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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1916)
TIIE MORNING OREGOXIAJf, FRIDAY; AUGUST 4, 1910. " 11 I ' KODAKS CAMERAS DEVELOPING PRINTING ENLARGING FRAMING ON THE FOURTH FLOOR. FOR THE BEST LUNCHEON IN PORTLAND COME TO OUR TEA ROOM, ON THE 4TH FLOOR. S. & H. Trading Stamps Given on Charge Accounts if paid in full on or before the 10th of each month. Open a charge account at this storfe and reap the benefit of this additional saving. S. & H. Stamps will be given on out-of-town orders only upon request. Ask for your Stamps! Olds, Wort man & King The Pioneer Store Established in 1851 Stamp Books Redeemed in Cash in the Gift Room Bring in your filled books of S. 4 H. Green Trading Stamps, get the cash and select your gifts from over 6000 different articles in the Gift Room at lowest prices. Stamps given on all purchases made in the Gift Room. Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methods More Summer Dresses in the Clean-Up Sale at Sacrifice Prices! V 53 Summer Dresses at $4.48 82 Summer Dresses at $7.48 32 Summer Dresses at $9.95 Attractive Frocks for Beach, Sport and House Wear-Latest 1916 Styles Lot 1 $4.48 Women's and Misses' Summer Dresses of dainty sheer voiles, linenes and other tub fabrics. Plain colors, stripes and figures. Plaited and draped skirts. Some in smart coat effects, others with soft lacey waists, fancy collars, etc. Full fi? AO Charming Tub Frocks of figured, striped and plain voiles, also linene in plain colors. Season's latest models with draped, flounced or plaited skirts. Beautifully trimmed with fancy collars, C?7 cuffs, etc. Sale price today P tE-O Lot 2$7.48 Lot 3 -$9.95 plain colors, also striped and figured voiles; some made up in combination with plain materials. Good many different styles in this lot to select from. All G?f f CT F a shionable u m m e r Dresses of cool, sheer voiles and mercerized pongee in stripes and checks. Attractive models for sport and street wear. Some in two-piece coat effects, others in fancy Btyles. All popular colors. C "1 O QO Sale price of these Dresses pJ-fZr.ZJiJ popular colors. Priced special Lot 4 $12.98: Women's Bathing Suits $1.25 to $10.00 Sale of Lingerie Waists at $1.19 Second Floor Women's Bathing Suits of wool Jersey in one or two-piece styles. Shown in all popular colors with fancy colored bor ders. Prices range from $3.50 up to $10. Cotton Bathing Suits in black, navy, red and maroon. Priced from $1.25 up to $2.50 Bathing Caps, Shoes, Hats, Bags, etc., etc. Second Floor Not a Waist In this lot but what is worth nearly double this price. All new fresh styles direct from the maker. Plain and novelty voiles, lawns, batiste, striped madras, etc. Styled with long or short sleeves. Don't fail to see these J? "J t Q attractive Waists at low price p..x7 3 Specials in Women's Sweaters At $4.98 At $6.95 At $7.5Q Women's Wool Sweaters W o m e n's Fiber Silk Women's Fiber Silk Sport and Angora Sport Coats in Sweaters with belt, also Sweaters with convertible all the most wanted colors, new Sport Sweaters of collar, sash and patch pock also two-tone effects. Styled fancy striped wool with roll ets. Shown in colors, rose, with popular roll collars. collar and sash. Various canary and pink. These are Belted or loose styles. colors. Full range of sizes. shown in medium weight. x 75c to $1.25 Neckwear At 50c Main Floor Women's Novelty Neckwear several hundred pieces taken from our regular stock and sharply reduced for Friday's sell ing. Vestees, guimpes, Bets and collars of fine laces, voiles and or gandies. This season's very new est styles, no old goods. Neckwear priced heretofore up to E?fg $1.25, your choice today at'"' See display of this neckwear in one of our large lOth-st. windows. Curtain Samples at 29c and 38c High-Grade Curtains in Beautiful Patterns Worth to $5 Pair Bargain Circle, First Floor Another big lot of high grade sample Curtains to go on sale Friday at a frac tion of real value. White and ecru lace nets with cluny edges and insertion, Brussels nets, Irish points, mar quisettes, etc. Curtains in this assortment to $5 a pair. Lot 1 29c Lot 2 38c $2.50 OWK Corsets $1.39 Popular Models, Full Range Sizes Second Floor For Friday and Saturday's selling w offer our $2.50 "OWK" SPECIAL" Cor sets at $1.39 pair. Women who have worn these splendid Cor sets will tell you they are well worth the regular price. Models for all figures from slender to stout. High-grade batistes, cou tils and brocades. Every pair beautifully finished. Best grade hose supporters. JJ f O Q ?2.50 Corsets for PJ.OZ' Allover Laces $1.35 Meat Safes at Third Floor Fly-proof Meat Safes with removable shelf. Strong construction and nice ly finished. $1.25 grade at 98c $1 to $1.50 Grades for 59c Special Shipment Di rect From Importer Main Floor A fortunate purchase by our lace buyer, now in the East, enables us to offer our customers a very unusual bargain in high grade laces. Exquisite patterns for dresses, waists, etc Splendid quality shadow laces, 35 inches wide in white, cream and ecru. Large variety of designs to select from. Ordinarily laces like these would sell at $1 to $1-50 CZQr a yard. Our special price J7C See display in lOth-st. Window. I SAVE YOUR S. & H. STAMPS. I $3.50 White Shoes $1.89 Popular Styles High or Low Main Floor Cool, comfortable White Shoes for street, sport and out ing wear. Palm Beach high-laced Shoes, white canvas Oxfords and Pumps, White Strap Pumps and dozens of other styles in this im mense lot.