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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1915)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23. 1915. 9 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF OBEOOSIAX TELEPHONES. S'nj-lnx Editor .Main 707O. A 8085 City Editor Mala 7070. A. 6085 eunday Editor Main 7070. A. 605 .Advertising Department. ..Main 7070, A BOWS City Circulation Main 7070, A 6091 Composing-room Main 7070. A 6095 Printing-room Main 7070. A 6095 Superintendent Building. ..Main 7070. A 609 AMUSEMENTS. HFTLIG THEATER (Broadway and Taylor street.) Ruth St. Zenla and company. Thia afternoon at 2:1a and tonight at 8:13. BAKER THEATER (Sixth and Morrison streets.) Baker Stock Company In "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine." This after noon at 2:15 and tonight at 8:15 o'clock. CKFHEUM (Broadway and Yamhill street.) Blg-tlrae vaudeville. 2:20 and 8:20 P. M. FANTAOE3 (Alder at Broadway.) Vaude ville, performances 2:30. 7:30 and 9:30 P. MY EMPRESS (Broadway and Stark at.-eet) Vaudeville. Performances 2:0. 7:30 and 9:15 p. M. X.YRIC (Fourth and Stark streets.) Dil lon and King In musical comedy. After noon and night performancea dally. Advertisements Intended for City News In Brief columns in Sunday's lasue must he handed In The Oregonlan business office by & o'clock Saturday evening. Mrs. Evma Ku'u's Funeral Todat. Mrs. Emma Klum, aged 69 years, wife of Hiram Klum, died at her home, 1205 Commercial street, Thursday. She Is survived by her husband, a daughter, eon and two brothers, T. J. and John Coyle, of Lebanon, Or. Mrs. Klum was a native of Linn County, Oregon, and had lived in Portland almost six years. iShe had been a member of the Patton Methodist Church since coming to Port land. The funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock today from the chapel at the corner of Killingsworth avenue and Kerby street. Interment will be In Itivervlew Cemetery. School, Hears Sibphont Orchestra. Upon the request of the principal, T. T. Davis, the final rehearsal of the Portland Symphony Orchestra for its ylrst concert, was held at the audi torium of the Lincoln High School yes terday morning. The concert lasted almost two hours, and the hearty ap plause accorded the musicians dem onstrated the students' appreciation. The School Board has been, asked to appropriate $1000 for the support of the orchestra in return for the per formances that are given for the benefit of the students. The Board has taken the matter under advisement. Sacred Heart Carnival. October 27. The annual carnival of the Sacred Heart parish will be held Wednesday, October 27, at the parish hall, near Milwaukie street. C..H. Kenneth is chairman of the executive committee on arrangements. Mrs. T. J. Reynolds and N. Gardner have charge of the prizes. They report many valuable donations. Mrs. Kreilish, chairman of St. Ann's Society, has donated a full set of hand some dishes for the carnival. An In teresting programme will be rendered. The carnival will continue for three nights. Judge Closes Linnton Riot Cases. The last of the cases growing out of the Austrian riot at Linnton on Sun day, September 12, were cleaned up by Judge Gantenbein yesterday when he fined Joe Puzek 150 and sentenced Carl Schermora to 60 days in the County Jail. Schermora was paroled, how ever, on a showing that he had been in jail constantly since September 12. The two men pleaded guilty to assault and battery on E. H. White. Their trouble with White constituted the vanguard of the riot. Alleged Speeder Faces Trial. Jasper Kelter, who was arrested at Eleventh end Stark streets Thursday night by Motorcycle Officers Crane and Gould stone, charged with driving an auto mobile while intoxicated, will be tried in the Municipal Court next Wednes day. According to Deputy Sheriff Carl H. Jackson, Mr. Keffer was driving up Washington street at 35 miles an hour, immediately preceding his arrest. He is said to have run into