THE MORNING OREGOMAX, SATURDAY, APRIL o, 1910. S. & H. Green Trading Stamps Given on All Charge Accounts if Paid in Full by 10th of Each Month Get Your Stamps ! Portland Agency for Gossard, Nemo, Bien Jolie, Bon Ton and Royal Worcester Corsets Carters Knit Underwear, Dutchess Trousers, Home Journal Patterns Soda Fountain in the Basement Women's Easter Coats, Capes and Dolmans THE GARMENT STORE directs your attention to special showing of the new spring coats, capes and dolmans, em bracing all the smartest styles brought out this season. Dept. Second Floor. New Coats $15.00 to $95.00 Coats for all occasions for motoring, sport, street and for dress wear in any number of styles. Many are in belted effects, others are semi-fitting and still others are in loose models. Coats of bolivia, velour, gabardine, serge, wool jersey and novelty mixtures ia a wide assortment of the leading spring colors. Prices range from $13 up to Jji93 Capes and Dolmans Graceful, rippling capes and stunning dolmans a new shipment just received will be on display Saturday. Serge capes with coatee and surplice fronts capes with yokes and drape collars dolmans in many different styles, some with nar row sash belts and large collars. Velour, velvet, tricolet, silvertone, jersey and other materials. Prices $17.50 to $150 Sole Portland Agents (BeWpikL&A Dresses pill i Easter Cards In Great Variety Easter Greeting Cards, Favors, Gift Stationery, etc. Main Floor. Easter Baskets, Decorations and novelties of various kinds. Denni son Booth on the Second Floor. Fishing Tackle Fourth Floor Rods, Baskets, Reels, Flies, Lines everything to make that trip a success will be found in our well stocked Sporting Goods Department. Fishing licenses issued at this store. The Standard Store of the Northwest Olds, Wortman & King Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methods SATURDAY'S GOOD NEWS OF SAVINGS Dress Skirts $5 to $35 Second Floor The separate skirt is more important than ever before and women are buying them freely. We have a splendid assortment in panama, serge, silk warp poplin, novelty plaid, tricolet, fantasi silk and satin. Very smart with sepa rate wraps and blouses. $5 to $33 New Middies $2.50 to $3.25 Second Floor Middy Blouses of white galatea some with colored collars and cuffs trimmed with white braid, others with detachable flannel collars. One style has deep yoke with tailored pockets Prices range from $-.50 up to $3.25 White Galatea Middy Shirts are priced at $1. (9 and $1.(59 each. Ap ron Day Bargain Circle on Main Floor Main Floor Special Clean-op Sale of odd lines women's aprons at great savings. Supply your spring and summer needs at low prices. Bib Aprons Women's Bib Aprons of good quality material. Large full HQ styles. While they last, at ' Coverall Aprons Women's Coverall Aprons of standard quality gingham and per cales. Open side front or back. Special at 98cS $1.49, $1.98 White Aprons Women's White Aprons an as sorted lot offered Saturday at HALF PRICE. Slightly soiled and mussed from display. Shop early. Quality Clothes For Men When buying clothes you should never lose sight of the fact that money for clothes is the same as money for anything else. This store sells only the 100 per cent kind that's why so many Portland men are on our customer list. SPRING SUITS best makes SH5 to $50 Men's Easter Ties At $1.15 Most every man will have a new tie for Ea.