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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1917)
'4 ttte aronyrs-o obegojciatt. sattjtcday, October 20, idit. FfiOTHERS DEMAND THAT MR. EATON GO Women Whose Sons Are Ready i to Fight Denounce Pro . ; fessor's Attitude. REGENTS ARE PETITIONED TTostiTe "Resolntlon Insists Tliat In structor Be Removed, While His Co-Workers Plead Tliat He Be Retained. EUGEXE, Or., Oct. 15. Special.) Mothers of Oreg-on soldiers at a meet ing here tonight unanimously adopted resolutions calling for the removal of Allen H. Eaton as a member of the fac ulty of the University of Oregon be cause of his participation in the meet ing of the People's Council for De mocracy and Terms of Peace. About 4v mothers were present. Mrs. M. E. Watson, who has three eons In the Army, one of whom is in France, presided and addressed the meeting1. Mrs. Ollie Waller, whose only son is serving with the Oregon Coast Artillery, acted as secretary. Pro-German Propaganda Hit. "I agree with Roosevelt thoroughly," Mrs. Watson stated. "We are either for or against the Government. This is a life-and-death matter, and when you have three sons in this thing you do not have much patience with people who are not backing them up." Mrs. Watson, Mrs. Waller and Mrs. L. A. Ingalls were named to go before Lie ooard of regents of the university at their meeting tomorrow to present the resolution. The resolutions refer to the circu lation and signing of a petition for Mr. Eaton's retention as a member of the faculty by his associates in the University of Oregon, in which the petitioners denounce pro-German prop aganda and condemn the People's Council, but assert their faith in the loyalty of Mr. Eaton as an American citizen, then continues: 1 Eat'pn'fs Dismissal Demanded. "Resolvied. That we, as mothers of boys who are serving in various branches of the Army and Navy, con demn the conduct of Allen H. Eaton; and be it further "Resolved, That we cannot accept denunciation, of German propaganda e nd condemnation of the People's Council by other members of the fac ility of the University of Oregon as having, any connection with Mr. Ea ton's case, inasmuch as Mr. Eaton him self does not express his condemnation of the People's "Council and its action, which has been fnterpreted by patriotic Americans as German propaganda." UNIVERSITY OF OKEGON, Eugene. Oct. 19. (Special..) Forty-thre voting members of the faculty have signed the petition asking that Allen H. Eaton be retained as an ins tructor in the uni versity, which will be presented to the board of regents when they meet here tomorrow evening in special session to consider the resignation of Mr. Eaton, filed following the adoption of resolu tions by the Eugene Chamber of Com merce demanding that he be dismissed from the university faculty for parti cipation in the Chicago meeting of the People's Council for Democracy and Terms of Peace. Forty-thrre Mku Petition. The petit ion was submitted to 47 f acu It y mem bers. Two refused to join in any recommendation to the board regarding Mr. Eaton's dismissal und two others declined to sign the peti tion as drawn up, but announced that they would address personal letters to the reeents iu his behalf. The peti tion asks clemency for Mr. Eaton on the ground that the punishment is out if proportion to the offense and that while Mr. Eaton mule a mistake in attending the Ch icajaro meeting, his jat riot ism is not to be questioned. Opinion among the students favor Mr. Eaton's dismissal and the student body paper, through its editorial col umns last night, urged the acceptance of his resignation. PERSONALMENTION. X Xe. of Tacoma. is at the Palace. V.. McKea, of Seattle, is at the Ritz. W. Turdy. of Eugrene, is at the Ore gon. O. B. Hurd. of Seattle. Is at the Fitz. C. A. Bushnell. of Seattle, is at the XJaton. V. J. Piatt, of Ktieene. is at the Eaton. C. Reamer, of Tendleton. is at the Oregon. C. 11. Karnett. of Wasco, is at the Oregon. Billy Culbert. of Corvallis. is at the Oregon. R. II. Holmes, of Echo, is it the Perkins. jr. L. Barnett. of Seaside, is at the