- Just such footwear as many stores ask T i O Q $3.00 and $3.50 for. Friday and Saturday special, pair pJ-.OZ' $5.00 Low Shoes $1.89 Main Floor Several hundred pairs Wom en's Low Shoes Pumps and Oxfords pat- ient leather, dull calf, vici kid, satin and gunmetal calf. Some with neat ornament at vamp, others with tailored bow or strap over instep. Turn or welt soles, Cuban or Louis heels. There are several smart styles in this lot in popular two-tone effects. Cool, comfortable Summer footwear in styles for street, dress and sport wear. Do your shopping early in the day and avoid after-J " DQ noon crowds. Standard $4, $4.50 and $5 Shoes, pr. P X. a O 7 Children's Shoes of Dependable Qualities at Special Prices Colonial Hams 21clb Put up by Arm our & Co. ex pressly for this store. Medium! sizes, weiehine- 10 to 12 lbs. Genuine sugar-' cured, closely1 trimmed. Spe cial, a lb. 21 - 3oc Pheasant Brand Loganberry Juice, now Royal Baking Powder, special per 1-lb. can at T-BaCOn nriVH n Ktrin or hi Btrip at, the lb. Lfcoioiiijd) I 29c 39c 23c $1.00 and $1.25 Fancy Sillcs At 69c Center Circle, First Floor This assortment of high-grade silks is made up of lines taken from our regular stock. There are stripes, checks and Jacquard effects in splendid assortment of colors for dresses, waists, petticoats, guimpes, etc. A splendid oppor tunity to save money thrifty women will be quick to take ad vantage of. $1.00 and JO $1.25 Silks, special today OivC Profit bu Our Semi-Annual Sale of Mens & Young Men's Fancy Suits $15 Grades $11.85 $30 Grades $22.50 Main Floor Every suit new this season. No old goods at any price. Fancy Worsteds, cassimeres, chev iots, etc., in beautiful new designs checks, stripes and mixed effects in latest colors. Best of workman ship throughout. Step in and se lect your new Outing Suit today. Men's $15.00 Fancy Suits $11.85 Men's $20.00 Fancy Suits $14.H5 Men's $25.00 Fancy Suits $1K.75 Men's $30.00 Fancy Suits $22.30 Men's Straw Hats Reduced Main Floor Men's Straw Hats de cisively underpriced to clean up the stock at once so none will be carried over to next season. Men's $5.00 Panamas for $3.75 Men's $6.00 Panamas for SI.15 Men's $7.50 Panamas for $5.25 Men's $2.50 Jap. Panamas $1.59 Broken lines Men's Straw Hats formerly selling to $3.00 for 50 Special Sale Boys9 Suits Special Lines Formerly (T fif Selling Up to $7.5Q at p&xJJ Main Floor Final Clean-up of several small lots boys' Norfolk Suits an even hundred in the assortment. New, up-to-date Nor folk models with stitched belts, plaits, patch pockets, etc Full, roomy styles, pants lined throughout, with buttons at knees. Sizes for boys 6 to 18 years of age. Suits priced heretofore Q CT ") f at $6.50 and $7X0. Priced for quick clean-up at v'Oavlr ski IS SEIZED Telltale Odor Gives Sheriff Clew to Trunks' Loads. F. PETERSON CONFESSES Authorities Tliink Thry Have Traced Owners of I'our of Liquor Liaden Cases Xow Stored at Transfer Office. ten-gallon kfe, Ingeniously fitted in side the trunks, and wrapped in blankets. Bottles broke In. transit Jn several of the trunks and in the others the odor of hiaky was strong: enougrh to attract the attention. The results of the investigation of Sheriff Hurlburt probably will be turned over to the Federal authorities, because the United States laws are far more severe than the state law in liquor shipment violations. CREWS GO AFIELD Whisky nearly 75 pallons of it has been shipped into Portland in the last few days in innocent-appearing: trunks, and no one knows how many thousand gallons may have entered the city in the same way since the state went dry. Sheriff Hurlburt has confiscated six trunks of illegal whisky, has one vio lator under arrest, and has three sus pected persons "under surveillance, with more arrests probable. District Attor ney Evans and SherifT Hurlburt have opened a campaign that will have a marked effect on the number of trunks coming- into Oregon with or without returning California travelers. With one exception, all the trunks were consigned to supposedly fictitious persons, but Sheriff Hurlburt's depu ties believe they have all but two cor rectly traced. Though four of the trunks have remained at the Union Depot or at a transfer company's of fice since early in the week, the watch ers for the Sheriff's office have been unrewarded, as the consignees have not called. It is thought they have been warned. Kred Peterson Arrested. Fred Peterson. 