-tcr! Here is an opportunity to select from a large assortment of handsome patterns and colorings in ties that were made to P" "1 ? sell at $1.50, $2 and $2.50. Saturday Men's Spring Hats $4 to $7.50 Just inside the Morrison-St. entrance you will find a superb collection of all the new PVnnAo nri n fr in mpn's hats. PHrpa range $4.00, $5.00, $0.00 and $7.50 2 Ma Featuring Easter Hats At $10 Second Floor From every point of view it will pay you to come to this store for your Easter Hat. Saturday we shall feature a notable showing of charming hats in both dressy and tail ored effects all the newest (PI f shapes and straws choice Tailored Hats At $7.50 A new shipment just received. Smart effects for immediate wear and, extraordinary values at this exceptionally low price each $7.50 Beautiful Easter Neckwear In a Wonderful Showing Main Floor Collar and Cuffs, separate Collars, Ves tees and Guimps. Exquisite styles in real filet laces, organdies, crepe and pique materials. Ruffled, plaited, tucked, hemstitched and hand embroidered effects. Specially selected novelties in dainty styles to go with Easter coats and dresses. Prices from 650 up to $10 Women's $4 Waistcoats Special at $2.98 Main Floor EXTRA SPECIAL New waistcoats of dainty summer silks in dainty colorings with pique col lar. Belted effect with pearl buckle. These C?0 f0 are a standard $4 value. Saturday special v)iUO NEW PLAITINGS in victory red, peach, blue, flesh and other shades. Van Dyke and hemstitched. Priced from $1.50 to $2.25 yard. Children's Wearables In a Special Easter Showing Second Floor Girls' -Easter Frocks of taffeta and fancy plaids with novelty vestee fronts. Victory red, blue and other pretty shades. Sizes 10 to 14. Priced for girls $18.50 to $32.50 Sizes 6 to 8 Priced $16.75 New Wash Frocks for girls 8 to 14 years of age. All the new est styles and color combina tions. Priced $2.98 to $12.50 Wash Frocks in chambray and fancy checks for girls 2 to 6 years. Priced $1.69 and $1.98 Girls' Coats, Special $8.98 Second Floor Coats of splendid quality wool serge and in the popular 6hepherd checks. Good practical styles that may be worn CJQ QO on all occasions and at all seasons. Sizes 8 to 14; ?15 coats DO70 OTHER WAISTCOATS in a great variety of styles. Silk, pique, novelty and plain fabrics. Priced from $1.25 up to $10.00 each. Millinery Ribbons Main Floor Silk Ribbons with plain or picot edge in widths to 5 inches. Ribbons especially adapted for Easter Millinery good firm quality, 20 to $1 yd. SHOP EARLY IN THE DAY. New Ribbons for fancy bags tapestry effects, new satins and heavy silks in light and dark colors, Priced at 35 to $3.95 Ribbon Bag Frames in colors to match ribbons, 65 to $3.50 HAIRBOW RIBBONS TIED FREE AT THE RIBBON COUNTER. Motor Headwear Main Floor Women's New Motor Caps, including smart veils the last word in smartness for the woman who motors. Shown in desirable colors. Fea- fljr QF tured for Saturday at DO.0 NEW VEILINGS BY THE YARD. Large Sheets At $1.25 Main Floor Good heavy quality seamless sheets, size 81x!)0 inches and full bleached. On J"I jr special sale at low price 3-l-dt 25c Muslin 19c Yard 36 inches wide, full bleached and of excellent quality, 1Q Saturday special the yard NEW MOTOR VEILS in a large assortment of popular styles and colors. One of these will greatly improve your motor outfit. ' One lot containing a number HfZ of styles worth $2.25 at i D ALL COLORS 35 UP TO $1.50 Sale of Enameled Tea Pots Basement Gray enam eled teapots, 2, 3 and 4 q u a rt sizes, special 39 B 1 u e and white enam eled teaDots. 2, 3 and 4-quart sizes, special at only 75 each. Shop early! . Fill V. Sale of Men's Shoes $8.50 to 12 Grades, Special a Pair Main Floor ATTENTION, MEN! Here is, with out question, the best offering in high-grade shoes ever made in this city. Every pair is from our own regular stock and of standard make. LOT X674 Men's tan willow calf laced shoes, kid lined. Com fortable, medium toe last with full double sole, out sole viscolized to keep out dampness, regular $12 grade $6 pair LOT X 664 Men's black vici kid shoes on dressy English last with blind eyelets. Regular $8.50 shoe at $6 LOT X680 Wine color calf laced shoe on straight last with fiber middle sole. Splendid fitting walking boot of regular $9.50 grade, special $6 LOT 1X679 Tan Norwegian calf shoes on modified English shape, full toe, double sole and heel, brass eyelets. Shoes of highest quality that