Perkins. Joseph Hunt, of Gardiner, is at th Tsortonia. J. N. Luck, of rendletnn, is at the Jmperia 1. D. E. Hunter, of Bend, is at the Portland. L. J. Simpson, of Coos Far, is at the Portland. R. IT. Williams, of Roseburs. is at the Eaton. C. F. Kalish. of Boston, is at the Multnomah. K. r Roberts and Mrs Roberts, of For Burning Eczema Is at is at of Ontario, is at is at Kellogrg, Idaho, are at the Multnomah. E. G. Moody, of Denver, is at the Multnomah. Georgre Malavey, of Hood River, is at the Ritz. James Harris, of Forest Grove, is at tne .ferKins. Mrs. L. Smither, of Astoria. the Seward. George E. Prine. of Denver. th Seward. J. W. McCulloch the Imperial. F. D. Peabody, of New York, i tne f ortiand. R. S. Hurd. of San Francisco, is at the Portland. Grace Ayres. of Stevenson, Wash.. at the Palace. Don A. Smith, of Kellogg, Idaho, at the Perkins. D. Sonderback, of Willapa, Wash, t the Seward. Mrs. G. W. Parraan, of Condon, at the Seward. Mrs. Edward Ball, of The Dalles, at the Xortonia. W. J. Roberts, of Klamath Falls, at the Imperial. C. N. Weiler. Jr., and Mrs. Weller are at the Eaton. Fred Greene, of Stevenson, Wash., is at the Palace. Mrs. W. E. Burke, of Kewberg, is at the Cornelius. Mrs. George B. Bingham, of Salem, is at the Imperial. Mrs. W. E. Summers, of New Bridge. is at the Cornelius. A. B. Smith and Mrs. Smith are at the Washington. A. L. Queen, of San Francisco, is at the Washington. Charles R. Duffy, of Kalama, Wash., is at the Cornelius. Mrs. A. R. Rennick. of Kelso, Wash., is at the Washington. E. A. Nelson, of Minneapolis, is reg istered at the Nortonia. Miss Mildred Bettingen, of The Dalles, is at the Nortonia. N. F. Lambert and Mrs. Lambert, of Corbett. are at the Palace. W. D. Hardy and Mrs. Hardy, of Seattle, are at the Cornelius. G. McClure and Mrs. McClure, of Powers, are at the Multnomah. D. A. Osburn, wife and family, of Cannon Beach, are at the Ritz. H. H. Bernstein, from San Francisco, is registered, at the Washington. WATER DISPELS DELUSION Joseph Sadler Jumps Into Willam ette and Climbs Out. Joseph Sadler, aged about 35, af flicted with a delusion that the "inner circle" of some religious organization after "after" him because he "knew too much about them." fled to the banks of the Willamette River near Burnside bridge last night, shortly after dusk, and plunged in. Whatever superfluous knowledge, he had vanished with the chilly waters, and he scrambled back to earth. He started up Burnside street, and after almost su mile of travel stopped at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Roe, 448 Burnside street. Mrs. Roe fed and warmed the nightly caller and called the police, who took Sadler to the County Jail. A charge of insanity probably will be placed against him. EAST SIDE 0. K.; WEST N. G. Edward W. Ryan Happy Until He Moved; Divorced Xow. "As long as we lived in a little home on th East Side we were happy, but when we moved Into an apartment on the West Side two years ago, .the con duct of my-wife changed immediately," testified hdward vv. Kyan against Anna C. Ryan in Presiding Judge Kava naugh's court yesterday in a divorce proceeding. "It was then that she began to associate with other men. She made a trip with a Mr. Robinson to Spokane, and remained four days. Other witnesses corroborated the statements of Mr. Ryan. Judge Kavanaugh gave Ryan the di vorce, although the wife instituted the suit. The couple were married at Van couver. Wash., December 13, 1913. SPEEDER TO PAY DAMAGES Hiirh School Boy to Be Deprived Motorcycle for Month. of In lieu of a fine. C. Lamnerl, a high school lad, will be deprived of the use of his motorcycle for 30 days. This was the decision of District Judge Dayton, before whom Lam pert yesterday pleaded guilty of traveling 3.r miles an hour on the Columbia River Highway last Sunday. I,. J. Camp was let off with a $ir fine for driving an automobile at the rate of 30 miles an hour on condition that ho pay for the repairs to a motor cycl with which the auto collided after skidding 57 feet when the brakes had been applied. This mishap also occurred on the highway. POLICE SUBSCRIBE $2500 Detectives Show More Interest Than Cniformed Men. Approximately $2300 has been sub scribed for liberty loans by employes of the Portland police department, ac cordins' to James McCorkle. clerk at police headquarters, who is taking sub seriptions amon? the peace officers of the city. Thus far there have been but few uniformed police to subscribe. Arrangements have been made whereby the police can buy the bonds at $& a month. Members of the detec tive bureau" are showing a greater in terest than the others, Mr. McCorkle said. Greasy salves and ointments should not fee applied if good clear skin is wanted, from any druggist for 35c or $1.00 for xtra large size, get a bottle of remo. When applied as directed it effectively removes eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also sores, burns, wounds and chafing. It penetrates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is a clean, dependable and inexpensive, penetrating, antiseptic liquid. Try it, as we believe nothing you; have ever used is as effective and satisfying. The E. W. Rose Co.. Cleveland. O. $10,000 TO BUY CITY FUEL Ordinance Establishing Rotary Fund to Be Introduced Wednesday. Ten thousand dollars has been desig nat.H a a th i i i T i 1 1 n ve t m en t riocts ftsrv fnr the ritv in entering the fuel business. An ordinanco establishing a rotary fund of that amount, to be uerpetuated by receipts from sale of wood, will be before the Council Rids nrp in b. onened October ?9 for stumpage, for cutting cordwood, for hauling cordwood, for furnishing slab- wood ana lor lurnisnine iv.uvu tons of coal. ?ray Hairl BAR BO HAIR REMEDY A preoumtica of rreat merit that fmdoaiiy darkens tray hmix and makes It soft and ploesy. . C.h Cam Makm It rouraeff To balf pit of water add ooe ex. of Bay kim. a box of B&rbo CotnDouBd. and oj. of glycerine. Any drutftrist coo pot thie up. or on can mix it at home at verylittie cost. Direction fecoaineaciiboxof Earbo Cocopoaod. At all drug atoroa. The Best Laxative. "I can recommend Chamberlain's Tab lets as the best laxative and cur for ronstipation that I know of," writes Frank Strause, Fruitland, Iowa. Adv. Commission Approves Road. SALEM, Or., Oct. 19. (Special.) The State Hierhway Commission today fi nally approved and sent to the Federal authorities for their approval, a post road project on the John Day Highway between Fossil and Sarvice Creek. The road proposed Is 9.47 miles Ion sr. to be constructed at a cost of $36,733.40. The road lies in Wheeler County. Army Orders. CHURCHILL URGES 2 MORE QRMALS State School Superintendent Says There Is Demand for 1000 Teachers Annually. MOTHERS HEAR TAZWELL President-Kerr Tells Women's Con vention at Eugene Why Liberty Bonds Mast Be Bought Uni versity Departments Explained. EUGENE, Or., Oct. 19. (Special.) State Superintendent of Public Instruc tion Churchill went on record today be fore the Oregon Congress of Mothers and Parent-Teacher Associations in fa voring the establishment of two more normal schools in the state one in Eastern and the other in Southern Ore g-on. Superintendent Churchill stated that 1000 teachers are needed every year, while the normal school supplies but 150. More normal-trained teachers for positions now being supplied by high school students are needed, he stated. Superintendent Churchill declared the one-room school is the weak spot in the Oregon educational system and he urged that provision be made for equipping especially trained teachers for this work. President Campbell explained the dif ferent departments of the university, telling of their present needs and fu ture plans. President Kerr Talks on Bond. Judge George A. Tax well, of Mult nomah County, spoke on the work of the Juvenile Court. Dr. vV. J. Kerr, president of O. A. C, last night urged the purchase -of lib erty bond3. He said that America must win this war and win quicKly. and that the women have no less a part to play than the men. Saying that it was not an army that we must train, but a. Nation, the speak er quoted President Wilson by saying that the people of this country must draw together in one compact