Mr. Jackson's automobile and another machine on Washington street. Police Find Stol.es Auto. Taken by auto thieves while standing in front of the Orpheum Theater on the night of October 20, a new seven-passenger car belonging to L. M. Starr, 901 Lewis building, was found early yesterday morning by Police Sergeant Oelsner on Eleventh street, between Alder and Morrison streets. The thieves evidently had left the machine there after taking & Joyride. It was apparently un damaged, and was taken to the station nd Mr. Starr was notified. Robber Confesses, Sentenced. Au gust DeBoodt, pleaded guilty before Municipal Judge Stevenson yesterday morning to taking various articles of clothing from Alphonse Audcel, 606H Thurman street, and was sentenced to 90 days in jail. The man broke into the house and took a suit of clothes, nn overcoat, a hat and a watch chain. The suit and overcoat were . pawned for J2.50. but he had the hat and chain when arrested Thursday night at Fourth and Burnside streets. Too Much Mother-in-Law Blamed. Too much mother-in-law is the burden of a divorce complaint filed yesterday by George E. Miller against Lulu J. Miller. Miller declares that his wife insists on keeping her mother with them and that said mother is a con stant source of trouble. On the other liand, he asserts, she refuses to enter tain his mother or his sisters and in variably is spiteful in her attitude to wards them. $5090 Judgment Received. Judg ment for SoOJO, the full amount asked, was given E. C. Gardner against A. J. Ray & Son, Inc., hopgrowers. for personal injuries by a jury in Judge Morrow s court yesterday. Gardner, a I laborer, was hurt by coming in con tact with an improperly guarded engine while employed at the Riverside Hop Farm, in the northern part of Marion County, in July. 1913. Partner - Manager Wanted. High class business exceptionally meri torious, requiring only few thousand dollars. Unusually promising proposi tion; requires man of high character and business ability. Real opportunity. Inquiries treated confidentially; state age and experience. BO 174, Oregonlan. Adv. Tatlor-Street sr. E. Church. The usual outdoor service will be held to morrow at 10:15 A. M. by the members, on the corner of Third and Taylor sts. In front of their church, which is locked and barred against them. This service will be of an unusually attractive character. and the attendance of friends will be appreciated. Adv. State Bank Examiner Sues. Suit in Circuit Court to recover 517.30 and interest on notes executed in favor of the defunct American Bank & Trust Company has been commences by State Bank Examiner -Sargent against W. S. Beebe. Sheriff Brown on Wat Home. Ben J. Brown, of Vale, Or., Sheriff of Malheur County, was in Portland yes terday on his way home from Salem, to which city he had taken F. B. Hamp ton, convicted for obtaining money by false pretenses. "Undamaged Goods" will be Dr. Luther R. Dyott's theme in the First Congregational Church, Sunday at 7:45 P. M. His theme at 11 A. M. will be. "The Lord Sent the Hornet." Special music. Strangers welcome. Adv. "What Jesus Means to Me" is the subject of the sermon to be preached bv Rev. J. H. Boyd at the First Presby terian Church, corner Twelfth and Alder sts.. at 10:30 A. M. At 7:30 P. M.. "The Fact of Pain and Struggle." Adv Two Gospel, Messages at Calvary Presbyterian Church, Eleventh and Clay, tomorrow, by Rev Oliver S. Baum. Adv. Arb you aware Te Oregon Grille serves a 40c merchants' lunch daily T Th best in th city. AAt. Linnton Franchise Accepted. Ac ceptance of a franchise on the Linnton road for a railway line has been filed with the County Commissioners by O. M. Clark, Richard Shepard and J. B. Holbrook, who propose to build a 5- cent fare electric line connecting Port land and Linnton. The franchise of the United Railways on this road was canceled because of violations of its terms, principally by increasing the fare to 10 cents. Subsequent to the cancellation the United