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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1916)
THE MORNING OKEGONIAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1916. 13 DEMOCRATS TAKEN TO TASK BY MOORES Shortcomings of Wilson Ad ministration Reviewed by Republican Chairman. pledges are. Repudiated FY reign Policy Is Held Weak and Treatment of Mexican Question Scored State Central Com mittee to Meet July 8 . That may properly be designated as r1,th first shot in the local political campaign was fired yesterday, when Charles B. Moores, Republican state chairman, issued a formal call for the meeting of the state committee at the Imperial Hotel in Portland at 1 P. M. Baturday, July 8. Mr. APoores took occasion. In calling the committee into action, to deliver a terrific broadside against the Demo cratic administration. He reviewed briefly some of the Democratic short comings that have been brought most glaringly to public prominence in the last four years and pointed out that the progressive legislation, such as the currency bill, the income tax and other acts for which the Democrats loudly claim credit really was initiated and put into effect by the Republicans. Mr. Moores' call, in full, follows: To the Members of the Oregon Republican State Central Committee: PORTLAND. June 20. There will be a meeting of the newly-elected members of the Oregon Republican State Central Committee at the Imperial Hotel In Portland. Or., on Saturday. July 8. 191-6, at 1 o'clock P. M-, tor the purpose of organizing tor tne ensuing- campaign, and for the transaction of such other business as may be proper! brought before the committee. The two great ings of the Republican party are again practically a unit. Their united plurality over Wilson in 1012 was more than 1,800.000. Under the leadership of two such splendid statesmen as Hughes and Fairbanks they propose to make effect ive their combined strength In the coming campaign by relieving the country In No vember next from the burdensome incubus of a Democratic administration. Bryan Taken to Task. Four years ago Bryan went to Baltimore pacifically instructed in the Democratic pri maries of Nebraska to support Champ Clark for the Presidency. H repudiated his in structions under the pretense that Clark was the candidate of Tammany Hall and the bosses and supported Wilson. In June, 1916. Mr. Bryan, as a reporter, looks on from the press gallery, while Charley Murphy, of Tammany Hall, having just secured the best Federal appointment In New York. Joins hands with Jim Guffey and Roger Sullivan and Tom Taggart and Gumshoe Bill Stone, and helps them redeem the single-term pledge of 1912 by renom inating Wilson. In 20 columns of language, embodying the classiest lot of political bunk that was ever filched from the pages of a dictionary, Oov ernor Martin Glynn, of New York, and 6en- tn- .In m of Kwntuclcr. assure ths astonished delegates that, among a thou sand other wonderful things, all set forth in " detail. Woodrow Wilson "has fastened the brakes of justice upon the wheels of power, nd has lifted the mists from the temple " aihura i-.11 f I ihart S am ar-a on h rtn d In the Democratic platform adopted they "challenge comparison of their record, and their keeping of pledges, with those of any party of any time." Their 1912 Dlutform told us "our pledges ; are made to be kept when In office, as well as relied upon during the campaign.-' - Single-Term Promise. Dodged. Woodrow Wilson told us in his 1913 cam paign, "our platform Is not molasses to catch files. It means business. It means what it ays." Wilson to the principle of a single term, and Woodrow kept his pledge by writing a con fidential letter three months arter his eiec- tlon to Representative A. Mitchell Palmer, urglnr him to defeat the resolution of Sen- a tor Cummins calling for a constitutional - amendment providing for a single term. That platform directed the Democratic Na tlonal Committee to require all expressions of preference for a Presidential candidate It denounced all attempts to deprive the ; states of any reserved rights, or enlarge the .