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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1919)
15 Read H. G. Wells' New Book, "The Undying Fire" $1.50 Per Copy The Book Shop, Main Floor Soda Fountain and Ice Cream Parlors in the Basement Shoe Shining Parlors in the Basement Manicuring and Hair Dressing Parlors on the Second Floor Kodaks and Films on 4th Floor We Give S. & H. Green Trading Stamps With Purchases Amounting to 10c or More A Direct Cash Saving on Your Purchases Stamp Books Redeemed at "S. & H." Office on the Third Floor BEADS OF EVERY KIND AND COLOR ON DISPLAY AT THE JEWELRY COUNTER FIRST FLOOR FESTIVAL VISITORS ARE INVITED TO VISIT OUR BASE MENT UNDERPRICE STORE Prize Rose Exhibit By Our Employes Don't fail to see this showing of beautiful roses grown in the gardens of our employes. Cash prizes will be awarded to the successful contestants. The Standard Store of the Northwest Victory Souvenir Bags Priced 50c and $1.00 they are very popular" these new Victory Bags. Various styles, some with tassels. White with na tional colors. Give a patriotic touch to your cos tume. Priced at oOf and $1.00 Main Floor. Olds, Wortman & King ' ' Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methods XIIE MORNING OKEGOXL1N, FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1919. A Page of Important News for Rose Festival Visitors Telling of Many Unusual Savings in Wearing Apparel and Needs for the Home READ AND PROFIT! Leather Bags Special $10 Third Floor These are shown in 16 inch size. Made of light weight leath er in black and brown. Leather-lined. Limited number on sale J1 A HA Friday and Saturday at wlU.UU Cane Suit Cases Special $8 Third Floor Best grade Cane Suit Cases with large leather corners and sewed-on handles; 24 inches long, 6Yz inches deep. Beautifully lined with art cretonne. Deep pockets in cover. Good serviceable cases. ?Q f( Priced special for Friday at DOeUU Silk Gloves Main Floor Women's high-grade Silk Gloves Portland Maid and Kayser makes all styles. Prices range from 75 up to $2.00 pair. $20 to $40 Hats At $15 Millinery Salons Second Floor Choose any Trimmed Hat on display in the Millinery Salons Friday for ten dollars! This includes beautiful pat terns and a splendid assortment of Trimmed Hats in leghorns, Georgette crepe, lisers and novelty C ff straws. ?20 to ?40 Hats 51itUU Capes and Dolmans Great 2 Days Sale Practically all of our high-class Capes and Dolmans are included in this offering. Very latest models in braided, embroidered, draped, ruffled trimmed and tailored ef fects. A remarkable opportunity to save a full third on garments that are now at height of fashion. $45 Garments at $30 $110 Garments $73.34 Capes and Dolmans of wool ve lour, tricotine, gabardine, serge, satin, moire, silk faille, taffeta and iricolet. Black and all wanted colors. $ 45.00 Capes, Dolmans $30.00 $ 48.50 Capes, Dolmans $32.34 $ 52.50 Capes, Dolmans $3o.OO $ 55.00 Capes, Dolmans $36.67 $ 58.50 Capes, Dolmans $39.00 $ 62.50 Capes, Dolmans $41.67 $ 65.00 Capes, Dolmans $43.34 $ 72.50 Capes, Dolmans $48.34 $ 79.50 Capes, Dolmans $53.00 $ 95.00 Capes, Dolmans $63.34 $110.00 Capes, Dolmans $73.34 Women's Silk Kimonos Special at $8.95 Second Floor Fashioned with sailor collar trimmed with plaited ribbon-fitted waistline. ' Of fine quality silks in dainty flowered designs. Wisteria, rose, copen and navy. We also include in this sale Japanese Kimonos with beautiful embroidered floral designs. These JQ QP are shown in navy, rose, light blue and pink. All sizes at tDO7tJ Dainty New Summer Smocks Priced $2.50 to $4.50 Second Floor Of beach cloth, cotton crash and voile materials. One attractive model is made up in fancy figured voile trimmed with or gandie collar and cuffs, Belted waistline. Some are trimmed with hand embroidery. Various colors pink, blue, yellow, rose, etc. etc. Aft ym $5 Laced Oxfords $3.48 White "Ostend" Cloth Main Floor Women's White Laced Oxfords with hand-turned sole and full Louis heel. These are cool and exceedingly smart for street