Railways se cured a freight franchise as far as Oilton with a common user privilege. Messers. Clark, Shepard and Holbrook probably will take advantage of this common user clause to run their cars over the line as far as constructed. Drill. Tower Soon Readt. The drill tower of the Portland Fire De partment, under construction at the rear of the Are station on East Third and East Pine streets, will be com pleted next week, ready for use. It stands the same height as a four-story building, attached to the engine-house by steel bars'. It will be covered with galvanized iron. The inside will be used for storing hose. The plans for the structure were prepared by Bat talion Chief Holden after the Los An geles, Cal., drill tower, which cost 3000. The appropriation for the Portland tower was 2500, but the actual cost will not be much, if any. over J1000 The cost is only for -material, and the firemen are doing the work. Mr. Lane and Mrs. Stoner to Talk. Senator Harry Lane and Mrs. Winifred Sackville Stoner will be the speakers before the Civic League at its luncheon today at the Multnomah Hotel. Mrs. F. S. Myers will introduce Mrs. Stoner, who will speak upon "Natural Education." "The Duty of the Citizens to Their Public Servants' will be the subject of Senator Lane's address. The subject announced for the next weekly meeting is "Pure Fabrics" and the announcement goes on to say "it may be necessary to show you how you were fooled' in Dress-Up Week." Improvements Are Completed. Im provement of several streets in St. Johns suburb have been completed, in eluding North Hayes, Swenson and Leonard streets. North Hayes was im proved from Philadelphia to the center line of Catlm street at a cost of $3468. Leonard street was improved from Charleston to Chicago street, and an assessment of $1997 was made for the work. Swensen street was improved from Oswego to Myers streets. The as sessment made was for $3117. All these improvements were for grading and cement sidewalks, and were authorized by the old St. Johns Council. ROTAL ROSARIAN BAND TAKES NEW Members. At a special meeting of the Royal Rosarian Band Thursday even ing, five new members, J. R. Tomltnson, Frank Robinson, George Fety, E. C. Shipley and Paul Mahoney. were taken into the organization. A proposed con cert was discussed and met with much favor and no doubt will be held in the near future. Upon the resignation of C. W. Bourne as secretary of the band, Andrew Loney was chosen as his successor. Wagner Music Promised. The Reed College chapel service tliis morning at 8:30 will be devoted to a programme of Wagner music. Dr. Max CuBhing will play "Traume." "Pilger Cher" and the "Valhalla March," on the Olds memorial organ, and together with Louise Huntley at the piano, will play the prelude to "Parsifal." Professor Nor man Coleman will give a short talk. Two Sentenced for Theft. One hundred and eighty days each were meted out to George Wade and Douglas P. Swimm by Municipal Judge Steven son yesterday when they appeared be fore him charged with taking $15 from Barney Faulk, of Oly-mpia, Wash. Faulk identified them as the men who had taken his money. Sell wood Masons Hear Addresses. Sellwood Lodge, No. 131, A. F. and A. M., heard addresses last night by Wallace HcCamant and A. T. Bailey. A musical entertainment was rendered by Dr. J. J. Sellwood, Gus Cramer, Enoch Elmgreen and F. F. L. Moreiand. Extension Class Meets Tonight. Mrs. Mable Holmes Parsons, of the Uni versity of Oregon, will meet the class In literary appreciation at 7:45 to night in room B of the Library. After a review of some criteria, the writings of Thomas Hardy will be discussed. Bishop's Bride Portland Girl. Miss Rose Fullerton, whose marriage to Bishop Rowe, of Alaska, has just been announced, was a resident of Portland for several years and in 1910-1911 was employed as a nurse at the Sellwood General Hospital. W. M. Simpson to Speak. The sub ject of the free lecture at the Central Library tomorrow at 2:30 by