- powers of the Federal Government. , It demanded free tolls for all coastwise . vessels going through the Panama Canal. It called for a rigid and honest enforce - wient of the civil service lawa. It pledged the protection of both the life and tne property or American citizens re ; siding, or doing business, in any foreign country. "Wilson Ignores Pledges. ' Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic party have ignored and repudiated every . single one of these planks. waste of money and the lavish appropriations of "recent Republican Congresses," and 'de- . manded a return to that simplicity and economy which befits a democratic govern ment, and a reduction In the number of useless of flees. Senator Borah, In a recent utterance, tells its how this plank has been redeemed in the following words: "We are spending $200 $00,000 annually in excess of the expendi tures of thow years which the Democratic platform criticises as profligate. We have created more offices and provided for more salaries during two and one-half years of the Wilson Administration than during any 1 0 years In the history of the Government for the last GO years. We already hae over MJO.000 Federal employes, and this Adminis tration has passed laws that In their ulti mate working will call for 50,000 more. We could save $300,000,000 annually and get bet ter service." Peatce Not Due to Wilson. ""Wilson has kept us out of the war" Is the rankest pretense of the Democratic de fense. "Who has kept out Sweden, Norway, Holland, Switzerland, Portugal, Spain, Greece and Roumana? Beleaguered upon every side, the Kaiser has all the business he can attend to at home and he has neith er the power nor the disposition to make war upon us. Wilson has had as much to do with keeping us out of war with Germany as Bryan or Henry Ford. No President could have done less than he has done Jn his vacillating and equivocal course. Bernstorff, the German Ambassador, and Secretary Lansing have been the real factors la the whole controversy. Conditions which none of them could control have made war with us Impossible. Mexicmn Policy Denounced. Woodrow Wilson has not only not kept us out of any war, but he Is the only President in our whole history who has by his per sonal bungling Interference involved us In war with a foreien nower. whn in mo tion the series) of events that have ended in the recent call to arms? When, over three years ago, Madero and Lascurian had both resigned, Huerta succeeded to the un disputed control of the national palace in Mexico. He had the Mexican Congress and Mexican courts back of him. He was rec ognized by 20 nations. Including all, or near ly all, of the great powers. He was a trained ' soldier, educated In the military schools of Mexico, with the desire and the ability, if left alone, to restore tranquillity. The President deliberately intervened In the interest of the stubborn, conceited and thick-witted Carranza, and two Irresponsi ble and roving bandits and cutthroats. Villa and Zapata. An embargo was placed upon the shipment of arms to Huerta and every thing was done to destroy his credit abroad. The shipment of arms to Villa, the unspeak able Villa, was permitted and these weapons were afterwards used to kill American citi zen a. This all ended In the destruction of the only responsible government In Mexico, and the political chaos and anarchy of the last three years. No one will undertake to Impeach the integrity or the patriotic mo tives of the President, and now that we are engaged In war, every patriotic citizen will back hm to the limit, but no amount of Democratic sophistry can ever palliate or excuse a course that so aggravated con ditions and brought such 'deplorable results. Beat Measures or Republican Origin. All of the crowning achievements of the Wilson Administration are of Republican origin. Nothing saved us In 1914 from the usual Democratic panic but the Republican Aldrlch-Vreeland law. The Federal reserve act did not take effect until the middle ot November, 1014, after the crisis was over and after more than three months of the European war had begun to mollify the ef fects of the Underwood tariff law. This Federal reserve law. It may be noted, is. In all Its essentials, the work of Nelson W. Aldrlch, the late Republican Senator from Rhode Island. The passage of the Income tax law was made possible only by step taken by a Republican Administration to- secure sin amendment to the Constitution making such a law constitutional. The recent repeal of the provision of the Underwood law placing sugar on the free list Is a. Democratic ad mission that the original Republican con tention was correct. The conversion of Woodrow Wilson and a Democratic Congress to a nonpartisan tariff commission is a gratifying response to the demand made for such a commission In 1912 In the platforms of the Republican and Progressive parties. 