144 North Fifteenth street, was arrested Monday by Deputy Sheriffs Phillips and Beckman and later released on J1000. bond. His arrest was not made public until yesterday for fear other importers of illegal liquor might be frightened away. District Attorney Evans asserts that he has a complete t confession from eterson to the bringing- of at least Wo trunks from California himself. He says further that the Federal law has been violated. Of the other four trunks, three were addressed to supposedly fictitious per sons, Peter J. Moore, James R. Hart- man and Joseph H. Marley, in care of the express company. One was ad dressed to Frank Tregaskis. who is known to the authorities. Telegraphic notice was received by an express com pany yesterday to ship back the Treg- askis trunk to Ran Francisco, but Dia trict Attorney Evans ordered it seized. Spilled Whisker Gives Clue. Several of the trunks were packed with, case goods, but others contained ANARCHISTS UNDER BAN San Francisco Prepares to Expel Undesirables Frora Country. SAJST FRANCISCO. Aug. 3. As an in direct result of the bomb explosion which turned the preparedness parade of July 22 into a tragedy, the local au thorities took the first move today in a plan to rid San Francisco of anarch ists. Three men, confessed anarchists, arrested for distributing handbills of an Inflammatory nature bearing the names of Emma Goldman and Alexan der Berkman. the latter the editor of local anarchist paper, were ordered turned over to the immigration author ities for . deportation proceedings. The men arrested were Cesare vez- lio, Louis Aubert and Julien Potter. Classification of Lands Grant to Begin. of ENTRIES IN FULL EXPECTED HIGHWAY TRAFFIC HELD UP Bridge Closed at La Center Pending Completion of Grade. VANCOUVER, Wash.. Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) Automobile tourists passing over .the Pacific Highway were indig nant today when they found the road closed to traffic at the end of the bridge across Lewis River at La Center. without any warning being given. A I only long enough to see that the work 2,300,000 Acres Will Be Classified Into Agricultural and Timber Tracts, and Then Opened to Homesteaders. Louis I. Sharp, chief of the field division of the General Land Office, left Portland last night for Ashland to take charge of the work of class! fying lands of tne Oregon & California land grant in this state, so that those classed as agricultural may be opened to homestead entry at once. He will be followed tonight by crew of 20 expert timber cruisers and the same number of compass men, who have been engaged to help in the clas sification. Later in the week another crew probably will follow. From Ashland, Mr. Sharp and these crews will go about 20 miles east to a camp which has been set up Just this side of the California border. Here the work of classification will begin immediately. 'I expect to start the men to work within an hour after they reach camp, said Mr. Sharp. "I shall remain crews, the data will be rushed to Wash ington. CliASSIFICATIOX CREW HEADY Work on O.-C. Grant Tracts Will Start Near Plnehurst. ASHLAND. Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) A classification crew of over B0 men, with five tons of supplies and camp equipment, are here preliminary to classification work connected with the Oregon-California land grant. The movement is under the direction of Louis L, Sharp, chief of the field divi sion of the general land office, with K. F. Rice, local director. In charge. The initial camp will be established at Plnehurst in the midst of a heavily- timbered section southeast of Ashland. r.ew grade is being made at the end of tne bridge and the contractors tore out a portion of the structure. Traffic was held up all morning until 12 o'clock, when a temporary runway for auto mobiles was rigged and nearly 60 ma chines passed over the planks. A long string of machines was wait ing this afternoon until the place was fixed. Many transcontinental tourists were among those inconvenienced. 6000-Mile Anto Trip Started. MILWAUKEE, Or.. Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) Thomas Walker, ofj this place, has started on a 6000-mile automobile trip, accompanied by his niece and nephew, Miss Maude Forbes and Her shel Forbes. Their destination is Lex ington, 111. They left by way of the Co lumbia River Highway, Spokane and through Montana! Returning they will travel by a Southern route to Los An geles. The distance to be covered will total about 6000 miles. The party ex pects to return about September 1. The geological survey baa estimated that in the state of Colorado alone there are sufficient shale beds to yield 20,000,000,000 barrels of crude oil from which one-tenth of that Quantity of gasoline may be obtained. is moving along fast, and then will return to Portland, within two weeks at the