wear. All sizes from 2'a to 8 and widths A, B and C. Ox fords selling in the regular way AQ at $5.00. On sale Friday, a pair DOe iO SPORT LACED BOOTS of white canvas. Low heeled last with fiber soles. White kid ball strap and lace stay, legu- Q 4 QC lar $6.00 Boots, on sale- Friday at OflwO PALM BEACH i. ORT BOOTS in popular laced pat tern. Narrow plain toe, covered military heel, light, flexible soles. Broken sizes. Regular $5.60 grade; pair 2 Women's Sample Vests Special $1.29 Main Floor The Neckwear Section directs your at tention to a special sale of Women's Fancy Silk Vests at about half price. Maker's samples this season's very newest and best styles and CJ-I OQ colors. Vests worth up to $3.00; choice at 5X.7 Sample Vests ''vp1 Sample Vests only one or two of a kind. Made up in high-grade silks in a good selection of colors. Just such styles as are being shown about town at $3.50 up QO CA to $5.00 Friday special tS.tll SHOP EARLY IN THE DAY! 15c-20c Handkerchiefs 10c Main Floor Women's Handkerchiefs with novelty colored borders in as sorted designs. Also Initial Handkerchiefs white and colored embroi dery, wreath and fancy initial. Handkerchiefs well worth 15c "t f and 20c. Lay in a good eupply. Priced very special at each i-UC New Veilings and Veils Customers tell us our assortment of Veils and Veilings is the largest and most complete in the city. Nearly every day we receive new shipments, consequently our stock is always fresh and inviting. New Drape Veils, Slip-On and EZ-On Veils in a wide range of styles and colors with motifs, dots and scrolls. Priced S5 to $1.00 Veiling Department Main Floor. L. Fancy New Georgettes At $2.98 Lace Department, First Floor These are crepes that would ordi narily bring $3.75 a yard. Many beautiful figured effects suitable for waists, dresses, etc. Good as sortment of colors to QO QQ select from the yard 50 SHOP IN THE MORNING! Girls' Silk Dresses $10.98 to $14.98 Second Floor Charming new silk frocks for girls 6 to 14 years of age. Sample lines only one or two of a style and color. LOT 1 Values up to $18.50 now $10.98 LOT 2 Values to $22.50 $14.08 GIRLS' COATS, tan and navy blue serge or novelty mixtures. Shown in ages 6 to 14 QfT ffi fears. Vals.to $13.50 at OO.UU Girls' Crepe Kimonos at $1.98 We give Green Trading Stamps. Tub Dresses $1.69 Bargain Circle, First Floor Ex tra special for Friday girls' Wash Dresses in many attractive styles. Fancy plaids and stripes. Ages from 2 up to 6 C" ?Q years. Priced special at D-L.vJ Girls' Middy Skirts, full plaited style on waist. On sale Friday at on' Girls' Middy Blouses of good quality plain white ma- Q-! ryQ terial. Friday special 3-s-el7 nly S1.9S Sale of Iron Beds Dept. 4th Floor Friday and Saturday we shall feature a special sale of high-grade Iron Beds at a substantial reduction from the regular price. Iron Beds $13.75 Choice of 4 different styles. Vernis Martin, Ivory or White Enamel finishes. Pleasing de signs well made. CJ"! O I7K Priced SDecial. onlv 3-LO. I O $2 Oak Foot Stools Special $1.59 . $2 Oak Tabourettes at $1.98 Fourth Floor Solid Oak Foot Stools with leather tops. These are well made and of neat appearance. Standard $2.00 values. C" CO Priced special Friday at OJ.sJ Fourth Floor Solid Oak Tabour ettes in several attractive styles. Good strong construction. Regular price $2.50. On sale Fri- P" QQ day at special price of wJXeaO $3.50 Mahogany Finish or Quartered Oak Tabourettes now $2.48 You Take No Chances in Coming Here For Men's Clothing in the first place we buy only from reliable makers who have a reputation to sustain and who put into every garment the utmost in value and service at the price. Men and young men in need of a new suit cannot do better than make their selection at this store. Correct styles for immediate wear $25.00 to $50.00 Men's Union Suits Special $1.39 Main Floor Chalmers Inrox Union Suits, short sleeves, ankle length, long sleeves. Mercerized finish. Broken assortment of sizes. QQ Regular $2.25 Union Suits. Special DXOU Men's Athletic Shirts and Drawers. or