front against a common foe. The part of the women is to do the work at home that will minister to the protection and safety of the men. It is not a question of how little our men can get along with, but of how much they can use. he said. Dr. Kerr naid that while he believed and prayed it would never be necessary for American women to uo actual fjghung that he knew they would do it, as did their Russian sis- era, should occasion arise. , Plea Jhlade for Cripple. President Kerr spoke highly of the advances in educational lines. He said that one of the important recent devel opments of education lay In the closer relationship established between the schools and the parents. 'Co-operation between the parents and the teachers means giving the child the best training for his life work, he asserted. Mrs. P. Lt. Campbell explained the crippled children's act passed at the last session of the Legislature, and urged that in all the horror of war the people should not forget the other mat ters that have-a right to claim -attention. In the whole state of Oregon there is no children's hospital, she said. Mrs. Campbell cited lour cases which had been helped this year, and said that much had been accomplished. even though the builuing of the hos pital does not seem near. The speaker said that the treatment of the crippled children is not charity; that it is the due ot the children, and that the state is glad to help them. The work of the clubwomen, she said. is the finding out of these children and the getting of their cases before the proper authorities. ANTILLES HIT BY TORPEDO (Continued From First Pase. concerning the casual- be made public imme- periscope. They reg-ard It as probable that the U-boat commander picked his place, lay in wait below the surface until hi, microphones told him the pa trols had passed and the transport was upon him, then shot his periscope above water only long: enough to sight and fire before he ducked back to safety. Any attempt to locate the submarine probably was made impossible by the necessity of rescuing: the survivors. The vessel must have been virtually torn in half by the explosion to have none down in the time she did. Attack 'Well Out at Seu. Probably the attack was made well out at sea. It took two days for the news to reach Washington, tnd the dispatch shows the time that must have elapsed before definite word could reach Admiral Sims. The survivors are believed to be already safe ashore somewhere in France or England. bo far as known no hish officers of the Army or Navy were due to return on the Antilles. There is no definite Information on that point, however, as only General Pershing knows who was sent home on the ship. The reports so far received show merely that & num ber of Army officers and 33 enlisted men of the Army were aboard. The loss of the Antilles marks the first reduction in the transport fleet. A considerable number of American troops, workmen and uthers Involved in the prosecution of the war, have I been carried safely to France and I England, and- the unsuccessful attack on the first contingent is the only re corded previous instance where the U-boats have succeeded even in catch ing sight of the vessels. ANTILLES CRACK COAST LINER Steamer, or 687 8 Tons, Known to Passengers Visiting Mardt Gras. NEW YORK, Oct. 19. The Antilles. a freight and passenger steamship of 6S78 tons gross, owned by the Southern Pacific Steamship Company (Morgan line) was one of the crack American coast liners. She plied between New Orleans and New York and had carried thousands of persons to the Mardi Gras celebration in the Southern city. The vessel was taken over by the Govern ment as a transport early in the war. Captain H. V. Boyets, master of the Antilles, retained his command when the vessel entered the Government service, as did most of his officers. The crew as recruited by the quartermas ter's department included many of the men who had served on the steamship when she was in the merchant service. The Antilles was built by the Cramps at Philadelphia in 1907. She was 421 feet long with a beam of 53 feet and depth of 37 feet. The Antilles was withdrawn from the coastwise trade temporarily in Septem ber, 1914, to make a trip to Genoa. Italy, to bring home about 400 Americans who had been stranded in Europe at the outbreak of hostilities. The party mob ilized at Genoa under the leadership of L. F. Loree, president of the Delaware & Hudson Railway Company, to await the arrival of an American vessel. The Antilles sailed from Genoa on Septem ber 12 and arrived in New York on September 2. 