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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1918)
13 SOX J0E3O Charge Purchases Made Today Will Go On July Account Payable August 1 Stamps on Charge Accts. if Paid in Full by 10th Tents, Hammocks, Swings, Fishing Tackle, Golf and Tennis Goods 4th Floor Soda Fountain and Ice Cream Parlors in Basement Summer Furniture on 3d Floor Tea Room on 4th Floor D o 0 O PORTLAND AGENTS FOR LADIES' HOME JOURNAL PATTERNS NONE COST OVER 15c For Victory! Do you realize that the war will be prolonged unless you help provide the means to "carry on" to victory? Invest your ' savings in U. S. War Savings Stamps DO IT NOW! The Standard Store of the Northwest MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION S. & H. STAMPS GIVEN ONLY UPON REQUEST Flags and Bunting Olds, Wortman & King Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methods tor the Glorious Fourth U- S. and Allied Flags Patriotic bunting and flag material at reason able prices, on display at Domestic counter, 1st fir in wanted sizes and ma terials 4th floor. Now is the time to buy them! D o n o Double Stamps Today With Cash Purchases in All Departments Except Groceries o n o n o I D n o n D o Q o D o H o D o D o D o D o n o Men's Clothes Dependable Makes Reasonable Prices The best clothes-buying rule these days is to go to the store that sells re liable merchandise and pay a fair price. This is such a store. Whether you choose a suit at $20 or a more expensive one at $35 or $40, you can rest assured that each represents the utmost in value at the price. Men's Store, on Main Floor. Men's Porosknit or Union Suits at OOL Main Floor Maker's "seconds," having slight imperfections. Short sleeve and length. In ecru color only. QP Sizes 36 to 40. Special at each OtJU SPECIAL Odd lines Men's Summer Underwear Shirts and Drawers. Kfl All sizes in the lot the garment Odd Lines Men's Straw Hats Special $1 Main Floor Novelty straws and imita tion Panamas not all sizes in each style, but practically all sizes in the 0 CC assortment. Formerly $2.50, DJ-lU Men's Bathing Suits $1.50 to $5.00 Main Floor Black, navy and other good colors many are trimmed with striped border. Select your new bathing suit here. Full assortment. Priced $1.50 to $5. Sole Portland Agent for Dutchess Trousers Women's Silk Waists $3.29 Bargain Circle First Floor Doz ens of stylish new models in this special offering for Saturday. Georgette crepe in white, flesh and the latest bright shades, trimmed with embroidery and lace. Also dainty silk voile waists and others of tub silks, plaid silks, crepe de chine and taffetas. Very newest collars. Priced PQ OQ special for Saturday at DOeaJ7 Women's Sport Sweaters At $6.75 Bargain Circle Fiber silk and mercerized sweaters in several good styles for vacation and sport wear. Styled - with large collars, belts, sashes, pockets, (SfCt rTP etc. Various colors, at DJ I J Today- 1 -Sale of Women's Coats In the Garment Store Second Floor Three notable groups of Women's and Misses Coats have been set aside and repriced for Saturday's selling at savings you can not afford to overlook. Beautiful high-grade garments in latest styles. Women's Silk Coats Special $16.95 Several attractive styles in this offering smart coats for street, dress or sport wear. Made up in taffetas, silk poplins and satins. New belted effects with fullness at back, large collars, also pleated styles with wide folded belt and fancy striped satin collars and many in Q- QP the neat tailored models. Extraordinary values for D1.00 Silk Coats at $19.95 One glance at these Coats will tell you they are remarkable values at $19.95. Strictly new models, made up in silk poplins, taffetas and moires. Some have pleated back, narrow sash, large adjustable collars; others with wide belts, fancy collars, and some with loose Q Q QP side panels. Black, navy, gray and taupe. Priced special 3-L.tl Wool Coats at $24.95 Women's and Misses' Wool Coats in whipcords, gabardines, burellas, poplins, serges and coverts. Many smart sport styles are included in this offering. Some with belts, large collars, patch pockets. QOI QC Plain colors and checks. Priced special for this sale at tDalifxsssJ Women's$1.00 Thrift Veils Saturday Only 65c Main Floor These new "Thrift" - Drape Veils are decidedly chic. They are shown in black, white and leading colors. -Patterns and qual ity such as usually sell Jttf at $1. Priced special at OtlC Our veiling expert will show you the proper way to wear the veil. Double Trading Stamps given with New Chiffon Motor Veils in all desirable colors, priced at $2.00 Hy-Lass Motor Veils in black and popular colors, adjustable OK band, hexagon mesh, 2 for New Motor Caps for women and