are standard values at $10 $6.00 Model Grocery Specials Experienced telephone clerks at your service 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. Prompt deliveries. Phone your order. Sale of M . J. B. Coffee M. J. B. Coffee is vacuum packed and is always uniform in quality 1-lb. A (T cans priced at 3 - pound j- n cans priced wlU 5-pound cans $1.95 Sale of Canned Goods Canned Milk, Federal or OP Hazelwood two cans for only 0f Imported French Peas, "I A email cans, priced at the can Preferred Stock Catsup, on 1Q sale Saturday, a bottle, only J-tU Ivory Soap Special 'IC 5 Cakes j&DC Irory Soap will not be sold or de livered at the aboVe price except with other purchases made in the Drug Department. The limit is five cakes to a customer. Dept. Main Floor. Woodbury's Facial Soap for 23 Palmolive Soap priced, cake 10 Pear's Unscented Soap only 20 Packer's Tar Soap, the cake at 23 f Resinol Soap priced at, cake 250 Sempre Giovine priced at only 490 Lux Soap Flakes priced at 150 Ivory Soap Flakes priced at 100 Drug Specials For Saturday Kolynos Tooth Paste, tube 280 Revelation Tooth Powder at 250 Pepsodent Tooth Paste at only 500 Listerine at 230, 450 and 850 Tevla, non-greasy lotion, only 500 Santiseptic Lotion priced at 450 Peroxide Tooth Paste priced 190 Graves' Tooth Powder priced 220 Sal Hepatica at 270, 530, $1.10 Phillips' Milk of Magnesia in two sizes, priced now at 250 and 450 Colgate's Shaving Cream only 300 Everyweek Shampoo priced at 390 WATER GLASS, for preserving eggs pint bottle 200, quart size 350 Vz gallon 500, gallon 750 Mennen's Shaving Cream only 290 Hat Dyes Dye your hat and make it look like new. Full line of best dyes Colorite, Hat-Brite in all colors. Also Jetum in black only. Priced noAr at 250 Sale of Hair Brushes At 49c Main Floor Special lot of good qual ity hair brushes on sale Saturday. These are worth far more IQrt than sale price. Special at Men's Hard Rubber Combs for 190 Rubberset Shaving Brushes 290 Basement Sale of Trimmed Hats Basement Rough Straw Turbans in a large assortment of styles, many combined with satin. Also high side-roll effects, sailors and a great many other styles. All are . smartly trimmed and are very desirable for immediate wear. Hats well worth $4.98 Saturday at the special low price of $2.98. BASEMENT STORE Printed Georgette Crepe Dresses A NEW LOT JUST IN BY EXPRESS IN THE SEASON'S MOST ATTRACTIVE STYLES fe a vn nnr norxTnc nr catt tm tup paci? V' Saturday Special The above price is so low and the dresses so lovely there shouldn't be a single one left by closing time. Novelty printed Geeorgettes in a great many patterns. We also include in the sale a special assortment of women's and misses' dresses made up in wool serge, messaline, taf feta and figured foulards. Many are made up in combinations of two or more Q fTfi materials.- SATURDAY SPECIAL OlO.UU Women's Easter Coats Special $17.95 ... A h Today! Center Circle "Main Floor $2.50 to $3.50 Fancy Silks Special $1.59 a Yard - I" 1 FOUR STAR SHOW TO OPEN greatest fun promoter seen at the Or pheura in some time. THE QVESTIOX," WRITTEN BY AARON HOFFMAN. Sum Mann Changes Household to One ot Lore and Peace In Role at Orph?um. -- For the first time In several month four-star itiov has been assembled ."for the Orpheam. In the show, opening " at the Heilig tommorrow afternoon. Sam Mann is the headllner and the other three big-type acts are Moseoni brothers. Charles Irwin and Polly Moran of moving- picture fame. "The Question." a philosophic farce written by the famous author, Aaron Hodman, is Sam Mann's vehicle. He is supported by a New York company In the comedy in which Mann has the rI of a mysterious old man who makes a most human appeal with his homely philosophy. The little, old man enters a home where theft, infidelity and domestic troubles hold sway and throuirh his strange influence and ar gument peace, love and ffolden-rule theer assume reign