4:1--; lillllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllltUlllllllllllllllll COWHIDE BACS AT SALE PRICE A genuine cowhide traveling bag, light 6tock, sewed corners, leather lining, size 18 inch, black only. A good serviceable bag. While they last $5.93 BRING THIS COUPON AMI GET nn rvm i nn ZU-CAinA-ZU ! "S. & H." Trading ! S t a m pi on your ; first SI cash pur chase and double on the balance. Good on first floor and basement today. Oct. 20. Look Over This List It's Only a Part of Our Many Price Savings i LOGGER KILLED BY FALL Two Others Hurt at Odessa by Jumping from Runaway Engine, KLAMATH FALLS. Or.. Oct. 19. (Special.) In an effort to save himself by jumping from a runaway logging engine of the Odessa Logging & Timber Company Wednesday at Odessa, about 30 miles northwest of here, Charles Otis, of this city, was killed, his neck being broken by the fall. Axel Blundberg la in the hospital here jvith a fractured clavicle and Lawrence Lanso suffered serious and painful bruises and cuts about the head and face, which they received in the same aocident. The accident happened after closing time, as the engine was returning to camp. The logging crew was riding down the mountain on the locomotive, when it got out of control. The en gine did not leave the track and later came to a stop uninjured. A widow survives Otis. SAX FRANCISCO. Oct. 1!. The followinc ordr was issued ty itie w estern Depart ment ef the Army her today: Captain Elbert L. Grliell. IT. S. Army, retired, is announced aid-de-camp to Major Gnral Arthur Murray and assigned te command of Fort Mason, California, further details ties they will diately." Upon receipt of the cablegram from iVdmiral Sims the Government kept its promise not to withhold bad news from the public. The Issuance of the statement was delayed only until the Navy could tele graph to the families of the men known to have been lost Secretary Daniels carried word of the lois of the Antilles to t.".e White House when he went there late in the day with Admiral Mayo, who made his re port to President Wilson on his visit to England at the direction of the President. The news added to the gravity of the hour that the Secretary and Admiral Mayo spent in conference with the President. Might Have Been Worse. Quick upon the wave of sorrow at the news of the loss of the transport came a feeling of distinct relief be cause she had met her fate homeward bound and not on the way over with troops. The only soldiers on board were returning to the hospital or on special assignment. Had the full com plement of the transport been aboard, the loss undoubtedly would have been written in hundreds, as she was struck In the most vulnerable spot and went under so swiftly that few could have escaped. Officials are confident that those who survived owe their lives to the careful attention given by the Navy Department to the equipping of trans ports with lifeboats and liferafts. It is a. fixed rule that enough boats and rafts shall be carried to afford a place for every man aboard, even though the ship keel over and put half her boats out of commission. Miit Killed by Explosion. The loss of the ship's engineer offi cers indicates the probability that none of the engine and fireroom forces on duty escaped. Probably more of them died in the blast of the explosion of the torpedo which tore its way into the enerine-room compartments. The heavy loss among the Army en listed men indicated cannot be ac counted for until further details come In. Probably they and the Navy men were in their quarters below and could not make their way on deck before the ship took her final plunge. The