William Marcus Simpson will be "Paganism Masquerading." A special invitation is given to all teachers, ministers and public speakers. Tabernacle Service Fixed. Sabbath school this morning at 9:45 o'clock and preaching at 11 o'clock at the Seventh-" Day Adventist tabernacle. Knights of Pythias Hall, corner Eleventh and Alder streets. Store Open Till 10 P. M- Saturday it The George" Overcoat This illustration of the Double-Brfeasted George Coat will give you an idea of the clever styles you'll see here in this great stock of Overcoats. The Klavicle is another striking new Overcoat; made in single and double-breasted styles with velvet collar and loose, roomy skirts. You'll see here many other popular Overcoats by The House of Kuppenheimer The Roy, Braeburn, Keene and Beacon in more conservative models. Every new fabric, weave and color tone is here at $20, $25 and up to $40. Treat your feet to a pair of Ralston Shoes, famous for comfort and style. Prices $4 and $5. ' 4 ... COPYRIGHT 11S THE HOUSE OH KUPPENHEIMM Successor to Steinbach & Co. GUS KUHN. Pres. Morrison At Fourth Southern Pacific Wins. A jury in the damage suit of Homer C. Campbell and Charles F. Swigert against the Southern Pacific for $20,030 damages alleged to have been sustained through the burning over of some 40 acres of timber in Cow Creek Canyon returned a verdict for the defendant yesterday in Federal Judge Bean's court. The plaintiffs alleged that the fire had been started by sparks from locomotives of the defendant company. The Southern Pacific sought to show that its oil burning locomotives do not emit sparks and that, in any event, the land was too far from the railway tracks to have been fired in the manner alleged. Condemnation for Crossing Stated. The County Commissioners yesterday Instructed District Attorney Evans to begin condemnation proceedings against Anna Mercer and other owners of lots 1, 2, and 3, block 7, Bertha, to obtain a right of way for an overhead cross ing on the Capital Highway, formerly the Slavin road, at Bertha. The coun ty road viewers assessed the damage in this case at $625. The three lots are assessed for $230, but in their com plaint the owners placer! a value of $8000 on them and estimated the dam age to be done by the county at $4500. Miss Failing Convalescing. Miss Henrietta H. Failing, who underwent an operation for appendicitis at St. Vincent's Hospital about . two weeks ago, is reported to be convalescing rapidly and it is expected that she will be able to leave the hospital shortly. Miss Failing is a daughter of Mrs. Edward Failing, 617 Johnson street. Dr. E. F. Tucker performed the op eration. Anna Anderson Left $175. Anna Anderson, who died in the office of Dr. A. A. Ausplund last week, as the result of a criminal operation, according to the verdict of a Coroner's jury, left an estate of $175, all in cash. The heirs are her father and mother and five brothers. All reside in Sweden. Andrew Backstrom was appointed administrator. SELLWOOD QUESTION UP DELAY 1ST GETTING FIRE: STATION MAY CHANGE DEMANDS. Battalion Chief Holden Points Ont Advantages of Motor Engine in Plana for New Honae. If the City Commissioners do not see their way clear to appropriate $10,000 for the erection of a new fire station in Sellwood the present year. Battalion Chief Holden, who has been working on the plans for the new structure, favors building a firehouse for a motor fire engine a year hence instead, cutting out the horse-drawn engine used in that district. If the new building is put up now it must necessarily be for a horse-drawn engine, and must be larger and be equipped for the horse apparatus, and the cost will be much more, said Mr. Holden. Mr. Holden strongly favors the motor apparatus and a fire station for a motor engine, the cost of which would be about $3000 less than a fire station for horses, where five horses are kept on hand. He points out that a motor engine can cover a very wide terri tory, including Westmoreland