Regular 50c grade. Special; garment AJ Men's 25c Wash Ties At 3 for 50c Main Floor Men's Four-in-Hand Wash Ties in plain white, stripes and figures. Regu- CA lar 25c grade; priced special, 3 for Odd lines Men's Straw Hats HALF PRICE. Men's $2.00 Night Shirts, special at $1.C9 Boys $15 to $18 Suits Special $12.50 Main Floor Boys High -class Suits from our regular stock. TWO PAIRS PANTS with each suit. Finest of workmanship throughout. Homespuns and fancy mixtures in tans and grays. Ages 9 to 18. Suits formerly selling at $15.00, $17.00 and C- O Crt $18.50. Saturday at 3J-W.JU BOYS' BLUE SERGE SUITS a splendid assortment here for your selection. Latest Norfolk models with slash pockets, belt and buckle. Coats are exception ally well tailored and have alpaca lining. Pants full cut and full lined. Extra values at $10 and $13.50 Boys Dept. on First Floor. Friday's Feature Offerings in the Housewares Dept., 3d Floor Snlfiof Minrnn Fn Emmilir Odd Lines y4 to y2 off iA.i.f lip' Wash Boilers $2.59 Third Floor No. 8 Metallic Bot tom Wash Boilers with stationary hook handles and one-piece cover, as illustrated above. Only 108 of these good Boilers to go CJO CQ in the sale. Priced only 50 ORDER EARLY IN THE DAY! Housewares Dept. Third Floor Third Floor Minton Fancy China in beautiful enameled patterns. Bon Bon Dishes, Pickle Dishes, Olive Dishes, Candy Trays, Cheese Trays, and other pieces marked at A to Vi OFF. ODD LINES high-grade China offered at special reduced prices. Place Plates $18 to $165 dozen. Dessert, Plates $13 to $21.50 Bread and Butter Plates at prices ranging from $13 to $38 a dozen. FANCY CHINA Acid Gold Bowls, Olive Dishes, Sugars and Creamers, Chocolate Sets, Berry Bowls, Pickle Dishes and various other pieces at BIG SAVINGS. We give S. & H. Trading Stamps. $4.50 Silver Set at $3.49 Quadruple Plate Third Floor Silver-plated Sugar , and Creamer in attractive designs as shown herewith. Quadruple plate, bright fin ish, gold lining. Regular $4.50 (PO A Q Sets. On sale Friday at only DO -?6.75 Silver-Plated Sandwich Trays on sale Friday at only $5.00 Exclusive Portland Agency for the Famous Detroit Jewel Stoves You will appreciate the labor saving advantages of this new style Gas Range. It does away with etooping and back-straining while cooking and baking. It is equipped with gas-saving burners which keep" gas bills low. It is finished in baked ebonite, to protect against rust and to make cleaning easy. Requires no blacking and wipes clean with a cloth. Good Baking Their Crowning Achievement and good baking above everything else, is what every woman is look ing for. We don't believe there is another gas range on the market that can compare in this respect with the famous DETROIT JEWEL. "THEY BAKE BETTER On the Line at 9 A. M. ! This is the wash day accomplish ment in hundreds of Portland homes that are equipped with a celebrated One Minute Electric Washer Think of the saving in time to say nothing of the great economy for it only costs about 7c for electric cur rent for the average family washing. - Come, to the Housewares section and see one of these machines in operation. Department, Third Floor. EASY PAYMENTS $2.00 DOWN, $2.00 A WEEK puts a ONE-MINUTE ELECTRIC WASHER in your home! We Give S. & H. Trading Stamps Ask for Them TROUT BREAKFAST LIED 3 00 DELEGATES TO AD MEN'S MEET EXJOY PICXIC. Outdoor Meal With Strawberries, Served at Eagle Creek, Voted One Grand Success. The trout breakfast for delegates to the Pacific coast advertising: men's con vention, atag-ed at Eagle creek yester day morning: by Ed Strong of the Ore Bon Life Insurance company, left 300 trout-filled enthusiast smacking' their lips and blessing- the man who thoug-bt It up. At that, the trout were only a part of the feast. There were vast and luscious quantities of Hood River r-tra wherries, sent down from that fruit-growing center, and eaten with real cream, aa a first course; coffee and doughnuts and bacon fried with the trout to give 'em snap. The guests didn't know It, but all the cooking was done by