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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1917)
-UMATILLANS URGE HERMfSTON AS SITE Portland Chamber and Gov' ernor to Aid in Effort to Procure Cantonment. DELEGATION VISITS CITY Climate Said to Permit of All-Year Activity, land Belongs to Gov ernment, Electricity, AYater and Wood Easy to Get. A substantial delegation from Uma tilla County to arouse Interest in the campaign of Pendleton ana Hermiston to secure the location of an Army en campment near Hermiston visited Port land yesterday and the co-operation of the Chamber of Commerce and other interests was pledged. Governor AVithy combe advised the delegation, first by telegram and later in person, that he would aid in the movement in every possible way. The proposed cantonment site of 30,000 acres was inspected on Monday by Major Richard Park, chief engineer of the Western Xivision, who is cover ing the Western states on a trip of in spection of various sites offered. About 10 locations have been offered in the Pacific Coast states, although the Her miston location is the only one being considered in Oregon, so it is regarded as a etate-wide movement that will be supported by everyone in Oregon. Iferminton Club ActH. The Hermiston Commercial Club started the campaign for an Army can tonment there last May, when data were submitted to the War Department through the Department of the Interior. Because of the extensive reclamation work already completed near Hermis ton, the Reclamation Bureau was al ready quite familiar with conditions there. More recently the proposal of Hermiston people has been taken di rectly to the Western Division of the Army and data given directly to offi clals in charge. It was pointed out by the committee here yesterday that the proposed site would cost the Government nothing that it is chiefly Government land and that conditions surrounding it are ideal for cantonment purposes. The tract lies on a well-drained plateau, about 200 feet above surrounding irrigated lands. Transportation facilities are said to be ample, with the O.-W. R. & N. Company's lines passing the tract on two sides, while the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway is Just across the river, and in between is the Columbia, available for navigation. Climate Considered Ideal. The climate is so well adapted to the purposes of an army camp that it is said the men may be out in the open all the year around, as it is neither cold nor wet in Winter. A water supply may be had from Minnehaha Springs, three miles away, and .light and power may be supplied by a transmission line of 27 miles from Pendleton or Umatilla. It is only 30 miles to the forest reserve lands, where ample timber is available. Two sites, it is said, for cantonment camps will be chosen in the West, and it is the hope of the Umatilla County committee that one of these will be Hermiston. Major Park was inspecting a tentative site at Tenino, Wash., yes terday. His report will, of course, be made to the War Department, and it will be some time, probably, before llermlston people will learn what his iinaings are. Those in the party that visited Port land yesterday were Senator J. N. iiurgess. Judge G. W. Phelps. Leon -onen and H. Alexander, Pendleton; F. B. Swayze, Thomas Fraser, William Kennedy and E. P. Dodd, Hermiston; Dr. W. K. Donnelly, Arlington; Ralph Holt and Frank Sloan, Stanfleld. 'NO LOYAL MAN NEED FEAR' Postmaster-General Burleson Gives Views on Censorship Law. WASHINGTON", Oct. 10. Postmaster General Burleson announced that his policy of administering the broad pow ers of newspaper censorship vested in him by the trading with the enemy act will be "as conservative and cautious as it is humanly possible to be."' Mr. Burleson eaid that in adminis tering: the act he would have in mind only one thing: The country is at war with Germany and no deliberate prop aganda to discourage support of the Government in prosecuting the war to a successful conclusion will be tol erated. Beyond that, the Postmaster General said, no steps would be taken to interfere with criticism of the Ad ministration. When his attention was called to the belief throughout the country that the new law will confer censorship powers on him broader than was contemplated in the censorship law defeated early in the present Congress, Burleson said: "I realize that it is a great power, but I intend to be as cautious and con servative as it is humanly possible to be. There will be no Injustice done. Make Your Own Cough f Syrup and Save Money x . Better than the rradr-made kind. EMUy prepared at home. The finest coujrh. smip that moncT can buy. costing only about one-fifth as much as roady-made preparations, can easily be made up at home. The way it takes hold and conquers distressing coughs, throat and chest colds will really make you enthusiastic about it. Anv driifrErist can supply you with 2i ounces of Pinex (60 cents worth), i'our this