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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1917)
TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, AVEDNESDAT, JUNE 6, 1917. S. &H. Green Trading Stamps Given on All Charge Accounts if Paid in Ftill on or Before June 11 DOUBLE STAMPS on A 11 Charge Purchases Made From May 5 to 25, Inclusive Kodaks, Fishing Tackle, Hammocks, Lawn Swings, Wheel Goods, Sand Toys, Fourth Floor Try Our Special 25c Lunch, Served Daily in Basement Soda Fountain and Ice Cream, Basement Help Uncle Sam the War Win Subscribe to U.S. Liberty Loan We will guarantee to take bonds in denominations from $50 to $500 any time within five years in ex change for merchandise or to ap ply on account or on deposit to be traded out. This applies to all bonds issued through our store. A Liberty Bond means food for our boys at the front and A Liberty Bond Buys an Early Peace New La Fillette Flouncings . Main Floor Fashion's very latest new La Fillette Net Flouncings in skirt width with ruffles in dif ferent 6tyles. See these at Dress trimming counter. $2.75 and $3.25 ' . . The Standard Store of the Northwest Old's, Wortiiian & Kin Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methods Toilet Paper 6 Rolls 25c Basement No telephone orders accepted and not more than 12 rolls to a customer. Stand- OC ard size rolls. Six rolls AOls June White Sale A-Time .'.of Great Savings! Reduced Prices on Special Lines in All Departments All Women's White Suits Reduced All White Coats Reduced All Muslin Underwear Reduced All White Skirts Greatly Reduced Special Bargains in Table Linens, Towels, Napkins and Household Needs Reduced Prices on Many Special Lines of Hosiery and Un derwear All Cut Glass Reduced Special Lines of Embroideries and Laces Reduced Many Bargains' in Men's Wear in This Sale $1,25 Handbags Special 796 Basement 300 attractive new Bags in this special offering. Various leathers, also many novelty silks. Shown in all the latest shapes and sizes, with - or without inside fit tings. Bags in this lot such as usually sell at $1 and $1.25. Priced for Quality and Quantity TjQkn Sale in the Basement at "Notion Day" at Bargain Circle! Sewing Needs Sterling Skirt Markers at only 19 Artistic Hairbow Fasteners at 11 Clark's Mercerized Darning Cotton at, the ball 7; 4 balls for 23 Dress Weights, by the yard, 10 Curling Irons, small size, now 50 Grandma's Ironing Wax Pads 5 Mrs. Newcomb's Buttonhole Tape, in black and white, the yard 15f Shopping Bags, good grade, at 210 24-yard bolts Cotton Tape in five sizes, priced at only, the bolt, 180 Underpriced Queen City Spool Silk, for band or machine sewing, 100-yard spools, all colors, black and white, priced very special - for this sale at only 50 Defender Safety Pins, three sizes, on sale today at low price, 2 for 50 Middy Braid in white, red and navy, special for today at, the yard 70 Union Taffeta Kibbon, the bolt 100 Wire Hairpins, two packages for 50 Folding Wire Coat Hangers now 7 0 All Men's Hats Reduced Straws or Felts Latest Blocks Main Floor Get your new Hat here today and pay much less than regular. We have a splendid assortment of the season's newest styles in straws and felts. Note the following special prices in force here. All Men's $1.75 to Q" Pft $2.50 Hats, special at tDAetlU All Men's $3.00 Felts (PO OP Womenjs Knit Underwear Sale Center Circle, Main Floor and Straws on sale at All Men's $4 Straw tf0 f7r Hats now on sale at O All Men's $5 Panama HK and Leghorns now at 4 tf $6.00 Panamas and 3!A OK Bankoks now Belling at DxitJ 7.60 Panamas and C?K Kf Bankoks on sale today DJsJvF WOMEN'S VESTS of extra qual ity ribbed cotton. Full length stripes with fancy lace and crochet yokes. Sizes 36 and 88 l Qf only. Priced very special .Al WOMEN'S VESTS of fine cotton and lisle with band . and fancy tops, . mercerized .or cotton-taped Full length, all sizes 36 OK to a. SneciaL earmant dJ WOMEN'S UNION SUITS in cotton and lisle. Lowlieck, sleeve less styles with lace shell or tight knee. Band and trimmed A Q tops. Sizes 36 and 38. Spcl 4t CHILDREN'S PANTS and Vesta at a special low price. Low neck, no sleeve vests, ankle-length pants, Full, assortment of .sizes. " Qp On special sale at a garment S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS GrVEN WITH PURCHASES. Four Days Quality and Quantity Sales in Basement Underprice Store! White Canvas Shoes $3.48 1 Girls' Dresses Great Four-Day Sale in the Basement Large shipment just received. Women's White Canvas Laced Shoes in the latest styles. These are made of exceptionally good quality can vas, closely woven and bleached to snowy white. IJasily cleaned. Good range of(?9 AQ sizes. Special eale price at pairD0 Pumps and Sandals WOMEN'S