioned, as food was plentiful when it left Rotterdam. Captain Baron doubted the report of a scarcity of food in the Dutch port. The passengers generally lauded the efforts of the American diplomatic and Consular agents abroad to aid Ameri cans. Cologne Cathedral Fortified. Senator Fletcher, of Florida, praised this work. The RfV. B. C. Traudt. of Milwaukee, and others confirmed the report that the cathedral at Cologne was fortified. Mr. Traudt told of the arrest of seven Russian spies, who were disguised as nuns. All Kuli Khan. Persian Charge d Af faires at Washington, and his wife and family were among the passengers. They brought two suitcases, the rest of their baggage having been left in Hamburg. Henry B. Ketcham reported: tnat nis son. Henry Holman Ketcham. Yale's 1913 football captain, and five other Yale men were somewhere in Ger many and he had not been able to communicate with them for three weeks. Young Ketcham's companions included C M. Gile. pitcher on the Yale team, and William J. LJppincott. a for mer Yale crew captain. ANTWERP REFUGEES ARRIVE Vo-r-el Halted Six Times on Voyage by British Warships. BOSTON. Aug. 18. The Red Star liner Marquette with 113 persons on board from the war gone, arrived to night from Antwerp. She was halted six times on the voyage by British warships. Three times she was brought to by shots across her bow, the last time within a short distance of Boston Light, at 6 o'clock tonight For 11 days the Red Star liner's pas sengers were fearful of capture by German warships. In the English Channel she was held up twice by torpedo-boat destroyers. A British cruiser stopped her two days out; twice she was brought to in mid-ocean by English ships and tonight barely beyond the three-mile limit outside this port she was forced to stop by a Brit ish cruiser. Most of those on board had fled from Europe with few possessions; some with only the clothes they wore. Miss Mae Treska, a music student, said she was arrested as a spy in Ant werp and spent two hours in prison. In her flight from St Petersburg she traveled on crowded trains, sleeping on her baggage, which she finally threw out of the window to make more room for herself. She said she saw some of the fighting at Liege and was on the outskirts of several riot ing mobs In Antwerp. A party of 16 young women from Tennessee and South Carolina, who re turned on the Marquette, told of go ing for long Intervals without food or sleep. During the ride from Paris to Antwerp the only place they had to sleep was on the floor of a third-class carriage and their only food was a loaf of bread and a Jar of Jam. The train was delayed and they reached Antwerp barely in time to catch the ship. Professor Alexander H. Phillips, of Princeton University, made his way from Trieste to Antwerp by traveling most of the distance on troop trains. AMERICANS OX WAY HOME Names or Passengers on Steamer Noordliam Announced. AMSTERDAM. Aug. 18. On board the Holland-American line steamer Noordham, which sailed Saturday from Rotterdam for New York, where the following American passengers: Flrt csbla K. Ansoul, J. W. Arrowmltn, Charles Aulin. Nell C. Brooks. G. Burnett. Mr. and Mrs. H S. Cheney. D. F. C. Clark. A P. Crease. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Deb roiM. W. Davis. Edward C. Dixon. C. D. Swell R. t- Garner. I. C. Garrliou. Mr. and Mrs. E P. Gate. R. O. Harding. Dr. and Mrs J. F. Harper. Dr. E. E. Hlcka. Mr. Slid Mrs' J H Howard, S. E. Hud.on. Dr. and Mra! Charles T. 111. Edmund Carl. Htrbrt and Hln III, A. H. Irwin. N. S. James, V - .. .1 if, X) u InnM Mrs. :.?."' Johnson. Miss' Katherine Johnson, W. N. Jones. Miss u. w. Jones. r, auu . - League, J H. Leverlcn, air. ana mr. Lwls. E.' Lyons, Mr. and Mrs. David May. Dr. John t Mlddleton. dater John I. Mld- dleton. Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Moore, air. uu Mrs P. Nobbe and child. Professor Henry N'orthrup. Mr. snd Mrs. Guy R. Overenu. Miss Helen overena. .Mr. iuu r. p.Br.,n t nun Pearson. A. N. Peasle.-. W H. Pennock. Mrs. N. Pennock, T. J. Oakley Rhtnelander, T. J. Oakley Rhlne- .-.- ii u r .' - X n Hli-harrison. lainier ix. .w- u. - - J. Rlpner. Dr. E. Whltlock Rose, Wilbur W . Rose. J. W. Sheppara. sir. ana .r. n.. Smith, Nassau Stephens, A. Strolln, James b. Torrenee. Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Vaughn. Artla Vaug-hn. Miss Cornells Vaughn. Harry C. Whltlemore. Mr. and Mrs. A. McD. Wilson. AukIk Wilson. Second cabin Mr. and Mrs. William S. John A. Andrew, Miss Clarissa Andrew. Mrs. O. Barton ana lamuy, fi. Brett, Mrs. S. Brown and Daughter. Mrs. r v. . - rw c P.v.n.er Mrs. Marie Cha- taln Miss Catherine Cordiwener, Miss Jane Curtis. Miss Louise Curtis, Dr. T. W. Davis. Miss Mabel Dunlop. Charles r. t.nsiie, ntnu r. r. J rtK-lT Ha Vnrt Hermit!! Gabbe, Bar-net Harris, Mrs. Joseph M. Har ris. Otto Charlea Heroio, n ii. ;- U..J.II XT XV Tasnn (i W. MC- Farland. H. M. Merrltt, Rev. Andrew Ne mens. Mrs. Martha Nicholls, Mr. and Mrs. C N. D. North and daughter, Mlas Babetta . . . . , . ., in.. . i i . i NUTiner, Miss nena ugtn, . , weini. Mr. Parmelee. Miss Helen Phelps, . . w; !Ha sinffpr Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Sherwood and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. AlDh Shubert. Mrs. u. j. o...... . Basil Souraw Mrs. Ellis Sprenzard, Anton Stammer, James Stammer. J. P. Suerth. Miss Mary Tox and Mies R. Watklna. GERMflTsiO GIVEN OARING NEWSPAPER REPORTER RETURNS FROM Mil U II I. Almost labellevable Numbers of Ger mans on Way to on hern Bel glum, Is Report. iivnnM Ann- 18. 4:20 A. M. A dis patch to the Central News from Brus sels says that a daring newspaper man i -.(...n f triur citv after a trip along the frontier, between the armies, during wnicn ne act.ua.ny ajjciii. days within the German lines. He says: "The Germans are bringing up almost unbelievable numbers of men and .i.i f m ...ill.,,-,- hnrans nnrl SI1T1- quautiLicB Wl tv , ,,.-..,, r plies along the line from Luxemburg to tne norinern iimiia ui owgiau tory. . "I do not believe the published stories of atrocities by Germans, as all n .,V.nm T mat Ilflt TO bS ueruiuus " n,,,,. ....... the sort of men likely to be guilty o sucn ueeus, aamougu x uiu mi under the nervous tension of actual fighting. "Most of the ofticers are wen satis fied with the progress of the fighting thus far. One officer said: .. XT - ,, l. T In ,n : ,, a u fnt w 'n n n Wf 'TIC i''v-.iv ui, ... . . thought it would take three months. We are now in me ueari i neii.uui, ... , J . , co n A ,!!-, 1 ,1 f Hit wiinin a icw . ,, j - - capital. We will take to Strassburg . . . .1 I l,n - - many guns cauxuicu w -. e in-v ease from the vaunted artillery of .France.' ," 'We can afford to lose a million men as the price of victory, but the allies cannot aiioru to lose inou&anua. iho perfectly welded masi of the people of the German empire is bound to over come the badly united troops of the allies.' " The newspaper man lont.nued: "The German government has no quarrel with the United States and Is doing all in its power to impress the officials of the necessity for extending facilities to Americans who are trying to get out of tne country. AIM IS ON PARKER State List Health Powers Would Dentist as Nuisance. JURY INQUIRY REPORTED GENERAL BUTLER DEAD RETIRED ARMY OFFICER VICTIM OF BRIEF ILLNESS. Death Occurs at Home of Son-lu-Laxr, Major J. J. illorron Bnrial In National Cemetery. John G. Butler, Brigadier-General of the United States Army, retired, died at the home of his son-in-law. Major J. J. Morrow, 828 Kearney street, Mon day night at 10 o'clock. Death was due to embolism or the brain. The General was stricken last Weanesday. General Butler was born in Pitts burg. January 23, 1842. and graduated from West Point in 1863. He received appointments in the artillery and saw distinguished service during the Civil War, after which he was transferred to the Ordnance Corps of the Regular Army. He rose through successive grades and from the rank of Colonel of the Ordnance he was appointed a Brigadier-General in 1904, during President Roosevelt's administration. It was with this rank and distinction that he re tired. He was a member of the Loyal Le gions and was affiliated with the local chapter. He was also a member of the Arlington and University clubs. Three daughters and two sons sur viye him: Captain Lawrence P. But ler, Fourth Infantry, Vera Cruz; Lieu tenant Rodman Butler, Fifteenth Cav alry, Fort Bliss, Texas; Miss May W. Butler, Cortland. N. T., who is ex pected to arrive in Portland this morn ing; Mrs. Malcolm G. Buchanan, Tren ton, N. J., and Mrs J. J. Morrow, of this city. Funeral arrangements have not been made, but the body will be taken to Washington, D. C, and Interment will take place in the Arlington National Cemetery. ARTISANS HAVE