into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar eyrup. Shake thoroughly and it is ready for use. The total cost is about 6.j cents and cives you a full pint a, family supply of a most effectual, rileasant tasting remedy. It keeps per ectly. It's truly astonishing how quickly 5t fects, penetrating throuph. every air passace of the throat aad lunjrs loosens and raises the phlefrm. soothes and heals the inflamed or swollen throat mem branes, and craduallv but surely the annoyinjr throat tickle and dreaded couch, will disappear entirely. Nothing : better for bronchitis, spasmodic croup, i chopping cough or bronchial asthma. Pinex is a special and highly concen- j Crated compound of genuine Norway i fine exiracb, ana. is Known tne world i.ver for it nrnmnt healin- ff.t iC hroat membranes. " Avoid disappointment by asking your : In Job xix:24 is an allusion to the oriiggist for -21 ounces of Pinex" with use of lead to fill carved inscriptions full directions and don't accept any- upon stone by pouring the molten lead thing else. A guarantee of absolute sat- into the cavities of the letters to ren isfaction or money promptly refunded, der them legible and at the same time goes with this preparation, Jha iaex to preserve them from the action of Co., Ft, Wayae, Ifti, j the weather. No truly loyal American has anything to fear. And want to state right now that the purpose of this leerlslatlnr. t i prevent criticism or the Govern ment or the Administraticn or thi Postoffice Department. "I is not aimed at Socialist publica ji any oiner Kina oi publications as a class. The newspapers can de nounce me or the Admi. tration al! tney liKe and they can hac such critl -iom tmuiaiea tnrougn tne malls. But it we nna newspapers preaching dis loyalty newspapers that are really vrciiiian at neari ana in secret sympa hy with the German government, which we are fighting; newspapers which are trying to make the masses of the peo ple believe that this is a capitalists' war and that the Government, the.-.. fore, ought not to be supported such puDiications we intend to suppress with a. firm hand. We must win the war and we cannot brook disloyalty at home. "If we are wrong the individual will nave redress in the courts. If the courts decide we are wrong we will accept their Judgment." "pinion in Congress, which enacted the new law, is still evenly divided as to whether or not Congress has not gone too far in placing in the hands oi the Postmaster-General authority not only to decide when any publica tion shall be denied th mails, but in forbidding the distribution of the i,n. mailable matter in any wav whatever or its republication all without giving tne owners or a publication the right ' a iriai oy jury berore their bust ness is practically suspended. VORWAERTS IS VITRIOLIC "ERLW PAPER LASHES MICHAELIS, HELFFERICH AM) OTHERS. Socialist Organ Saya Government Can not Command Respect at Home or Abroad. AMSTERDAM, Oct. 16. The Berlin Socialist paper, Vorwaerts, in an edi torial on the political situation in Ger many! says: 'It is enough to make one ween to think that we have a Chancellor like Michaelis, a Vice-Chancellor like Helf ferich, a. War Minister lib. Vr,n st.i,. a Naval Secretary of State like Von Ca-' peile. It is enough to make one weep that in this critical time of the empire a government should be in power which neither at home nor abroad can com mand or even lay claim to respect, a government as to whose incapacity there is a general consensus of opin ion from Heydebrand to Scheidemann and from Von Reventlow to Ledebour, and that we cannot even' tell whether this government will be forced to make way for another more capable." After referring to the government's recent blunders, Vorwaerts asserts that if the majority party had refused on Tuesday to have any truce with "liie present unspeakable government." an.! had acted as the Socialists did and re fused to vote a supplementary buristi. Michaelis would have had to disappear TAX CHECK IS $100,225 Clackamas County Receives Grant Land Money From Washington. OREGON CITT, Or., Oct. 16. (Spe cial.) Sheriff Wilson has r,iv.H from the Treasury Department of the United. States a check for $100,225.18. This is in payment of all taxes to date on the Oregon-California land grant, which, after several years of litiga tion, was handed back to TTncio a.. ne cnecK covers taxes on more th isj.uuu acres In the grant in Clacka mas County, princinallv in th Wilh..., and Molalla districts. Clackamas County is the first mint. in the state to receive the taxes due for any lands in the grant. ins land is contained in the crut area ior wntcn tne Government brought auiL BgdinBi tne old Oregon & Cali lornia Railroad Company, later ab sorbed by the Southern Pacific, upon me gruunus mil tne railroad company uau xaiieu to iuiru its contract in sell ing the land at a certain price to set tiers. HIGHWAY PAVING RUSHED Large Force of - Men Is at Work on Roads in Clatsop County. ASTORIA, Or., Oct. 