'Democ ratio prosperity" Defined. The Pacific Northwest has for three years, experienced Democratic prosperity of the real brand. In the Eastern States there has appeared a remarkable political phe nomenon, that no other generation has ever witnessed. It is the coexistence of Demo cratic control and abnormal prosperity, growing out of the European war. The reports of the great commercial agencies, showing the greatest number of business failures In our history, demonstrate, bow ever, that this temporary prosperity is neither normal nor evenl- distributed. Our real troubles began as soon as the Under wood law got fairly under way. In the year preceding the war, business was everyrwhere depressed, the army of unemployed num bered many hundreds of thousands, mines were shut down building operations were at a standstill, the steel mills of the coun try were running at only 40 per cent capac ity, and 800,000 freigh tears were standing Idle on the sidetracks of American rail roads. Today the steel mills and the ammunition plants are glutted with hundreds of millions or ooiiars- worm or war oraers. i na ae mttnd for foodstuffs and manufactured goods, shoes, clothing, armored automobiles, frelghtcars. horses, mules, cattle, sheep, mine products, etc., represent other hun dreds of millions spent In prosecuting the greatest war In history. A 11 this means employment for Immense armies of American laborers and their wages are spent In every avenue of trade and in dustry throughout the land. Tens of thousands of reservists have relieved the glut In our labor market by leaving for for eign shores. Foreign Immigration has prac tically ceased. Over $300,000,000 la being spent at home annually that In other years our tourists were spending In Europe, livery existing condition tends to neutralize the effect of Democratic control and bring us a prosperity never before equaled in our his tory. Business Failures Greatest. But in spite of the enormous Impetus given to business by war orders, already aggregating $2,000,000,000, the number of business failures In the United States under the Wilson Administration has never be fore been even approximated. Under the Underwood tariff law, although our Imports exceed any figure ever before known In our National history, there has been a constant deficit because of our redcued tariff rates that must be made good by a continuous "war tax," something never known In time of peace under Republican control. The amount Involved In business failures in the United States In 1918, 1914 and 1915 aggre gates $910,447,774. or nearly $330,000,000 more than was ever known In any three successive years of any Republican Admin istration. The number of business failures in the United States in 1914 and 1015 ag gregated 39,574, or over 10,000 more than in any prior period of two years In our whole history as a Nation. This is not rhetorio from the language laboratory ' of Governor Martin Glynn or Senator Ollle James, but a bundle of cold facts from the great commercial agency of R. G. Dunn & Company. If this is the best the Democratic party can do, aided, as It has been, by $2,000,000,000 worth of war orders in the last 18 months, it should have the decency to acknowledge its utter want of constructive capacity and ask for the ap pointment of a receiver to take charge of the country until the Republican party can as sume control, as it will, on the coming 4th of March. CHAS. B. MOORES. Chairman Rep. State Central Committee. A Blessed Boon to Busy Brides easily and quickly prepared full of strength - giving nutriment the cleanest, purest, cereal food in the world Shredded Wheat with Strawberries. A com bination that is a joy to the palate and a perfect, com plete meal. You don't know the greatest of all palate joys if you have not eaten it for breakfast or any meal. Made at Niagara .Falls, N. Y. ASK FOR and GET THE ORIGINAL r HALTED HULK Ctsap substitutes cost YOvJ came prico. KNIGHTS TO CONINE PLANS FOR. BIG PYTHIAN CONCLAVE BEING ARIIANGED. Supreme Lodge Seealona to Be Held In Portland In August to Attract Many Delegates. Preparations are well under -way for the supreme, lodg convention of the Knights of Pythias to be held in Port land August 1 to 10, inclusive. At a meeting of committees appointed by Ivanhoe, Calanthe, Cosmopolitan, Pha lanx and Holmes lodges, of Portland, and Cataract Lodge, of Oregon City, comprising district No. 1 of Oregon, an expenditure of more than $1000 was voted to purchase marching uniforms for the parade to be held on August 2. Captain of Detectives Charles K. Baty will be requested to take charge of the formation and drill of this division. Thus far requests have come In for 850 uniforms. White trousers, white soft shirts, red neckties, white hats with red, white and blue bands, will be worn by the marchers, and each will carry an um brella of the emblematic colors, red. blue and yellow. There will be a float representing? a castle hall, with Calan the, a fair young woman, at the door. and Damon and Pythias inside. All Knights, affiliated or