BIG DAY THREE HUNDRED PARTICIPATE IN CLAMBAKE AT BAR VIEW. Plan Afoot by Dental Society and Others to Kndeavor to Apply Law to Case of Man Who Pulls Teeth on Public Streets. War between the state health au thorities and "Painless" Parker has been declared, as a result of the den tist's revolt against tne State Dental Society. It is said authoritatively that evidence has been brought before the grand jury in an endeavor to indict Dr. Parker as a public nuisance un der a secton of the state law provid ing for the abatement of things or pursuits detrimental to the public health. When the grand jury takes up tne case It is expected that dentists will testify that "Painless" Parkers methods of working on the street are unsanitary. Kxperts also will be called in to show that sanitary dentistry cannot be performed on an open street, where dust is likely to be flying, and that Dr. Parker has not the proper tools in his kit with which to sterilize his Instruments. Dr. Parker declares that the whole campaign is directed against him because he has proposed an initiative bill directed against the so-called "dental trust." Flsrht Plan Outlined. This action of the health authorities is the result of a campaign conducted on the streets and with the aid of advertising by "Painless" Parker. Charging that he was refused a dental license because he believed in adver tising, Dr. Parker set himself in op position to the Dental Society. Should the grand jury find a not true bill against Dr. Parker it is de clared the case will be taken up under the law which created the State Board of Health. This act gives the Board power to suppress anything detri mental to public health. Should both of these plans fail, the Dental Society, backed by the health authorities, has still another card to play. It is declared to be the inten tion of the dentists to go before the City Council and "demand" the passage of an ordinance prohibiting free clinics on the public streets. Should such an ordinance be enacted, it would shut out Dr. Parker from his street cam- 'Unethloal" Campaign Base." The "dental war" originated through thjr clause in the rules of the Dental Society declaring it "unethical" for dentists to advertise. Dr. Parker, com ing to this state, announced himself as an advertising dentist, and opened offices here, employing aeniisis wnu had passed the state examinations. He declares that because he refused to onforni to the "unethical' clause in the Dental Society's rules, he was not granted a license to practice. For the past lu mourns ur. raiei has conducted a campaign, much of ,. iio hnan thrnnch street sneak ing and demonstrations on the streets. RAILROAD CHIEF ANSWERS East Side Club Told Purchases in Oregon Will Not Be Curtailed. The East Side Business Men's Club Monday received from President Sproule, of the Southern Pacific, the following reply to its request that the company's purchasing department be retained in Portland: "East Side Business Men s Club, Port land. Or. Discontinuing title of pur chasing agent at Tortland does not signify that purchases of material in Portland, or in Oregon, will be dis continued. In fact. purchasing will not be affected there by the simple re trenchment of our forces, due to the depressed times now existing in this country, and we have to curtail in ad ministrative matters in every possible way. Portland merchants and manu facturers wil have our friendly con sideration precisely the same as here tofore, as our assistant general man ager, Mr. Campbell, can assure you. "Your reference to movng general manairer's office to San Francisco is manifestly a misapprenhension. Our management of the lines in Oregon is local and direct through the assistant general passenger division superin tendent, general freight agent and gen eral passenger agent, who have all requisite authority in Oregon matters." COFFEE TO SUCCEED RUM Man Forced Out of Saloon Business Plans Eating-House for Poor. Having been put out of the saloon business because of the bad reputation of his place, W. Margullis announced Monday that he will open the larg est coffee house on the Pacific Coast for the purpose of giving men out of work meals for small cost. The coffee house will be in the building formerly occupied by the saloon. Plans for the new undertaking were unfolded to Mayor Albee yesterday and received hearty approval. Mr. Margul lis says he wants only