Army. Navy and ship's officers and the others who were rescued probably were on deck or in cabins from which a step took them to the decks and a chance for their lives. Destroyer ScTeen Pierced. Lacking details of the attack, be yond the fact that the submarine was unseen, and the first warning to those aboard the Antilles came with the shock of the explosion of the torpedoi many theories were current as to how the U-boat crept through the destroyer screen, did its work and escaped un challenged. A majority of the officers who would comment thought the transport and her convoying patrols had run directly over a lurking submarine which saw them coming, calculated the distance and launched her deadly torpedo with out ever showing more than her IMMORALITY IS DENIED Mayor of Charlotte Says Town Near Camp Greene Is Clean. Reports of bad moral conditions the city of Charlotte, near Camp Greene. N. C, where the Third Oregon Regiment is now stationed, are abso lutely denied by Mayor McNinch, of Charlotte, in a letter received yesterday by Mayor Baker. The letter was in response to a tele graphic request from Mayor Baker that rumors be investigated and a report made for the benent of the families ot the men. 50cLablache Face Powder 39 50c Java Face Powder 39 fiOcPozzoni's Face Powder 39 $1.00 Delatone Face Powder.. . .90 Miolena Depilatory ..75 Phelactine -$1.00 25c Colgate's Dental Ribbon 230 25cAmolin -..180 50c Pebeco 430 25c Lyons' Tooth Paste . .200 25c Dr. Graves' Tooth Paste 190 50c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 430 $1 Vulcanoid Rubber Cushion Hair Brush 590 EOc Cloth Brush, solid back, 7 rows of bristles 340 25c Aluminum Soap Box 190 Colgate's Comfort Kit 500 Flossy Dental Floss Holder 500 Flossy Dental Floss 150 50c Nail Brush 390 $5 Military Brushes, leather back, 13 rows of bristles, pair $3.49 35c Tooth Brush 290 New Stock of PYRALIN IVORY -Engraving Free 25c Rose Water 190 25c Castor Oil 190 Moth Balls, 1 lb. 350, lb. 200, 3 or 100 25c Sheep Dip 190 25 lbs. Sea Salt 650 1 pt. Solution Boric Acid 250 1 pt. Javelle Water for bleaching clothes. .. .250 1 lb. Cut Agar Agar $1.10 3 oz. Aromatic Castor Oil 250 2 -lb. bag Mixed Bird Seed 300 Shah of Persia Glycerine Soap 100 3 for 250 10c Almond Oil Soap 3 for 250 10c Rose Glycerine Soap 3 for 250 10c Peroxide Cold Cream 3 for 250 lOcYutopia Soap 3 for 190 10c Baby Castile Soap 3 for 250 10c Shah of Persia Castile Soap 3 for 250 10c Stuart's Peroxide Soap 3 for 250 lOcMaxine Elliott Soap 3 for 19 10c Wash Rag Castile 3 for 250 lOcCreme Oil Soap 3 for 250 10c Mayers' Prize Baby Soap 3forl)0 lOcSternes' Verbena Bath Soap 3 for 250 10c Genuine Olive Oil Castile ..3 for 250 $1.00 Liq. Arvon 900 8-oz. Bottle Salvora Hair Tonic 5O0 1 pt. Bottle Lily Milk of Magnesia.. 450 60c Bottle Sal Hepatica 530 50c Danderine 400 50cBenetol 400 $1.00 Horlick's Malted Milk 8O0 50c Pond's Extract 450 $1.00 Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin 900 1 lb. Merck's Sugar of Milk 700 1 pt. Bottle Lister's Antiseptic Fluid 500 $1.00 Bottle S. S. S 890 $1.00 Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery 9O0 1-pt. Bottle Pure Cod Liver Oil $1.25 Fellows' Hypophosphate 850 and $1.23 Scott's Emulsion 690 and $1.39 The "Hedlite" Electric Heater is a wonder. Attached to any electric light socket it will warm quickly and cheaply any ordinary living room get one today. MAB3HAIX TOO -HOMT A 6171 ALDZX apggTAywtaTwmx Always "S. A II." Stamp First Three Floors iMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIMIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIMIIIIHlinilllllinilllllllMIIIIMIIIinnillllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIUlllllliz 4 AVIATORS FRENCH CITED I! LATEST ARMY ORDERS. Lieutenant Lufbery, Among Number Is Credited Wltb Eleven Victo ries In Air. PARIS, Oct. 19. Four members of the Lafayette escadrille were cited in the latest French army orders. The citations follow: Dudley L. Hill, of PeekskiU, N. T., "for high courage In the recent attacks at Verdun, especially on August 18, when his airplane was seriously dam aged as he was protecting