non-affill ated with local lodges, will be asked to take part. A large number ot extra hats also have been ordered for women who will march. The convention will be National in character and notables from all parts of the United States are expected. The programme has not yet been completely arranged, nor have all the officers of the supreme lodge been heard from. Secretary K. M. Lance will announce these within a few days. The committee on arrangements from district No. 1 consists of Dr. I. X. Pal mer, chairman: Arthur Downs, E. M. Orth, J. W. Crampton, J. Gurabert, B. F. Sherwood, L. F. Clark, James B. Bacon and J. Hiller. Secretary Lance, who Is looking after general arrangements, has headquarters in the lodge hall, at .Eleventh and Alder street. . On and After July 1 Filled Books of Stamps Will Be Redeemed in Cash Don't Overlook This Important Saving Soda Fountain and Ice Cream Parlors in the Basement Take Your Luncheon in Our Tea Room on the 4th Floor Kodaks, Cameras on the 4th Floor Oregon Pioneers Welcome! to the hardy sons and daughters of Pioneer Days, Portland's Pioneer Store bids welcome! Make your headquarters here while you are visiting in the city. Olds, Wortman & King . The Pioneer Store Established in 1851 Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methodi You will lose half tha enjoyment of your outing: days unless you. take a kodak with you. Complete Una Eastman Ko daks and supplies here for 'your choosing. Sale of Women's Suits Continues All Week-2d Floor $5 to $10 Dress Hats , $3.95 REMARKABLE no other word will express the wonderful values in this lot of hats we offer in the Millinery Salons, Second Floor, for Thursday Land there are styles to please every fancy, from the smart tailored Hats for sport, street and outing wear to the more dressy effects. Some trimmed with wings, breasts, flowers, etc; others with bows and nov elties. Trimmed Hats worth from $5.00 up to $10.00 on Cf O Q CJ sale Thursday at your choice of entire assortment for PJaIaJ lOOO Un trimmed Hats Special $1.25 Millinery Salons, Second Floor Another big shipment just received of White Patent Milans, Panamas, Milan Hemps and Novelty Straws. Large and small styles in black, white and wanted col- 3 W n ors. Untrimrned Shapes worth to $5, Thursday special P X w O At Bargain Circle 1st Floor A Great Sale of Women's Slippers Those who were unable to take advantage of our last week's 6ale of slippers will be given an opportunity to do so Thursday at same low prices. Yes, we give S. & H. Green Trading Stamps. Ask for them. $1.35 Boudoir Slippers, Pair 98c $1.5Q 1-Strap Slippers, Pair 98c Bargain Circle Women's Boudoir Bargain Circle Women's Kid Slip Slippers of kid and ooze leather. pers, one strap style with low Colors, red, pink, brown, blue heels and wida toes. Mostly large and black; elkskin sole, QQ- sizes. Excellent $1-50 QO silk pompon on toe, now0 Slippers at, the pair onlyOC Barefoot Sandals of extra quality Misses' $1.69, Child's $1.19, $1.39 Women's Chippewa Indian"Moccasins, beaded vamps, the pair $1.43 Children's Indian Moccasins $1.29, Men's Moccasins special at $1.48 Odd Lines Boys' Oxfords in narrow widths, $3.50 grades now at $1.00 Wash Goods Week NEW SPORT STRIPES in all the wanted colors on natural and white grounds. Yd. 25c, 35c, 50c NEW PRINTED VOICES in a great variety of dainty floral ef fects and stripes. Yd. 25c, 35c, 45c NEW JAPANESE CREPES for kimonos, draperies. Yd. 25c PRINTED VOILES of finest quality, dainty sheer fabrics for Summer waists and dresses, 40 inches wide. , Priced at, yard 75c DASH VOILES in floral pat terns and novelty stripes a splendid assortment from which to choose. Priced, the yard 18c Aisle of Cottons Main Floor risTiil Women's Silk Petticoats Extra Special Offering for Thursday, at Only $3.29 Garment Salons, Second Floor Latest full-flare styles to go with wide skirts now being worn. Made from excellent quality taffeta and messa Hne silks and Bhown in several styles with deep accordion-plaited flounces, some trimmed with ruffles. Splendid assortment of the lead-1 ing colors tans, blues, rose, etc., also black. Make it a O OQ point to Bea these new Petticoats on sale Thursday, special J Silk Petticoats at $3.98 and $5.00 AT $3.08 Women's Silk Petti coats in many attractive styles with deep full flounces and ad justable fitted tops. Taffeta and cnes6aline silks. Complete assort ment of colors and fl Q Q Q ill length. Choice at PO.iO Dress Skirts of Silk, Wool Women's SilkSkirts Special $5.85 New Wool Skirts Priced at $5.00 WOMEN'S SILK SKIRTS in all black, awning stripes, plaids, checks in combinations of black and white or colors and white. A great many different Btyles hip yoke effects, shirred backs, belted and novelty cuts. Latest flare and plaited styles. All sizes. Each only 5.85 WOOL SKIRTS for street and sport wear in a Bplendid showing of the season's best styles. Full flare, plaited and novelty cuts in serges, gabardines, golfine, Bed ford cords and various other weaves. Plain colors, checks, stripes, plaids. See Z?Cf ff these Skirts priced P WOMEN'S BATHING SUITS Latest Models .!1.25 TO $19.50 AT $5.00 Women's extra good grade taffeta, messaline and silk Jersey Petticoats. Plain col ors, stripes, plaids and dainty floral' effects. Extra and regular sizes and all lengths. 