misses. Styled with turn-down buckram interlined visor, $1.25 all cash purchases. Ask for them. Girls' White Dresses Underpriced Girls' Crepe Middies in all the desirable colors. Well -made and nicely trimmed. Sizes CJ" "1 Q 6 to 14. Special at DXJ- Second Floor Dainty white ' lawn dresses for girls 6 to 14 years of age. Manufacturers' samples all are beautifully trimmed with laces and embroideries. Very latest 1918 styles only one or two of a kind. Mothers with girls to buy for should take advantage of this opportunity to save. Girls' Serge Coats $7.98-$8.98 Second Floor These are especially desirable for beach and outing wear. Medium weight, dark blue serge. Smart new models, beautifully tai lored. Sizes range from 6 to 14 years. Khaki Suits for girls 8 to 14 years. Coat with separate skirt or with bloomers. Fine for out ings. Special $4.98 and $5.25 New Bathing Suits and Accessories Second Floor SPECIAL Women's and Misses Knit Bath ing Suits red, black, navy, royal and heather J A A( with fancy borders and V-neck. Priced special 5xTci7 Other Knit Bathing Suits priced at $5.50 up to $15.00 Caps, Bags, Water Wings, Shoes, etc. Reasonable prices. Great Millinery Clean-Up Second Floor Saturday the Millinery Salons will inaugurate a great month-end clean-up sale of about S00 Trimmed Hats at sacrifice prices. Many at less than half former prices. $7.50 to $10 Hats At $5.00 Beautiful White Milans trimmed with ostrich bands, ribbons and flowers. Black, tan and gray-trimmed Hats in 'all the new est shapes, also band-trimmed 'sailors for sport and street wear. Hats in this lot formerly priced at $7.50, $8.50 Qr ff and $10.00. Your choice at only 30.UU $12.50 to $25 Hats At $10 This lot is composed of our smartest Dress Hats beautiful models in all the wanted straws, trimmed with wings, ostrich, flowers, ribbons, etc. Many exquisite Leghorns and Milans with Georgette crepe facings. Hats formerly selling up to $25.00. Q" A ff Priced special for today at only OXl.UU Men's Oxfords At $4.98 Main Floor Shoes selling former ly at $6. "Black calf leather, sen sible toes, flat heels, fl A QO Neolin soles. Saturday Dr0 $5.50 Oxfords At $4.48 Main Floor These are of excellent quality calf leather. Neat English last, with fiber coles. (A A O Special Saturday, pair Dx:xO Hair-Bow Ribbons 35c Yd, Extra Quality- Main Floor Children's Hair Bow Ribbons of good firm quality the kind that will hold their shape. Great variety of dainty colors navy, red, gold, Copen, green, Alice, black in QPT various combinations. Yd. JtJU All Good Colors New all-silk Grosgrain Ribbons for millinery purposes. White, black and the desirable colors, in all wanted widths. Yard, 18-$1 New Narrow Satin Ribbon in widths 1, l1, 2, 5. Priced at, the yard, 3, 3V2$t 4 and 7 Women's Silk Gloves 60c to $1.75 Center Circle, First Floor Special showing of Portland Maid and Kayser Silk Gloves m all the popular styles. Fine quality Milanese ff Gloves in white and black D-L.UU Women's 2-clasp Milanese (J-! Off Gloves, plain and fancy, at wlu Women's 2-clasp Milanese rrff Gloves, extra heavy grade wltlu SPECIAL One lot 2-clasp Tricot Gloves black, white OUC New Neckwear for Women Collars, Sets, Jabots, Vests, 65 c up to $10 Main Floor The Neckwear Sec tion has something new to show you every day. Just now there is a wonderful assortment of new mid-Summer novelties in collars, jabots, vests, vestees and modesty vests, ready for your inspection. Fine laces, organdies, nets, piques, crepes, satins styles that are exclusive and the proper modes to go with Summer dresses, coats and suits. Prices range from 65 on up to $15.0(f Drugs and Toilet Needs Standard Lines at Right reserved at all times to limit quantity of any article in this lot sold to a customer. 5 Cakes Ivory Soap at only 25c Lmit 5 bars to each customer. None sold or delivered at above price except with other purchases made in the Drug Dept., Main Fir. Waterglass for preserving eggs at 2o, 50, 75t and $1.00 Cuticura Soap, special at 120 Lazell'8 Massatla Talcum 10! Jergen's Violet Glyc Soap 10 Woodbury's Facial Cream 22 Malvino Cream A 7 Priced Special .J- Daggett & Ramsdell's Cold Cream, in jar or tube, now 4ii Odorona at 27, 45 and W Espey's Sunburn Cream 20c-40c Milkweed Cream 450 and OOfV Peroxide, 3 sizes, 10c, 13c, 25c Special Low Prices Olycothymohne, 3 sizes, priced special at 25, 500" and $1.00 Domestic Castile Soap in large size bar priced special at 290 Gourard's Oriental Cr'm $1.25 Carborona for cleaning gloves, etc., priced at 2." and 450 i Calox Tooth Powder now 250 Squibb's Talcum Ori Powder Special. UL La Blache Face Powder in all shades priced special at 450 M. & L. Florida Water at 30 Hospital Cotton, full lb., 500 Lyons' Tooth Taste now 200 Pluto