to get rent out of the place. It is the plan to give a meal for 5 cents and to furnish a place where men out of emplovmi-nt may loiter instead of going to saloons. u. uvianH s lust returned from a ! iri.m.ih v,-it: purrv and Jose phine counties, where he set In motion preparations for Southern Oregon's par ticipation In tne exposition. During the absence of O. M. Clark, chairman of the commission, much of the responsibility of planning for the - . i . . r Drop-nn at thfi Pan- ama-Paciflc Exposition, and provisions for assembling ana arranging fell to Mr. Hyland. In the past few months he visited practically every section of the state and brought the various counties into line to co-operate with the commission in preparing for j Oregon's -representation at San Fran- Cisco. As a result of his visit to Southern -,....,, Pnriv Pnuntv is nlanning to assemble and contribute the finest dis play of agates from her beaches tnat has ever been collected. Coos County is arranging for a fine exhibit of woods and Klamath County is to have a fish ; and game exhibit which is calculated I to make one of the most attractive and unique displays In the Oregon building and grounds, with the co-operation of the State Fish and Game Commission. Mr. Hyland submitted at the meeting of the Commission yesterday a report covering his activity in organizing the various counties, and indicated a state- I wide inclination to endeavor to make the Oregon building and Oregon ex hibits the finest possible. OCCASION ToiT BUYING Double S. 6 H. Trading Stamps 1 oday DIVE TO DEATH MAN ENDS LIFE BY PLUNGING OFF MORRISON BRIDGE. Addresses Made, Prosrrammc Carried Out and Exhibition Drill Pnt On by Life-Savins" Crew. Three hundred members of the United Artisans arrived at Bar View Monday by special train at 8:30 A- M. for their big clam bake, and were greeted by the re ception committee of the Bar View Bench Progressive Club. An open-air programme was held Immediately, in which the Oak Grove band played a prominent part. W. B. Shlvely made the welcoming address on behalf of Bar View. His address was respond ed to by H. S. Hudson, supreme master Artisan. The Artisan trio, including Miss Smith, H. E. Hudson and R. G. Thomas, sang several vocal selections. Miss Goldie Peterson gave a vocal solo, the French sisters gave an exhibition of dancing and Miss Mildred Garr gave a reading interspersed with irrjitatlons of the different barnyard fowls. M. Peterson, of Bar View, acted as master of ceremonies. Immediately following the pro gramme an exhibition drill was given by the life-saving crew under Captain Farley. At 2 o'clock the Artisans were served with clam chowder and at 3 o'clock the big clambake was held. Among the prominent visiting Arti sans were: H. S. Hudson, supreme mas ter Artisan; C. L. McKenna, Isaac E. Staples, H. R. Taylor, Mayor of Cor vallis; L B. Reeder. Drs. J. C Eschel man H. E. Schlegel and E. E. Van Alstyne. Mrs. Ella Watt, of Salem, supreme instructor of Artisans. Coat Discarded by Him In -attempt to Swim After Lean Suicide Is J. F. GHson, Wallace, Idaho. I M , , ,, ; 1A rAAt frnm f.lp miuule of i 1 J I f, . I ' f, w - - - " the XInrrison-street bridre to the sur face of the river, a man, believed to be r-,,. ... v niiann nf Walla.ce. Idalio. committed suicide at 6 o'clock Monday night. Spectators say tne ma.u men to swim, but had been stunned oy tne fall and made no progress. W. S. Robinson, a carpenter anu con tractor who lives at 3804 Sixty-nintn street. Southeast, saw the man in mid air just after he plunged. "He hit flat on the surface or tne water," said Mr. Robinson. He came up, took off his coat in the water ana tried to swim, but sank and dia not come up again." Clarence Bicknell. engineer on the Mildred H., started to the man's assist ance in a rowboat, but did not reach him. in time- Letters in the man's coat indicate thnt lw was James F. Gilson, a dusi- ,i man frnm Wallace. Idaho. One let ter was from a sister, Mrs. M. L. Dols. of Dixon, Mont. SUICIDE PROMINENT MINER Gilson Was Officer of Wallace alin ing & Milling Company. WALLACE, Idaho. Aug. 18. (Spe cial.) James F. Gilson, reported, to have committed suicide In roriiaiia. was a well-known resident ana mill ing man of this city, where he had .r. jj , o noor i! vmrs. He was resiueu iui . a stockholder of the Wallace Mining & Milling Company, wnicn naa property in this city. Mr. Gilson left