4Z?J it Various styles, now pJ"L Silk Waists At $2.29 Second Floor- A fortunate pur chase enables us to offer in this lot of waists a most remarkable bargain. Several pretty styles in tailored effects trimmed with hem stitching, plaits, roll or square col lars. Crepe de chine, tub Bilks and Jap silks. These are shown in plain Colors and JJ O OQ stripes. Special now aP Ws' 'Coffee Day' Model Grocery Fourth Floor No deliveries of the following special except with other pur chases made in the Grocery Dept. 4Qc OWK Coffee At 29c Fourth Floor Delicious flavor and aroma preferred by many to reg ular 40c Coffees. On sale OQw Thursday at, special, lb.WivC OWK TEA Uncolored Japan, English Breakfast or Cey- O Ogm Ion 50c grades at, the lb.f ORDER EARLY IN DAY. Profit by These Worth - While Savings on Refrigerators Basement Protect the health of your family by having a Refrigerator in your home! Just now you may choose from standard lines at big savings. $21.00 Refrigerators now $10.75 522.50 Refrigerators now 17.80 $27.00 Refrigerators now S21.60 $28.50 Refrigerators now, $22.28 $34.50 Refrigerators now S27.oO $36.00 Refrigerators now $28.75 $42.00 Refrigerators now $33.60 Save Money on Garden Hps e 60 ft. Cotton Garden Hose, com- j O QQ plete with nozzle, -inch size, now apOa Ja 50 ft. Red Rubber Garden Hose 5 Q Q in -in. size, complete with nozzle V''' 50 feet Red Rubber Garden Hose CJJ In -in. size, complete with nozzle, M PRETTY WIFE DIVORCED W.'J. MACArLET, OO, AND WIFE, 83, ARB HOT HAPPY. YoU( Wife Not Interested In Matters That Concerned Older JTuaband, He Say; Trouble Results. Alterations In the complaint were of cruel and Inhuman treatment, but the real trouble was that he was 65 years old and she 33 and pretty, William J. Macauley, sales manager for the Na tional Cash Register Company in Port land, maintained in commenting on the divorce suit brought to a success- ful conclusion by his wife, Mrs. Willi Macauley, yesterday. Things which interested her did not interest him, and there lay the rub. Circuit Judse Gantenbein halted the case yesterday to see if a settlement could not be made by both parties without taking up several days in trial. An agreement was reached, the wife testified briefly to alleged cruel treat ment, and the decree was granted. She is to receive $75 a month and S200 attorneys' fees, and each side was or dered to pay its own costs. Mrs. Macauley was a telephone girl in Butte, Mont., when they were mar ried, August 3, 1908. and charged that her husband twitted her with saving her "from the gutter." Mr. Macauley said yesterday that his wife had taken valuable prizes that he had received in salesmanship contests from him, and had diamonds of his to the value of 5200. which had been purchased as an investment. She said he gave them to her. Mr. Macauley has made as high as $20,000 a year, he asserted. DAMAGE VERDICT IS $1250 Autoist Must Pay for Injuries to Sleigh-Driver. As the result of a collision between an automobile driven by Gay M. Lom bard and the horse-drawn sleigh of Otto Williams, damages of $1250 were awarded Mr. Williams by a Jury in the court of Circuit Judge Gantenbein yes terday. He was severely injured and sued for $10,000. The accident occurred January 20, 1914, on Lovejoy street, near Twenty fourth. It was a rear-end collision and Mr. Lombard is said to have failed to sound his horn. Y. M. C. A. BOYS PASS TESTS Xine Members Admitted ta Volun teer Xiifesavlng Corps. Nine members of the T. M. C. A. boys' division have passed the Federal examinations and have been admitted to membership in the United States Volunteer Lifesaving Corps. The tests were conducted in the association tank under the direction of Harry T. Smith, assistant physical director and one of N ' pgg OTICE! . JOBBERS, RETAILERS, CONSUMERS The Bureau of Chemistry, U. S. Department of Agriculture, has ruled "that 'Salad Dressing, if mads with oil, must b labeled to indicate the land of oil used, unless that oil is Olive Oil." "That the word "MAYONNAISE cannot appear anywhere on the package unless eggs are used." There