Water, large size, 350 Maurine Freckle Cf Cream at only . .OvL. Sal Hepatica, 27c, 53c, $1.10 Sanitol Tooth Powder or Paste priced special at only 2O0 Sozodont Liquid for Teeth 290 Santiseptic Loton for poison oak, sunburn, etc, priced at 450 Basement Sale Children's Hats Special $2 Basement Pretty midsummer millinery for misses and girls. Dainty droops and side rolls, trimmed with flowers and ribbons. Also transparent brims and fancy colored crowns. Milans, hemps and rough straws in black and colors. Hats formerly selling up QO ff to $3.48. Priced special for today wi.UU OUTING HATS in fancy stripes and tZfn plain white Priced special for today OUC "Hotpoint" Electrical Appliances Third Floor The Housewares Sec tion gives notice of an advance in prices of Electrical Goods to take effect in a few days. .Women who have need for these appliances will save considerable by buying now. Hotpoint Irons At S5.00 Hotpoint Electric Irons-with cool end attachment. Latest style. Priced complete with cord and QfT flfl Five or six-pound Dtfif plug. Hotpoint Grills At $7.50 Hotpoint Radiant Grill, three-heat style, as illustrated above. Just the thing for warm days. Pfl See these! Present price 3 o D o n o o D o o D o n o D o o n o o Q o o D o a o o a o o a o aoraoi lODOl IOE (OEXOI IOE301 IODO SAVE SHOESJS PLEA Cerise-Colored Boots Doomed, Say Dealers. STANDARD LAST IS REMOTE Government Decides That Women Will Have to Worry Along With Five Varieties of Shoes Until War Is Closed. Women, hang on to your fancy shoes. When the secondhand man calls for old leather, don't hand out your cerise col ored boots under the misguided idea that you can replace them in the Fall. Because you can't. There aren't going to be any cerise colored shoes in the Fall, or any taupe kid boots, or any champagne pumps. So if you want any of these attractive shades of shoe leather, you had better pave your supply for this Fall ends the making of colored shoes, other than gray, white and two shades, black and brown. "The Government has decided that women will have to worry along with these five varieties of shoes until the war is over." said W. B. Roblin, Port land ehoe dealer and secretary of the Shoe newly organized Oregon Retail Dealers Association. The Oregon Association has. been formed as a branch of the National Association to cooperate with the Gov ernment to, conserve leather. While con serving leather, however, the associa tion will see to it that no stand ardized shoe is adopted until the need for it is imperative. In England, there is but one kind of ehoe for everyone, and the suggestion has been made that shoes of C, D, and E widths be the only ones, manufactured In America. For men, the Government has de clared that there shall be but two kinds of shoes made next Fall, black and dark brown. Sole leather on women's shoes wjll be what is known as "five and six iron," which is very light. Men's shoes will be "seven and eight iron." The only way to get heavier soles will be to insert an extra sole in the shoe. This season's shoes will be in etyle next year for there are to be no new lasts. The officers elected by the Oregon Retail Shoe Dealers Association are Will A. Knight, president; W. B. Rob lin, secretary; W. E. Mcllheny, first vice-president; T. D. Gordon, Marsh field, second vice-president; George Williams, W. E. Staiger, L. Senosky, Max Striker, J. Rosenthal, directors. W. 8. 8 BCY THE LIMIT War Correspondent Lectures. TENINO, Wash., June 28. (Special.) German atrocities in the war zone and what can be done to help the men in the trenches was the subject of a lec ture delivered in Tenino Monday night by Dr. H. G. Lorenz. who spent six months on the western front as a war correspondent. The lecture made a deep impression on Dr. Lorenz' audi ence, which packed the theater in which it was held. HOPPE INVADES MOVIES GREAT BIL.LIARDIST KINDS NEW WORLDS TO CON4VEH. Cue Marvel Will do S Trimming Stunts, Play Billiard., Pilot Racine Cars and Flamre In Elopement. William F. Hoppe, the world's great est exponent of the real art of billiard playing, has gone into the movies. The balkline champion, with his cue put away for the Summer, does not intend to remain idle during his off season and has accepted an offer to become a reel actor. This will be the champion s first ap pearance in the role of a. screen enter tainer. He has been an actor since youth, performing before thousands. He is entering upon a new work, but that field has been so clearly mapped out for him that he should have no trouble making good in his new en deaTVor. There is a plot to the play in which he will be featured. William will be seen in billiard championship matches, exhibition matches, swimming scenes, auto racing stunts