over the house hold. Moseoni brothers offer Danrln Odds and Ends." They are experts in every form of dancing and their act in put on with dash all their own. diaries Irwin, formerly a British sol dier who became an actor through success in entertaining in the camps of Malta and India, has a comedy monologue called 'Vomin' ThrouKh the l:ve." Polly Moran. the fourth star. Is the comedienne who attained fame as -Sheriff Nell" in a comedy series. Se attle praised Miss Mo-an as being the RHINE WIRES AGAIN USED Telegraph Service With German Provinces Restored. Wire communication with the Rhine provinces of Germany now occupied by the allied armies of occupation has been restored, according to word re ceived at the Portland offices of the Western Union company yesterday. 'Communication with Rhine prov inces of Germany occupied by the American and allied armies restored for plain language messages to the troops and for commercial messages to individuals and firms." the an nouncement reads. "Private messages between private individuals are not allowed. "Following are principal towns for which messages may be accepted: Duisburg, Kerfeld. Munchladbach, Aachen. Solihgen. Mulheim. Cologne, Bonn, Duren. Coblenz. Ems. Treves, Frankfurt. Darmstadt. Worms. Speir, KaisersaJautern, Saarbrucken and Aix-la-t'happelle. "The rate is seven cents a word more than the rate to London." Pruning Demonstration Held. CENTRALIA. Wash.. April 4. (Spe cial.) An orchard pruning and spray ing demonstration was held this morn ing by E. F. Perry, district state horti culturist, on the farm at Grand Mound of E. Shank. M. I Dean, state horti culturist, talked on pruning, spraying and culture of fruit trees. Alexander Galbraith, head of the state seed de partment, will be in -Lewis county next Monday, according to an announcement by A. B. Xystrom. county agent. Mr. Oalbralth will speak at the noon lunch eon of the Centratia chamber of commerce. LOWER RATES ARE OPPOSED INLAND EMPIRE TO FIGHT ORE GON REQUEST. Seattle Port Body Hears Appeal to Prevent Drop In Freight Charges Below Sound Rates. SEATTLE. Wash.. April 4. (Special.) That the entire western Washington district, through its chambers of com merce, its shipping and commercial or ganizations and Its civic leagues, should oppose with the utmost vigor the ef forts of Portland and Astoria to obtain a lower freight rate from the so-called inland empire territory than is now in effect in the same district to'Puget sound, was the principal point in a com prehensive report mad - this afternoon to the Seattle port commission by E. J. Forman, traffic manager, and C. J. France, executive secretary. Mr. France, who pr-sented the re port, explained that a complaint had been filed with the interstate commerce commission and the director-general of railroads by the commissioner of pub lic dous of the city of Portland, the Port of Portland, the Portland Cham ber of Commerce, the Portland Traffic and Transportation association and the Inland Empire Shippers league of Pendleton. Or., asking that southeastern Washington and the Spokane district. Idaho and northeastern Oregon be given lower freight rates. He said the action was based upon the contention that operating costs of rail roads are less on the water level grade to Portland and Astoria "lan on the mountainous grade through the Cas cades to Seattle and Puget sound The report of Mr. Forman and Jlr. Franco was referred to Commissioners Robert Bridges and W. T. Christenson. who will adopt some form of immediate action. "U" TO HONOR FIRST HEAD Architectural Students Work on De sign for Memorial Tablet. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, April 4. (Special.) rStudenta of the school of architecture are working on the design for a memorial tablet in honor of President John W. Johnson, first head of the university. The tab let; which has been ordered by the board of regents of the university, will be placed in the lobby of Johnson Hall and will be installed by commence ment time, about the middle of June. The inscription, which is being writ ten by Professor W F. G. Thacher, will contain something of the life and work of President Johnson. The tablet will be of bronze, about three by four feet in size. The lettering also will be- done in the architecture department. TWO ACCUSE EACH OTHER Men at Pasco Charged With Robbing Store of Japanese. PASCO. Wash., Anril 4. (Special.) Jack Duffy and James lielly, who were arrested several days ago charged with taking a part in the robbery of the store of Harry Yamauchi, a Japanese, yesterday pleaded not guilty to the charge. Each told the officers that the other obtained the money from the Japanese. - - Since their arrest Kelly has con fessed to numerous petty thefts. Both men will stand tria on a charge of grand larceny in connection with the robbery of the Japanese store. WIFE OF TWO IN CUSTODY! BOTH HUSBANDS SERVING IN OVERSEAS FORCES. Mrs.'R. E. Brown Arrested at Silver ton ; Double Allotments Received From porernment. SIL.VERTON", Or., April 4. (Special, Because Mrs. R. E. Brown of Hood River had been receiving allotment money from the government for two husbands in the service, she was ar rested here today by Deputy United States Marshall Tichenor and taken' to Portland. Mrs. Brown's husband No. 1 enlisted in the army two years ago. He is now in Germay with the army of occupa tion. Some time last fall Mrs. Brown went to Des Moines, Iowa, according to her statement to the United States of ficer, and was married to a man named Charles Coons, who is in the service overseas. The government has been paying Mrs. Brown on both accounts. She returned to Oregon several months ago and has since been keep ing company with a man in Portland named Jack Wyatt, it is said. Mrs. Brown has spent much of her time at the home of her mother in Hood River and came to Silverton a few weeks ago to visit her sister. Mrs. Frank Re veal. Brown was living in Silverton when he first met the young woman. After the wedding they moved to Hood River, where he enlisted. American Revolution, Wednesday after noon was a guest of the Mary Lacey chapter of this city at a luncheon held in her honor. Tuesday she was a guest at a luncheon held in Winlock by the Meriwether Lewis chapter. At both luncheons Mrs. Ellis spoke on Ameri canization and said the Daughters of the American Revolution are rebuilding the French city of Tilloloy. D. A. R. Regent Centralia. Guest. CENTRAL! A, Wash., April 4. (Spe cial.) Mrs. Overton G. Ellis of Tacoma, state regent of the Daughters of the YAKIMA TO EXPAND GUARD Commercial Club to Co-operate In Recruiting Campaign. YAKIMA, Wash., April 4. (Special.) The Yakima commercial club has pledged support to the maintenance of a national guard company in this city and will co-operate with the offi cials of .the company in a recruiting compaign, plans for which now are being made. An appeal also will be made to business men of the city to encourage their employes to become members of the guard. The company now has a membership of more than 100, but a considerable number of -the men are business and professional men of middle age who wish to apply for discharges as soon as younger men are recruited to take their places. Ore Strike Slade at Baker. BAKER, Or., April 4. (Special.) A rich strike of gold-bearing ore was made yesterday, in the Highland mine, pear Baker, which promises to make that property one of the greatest gold producers in this region. The ore was struck in what is known as the Glas cow tunnel, 400 feet beneath the sur face of the mine. The ledge averages 11 feet in width. Three feet of this as sayed 5g per ton and eight feet went fl8 per ton. , PIJIFI! RENTl Si Cuticura Heals Itching Burning: 5km Troubles A!l dm sir K tat Sou 2S. Ofntmant S and Rn. TmJetra-tt. awnpis eaco irea as vsocvt, wain. , I