are any number of Salad Dressings made with cottonseed oil, without the proper indication appearing on the label. The word "MAYONNAISE" appears plainly on m good many product not containing any eggs. There are a good many Salad Dressings on the market containing neither1 oil nor eggs. The Jobber, Retailer and Consumer should learn to discriminate between these various so called "Mayonnaise" and "Salad Dressings." All food products should be plainly labeled and branded in accordance with the rulings of the Bu reau of Chemistry, U.S. Department of Agriculture. POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL SALAD DRESSING is guaranteed GENUINE MAYONNAISE, prepared with Pure, Fresh Olive Oil, Selected Fresh Eggs, Pure Vinegar, and Pure Selected Spices. Contains NO artificial color, NO starch, NO gum, NO fillers of any kind. THE POMPEIAN COMPANY BALTIMORE. U.S. A. the Federal examiners for Oregon. The boys have organized a patrol, which will be on duty at the Summer camp at Spirit Lake, and will teach others to swim. Knowledge and methods of resusoitatlon, breaking holds of drown ing persons and ability to swim, fully clothed, and dragging weight to shore were required. The boys are Harrison Huggins, Her bert Foster, Remey Cox, Joe Ingram, John McLernon, Richard Dent, Haddon Rockhey, Joe Tibbetts and Paul Stone. HIBERNIANS MEET SUNDAY Fnnds for Irish Rebellion Sufferers Will Be Collected. Funds for the relief of the victims of the late rebellion in Ireland will be collected at a meeting to be held In Hibernia Hall Sunday. June 25, at 8:30 P. M., under the auspices of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Father George Thompson will preside and addresses will be given by Archbishop Christie, D. J. Malarkey, Henry A. Davie. A musical programme also will be given. At a meeting held in New Tork City recently, which was headed by Cardi nals Gibbons. Farley and O'Connell. and attended by representatives of the Irish race in America, it was decided to raise funds for the relief of the distressed people of Ireland. An appeal is being sent out to the many Irish societies in this country. All money contributed will be for warded directly to Dublin. Checks may be made payable to the local treasurer, D. W. Lane. 473 Williams avenue. REUNION DATE ANNOUNCED Annual Plcnlo of Douglas County Pioneers to Be Held Sunday. The Douglas County Pioneers' Asso ciation will hold Its fifth annual re union and picnic at Peninsula Park on Sunday, June 25. Arrangements for the affair have been completed. There will be a business meeting at 11 A. M., to be followed with basket lunches. Between S and 3:30 P. M. there will be speeches. muslo and reminiscences of Douglas County and its pioneers. Among the speakers will be Judge Henry L. Benson, of ths State Supreme Court. The association has more than COO members. All persons who are native ot Douglas County or formerly lived there are invited. Attorney George C. Johnson is pres ident and Attorney Lon Parker is sec retary of the association. HAROLD BEAN HONORED Special Work Provided for Portland Boy at Johns Hopkins. Harold C. Bean, son of Federal Judge Bean, has received high honor at Johns, Hopkins University, Baltimore, from which institution he graduated June 15. His work at the university was of such a character that the fac ulty chose him for one of the four po sitions in the university hospital open for graduates. Tnese positions are given to students having the highest clsss standing. Dr. Bean has been a student of Johns Hopkins University for the past three year. Ho took his first year of medi cine at the University of Oregon medi cal school in Portland. He is a grad uate of the University of Oregon. Dr. Bean has Just returned from Bal timore. He will visit here during the Summer, returning to Baltimore in the Fall. THE BABY IS NOT THE ONLY ONE who will miss that little gas water heater if you fail to order it before Saturday. Think of the many times every day that hot water in large or small quantities is needed in the home think of the trouble of getting it and the times you don't get it Think of the waste of fuel Think of the insuffer able heat in the kitchen. A gas water heater means all the water you want in a few min utes without trouble, without un necessary heat and at the small est possible cost. Gas Water Heater Week June 19-24 Special Price, Including Connection, You V V see it's this way. I have a pain ful indisposition in my tummy. It is exactly 2 A. M. Doctor in structs over the tele phone that hot water bags be applied in stantly to the seat of disturbance. But there isn't any hot water. Hence Wow 1" $ 1 3.9S $1.00 DOWN, $1.00 PER MONTH PORTLAND GAS & COKE CO.