bombard ment airplanes." Edwin Parsons, of Springfield, Mass., for "splendid courage shown on all missions entrusted to him. He brought down an enemy on September 8." Sergeant Kenneth Marr. of San Fran cisco, "a valiant pilot, who aided in bringing down an enemy on Septem ber 19 and engaged several enemy ma chines on September 23. By his coolness and daring he brought his own dam aged airplane back." Loiutenant Kaoul Lufbery, of Wal lingford. Conn., cited for "16 flights in a fortnight, iu which he brought down or disabled six enemy planes, scoring his 11th victory on September 4. His own machine was damaged five times during these flights." Men Denied Passports Appeal. ASTORIA. Or., Oct. 19. (Special.) The eight men of military age who were denied passports to return to their native lands by the local exemp tion board have taken an appeal to the district board. This morning Adolf Steen Alsos applied to the board for a. passport to return to Norway. He says he wishes to visit his mother in order o provide a hom for her. Ifoxx can always tell a good Picture Play (afterward) Yes and beforehand too if you look for these trademarks or names in the motion picture theatres' adver tisements and in the lobbies. TRADE M MARK f I I 'p rSSS"- FAMOUS PLAYERS -LASKy CORPORATION gftajje -awv0a. J KTlty If You Have to Stay at Home and work for wife and babies, make your dollars fight for all of you. Buy a Liberty Bond It's a gilt-edged investment, paying a liberal rate of interest, and guaran teed by United States Government. Subscriptions taken at this bank for any amount $50 up. THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SIXTH AND STARK Resources $25,000,000.00 Painless Parker Outlaw His Confessions CHAPTER LXII In t Ik Ins m per fectly linocent tuid making a mo-lar-myatifier out of him. tbe Dental T r a a t Jackdaws are working a loner conalRtent 1 I n e a. They ?.now exactly what they are lo Ihr: within their limited vision. Tbe dental col lege education of the prospective dentist is aimed to make him an Jnte arral plank In the Dental Trust platform. This platform Is necessary in order that the older birds may have a substantia I roost, from which they may pick the lus cious plums that grow in a hlshly protected hothouse. If there were sot fresh timbers In that platform It would grow moss-covered, would rot and would eventually fall of Its own weight. How necessary, then, that the in stitution perpetuate itself, replacing tbe old members with new and vigor ous substitutes f True, every time the Dental Trust mm? received a new assignment of highly trained 'ethical practitioners, old Father Time gets a few more nicks In his sickle. Progress la that much re tarded. A few more barnacles collect on the hulk, which, long ago, should have been sunk as unsea worthy. But It Is tbe sort of expedient that Is rendered necessary when a mori bund cult seeks to perpetuate an an tiquated and untenable system. And yet, what a pity that promis ing young men, who have in them the possibility of becoming really useful practitioners In any community young men who have the trend to ward right Ideals young men who ought to be trained along progressive lines should be drilled in a miser able, petty larceny sort of career, edu cated to believe that their diplomas give them the right to mulct the pub lic and play the age-old part of Med icine Men and "Witch Doctors! Some day and it's coming in the near future dentistry, as well as oth er kindred professions, will be cleared of the cobwebs, and we'll all be work ing In the daylight Instead of In the twilight of a tradition that belongs In the shadow of the Tower of Babel--Adv. (To be continued.) Change of Time GREAT NORTHERNRAILWAY COAST LLNTE SERVICE BETWEEN PORTLAND-TACOMA-SEATTLE-VANCOUYER,B.C. Effective at Once 99 Train 456 "The Owl will leave Tortland daily 1:00 P. M. instead of 5:00 P. M. as here tofore, making: same stops as formerly, arriving Tacoma 5:50 P. M-, Seattle 7:15 P. M., connecting: with ORIENTAL LIMITED for all Eastern points. H. DICKSON, CP.4T.A. 348 Washington Street. Ill Telephones: Marshall 3071, A 2286.