PUMPS of patent vici kid and gunmetal calf. Great many dif ferent styles, various toes and heels some with straps, others with (IJO A O neat bows. Sale price a pair DiTbO BAREFOOT SANDALS in sizes for Women. Misses and Children. Some with rubber soles and heels. Black, white, tan. 980 to $1.48 the pair. Beautiful New Silk Mixtures At 39c and 59c Yard A 4- 10 Basement New xVL U7V mixed Silk materials for Summer dresses, waists and skirts. Scores of handsome pat terns in the very latest sport ef fects with large or 6m all designs on various colored grounds also neat stripes and checks. Vast as sortment to select from. OQ Basement sale price. Yd, A 4. CQs Basement Hundreds XX uCof yards new . silk mixed sport fabrics in this lot. All the new and wanted colors are well represented, and there are patterns to please every fancy. Large and small figures, stripes, checks, etc. We also in clude 36-inch Tussahs and FQ novelty sport silks. Yd. At $2.98 Basement Many of these dresses are worth fully double the above price. Attractive styles made np in galateas, linens, wool, Challie, imported ginghams and pique. Nor folk, middy and one-piece styles. Plain colors, stripes and figures. Trimmed with smocking, band-embroidery, fancy belts, CJO QQ etc Ages 6 to 14. Special DAimVO Girls' Dresses at 47c 87c and $129 Basement Final clearaway of about 300 Children's Wash Dresses. Very newest 1917 styles in various materials. Stripes, plaids, figure and plain colors 3 special lots. LOT 1 Sizes 2 to 6 years Special for Wednesday at 470 LOT 2 Sizes 6 to 14 years Special for Wednesday at only 870 Sale of Rag Rugs In Basement Bright, cheerful patterns the ideal floor covering for beach cot tage or bungalow. In various sizes. Size 24x36 inches. Special 98 6 Size 24x48 inches. Special $1.25 Size 27x54 inches. Special $1.29 Size 30x60 inches. Special $1.69 Size 36x72 inches. Special $2.89 $16.50 to $25 Dresses $10 In Great 4Day Sale in the Basement at Only $10 97 Dresses "in this sale and not a single one of them but what is worth $16.50 or more. Any woman who has need for a new dress should be here bright and early Wednesday morning and "see these phenomenal bargains. Beautiful new 1917 models for street wear for sport wear and for evening wear. Made up of fine quality 6ilk Crepe de Chine, Georgette Crepe, Crepe Meteor and Imported Pongee. All are handsomely trimmed and have the new large collars. fk AA Plaited and flare skirts. Dresses worth up to $25 now at-"--"" S. & H. Green Stamps Given With Purchases Dress Skirts Special $2.98 Women's Kimonos at 98c Basementr Women's and Misses Dress Skirts at' a very special low price. Several 6mrt styles for sport and street wear. Many in full plaited effects, others in flare styles. Made up in excellent qual ity wool serge, poplin and gabar dines. Good selection of plain col ors, also checks. Skirts CO QO to $6.50, Basement sale OeiO Basement Women's long Kimonos greatly underpriced for Basement 4-days' sale. These are shown in attractive styles and are made up of excellent quality wash crepe in neat patterns and colors. Light, medium or dark. Trimmed with facings of contrasting colors. Cut good and full. Kimonos well QQ worth $1.50. Basement eale ,Ol Silk Waists Special $1.98 Basement Special Some of these high-grade Waists were formerly $4.50 others were $2.98 and $3.50. Odd lines, one or two of a kind made up in wash silks, Crepe de Chine, Jap Silks and fancy nets. While they last QO take your choice at, each3-L'0 Tub Dresses At $4.98 Basement Women's and Misses Tub Dresses in exceedingly attractive 6tyles Special lot of 300 just opened. Dainty afternoon frocks. UL G. A IS FIRST New Zealand Commissioner Tells of War Work Done. THREE ON WAY TO FRONT tiona art being made to care for the soldiers when the struggle Is over." Mr. Lascelles' eon, who is a field sec retary, is 20 years old. He was re jected when he applied for service, a stiff knee preventing field duty. .Pro voked by his rejection, he at once en listed in the Y., M. C. A. work, deter mined to get to the front somehow. Mr. Lascelles has unlimited resources at his command to put association building in the field with the troops. He is sent to the front to supervise the secretaries and to establish huts wher ever they are needed. For many years he was in business in Timaru, but re cently retired. of the Summer in Washington. Mr. Shlmlan has no assignment and will visit at Malone, Washington, until late In July. America's Selective Draft Is De - clared Far Superior to Method Used in British Colony, as Labor Levy Was Too Heavy. CoqniUe and North Bend Lose Pastor MARSHFIELD, 'Or.. June 6. (Spe cial.) Rev. F. S. Shlmlan, pastor ot the North Bend and Coquille Presby terian Churches for the