here about a month ago presumably on a mining deal and Dennis Goggin, a ciose ineim left here this morning to meet him in Spokane in connection with the deal in hand. He was single, aDout oo yeaia of age, quiet and unassuming. A sister, Mrs. Louis Dols. formerly of this city and Spokane, now is residing near Dixon. Mont A half-brother, Ed Milligan, formerly resided here. Mr. Gilson was raised in Independence, Iowa, where he has relatives. EM P R ESS MUSIC C H A R'M S Voices at Show Are Unusually Good and Please. For one ' tfho seeks singing, with voices of more than average sweetness, the bill at the Empress Theater this week will hold an attractiveness quite beyond its other appealing features, for the majority of the acts are full of singing, and three o them are entirely musical. Add Hoyt's Miniature Minstrel Show, which closes the bill, caps off well the programme, with beautiful songs in solo and in ensemble, and between the "Some Reductions" 10c Hose Water. 10c Cocoanut Oil , 7 10c Allspice 7 10c Bird Sand 7 10c Sulphur 7 10c Epsom Salts 7 50c Swamp Root 33 50c Sal Hepatica 39? Jl Cuticura Resolvent 7C 1 Walnut Hair Stain 71 f 50c DeWitt's Kidney Pills 33C 25c Mum, 15; two for 25 25c Euthymol Tooth Paste. 15; two fZr 25 25c Frostilla. 14c two for 25C 5c Ivory Soap, eight cakes for 25C (No deliveries quantities limited, i 50c Nail Brush, ebony 33 5c Hand Scrub Brush 3 15c Tooth Brush, two for 25 $5 Ivory Hair Brush. 11 rows bristles, a beauty S3. 98 GARDEN Deep Cut HOSE $6.25. 5-ply $5.75. 5 ply. $7.00, 6-ply, $6.00, ply. $8.60. 7 ply, $7.00. 7 ply. fc-ln.. $5.TO H-in H.7 Lawn Mowers $ 4.00 I .awn Mower, to closa. fH'I- $10 00 lawn Mower, to close. " One bottle lawn mower oil KRI'.K, Incloutna: a can. with each purchsac. Cut Glass All This Week OXE-ai ARTKR OFF. See Alder-Street Window. Everything Photographic When in need of good material want It quick, call us. We'll be there with the goods. C'yko Paper, Ansco Cameras, Films, etc. I "Argentala" A fabric of itreel aoftness and efficiency for ileaning and polishing fine arlli lea of gold, sliver, nlck. l. OC glass, etc.. price LADIES' HAND BAGS Extraordinary Bargain CALL. EARLY Must mak r room for Fall gooc THERMOS A large stock of n e w T!:.err.: !? SI to $4.50 V Pay Gas Bills Here Pay Water Bills Here Buy Money Orders Here Buy Streetcar Tickets Here Brancn Postoffice All for your accommodation. Soda Fountain AND Tea Room Rapid Service. Every thing Modern and Appetizing III 1 songs there Is a pleasing sparkle of dialogue typically of the old-fashioned minstrel show. They-Yan-Da, the Sioux Indian sing er, has a strikingly sweet voice, and his singing and Indian dances caught the fancy of the audience last night at once, so that he was called back again and again. Estelle Rose, In - er cycle of songs and costume changes, is also a great favorite and has a line of patter that a joy to the heart Speaking of patter, there is Arm strong and Ford in 'Johnny and the Cop," with a beautiful mess or aaii- dill quibbling and English impersona tion The Englishman, with his "typi cal" costume and his "typical" accent,' which hoary tradition h-s hung on the English Impersonation, is vivified with a great amount of originality in this act. and the "Cop" has a voice that is pleasant to listen to. even when he is pulling off a rag-time song without much attention to melody. Vivian Murray and Grace St. Clair In "Broadway Love" have a delightful lit tle bit of comedy with plent of spark ling lines, and In their act they let no opportunity either In plot or lines of the little sketch escape them. From the whirl of the opening "dance-a-logue" of the three Brownes to the. filming of the movies at tlie close of the bill there are few barren spots to plague the vaudeville fan who Is seeking a performance that I. as a continual round of entertainment or mirth. iiipun stays MtMh OoMoa. ST. LOUIS. Aug. HI. A report asU been given out here that Pipaw had placea an order tor $.000,000 bales of cotton with various dealers In Hie South. The report was made public here to night by J. R. Curlee, secretary of a large mercantile firm of HI. Ioul GIRLS ACCUSE; MAN HELD J. A. Hogan Charged With Annoy ing Milwaukee Children. j. a. Hogan, a laborer living near Stanley Station, on the Estacada car line was arrested on charges of insulting- several little girls near Mifc waukie. Deputy State Game Warden Frank Irvin. who