and East moreland and the Reed College, and the district toward the east, which re quires long runs. While the fire station at Sellwood ia in bad condition, Mr. Holden .thinks it cant be used for another year. ice had been obtained by publication in a Portland newspaper. In answer to protests of Wambold's attorney that neither he nor his .client knew where to find the defendant the judge reiterated that finding her was tneir problem and not his. READY FOR COLD WEATHER Buy Wool Underwear Today. The Brownsville Woolen Mills Stores' big annual sale of underwear, socks, sweaters, shirts and all classes of woolen goods that men wear will give the thrifty buyer a chance today to save several dollars on his Winter out fit. In looking for these goods today, be sure and see the windows of the Wool en Mills Stores on Third and Morrison and Third and Stark streets. Adv. Dinner. Dinner dance tonight at Chanticleer Inn, on the Columbia River Highway. Phone reservations to Main 8842. Dancing until midnight. Week-end sleeping accommodations. Special din ner. Good music. Special rates on autos. Adv. Duck Hunters Have Cold Feet. But there's no reason why their feet should be cold if they will invest in a good pair of warm yarn stocks, such as the Brownsville Woolen Mill stores are now selling in their big woolen goods sale at 25 and 35 cents a pair. Adv. RESPECT COMMANDED BY EMOTION OF TOES Difficulty Lies in Manifestation That Will Arouse Response in Audience, Says Ruth St. Denis. AUTO CRASH INJURES TWO Police Blame Driver of Car Which Collides With Taxi. A, Hoffman, East Twenty-eighth and East Pine streets, sustained a broken arm and numerous bruises yesterday morning about 8:40 when the taxi cab which he was driving was struck by a touring car beiongnig to D. W. Ellerson, 525 Clay street, at the in tersection of Sixteenth and Jefferson streets. E. B. Seabrook, attorney in the Yeon building, and Mrs. Seabrook were in the touring car at the time of the accident. Mrs. Seabrook received badly bruised arm, but was other wise unhurt. The taxicab was hurled against a telephone pole at the northwest corner of the intersection and both rear wheels were broken and the body and top badly damaged. Patrolman Bales. who was dispatched to the scene of the accident, declared that the driver of the touring car was to blame. He said that that machine skidded 30 feet be fore striking the taxi. Dinner Dance Tonight. Special dance, special music, special dinner at Chantlclerr Inn. Oregon's grandest scenic boulevard trip. Week end sleeping accommodations. Make reservations early. Main 8842. We make special reduced auto rates Adv. BY LEONE CASS BAER. j THE SUBJECT nearest the heart of Ruth St. Denis is her school of dancing in Los Angeles. It had been her dream for many years to have such an institution as now Dears her name, but she never had felt that he wanted to assume ail tne respon sibility. So when she met Tad &nv.u a year or so ago and tney were mar ried, and she found out mat ne. too, nu dreams of a dancing scnooi. wuj, woman like, she let him snouiaer some of the responsibilities and they set about making the dream come true. Thev selected Los Angelee from all the other cities of the world because it has what Miss St. Denis descrioes as n luminous sniritual atmosphere one that makes artiste particularly nappy. Lone Search Rewarded. "As you may imagine," says Miss St. Denis, "we had to search ana searcn for lust the Dlace we wanted. We re quired a big house, big- grounds and a swimming pool oh, we wanted a. lot of thlncs. but most of all a sense of isolation and lots of trees. "Finally we found just what we were seeking, at the edge or a par, in a fashionable residence district, and while we are only a short motor ride from the city we are still far enough away to feel the solitude we crave. " 'Denishawn.' the Ruth St. iienis school of acting we call our place. Both Mr. Shawn and I teach. "We call ourselves Spirit and Form I am the Spirit. Mr. Shawn