past four or five years, has resigned his pastorate In both cities and will spend a portion "America has solved the problem of conscription far better than England and her dominions." said M. W. P. Lascelles, honorary Y. M. C. A. com missioner from New Zealand, who, with two other association secretaries, ar rived in Portland yesterday on their way to the battle lines in France. With Mr. Lascelles was G. W. W. B. Hughes, superintending secretary for the Y. M. C. A. In New Zealand, and A. N. Lascelles, army field secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at the front They are studying- association methods on the Pacific Coast and will report any improvement in administration that they find in Portland to the Y. M. C. A. headquarters at home. "New Zealand .made the mistake," said Mr. Lascelles, "of drafting every body. America has solved the problem by selective draft. We took farmers from the fields, workers from the fac tories and miners from the coal mines and as a result we have been short on labor. The government has admitted its mistake and now is following the pol icy that America has adopted. We have already contributed 85.000 men out of a total population of 1,000,000. Commlulon to Russia Lauded. "The visit of the allied commissions to the United . States has done for America what the American commis slon will do for Russia. It has shown America the mistakes to be avoided and has strengthened her hand in the war. I think that one of the greatest things of the war is the visit of. the Americans to Russia. It will mean that Russia will be stabilized in her alle glance to the allies and it will bring her back from the path of anarchy. "The war has been the making of the T. M. C A. In New Zealand. We did not have the sentiment of the people back of the association that you have here. But the men have been writing home from the front and telling their rela tlves and friends that the only inetl tution that they meet close to the trenches Is the Y. M. C. A. and that It has been a great factor durlnf thel leisure after long hours in the front line. "As a result, all New Zealand asso clatlons are out of debt. Y. M. C. A buildings are being planned as peace memorial alter La war and prepaid Wlllard W. C. T. U. to Sleet Friday. The Wlllard W. C. T. U. will meet Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. George Pratt, 1007 East Fifteenth street North. The members are asked to come at 1:30 o'clock and bring tea towels and. clean old linen, as the aft ernoon will be spent in sewing for the sailors and soldiers. Masons Buy Liberty Bonds. CENTRALIA. Wash.. June 6. (Spe cial.) The local Masonic lodge last night voted to invest a part of its funds in liberty bonds. The subscrip tion will probably be increased by the lodge later. Read The Oregonian classified ads. NEW ZEALAND Y. M. C. A. SECRETARIES IN PORTLAND ON WAY TO BATTLE LINES IN FRANCE. !T "" J V-,ua 4c-jjr. f TV . . t v - - " ' , i ' , . v - h X t J' i ' jr rr" - t l - - J 3 V T z t , ' O ;v s j 1 ,1 Mi ; - ' 5 " Tl lf - ' ' ' ' ' I fy f - : ) J, ij-- " ... fMH'- ---- it IJp L , .A.-, , . - satemi- imrmmsfniini fiiririmfflffsWissa1gaMssas PARIS TERMS NAMED today Major Isaac Newell, Infantry, is ordered to Vancouver Barracks for duty with the new Forty-fourth In fantry. Captain Raymond A. Wheeler, now at Hawaii, is ordered to Join the Fourth Engineers at Vancouver. Deputies Demand Return of Alsace-Lorraine. REPARATION WANTED, TOO Secret Vote Also Strongly Favors Continuance of War Until All Invaded Territory Is Gained. Premier Approves Action. PARIS, June 6. By a vote of 453 to 66 the Chamber of Deputies in secret ses sion has adopted a resolution declaring that peace conditions must Include the liberation of territories occupied by Germany, the return of Alsace-Lorraine to France and Just reparation for dam age done in the invaded regions. The resolution, which was accepted by the government, "also favors the creation of a league of nations for the mainte nance of peaoe. The resolution reads: "The Chamber of Deputies, the direct expression of the sovereignty of the French people, salutes the Russian and other allied democracies and Indorses the unanimous protest which the repre sentatives of Alsace-Lorraine, torn from France against their will, have made to the National Assembly. It declares that it expects from the war Imposed upon Europe by the aggres sion of Imperialist Germany the re turn of Alsace-Loralne to the mother country, together with liberation of invaded territories and Just reparation for damages. "Far removed from all thoughts of conquest and enslavement, it expects that the efforts of the armies of the republic and her allies will secure, once Prussian militarism is