16. (Special.) ADout three-rourths of a mile of the Columbia River Highway in the vicin ity of Svensen has been paved and during the line weather further paving in tnat vicinity Is being rushed. Good progress is also being made on the portion of the highway between Sven sen and Westport. Four or five rock crushing plants are being operated at various points preparing the material which is being laid at a rapid rate. A large force of men is employed on the Lewis and Clark River road. GERMAN SOIL TO BE HELD Socialist Leader in Reichstag plores Attitude of Allies. e- AMSTERDAM. Oct. 16. At a Socialist meeting in Berlin Sunday Philip ocneiaemann. leaaer or tne Socialist majority in the Reichstag, deplored the fact that Germany's enemies had "scoffed at the German desire for peace. "We will not renounce a square foot or iierman soil, he added. Dr. Michaelis, Herr Scheidemann de clared, was unsuited to the post of Chancellor. BLACKLEG INVADES HERDS Grant County Stockmen Taking Pre cautionary Measures. BAKER. Or., Oct 16. (Special.) In the face of a severe epidemic of black leg. Grant County stockmen are hasten ing to vaccinate their herds. There have been a large number of stock fa talities on the ranges and the disease has spread to some of the valleys. Thus far the general loss has not been great, but several ranchers are reported to have been heavy losers. SHIP CAMOUFLAGE CLEVER American Vessel Firing Shell First Notice of Presence. Is AT AN, ATLANTIC FORT, Oct. 16. An American steamship which arrived here today from Europe was so cleverly camouflaged that a freighter, met 400 miles off the coast Sunday did not sight her until the American vessel, suspecting the freighter might be a screen for a submarine, fired a blank shell. The freighter proved to be a Swedish "'' ll""n6 reiiei supplies. HOOVER SAYS' GO SLOW ON SWEETS Serious Sugar Shortage Eastern States Is Ex pected Soon. in CANE SUPPLY DISTRIBUTED Further Offerings Xot Expected Un til Late in November Re tailers Advised to Sell In Small Lots. WASHINGTON. Oct. 16. The Eastern states fear a sugar shortage with no prospect of relief before late in No vember, when the Hawaiian and West ern beet crops arrive. In a statement tonight forecasting the shortage the food administration again appealed to the American people to cut down their consumption oi canay ana sweet arinKs. and at the same time gave warning that retailers already have received their stocks at prices recently agreed upon and the public should pay no more during the temporary scarcity in the East than it has been paying during Th?.horta is due. th. Administra- tion says, to the failure of the public, outside of a few loyal homes, to reduce consumption and the unusual exports to France in order that the French people may have their meager ration of one pound of sugar per person per month. In regard to prices attention is called to the fact that by agreement the price or beet and Hawaiian sugar has been fixed at 7 cents a pound. Atlantic and Pacific seaboard bases, under which the maximum retail price at interior points should be 8(4 cents, while by an agree ment with the cane refiners and Cuban producers the price of cane sugar has been held down so that it should reach the consumer at about 9 cents a pound. Louisiana Producers Slow. The administration notes that it still is awaiting a reply to its appeal to the Louisiana producers to join in the agreement. 'There will be a temporary shortage in the supply of sugar to the area north of Savannah and east of Pittsburg," the food administration's statement said. during the latter part of October and the month of November, pending the ar- ival :n the market of new sugar. The o-. et Mijar factories in the Western; ai e rapidly coming into action; mi. u;;tther with the Hawaiian pro-j 1 . -i- .i. will be able In a short time to' t: ... ..-are or the sugar supply in the aied west of the territory referred to. "."A-- the production of beet and Ha waiian sugar increases the areas sup plied from this source will gradually extend eastward, and beet sugar should reach the Atlantic seaboard by the end of November. The rapidity with which this sugar invasion from the West can take place will be largely controlled by the economy shown in the consumption of sugar by the people in the Western area, and the Administration makes a special appeal to them that they reduce the consumption of sugar, more espe cially of candy and sweet drinks In order that the Northeastern states, may. be supplied at the earliest possible mo ment. Cane Sugar Distributed. Practically all of the cane sugar In the hands of the refiners and producers has now been distributed to the jobbers and retailers at the prices maintained during the last two months, or upon a basis that should reach the consumer in the neighborhood of 9 cents a pound. Therefore, if by virtue of the shortage in the Eastern states, the price of sugar should increase, it is only proof that it has been increased at the