puts our ideas into practical execution. - "We like to feel that both our school and our performances are a sort or clearing house for talent. We look with severity on all pretense or lack of talent, since it is really cruelty to en courage self-expression in people who have nothing to express. I believe absolutely in the necessity for self expression. Expression la Not Genlna. "The person who has any desire to sing, or dance, or write or paint should make a place lor that, somewhere, in their life. It is a safety valve. But there is quite a line of demarcation between eelf-expression and artistic genius, for a certain amount of the critical faculty must obtain with the genius. I accept Tolstoi's definition of art that it is 'the manifestation of feeling.' "The difficult point for the student to grasp lm t-haX it i -on tiling to x. j - f Ruth St. Denis. perience an emotion In one's self and quite another to manifest that emotion in euch form as to create in the mind of the spectator something akin to the emotion the artist feels." I said. "I gotcha, Steve." Personally I was really much im pressed. Miss St. Denis has turned my middle-class soul clear over. I had thought, until her coming, that' feet were the ugliest things in the world, used only to get about on, and to say this little pig went to market on. Respect I Commanded. But Ruth St- Denis has shown me that the emotion in a big toe is thing to be respected. Lillian Gish. the motion picture queen, ie living at Denishawn while its owners go on this tour. Miss St. Denis takes great pride in the tact that there is no foreign ele ment of any kind in their school or its exponents. "It is an all-American In stitution," she says. "Mr. Shawn is aansu city ana Denver man. I am from the land of the mosquito New Jersey. COURT WON'T BE "REN0ED" Judge McGinn Orders Divorce Ap plicant to Gt Personal Service. 'You can't make a Reno, Nev., of my court," Circuit Judge McGinn yes terday told an attorney for Glen W. Wambold, a physician who was seeking divorce from Clara Wambold on the ground of desertion. - "I shall continue this case until I am satisfied that this woman has actual knowledge of this suit." Wambold testified that his wife de serted him ixl Pennsylvania several years ago and that he does not know where she is. His answers to questions put by Deputy District Attorney Murphy as to her reasons for leaving were un satisfactory to Judge McGinn, hence the refusal to grant the decree, serv SUPERIOR SERVICE IN LIFE INSURANCE means serving the policyholder best on every occasion, but especially paying more promptly than any other company when a death claim is to be paid, with out subjecting the beneficiary to weeks of waiting;, as necessarily must be the case when dealing with other companies. In a Life Insurance contract, superior service is worth more than all other considerations combined. OrcgonTifc Oregon's Successful Life Insurance Company furnishes to people of Oregon a service superior to that of any other company. Horn. Office connsrrr building PORTLAND Your Old Tires here's where you get greatly increased service ont of them. Our new DOUBLE TREADED METHOD means thousands of miles more service. Guaranteed tires made from your old casings. Vulcanizing and tire re pairs of every description. All work GUARANTEED. Highest cash price paid for old tires. W. H. M'MONIES & CO. Bast 7th and Hancock Stu. Phone East 145 Replace all your old carbon lamp, with the RED LABELED C. I. MAZDA LAMPS and get better light at one-third the cost per candle-power. Start now. Buy a carton here. Keep a stock at home. 10 to 40 watt. .27c M watt 3ttc LOO watt ..Ode Fill every socket today with th-es current - savlntr hook - resisting Lamps. All sizes and types. ST U B B S ELECTRIC CO. Sixth at Pine. We deliver. First Methodist Episcopal Church "Preaching by Pulpitless Preachers" Browning's "Mad Soul" or "Saul and the Witch of Endor" by Dr. Frank L Loveland Sunday Evening, 7:30 Sharp