R. E. Clan ton, master fish warden, and G. Evert Baker. These gentlemen displayed a fine knack in wrapping- a trout in a coat of cornmeal and frying him to the exact point where a graven Image would have yelled for a helping. Among the g-uests were Governor Olcott and Lieutenant-Colonel Watson of the flying- circus. The delegates quickly found them and made them and Samuel C. Lancaster, engineer of the Columbia river highway, give brief talks. The Portland Spectator was host for the breakfast, with Mr. Strong in charge. He was assisted on the com mittee of arrangements by Tod Hazen. E. H. McCarty, H. W. Kent and W. K. Matten. Members of the Seattle police band were specially invited guests. Chopped banana stalks, used as soon as the fruit has been harvested, have been used in Queensland for feeding horses. Auto Load of Captured Whisky Disappears. Marshal Word Relieved of Prize While Katlns Brcakiaat. HOOD RIVER, Or., June 12. (Spe cial.) Members of the sheriff's office here and at The Dalles declare today mat "he who laughs last laughs best." Since posses of the two offices ar rested Deputy United States Marshal Frank B. Tichenor, escorting an alleged bootlegger and his -car from Burns to Portland last week, the two sheriffs have been subjected to unmerciful ban tering by their friends. But it is an other tale that of today. Hastening to Portland from central Oregon with -4 quarts of captured liquor aboard a big tourinjr car, ex Sheriff Tom Word of Multnomah coun ty, now a deputy United States mar shal, stopped abuut 4 o'clock at a res taurant at The Dalles for breakfast. Returning- to the street to start the 90-mile drive to Portland, Mr. Word rubbed his eyes. The machine was gone. He lost no time in rousing Levi Chrisman, high sheriff of Wasco coun ty, from his sleep. The latter, grin ning, so they say, like a Cheshire cat, put in a long-distance call for Sheriff Johnson of this county. And at day break the self-same men who last Fri day awaited and arrested Officer Tichenor were guarding- the highway passes, hoping to capture the liquor laden automobile taken from Mr. Word. It is presumed that confederates of the central Oregon bootlegger were fol lowing Mr. Word and made away with the car the Instant he entered the restaurant. POKER LEADS TO SHOOTING Loser Holds Up "Winner, Then In dulges in Gunplay, Is Report. ABERDEEN. Wash.. June 12. (Spe cial.) Postolus George is at Aberdeen general hospital suffering from gun shot wounds, inflicted when a fellow employe at the Climax logging camp fired twice at him with a shotgun. George does not know the name of his assailant, other than that his first name is Jean and that he is foreman of a skid road gang. Sheriff Bartell and Deputies Ham and Eddy went to Bay City this afternoon to arrest George's assailant. George's condition was declared at the hospital not to be serious. The shooting, George explains, fol lowed a poker game in which he was winner of about 1100. iTe claims Jean held him up after the game and took the money from him. This, George says, caused him to offer to fight Jean this morn Ins:. Jean, instead of accept ing the challenge, went into the bunk house and brought out a shotgun which be emptied -at George. School Attendance) Shows Growth. ABERDEEN, Wash., June 12. Spe cial.) The school population of Aber deen has grown 1642 in the past five yars according to the school census, final figures for which have just been given out. The increase for the year was 168. The total now stands at 4050. Hedda Nova, the temperamental Rus sian star, who ia being featured by Universal in The Spitfire of Seville." declares her director. George Seigmann, and hla assistant, Jimmy O'Shea, waste more time talking over "trench scan dal" since they returned from France than they spend "shooting. Each finds a willing auditor in the other and there is joy In the Seigmann p seducing family. CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears Big-nature of I ASK YOUR GROCER MSfOSTERBAKlNGCQ PORTLAND. OREGON. SAI FM RAKINGfO ySAimOREGON. f