TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, 3TXY 1G. 1010. TVa ATURITY, as well as youtK; wants good clothes The man whose years run into decades enjoys wearing smart clothes just as well as his sons or his younger business associates. This store has clothes for such a man. Different, of course, from the styles we have for the young man. Different patterns different models but the same cleverness of design and workmanship, tempered to meet the dignity and personality of the man!. Business and professional men men who have retired from the more strenuous activi ties of life will be suited in clothes like these. $25 to $60 MorrlsaaStreetat Fourth? irtd - ml BAZAAH5 QUIET PLAGES DTRADrXO IjEAYES PEOPLE PLEXTY OF TI3IE FOR TAIiK. Xankee "Hustle" Has 3ot Reached Turbanctl Turkish Merchant ., in. His Booth. BY WILLIAM T. ELLIS. 'Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by arrangement.) CONSTANTINOPLE. A bazaar is a friendly place. The vaulted street cov erings of the many-avenued old Stam boul bazaar seem like a hospitable inn. When Madame Turk fares forth to buy a. new and rather gorgeous gown she Ssually takes a friend along and as she feirries to examine stuffs she has the ajociable counsel of other leisurely shop pers. Does she want the goods drawn out full length for examination, far beyond the limits of the tiny bazaar at which she shops? Then the human tide turns aside for her uncomplaining ly. Personality takes precedence of traffic in the east. What though an amateur merchant plants his stand in the midst of the cobblestones which are the narrow footway? The flood of pedc3tr.ns parts for him with never a. murmur. Kolka Are Folka. Folks are interested in folks in the bazaar. Do the Americans tarry to buy? A cluster of interested natives quickly gather around, with one or more eager ly proffering the help of a small stock of English words. Even a friendly hint as to the real worth of the article in question may be quietly whispered. In the inevitable chaffering over price that follows the gullibility of the foreigners and the skill of the dealer are all mat ters of lively entertainment to these sociable bystanders. Bazaars are to Asia what drawing rooms and salons are to Europe and America. They are the center of social intercourse. People do not visit one another in their homes, as is the west ern usage. Dinner parties at which men and women gather are unknown. In making a call at a home, which is rare, a man never sees the wife of his liost. There are no public functions at which friends meet socially. The mosque has nothing analogous to the church social. So it is in the bazaars that acquaintances foregather. As is not altogether unknown in the Occi dent, a shopping tour is also a talking tour. There is more conversation than Commerce. Bazaar-Made Public Opinion. The merchant himself, as he sits fcross-legged in his little booth, scarce ly bigger than a packing case, expects Intellectual diversion out of the trans action. W"hat we call a businesslike manner he deems rudeness and a rather Btupid lack of interest in essential things. Time is not wasted that is spent in talk with the possible cus tomer whom Allah has sent. How other than thus is one to learn the news of the world? In the bazaars the doings of the nations and the movements of thought that underlie all wars and changes are discussed from every an gle. Would you know how the different nationalities are esteemed in Stamboul, which gathers its impressions at first band from travelers who have fared hither from India and China and the Philippines and Algeria and Tunisia and Morocco and Russia and Persia? The answer is in the subtle difference in attitude toward the Europeans who chance by. Perhaps the kindling of the eye at the recognition of an American uniform is due to the fact that the price of bread has lately dropped more than one-half owing to America's food distribution: perhaps it has a deeper, broader foundation. These bazaar rugs upon which the merchants sit are veri table "kiwan khanas," or judgment feats, at which the nations are weighed. - Scooping: the nspaprri. Forty newspapers are published in Constantinople, in Turkish, Arabic, Pefsian, Jewish, Flemish, French, Ital lan, Greek, Spanish, Armenian and know not what other language; but still, as 400 years ago. the main reli. ance of the population for news is upon the bazaars. "On dit is more authori tatlve than a signed editorial in "Vakit." Today there is ill-suppressed excite ment in all the city because news has come in by Greek sources (news chan nels here are polygot) that Constanti nople is to be taken from the Turks and sriven over to an international com mission. Dire predictions of what will follow are reported from the bazaars, and if there should be rioting the chances are two to one that the mobs Trill arise in these same thronging ave Hues of Oriental life. Some Things the Occident Lacks, "While the modern department store has more wares, and better, than the bazaars boast, it lacks several charac teristics of this variegated life. Th Turkish sweets, so popular, so distinc tive and so tasteful, are missing, as well a the vendprs of nuts, figs and raisins. Tiny cafcy. at which one may tarry long over a portion of y.-iourt (itber. (Characteristic .Constautinopl dainties, watching the flowing tide of bazaar life the while, cannot be dupli cated ' in American cities. The hum of blended human voices, dominating all other sounds, gets no such pre-eminlnce in our machine ruled life. Nor are the smells of the bazaars to bo found in America for which we may be thankful. Any one of the tiny donkeys, his curious pack saddle overladen with charcoal or grain or other merchandise, would hold all eyes on Broadway. If, as is too com mon here to be noticed, his turbaned, bearded Turkish owner sat astride the pack-saddle, holding up his slippered feet to keep them from dragging. New York would straightway produce a traffic-blocking jam. Hand-Made Goods in the Orient. Even the wares of the bazaars are somehow essentially human though this trait has been sorely impaired by the heavy influx of garish made-in-Germany goods. Here are the weaves of the east, testifying to the patient labor of skilled fingers. Everything that is truly Oriental is hand-made, be it a pair of native shoes, a scarf, a turban or a cooking pot. There is a touch of domesticity about many of the articles which are dis played, since they are frankly second hand. Bazaars buy as well as sell, and there is what the reporters call a "hu man interest story" in that sad-faced Turkish woman, veil up, offering from dealer to dealer a silk gown. War prices have brought many proud fami lies into the bazaars as sellers who never before frequented them except as buyers. I know the bazaars are doomed, just as are the baggy trousers and big tur bans of the older generations of Mos lems both trousers and turbans being designed to help men pray five times a day, as they cannot well do in mod ern raiment. Already the western style stores are crowding In upon these dimly-lighted, vaulted streets with their charming faience tiles to tell of the f community spirit of former days which decorated the market place after the fashion of the Mosque. Perhaps the buying and selling in old Stamboul will one day become "snappy" and hur ried, and commerce may be improved thereby, but human life Itself will be the poorer, and every lover of the lei surely picturesqueness of the Orient will mourn. them are supporting large families and it is claimed that some are not able to care for their families properly. All salary petitions are being tabled by the city council awaiting the out come of the special election. The city now is permitted to levy 9 mills for the administration of city affairs. Eight mills is permitted by the city charter and an extra mill was voted by the peo ple during the war period. Finding even this extra mill inadequate, the city council now asks voters to approve a 10-mill levy. In addition to the salary increase, which the city commissioners say is necessary. Mayor Baker plans on in creasing the police force if the measure is approved by the people. At present there are approximately 40 men on the beats of the city on each shift. Forty men cannot possibly cover the 66 square miles of area in Portland, according to Mayor Baker. "It is impossible to properly police the city if we have an inadequate po lice force," said . the mayor. "We are short in the police department and the city council is helpless because no money is available to increase the force, The voters of the city, in self protec tion, should approve this 10-mill meas ure in order to provide money with which to expand the police force." TEN MILL LEVY IS URGED MEASTTRE XECESSARY TO 'PRO VIDE WAGE INCREASES. Oregon Postmasters Named. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, May 15. Fourth-class postmas ters have been appointed for Oregon as follows: Horace A. Nicholson, Gypsum, Baker county; Charles A. Miller, Eight mile. Morrow county. Income of Many City Employes Held to Be Inadequate Police Force Also Is Short. City employes cannot be granted wage increases unless the voters ap prove the charter amendment allowing 10-mill tax levy at the special elec tion June 3. Investigation of salary increases granted city employes during the last two years, according to City Commis sioned Barbur. show that the average increase does not exceed 15 per cent. while the increase in the cost of living has practically doubled. Many of the employes have received no increase during the past two years and members of the city council say that justice must be done if efficient service is to be obtained. Laborers working for the city now are getting 3.7s per day. Many of UNION DENTISTS INC. ay or lief PLATES $10 x WE GUARANTEE OCR WORK. Porcrlaln Crowns. ... ...-.... r.(H) Porcelain Fillings.. . .ai.OO 22-K Gold Crowns. ............. .95.00 S2I-K (.old Urlilyre. as.OO Extracting;. . ............... i ..... . .SOe A complete set of teeth makes one look natural. It is astonishing bow good teeth will change a person make old look young, the young look more at tractive. Then, too, not only are good teeth- essential to masticate food, but they aid in the proper articulation of .-1 .-, f" . . ... Jan' K w V. In... .1 gating. 231 Yz Morrison. Cor. Second Kntlrr Cornrr. THE FUN STARTS TOMORROW WITH MARGUERITE GLARK "LET'S ELOPE A. CORKING COMEDY - DRAMA a; "f I " jT .-tit I N E S THAT YOUR SHOULDERS AND ARMS MIGHT HAVE FREE PLAY WITHOUT DESTROYING THE LINES AND GRACE OF YOUR JACKET, FASHION PARI& ORIGINATED THE BELL-DELL SLEEVE EFFECTS IT IS COMFORTABLE, AND HAS A DISTINGUISHED ' STYLE A TMOSPHERE, THE STRAIGHT- UP. ENQLISH SHOULDER IN FRONT BLENDS INTO A RAGLAN EFFECT IN THE BACK. THE RESULT IS NOT ONLY REMARKABLEB U TENTIREL YJRA. CTJCAL CUSTOHrSEK VICE'XVITHO Uf THE ANNO VANCE OF A TRY- ON . READ V- TO-PUT' ON TAILOREDAT FASHION-PARK iPASlHradDIT IPAMIK. Sochester JfevYbrk,. my irra eve. raarak- N 'jCH T1NPM BILBO, The Fashion Ptirlirdeslsrnfnsr rooms' were Com mandeered bylTi& Government whcn .it decided to put style into the uniformi Th fja n GstyleJf oo horLSp rin sr.-J steady Jo. rjfoui. WE ARE READY TO SHOW YOU THE STYLES DEVELOPED BY OUR, TAILORS AT FASHION PARK "DeiiBellm U-MorrisonStreet at Fourtft h U I r ' - - r - ''"V v : ' f f I - 4 J 1. I J LAST TIMES TODAY THE BURGLAR" Give Your Eyes a Chance Why put it off from day to day when you feel your eyes are not just right? Consult an op tician! We are equipped to give you service and sat isfaction. No charge for consultation. STAPLES The Jeweler-Optician 266 Morrison, Between Third and Fourth lllllini!llllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllli 7 Ways to Serve I 80 PLACES TO BUY 20c PER POUND 100 SATISFACTION To take your milk in a healthful and economical way get 1 Red Rock Cottage Cheese liiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuir rhonc Your Want Ads to THE OUEGOMAN Main 7070, A G J93 BLISS NATIVE H E R B TABLETS T.ark of axeixlM. poor food. Improper digestion and mental worry often ca.ua SICK HEADACHE B1111ounes. Dyspepsia. Constipation and Stomach disorders. Uss Nuv Hrt Tablets ara a great Kidney and Liver Regulator For SO years rerornlzed as tn only standard herb remedy. Safe, fen tie, and certain. Get the genuine. Every tablet contains this trade-mark. Price $1.00 per box of 200 tablets. Bold by leadlnc drnfffista and local agent everywhere. aim iUIllli!lllIIIIllIIl!IlIIIlI!lIllII!!II!llI!lM Heat Skin Diseases It is unnecessary for you to suffer with eczema, blotches, ringworm, rashes and similar skin troubles. Zcmo, ob tained at any drug store for 35c, or $1.00 for extra large bottle, and prompt ly applied will usually give instant relief from itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful, penetrating; disappearing liquid and is soothing to the most delicate skin. It is not greasy, is easily applied and costs little. Get it today and save all further distress. ' The E. W. Rose Cot, Cleveland. O, ft ORE THROAT VT or TonsHitis, gargle ev)J with warm salt water then apply VicicsS ICICS VAP0R1 . TOUR CQDYGUAR&"-3Qf,&Qr. aim .l.20 I Won't Blister Imagine the benefits of rrandma's old i : rtf mustard plas- i t1 itr ter without the 5 i 1 ,Vp blister "The EE Little Doctor" EE V is just that ana morei it s reaay zor in- stant use without fuss or ria r bother and not a chance to 3 r blister! Comes in tidy opal pg ' jars EE3 EES cs 23c and 50c Sizes E ee MAC LAREWsS WilLNOTBiaitM At Your Druggist's E Or Sent Postpaid by EE THE MacLAREN DRUG CO. j EE TRINIDAD, COLO. EE BROADWAY DYE WORKS m.sti;k iyi:h? Ar ri,KAEns.