and an elopement. He is in Philadelphia, at present, where he announced his entering the motion picture field, and will soon move to New York, where he will stay until September, when he will again make his annual tour of the United States. Hoppe's personality has been as great an asset to him as his billiard art. Hoppe is a character In sports and the great est in his profession. It is claimed by many experts that he Is the greatest billiardist who ever lived, and this in cludes .the late Jake Schaefer and Frank Ives. He is. the recognized master of balk line billiards, but his showing at three cushions liftt season leaves little doubt that he could- be the king of that style if he decided to devote himself ex clusively to it. In an exhibition match in San Francisco last winter he made a world's record run of 25 three cushion billiards, bettering the best previous mark by 6 points. W. 8. 8. BCV THE LIMIT THREE MEN ARE INJURED Two Ship Workers and Lineman Taken to Local Hospital. C. W. Stine, aged 31, a plate hanger employed at the Albina Machine and Iron Works, received serious injuries yesterday afternoon when a scaffolding on which he was standing collapsed and fell to the ground. His leg was fractured and his body was bruised. H. H. McGowan, aged 19, of 981 Cor bett street, employed at the shipyard of the Foundation Company, received a serious injury to one of his eyes yes terday morning when operating a com. pressed air-gun. B. E, Williams, a lineman, living at 595 Sixth street, fell from a telephone pole a distance of 25 feet and suf fered the fracture of his left leg and a severe shaking up. AH three men were removed to Good Samaritan Hospital. W.S 8. BUT THE LIMIT Germans Desert Despite Fences. PARIS, June 28. Three-barbed wire fences, one of which is charged with electricity, have proved ineffectual in hindering German soldiers from desert ing across the frontier into Switzerland, says a Havas dispatch from Basle. FIVE ARE OF PORTLAND SKETCHES OF YOINO OFFICERS JUT PROMOTED ARE GIVEX. Youthful Careers of Men W ho Win Commissions nt the Premldlo Klrst Training; Camp Reviewed. Listed among the 85 officers of the 166th Depot Briaade. whose promotions to higher positions were announced at Camp Lewis Thursday, are fiv Port land boys; Ernest Alfred Wyld. Cyril Lawrence Meyers, Thomas Walter Gil lard, Earl Eliaaon Grant and Frank McGarland. Ernest Alfred Wyld Is the son of E. A. Wyld, vice-president and cashier of the First National Bank of Portland, where he was employed before going to the f-rst officers' training camp at the Presidio. He received a commis sion as Second Lieutenant and took up active work at Camp Lewis in August, 1917. He has been at that cantonment ever since, connected with the depot brigade. Before enlistment, he had re sided In Portland 17 years. He received part of his education at Victoria. B. C, and part at Washington High School. Cyril Lawrence Meyers is a graduate of Washington High School and Ore gon Agricultural College. Ho Was prominent in athletics of all kinds while attending both of these institu tions. Soon after his graduation from college, he went to the first officers' training camp at the Presidio, where he won a commission as a Second Lieutenant. For the past six weeks he has been studying musketry at Camp Terry, Ohio. He recently received or-. ders to proceed to Camp Lewis to act as inspector. Lieutenant Meyers is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Meyers, of 695 Mllwaukie avenue. While attend ing tchool in Portland he carried an Oregonian route for five years. He has also worked in this city for the Sell wood Oil Company and for the In-man-Poulsen Lumber Company. Thomas Walter Gillard is widely known among the younger set in Port land where he was very popular. He Is a member of the Oregon bar and was for several years secretary of the University of Oregon Law School when that Institute had its headquarters in Portland, and later was attached to the School Board. Lieutenant Gillard was one of the first applicants from Port land for the first officers' training camp and received his commission as Second Lieutenant with flying colors. The news of his promotion was wel comed here. . V. 8. S. BUY THE LIMIT Rotary Clubs Elect John Poole. KANSAS CITY. Mo.. June 29. John Poole, of Washington. D. C, "dark, horse" candidate, today was elected president of the International Associa tion of Rotary Clubs on the second ballot. He received 273 votes, but his election later was made unanimous. Constipation For tfris disorder "you will find nothing quite equal to Chamberlain's Tablets. When the proper dose is taken you can hardly realize that the effect is not na tural instead of having been produced by medicine.