hands of the handling trades, not the hands of either the producer or,the refiner. The food ad'ministration asks the public not to pay more for sugar during the present shortage than It has been paying during the last 30 days. When the supply of beet sugar reaches the Atlantic seaboard, it should be avail able upon a less basis than the cane prices above mentioned. Limited Sales I" reed. "Furthermore, the food administra tion requests that all jobbers In the West as well as in the East should dis tribute their sugar with care amongst the retailers in much reduced quanti ties, and that the retailers, in turn, should refuse to sell only a very lim ited quantity to any one customer. We also trust that jobbers will refuse to sell sugar to any retailer who advances the price. j "A remedial contribution can be made if the American people will at once re duce their consumption or candy and sweet drinks. Many householders of the country have responded to the appeals for voluntary reduction, but unless we can secure a wider reduction of the! sugar in candy, ice cream and sweet drinks it will be necessary next year to curtail the supplies of these indus tries as has been done all over Eu rope." MOTHERS TO HEAR BOYS Proposal to Send Phonograph Rec ords to Trenches in France. WASHINGTON, Oct. 9. That mothers and relatives may hear the voices of beloved ones, who are . serving with the United States Marines in France. a Massachusetts woman has suggested that blank phonograph records be for warded to the boys in the trenches. "Such records would prove dear to every household from which a son is serving; it means that even though he be killed in battle, his voice can still be heard ,by those he held mnit dear." writes the woman to Marino Corp officials here, who have taken the matter under consideration. POLITICIAN IS PERSUASIVE Thompson Lieutenant Embarks in Cheese and Lemon Business. CHICAGO. Oct. 9. It begins to look as If life will become insufferably dull in the Twenty-first Ward, now that the State's Attorney has put a crimp into tne activities of Francis E. Becker, the Thompson-Lundin politician. For Mr. Becker was no plain, ordinary hench man. Rather was he an intriguer, an adroit and almost poetical gentleman, a creature with many argosies sailing the political waters. Thus he appears in the light of a cheese salesman and purveyor of lem ons. Having lined up the saloonkeepers n tne ward, exnibited his prowess over the police department, fire department, his pull and his drag with the powers that be, Mr. Becker cast about for fur ther opportunities and his roving eye ighted upon the figure of Frank W. Keigher. formerly a morals Inspector under Major Fankhouser. The facts as they were Issued by State's Attorney Hoyne are these: Convinced that the ward was waiting for some wideawake cheese plugger and lemon vender. Mr. Becker led hie friend Keigher to the various saloon keepers in the district, introduced Mr. Keigher. lauded his character and read to the delighted beer merchants a short, pithy eulogy on the well-known and celebrated "Keigher cheese," without which no drink parlor was complete. The saloonkeepers, overcome with joy at the prospect of obtaining this wonderful cheese, even though it cost twice as much as ordinary cheese, placed large orders with Mr. Becker, Just as that shrewdly commercial iren tleman has expected. Little did it mat ter that the cheese when delivered crumbled even a? dust crumbles into dust. Little did it concern these liquor sellers that the cheese could not be eaten, drunk, boiled, stewed or used as mucilage. Some baited rat traps with it. Others offered it to the allies as a weapon against the gas attack of the nun. Observing the notable success and the continued demand of his saloon keeping friends, whom he had so often befriended. Mr. Becker again branched out. This time It was in lemons that he ventured. The overjowed saloon keepers found another opportunity to deal with this philanthropist. What if the lemons had seen healthier days? Were they not Mr. Becker's lemons? They were. And the thirst parlor own ers bought them for what they were lemons. "We have the facts about the cheese, lemons and everything else," said Mr. Hoyne. "Mr. Becker's entire maneuver Ings are in our hands." MESSAGE IS FORCEFUL G. CLARK TELLS WHY PEOPLE SHOULD BUY BODS. ! "-Ml-.t. Speaker- Present Liberty Zond Question to Motion Picture Theater Audiences. A. G. Clark, of the Home Industry League, one of the four-minute men speaking nightly in Portland' theaters. told the audience at the Peoples last night that there was a German spy among tnem. And 1 want that spy to get this straignt, he said. "For Prussian treachery in Mexico we subscribe a billion dollars: for Prussian treachery in mis country we suoscribe a billion ior i-russian murders of women and children a billion, and for broken faith a Diuion more. And then, on top of an iniH, a Diuion more until militarism is beaten to Its knees." Crging