Everybody Welcome. All Seats Free. COME! (Publicity Committee) A. l. MILL L. tUIUIL Ccactml Manager C S. SAMUKL Asasranf Manager AgencyManagerWanted Manufacturer of a popular electrical specialty desires to place an exclusive agency in the hands of a capable, re liable man. The establishment of this agency will not require an expenditure of more than $200. We wait an exceptional man and of fer such a man an exceptional oppor tunity. If you think you are the man we want, tell us the results you have pro duced in the past and you will be given complete details of this unusual oppor tunity. Write today. M 156. Oregonlan. issaawJ Marshall 1; Home, A 6281 This Saturday We Offer Your Choice of BEEF or VEAIL Same Quality "Jones' Quality" Selected A-l Steer Beef Prime Rib Roasts of Beef, lb 18d Rolled Roasts of Beef, pound 167 Pot Roasts (all cuts), pound 14c Sirloin Steaks, lb 18d Tenderloin Steaks, lb. 18d Porterhouse Steaks,lb. 20c Oregon's Choicest Milk-Fed Veal Legs of Veal, lb .17 Loins of Veal, lb 17 Sh'lders of Veal, lb. IS'zC Breasts of Veal, lb. 12J4C Veal Loaf, lb 15c Veal Sausage, lb 15c Clubhouse Sausage, lb. . . .15 For Your Sunday Breakfast None Better Jones' Little Pig Pork Sausage (1-lb. cartons) 20 Also a Selected Lot of Choice Valley Lambs Smoked Meats JONES' "PRIDE OF OREGON" BRAND Hams, or whole, lb. 17 Bacon (choice stock), or whole strip, lb 18-20c English Bacon (Tenderloin Backs), 14 or whole strip, pound 7 17c- Picnics, lb lOo Ckttages, lb 15c Special Bacon, lb 12 '2 c . No. 5 Pure Lard. . 65 5 No. 10 Pure Lard. -S1.25 No. 5 Crown Comp. .55c No. 10 Crown Comp. .95 Phone Orders Cash or Credit Penny Change Coffee Specials Cream of the Coffee World Shop of HONEST Coffee IF MONEY. COULD BUY BETTER COFFEE D. C. BURNS CO. WOULD BUY IT The imperial, quality delicious, fragrance of the straights ; blended from Old Planta tion Coffee ; grown in the East m jsj Indies; regular price per lb! 50c.Zl.Hp Special price, per lb. Is a coffee of rich body, to meet the tastes of those who prefer a heavy blended cof- fee. it has decided character and strength of body, making a cup 6f coffee of fullness ofr flavor and aroma. Regular price per lb. 35c. Spe- M THE D. C. B. BLEND JUNO BLEN cial price, 310 lbs. for 1.00; or special, per lb 1 Decided heavy blend with pro- g r- nounced individuality. Reg. price Sp MULTNOMAH BLEN per lb. 30c Special price, per lb . . . GREEN OR I XROASTKI) COFFEE, Old GoTrrnmrnt Green Jara Coffee, Bpeelal price, per pound . .35 Moeha Green Coffee, Hpeeial price, per pound Costa Rica Green Coffee, apeeial price, per poand 25 WRITE OR PHONE lTS FOR OCT SPECIAL PRICE LIST 0 PCRB FOOD CA'.EO FRUITS A.I VEGETABLES, 1815 PACK. D.C.BURNS COMPANY 208-210 THIRD ST., BET. TAYLOR AND SALMON WHOLESALERS TO PRIVATE FAMILIES, HOTELS AXD RES TAURANTS. SPECIAL MAIL ORDER SERVICE. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. PHONES MAIN 616, A 1626. MM fiiyi Hotel Cornelius The House of Welcome Park and Alder Streets Portland, Or. In the theater and shopping district, one block from any carline. Rates $1 per day and up. . With bath, $1.50 per day and up. Take our .Brown Auto 'Bus. C. W. Cornelius, President H. E. Fletcher, Manager FRANK E. RAMSEY Care Hamapo Ho- j F o u r t e e nth I and. Washington. Phone Main 8601. Representative in Portland and Oregon ?ityP A. SCHILLING & NS.,aA& "SCHILLING'S" BESTte,cgpo: der, spices, extracts, soda. Between Third and Fourth Sts. Skidmore Drug Co. Temporarily Located 271 Alder Street WANTED, CHAIRS TO CANE BY SCHOOL FOR BLIND FOR PARTICULARS CALL. MR. J F MYERS, MAIN 548 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM , toilet preparation of merit" Helps tottrtvd.c&to dandruff, i c o . -.l . l ktitv toCmrav or r aded rlasr. fioc. and $1.00 t Dnicrlitt. J ' At the lat survey there were 41T ocean cables in the world, representing miles. A ModrraiePrlied Hotel or Merle Hotel Clifford East MurrlmoH Kear Graasl ATa 7S Per Dmy, 9S.UO Pec Wcdt L. I I ( lETl 1 04.0