longest. "I have the pick of all the timber men in Oregon on this work. The 20 cruisers who are to start tomorrow. and the 20 following them, have been selected from 200 applicants. Every one of them is a real timber man in every sense of the word. I don't be lieve a better crew ever went into the woods. Classification of the lands of the grant includes specific data as to the amount of timber, if any, on each 40- acre tract in the entire 2.300,000 acres of the grant. Where there is more than 300.000 feet of timber to the 40- acre tract, the lahd will be classed as timber and not agricultural land and will not be opened to entry, Of the 2.300,000 acres in the grant it is conservatively estimated that ap proximately 1.000,000 acres will be classified as agricultural and opened to entry. From this huge acreage there will De probably about 5000 to 70t. good farm sites. Though no official word has been re. ceived to this effect. Mr. Sharp ex pects the first batch of land to be opened to entry early this Fall. As fast as classifications are made by his Second Battalion. Second Regiment. Knglneer Corps of the United States Army, a new organisation provided for under the new Army bill, were re ceived here this morning. The head quarters of the battalion will be at this post Company E. which was ordered from here to the border shortly after Its organization, will form the nucleus of the new battalion. Captain R. C. Moore will soon be made a Major and given command of the new battalion. It Is expected. First sergeant Bruce Purcell. of Company F. Engineers, has been made Ba'.talion Pergeant-Major. Sergeant Parr succeeds him.' DRUMMERS TO FROLIC TRAVELING MEN TO HOLD AXXUAL PICNIO TOMORROW, Bis; Attendance Expected at Affair Crystal Lake Park Athletic Events Are Arranged. Traveling men will make, an early start tomorrow for Crystal Lake Park. but they will leave their grips behind for It is the date of the Joint annual picnic of the United Commercial Trav elers and the Travelers' Protective As aociatlon. Proceeds of the affair will be devoted to a worthy cause, the re lief of the family of a member. Attendance already promises to break 11 records for the recurring annual affair of the drummers. The esti mated attendance already has been out done by the sale of tickets. The outing will be started at iu o'clock in the morning and special trains will be put on by the Portland, Railway, Light & Power Company to carry Portland people to the park. The picnic will continue all day and it will not be until 11 o'clock tomorrow night that the business missionaries will turn their .faces homeward. Dancing will enliven the evening hours. A long list of athletic sports has been arranged and prize are offered for prowess in the different contests. One of the big features of the day will be a baseball game between the United Commercial Travelers and the Travel ers' Protective Association. All the wholesale houses will be rep resented at the big picnic for. In the main, the traveling men are attached to the staffs of these concerns. NEW BATTALION ORDERED Captain Moore Expected to Be Named Major and Commander, VANCOUVER BARRACKS. Wash., Aub". 3. (Special.) Orders providing for the official organization of the Valley Gravel Declared Better. MARSHFIELD. Or, Aug. S. (Spe- clal.) At a recent council meeting. City Engineer Heuperman declared during a discussion of street improve ments, that Willamette Valley gravel eventually would supersede that now Did You Ever hy.donf ou use Have trouble in securing the right light for your car? If you have then you want to try our service. We have lamps for every car that is running today. We have them in any candle power you may wish for. Prices 20c and up Let us demonstrate the new nitrogen lamp more light less current. Stubbs Electric Co. being- used In Coos County, or at least in Marsh field, m a base for hard-surface paving. Gravel used la concrete work for the past five years has come from the Coqullle River at Myrtle Point and on the Smith-Powers log ging road. Mr. Heuperman said that It is frequently so mixed with clay that It Is not reliable for base. SIxtk at Fine A er Bwdy. 1604 Candldates File at Olympla. OLTMPTA. Wash.. Aug S. Candidates for pnblta office who tiled their dec larations of candidacy with the Sec retary of Ftate Include: Georga H. Baker, of Goldendale. Republican, for Lieutenant-Governor; C. K. Vllea. of Se attle, Republican, for Insurance Com missioner, and James McNeely. of Ta eoma. Republican, for Governor. There era B93 ronsumers ef tannte rn the TTMted States who aanoaily S3&.000 eorOa of bemloek fcark. 2P0.O0O cords .t esic bark. sj4 SS&OOA eertls of rhMtnul wood. H Good road good car good crowd now make it a good party with a treat of Demand the genuine by full name nicknames encourage substitution. ij THE COCA-COLA CO.. ATLANTA. GA. ;: :s StuI far Frm. BooV.rt Th. 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