liberal subscriptions to the noerty loan. Mr. Clark told it all In one mouthful of language more ex pressive than elegant: "If you can't go across, come across." Mr. Clark left with his audience this parting snot: Remember that men win battles, but money wins wars." Nine other four-minute men nnntr. during th eevening. They were: W. T. Williamson, Liberty; Professor H. H. Herdman, Columbia; Homer D. Angell, Strand: Ralph Coan, Peoples; Elmer Amidon, Sunset; N. R. Jacobson. Star: Hamilton Johnson, Majestic; Victor Mc Cone, Circle, and G. L. Carlson, Globe. HONOLULU ASKED TO SAVE 6000 Pounds of Wheat Daily May Be Saved Through "War" Bread. HONOLULU, T. H.. Oct. 5. Six thou sand pounds of wheat a day can be saved the United States if Honolulu families will only eat graham or "war" bread instead of the regulation white loaf. Such is the announcement of the territorial food commission, which has inaugurated a food conservation cam paign that is expected to produce re sults in the home through the school children. Governor Pinkham issued a procla mation on the first day of school call ing to the attention of the children the necessity for economy in food and clothing and emphasizing the impera tiveness of avoiding waste during the course of the war. The schools will conduct a special propaganda designed to strike home to every parent through the lessons to the children. Approximately ' 20,000 pounds of bread is consumed daily by the white residents of Honolulu and if this con sumption were entirely of graham bread, the above-mentioned saving in wheat would result, and, as all flour is imported from the mainland. Hawaii would consequently be less of a drain on the states in the matter of food supplies. The action of the Government in fix ing $2.20 as the maximum for wheat per bushel is not expected to have any effect on bread prices here. Bread is now selling for 10 cents a loaf that costs 6 to 8 cents In the states, while the standard 10-cent loaf sells here for 15 cents. WAR BOON TO FRESHIES O. A. C. First-Year Men Will Xot Have to Do Usual Rook Work. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. Corvallis. Oct. 16. (Special.) Useful freshman duties rather than useless pranks arranged by the sophomores will be the order of events at O. A. C. this year. The present sophomore class has outlined a system of treat ment toward first-year boys which will not require them to rook duty which is only a waste of time. At many times freshmen have been re quired to scrub sidewalks. Such prac tices will not be carried out this year. Work about the campus which must be .done by the students will be ar ranged for and the freshmen will be come an aid in keeping the campus in first-class condition.' The 1920 class has a vigilance com mittee, which is in charge of the work to be done by first-year men, and other members of the sophomore class will not be permitted to violate the rules by rushing the freshmen or mak ing a show of them. SCHOOLS TO HOLD RALLIES Closer Co-operation Between Pa trons, Teachers, Pupils Proposed. Community rallies in each of the high schools of the city, for the pur pose of promoting closer co-operation between patrons, teachers and pupils in handling high school problems, will be held during November. The meetings will be addressed by Bishop Sumner. The programme in each instance will begin with a com munity sing, followed by readings and musical numbers. The meetings will begin at 7:45 P. M.. as follows: Washington, Thursday, rvovemoer s: Franklin, Tuesday, No vember 13: Jefferson, Friday, Novem ber 16; James John, Tuesday, Novem ber 20; Lincoln. Friday, November 23. During the first year of the Civil War the number of the regular Army rose to 32.000. Lincoln's first call for volun teers. April 15. 1861, was for 75.000 men for three months. At the beginning of 1862 the number of volunteers in the field was about 650,000. During the next three years it was about 900.000. At the close of the war the Union Army num bered 1.000.000 men. The total number of troops furnished was 2.850,000. Read The Oregonian classified ads. What's New for Fall? A GOOD many men and young men are asking that question about clothes. Here's the first item of interest: Hart Schaffner & Marx suits and overcoats for Fall are here. The popular fabrics are worsteds, cheviots, tweeds, iridescent shades, greens, browns, grays, in checks, plaids, stripes and mixtures and they're all-wool, every one of them. We don't need to argue about the merits of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes; you know they're good clothes; you know that they're guaranteed to give you satisfaction. The values are unusual. Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. The Men's Store for Quality and Service MORE CARS BUILT Southern Pacific Trying to Re duce Shortage in State. EARLY RELIEF IMPROBABLE With Crop Movement On and Add ed Demands Vpon Railroads Be cause of War Conditions, Task of Getting Cars Increases. Although a car shnrtas-A evtata nn Western railroads, the carriers are do- ng everything possible to meet the sit uation, according to railroad officials. The Southern Pacific, for example, is Dunning new cars as fast as the sup ply of materials and labor will allow. Steel for new rollinar stock is hard to obtain and as a result wood is being used instead of steel for all parts where steel is not absolutely essential. It is said to be out of the question to build a!l-steel freight cars under present con ations. Daily Sbortaae Large, The Southern Pacific Cnmnanw w short 1265 cars of all kinds yesterday. Since October 1 the dally shortage has 1 1 uiii j iuu 10 ijuu cars. It has latelj- been stated to the Pub lic Service Commission, it was reported recently, that the O.-W. R. & N. Com pany had turned over 1000 cars to the Southern Pacific Company. It is mougnt Dy railroad men that this statement might give a wrong impres sion io shippers, because the statement is misleading. There has been no turn over of cars whatever in the sense that tne cars were given for the use of the Southern Pacific Company on its own lines. What was meant, and the term ht should have been used, it is asserted ty Southern Pacific officials, is inter change of cars. Empty cars are received from the O.-W. R. & N. Company for loading on Southern Pacific lines and then turned back, loaded, t-e the O.-W. R. & N. Company for delivery to desti nation. This practice is, of course, common between all connecting rail roads. Figures compiled by the Southern NOW Now is the time to practice thrift and economy. Save all you can in food and energy. Save money. The saving habit is an ex cellent one, and now is a good time to get into it. ' One dollar or more opens a savings ac count in this old es tablished and strong bank. .You Help Your Country and Yourself WhenYou Buy a LIBERTY LOAN BOND LADD&TILT0N BANK Washington and Third $50 and up to (IIIIIIIIIIIIUlllllllllllllllllllllimUIHIIIIillllllllllUIIIIIIJ Pacific Company show that from Sep tember l to October 11. inclusive, the I Southern Pacific Company delivered to the" O.-W. R. & Is. Company at East irunnno juia cars. During the same period the bouthern Pacific received from the O.-W. R. & N. Company 2984 cars. This is an excess In favor of the Southern Pacific Company of 35 cars. Demands Are Heavy. With the crop movement on, the added traffic demands upon the rail roads by reason of the transport of quantities of war materials and troop trains, and the difficulty in getting cars returned from the East, it is impos sible, say operating officials, to fore cast an early relief from the vexing problem of car supply as It exists at present. However. everything that Give Your Teeth Exercise HARD crusts, and fibrous foods give the teeth work to do, and are in a measure tooth cleansers. The teeth need exercise just as much as any other part of the body. The chief cause of tooth decay is the use of soft pulpy foods which ding to the teeth and ferment. That's why you need to use a dentifrice which is first and always an efficient cleanser. S. S. White Tooth Paste is the best and most scientific combination of active cleansing agents on the market. It is made by the world's best known makers of dental equip ment and supplies according to a non-secret formula determined by eminent dental authority. Your druggist has it. Sign and mail the coupon b. low for a copy of our booklet. "Good Teeth; How They Crow And How To Keep Them." THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO. MOUTH AJVP TOILET PREPARATIONS 211 SOUTH 12th ST. PHILADELPHIA pmiMi tMMinniiiniiMM Wbsi Hi na wmtwi- m-wmii mTii iiM'IT-8--" - t - mum f COT TPOM taSf itT a.c?Py of 'Go?d Teeth: HgwThfyGrou and w A J1 How to Keep Them? also a sample tube ofSS. White Toothpaste., JAVXg tnnnrce t . L.I!".'.""..IS ?'."!' 11 "IJ" iiMJiii hi.j,i immiwwn . 'Tinmiiai '"''Ma'MM"l,B'-""-- is-n ii arijii .1 lit Good Mornind ! ; How do you rwivirr m. ' m did it. 50 shines for a me $4.90 and my shoes jvu. uy a uua va vla X . bHiNoiA Home Set and a box of StraoiA is the ideal shoe shining outfit. Ask Nearest Store. BLACK TAN WHITE RED Copyright Hart Schaffnor 4 Marx "Multnomah Hats." The Style jo you'll like 3J Southeast Corner Fifth and Alder can be done Is being undertaken to supply traffic demands.' Youth Killed hy Train. FRANKFORT. Ind., Oct. 9. William Cash, 4 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Cash, was killed when run down and crushed under an automobile driven by Newton C. Paragen. a wealthy farm er. The accident occurred in front of the Cash home when the hoy attempted to prevent his sister. Berr.eih, z years old. from being hit by the machine. The little girl. had started to her home from the opposite side of tne street. The boy, believing his sister was in danger! called to her to wait for him. He was struck as he started to assist her. like my Shine ? dime. Tfrrr-tr hn-r cairo wear longer. Why don't 1 OU Can 1 10S0. ft HOMESET j