destroyed, durable guarantees for peace and in dependence for peoples great and small, in a league of nations such as has already been foreshadowed. "Confident that the government will bring this about by the co-ordinated military and diplomatic action of all the allies' and rejecting all amend ments, the Chamber passes to the order of the day." Speaking to the resolution. Premier Ribot said:. "This resolution affirms our national sovereignty. It declares that In democracy like ours there can be no secret diplomacy. None can or wants to finesse with . the national sover eignty. None has entertained such thoughts. French policy Is the policy of frankness ana clearness." MURDER TRIAL OPEN TODAY Charles Lee Yin Will Answer for Participation In Tong War. Charles Lee Yin. alleged Chinese gunman, will be placea on trial in the Circuit Court today on a charge of second degree murdof. He is accused of killing Ham Quong Fong in the second outbreak of tong hostilities on February 24. Two other unidentified Chinese, who have not yet been appre hended, were indicted with Yin for the Fong murder. The killing of Fong took place on Fourth street, between Everett and Flanders, in the sight of scores of peo ple. The gunmen boarded a taxi In which Fong was riding and emptied their guns at him, killing him almost Instantly. Lee Kin later was identi fied by several witnesses. 42 AT REED GRADUATED Commencement Address Delivered by Dr. L. It. Briggs. Forty-two graduates from Reed Col lege received their diplomas yester day at the commencement exercises on the college campus. Dr. LeBaron Russell Briggs, dean at the . faculty of arts and sciences at Harvard University and president of Radcliff, delivered the commencement address, and Dr. Edward O. felsson. formerly professor of education at Reed College, and now commissioner of education for the state of Idaho, gave a short talk. The luncheon of the alumni or tne college was held immediately after the graduation exercises. RAILROAD SIDE PRESENTED Traffic Manager of O.-W. It. & X. Co. Justifies Requested Rate Rise. F. W. Robinson, traffic manager of the O. W. R. & N. Company, spoke be fore the Rotary Club at its luncheon yesterday at the Benson Hotel, in be half of the proposed IS per cent freight rate increase, which la before the Inter state Commerce Commission. Mr. Robinson 'pointed out that the Froatp-WU 9T Lasc'li Back aL W. F, LasccJJc ao4 C, W, V B. lluliM, Major Newell Ordered to Vancouver. ORF.GOXTAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Juof 5, Under orders i&sued CASTOR 8 A For Infants and Children In Use For Over SO Years Always bears the Signavwo of yU3jf present rates are based on the mini mum operating expenses at a time be fore the cost of every element In trans portation had increased as It has since the war. Costs in transportation, he said, have increased from 15 to 200 per cent, and the proposed increase in freight rates is not an effort to secure dividends, but an effort to secure money to carry on the operating ex penses and save the roads from going into bankruptcy. BAKER RECALL IS CLOSE Opponents of Judge Messick Claim Victory; Contest Probable. BAKER, Or., June 5. (Special.) With only two small precincts to hear from and with a lead rf 17 votes advo cates of the recall of County Judge J. B. Messick and County Commissioner J P. Rlttner tonight claim victory and declare their candidates William Duby and Judge John Fraser were elected County Judge and Commissioner. They claim the two precincts' returns will swell the recall plurality. The election is one of the closest ever held In Baker County and a contest is expected should the recall win by a narrow margin because Judge Mes sick's friends today claimed that there were irregularities in the counting. About 70,000 tons of cork are annu ally needed In the bottling trades in the British Isles. Just One Application and the -Hairs Vanish (Modes of Today.) A harmless, yet very effective, treat ment is here given for the quick re moval of hairy growths: Mix enough powdered delatone and water to cover the undesirable hairs, apply paste, and after two or three minutes remove, wash the skin and the hairs have van ished. One application usually Is suf ficient, but to be certain of results buy the delatone, In. an original pack age . A d v. Progress WE BELIEVE this firm was the first in Oregon to have an automo bile funeral car. This is only one ex ample of progress we have made in creating an institution which ranks among the most modern in America. Our most advanced step came when we left the noisy, crowded business section and built this establishment in a quiet, but most accessible part of Portland. MONTGOMERY AT FIFTH MODERN FUNERAL DIRECTORS J. P. Finlcs.