Is also a Deputy Sheriff of Clackamas County, made the After being taken to the county Jail at Oregon City, Hogan was identified by nine, small girls who charged that they had been accosted by him. He was given a preliminary hearing be fore Judge Kellogg yesterday and then bound over to the grand jury on $1000 bail. G. M. HYLAND PROMOTED Director-General of Oregon K.vhibits at Fair, His Post. George M. Hyland, who for the past six months has been engaged as field secretary and agent for the Oregon commission of the Panama-Pacific Ex position, was appointed yesterday by the commission to the post of director general of the Oregon exhibits at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Fran cisco in 1915. It is his duty to organize the various divisions of the state and arrange assemblage of the exhibits. HEADACHE AND DIZZINESS Headache is never a disease. It Is always a symptom. Applications, pow ders and tablets that drug the head ache into quietude are treating the symptoms, not the disease, always a useless proceeding and often harmful. When headache is associated with some dizziness it is usually the result of nervous exhaustion and 11 con tinue as long as the person who .1 overworked allows the debility to con tinue. It rapidly disappears when rest and the proper tonic is taken. Nervous exhaustion, the cause of such headaches and dizziness, results from a strain on the nerves with which the re building work of the blood is unable to keep pace. Che best tonic for such a condition is Dr. vWilllams' Pink Pills. These pills build up the blood and strengthen the nerves. With this treat ment unless the overwork, worry, or whatever has caused the nervous break down, is persisted in, the headaches, dizziness, nervousness and irritability that characterize neurasthenia rapidly disappear. The Dr. Williams Medicine Company. Schenectady, N. Y., will send free on request a helpful little book on the home treatment of nervous disorders. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are obtainable at any dru- store. Adv. Stomach Ache and Diarrhoea brought on by eating unripe fruit and vegetables, or sudden changes in weather, excessive heat, gulping down iced drinks, etc., are quickly relieved and prevented by the use of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey Taken as directed you avoia distress ing summer complaints. Heed the advie "Get Duffy's and keap well." Sold in sealed bottles only by most druggists, grocers and dealers. S1.00. Write for medical booklet The Duffy Malt 'Whiskey Co., Rochester. N.Y. V In the East, besides the big cities with their crowds, their massive buildings and historic associations, there are hundreds of other places fully worth a visit Wonderful Niagara Falls, the beautiful Thousand Islands of the St Lawrence, the Adirondack and White Mountains, Maine, Canadian and Atlantic Coast Resorts are all made available by Low Round-Trip Tickets These tickets are on sale daily to September 30th, to New York and Boston and Hundred of Other Eastern Points Stopovers Lpermitted at all interesting places en route -ctodme Toledo, Cleveland, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Rochester. Syracuse, Utica, Albany, Worcester Spring field, and providing option of rail or water trips between Cleveland and Buffalo; Albany and New York. The most complete train service between Chicago and the East assures a pleasant trip over the NewYork&ntral Lines Lake Shore "Tim Wattr-Uvtl RouU" Let Us Plan Your "Back-East" Trip TcO no in a general wy what N retraireJnumbHn jour and the amount of money too want to spend, and we wlrotMS. one or two trip, for Tour consideration, with complete information. and send you a doaenpove lower. Your local agent will be glad to advise you a. to round trip fare, and arrange your ticket, and aleep.ng car accommodations, or for suggests SgelCSSSflStS information regarding trips East. caDon or addre-our PORTLAND OFFICE, 109 Third Strawt W. C. Seschrest. Gen'l Agent Paawenawr Dept. MOTORISTS ASSOCIATED GASOLINE Has been tested out in the very high mountain altitudes of the Yosemite Valley and it was found to give MORE MILES TO THE GALLON it being found unnecessary to adjust the carbureter in touring the mountains. Insist Upon Pure ASSOCIATED GASOLINE If Your Garage Does Not Have It Phone: Main 2055, A 2055 Refined by ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY