TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, "WEDNESDAY, NOVE3IBER 5, 1910. TRUTH PDNDOUD'S AIM, SAYS WITNESS Advertisement Writers Are Warned to Be Careful. CIRCULARS HELD 'STRONG' Heart of Concern. Exercised Gen eral Supervision Oyer Public ity, Says Ex-Assistant. CHICAGO, Nov. 4. S. C. Pandolfo, rrpeatedly warned his advertisement writers to bo careful to state only the truth in matter they prepared for circulation. Jack Hammond, wit ness in the trial of 13 Pan Motor company officials, accused of mis using the mails, testified today. Ham mond was for a time assistant ad vertising manager of the Pan com pany. Pandolfo, however, allowed some material to go out in circular form of which Hammond had disapproved as being "too strong." lie told how he had sent an office boy to Pandolfo with a notation on the circular in question, calling at tention to the offending paragraph which Pandolfo nevertheless allowed to be printed. TeatimoiiT Stricken Oat. The testimony was stricken from the records on the ground that the witness could not be sure that Pan dolfo got the message. The paragraph he objected to was: "It (the Pan company) is already building that wonderful farm trac tor tank tread that, like its motor cars, created a big sensation at the automobile and tractor shows held throughout the country." Mr. Bowers, attorney for the com pany, also suggested some modifica tions or changes, the witness said, in another paragraph published in the circular part of a resolution adopt ed by tho Commercial club of St. Cloud. It follows: '"Resolved, that the Commercial club of St. Cloud. Minn., recommend to the entire citizenship of the city that they cease to do business with any foreign enterprise, rating company or commercial agency antagonistic to the Pan Motor company, or S. C. Pandolfo, its president." , Resolution Held Genuine. Evidence shows that the resolution was actually made by the Commercial l-i u b. The Gopher State Advertising bu reau was only a name, Hammond said, used by the Pan company to secure from newspapers the discount al lowed advertising agencies. He also testified that Pandolfo ex ercised general supervision over the publication of Pan Siftings, the com pany advertising organ, but that he did not on all occasions know the con tents of all articles appearing there in. W. It. Flint of Peoria, 111., who, during part of 1318 was in charge of administration of the blue sky laws of Illinois, identified the appli cation of the Pan company for a licenso to sell Pan company stock in Illinois. NO BABIES, NO MARRIAGE CHILDLESS TJXIOX MOCKERY, SAYS COLUMBIA PROFESSOR. Happiness of Man and Woman Sec ondary Robust Youngsters Prime Purpose of WeddiDg. CHICAGO, Nov. 4. Happiness of man and woman is only a secondary affair in marriage, the prime pur pose of which is to produce robust children. Professor William J. Durant of Columbia university said in a lecture at the Sinai social center here last night. "Where there are no chil dren there is no marriage," he added. Pree love Is impossible, the pro fessor said, because conquests of a man are praised by other men, "while if a woman has had one free love affair she is held in ridicule and be littled by her associates." "Most men now marry after they have become incapable of love," the professor continued, "and then comes your divorce. "Courts say that divorces are due to cruelty, drunkenness and half a dozen other things, but they are all wrong. The three fundamental rea sons for divorce are: "First The natural vanity of both sexes. "Second Psychological incompati bility. "Third Lack of children." Raid on Multnomah Dance Proves Real Thriller. liven Members of Committee Are Taken by Surprise When Liquor fr'laxk Is Discovered. MULTNOMAH club members are beginning to believe that the Biblical injunction to keep the right hand in the-dark as to the doings of the left is poor advice. Their decision follows a thrilling "raid" on a Mult nomah club dance at the clubhouse on Halloween night. Club members and police depart ment heads whispered secret plans some time before the dance, and everything was arranged to have a "mid" on trie dance to throw a thrill WHOLE FAMILIES FREED FROM COLDS Half a Century Breaking Colds Is Behind Dr. King s ew Discovery. FROM the little tots to grandma, every one in the family can use this f ifty-years-the-standard remedy in perfect safety and confident of beneficial results. Incessant coughing, disagreeable grippe, stubborn cold promptly checked, the phlegm dissipated, the congestion loosened. Same high quality today as always. Dr. King's Xew Discovery lives up to its time-tested reputation. 60c and $1.20 a bottle. Adv. The Results of Constipation are sick headaches, biliousness, nerv ousness, sallow ekin, waste matter in the body. Correct this undermining evil with Dr. King's Xew Life Pills. Feel good every day. Keep the system cleansed. 25c a bottle. Adv. into the revellers. But the "raid" thrilled even the plotters, for where they expected to see a squad of uni formed men swarming into the ball room they saw instead a belligerent appearing bunch of officers of the moral squad, headed by Lieutenant Harvey Thatcher. "Lord, what's up?" whispered one clubman to another. "Something's wrong," whispered the other nervously. "This wasn't the plan." Thatcher produced an imposing document charging everything on the crime calendar against the clubmen. Explanation was about to pour forth, when the colored waitress shrieked for attention. Officer Schulpius had shyly pulled a bottle of moonshine from his pocket and "discovered" it again propped against a punch bowl. "Do you know who put this here?" sternly asked the officer. " 'Deed Ah don't, sah," nervously responded the waitress, turning as pale as possible. "'Deed Ah don't." Multnomah clubmen turned pale, too, at sight of the pint flask whether from fear or longing could not be determined. "Well, we'll just take this all along," growled Thatcher in his best bass voice. "And you, too," turning to the chairman of the dance commit tee. The chairman, though he had been in on the plotting, was in a d.Tzen condition and quite prepared to spend the night In durance. The chairman was "under arrest" till the door was reached, and the grins of the "raiders" gave him cause for a sigh of relief. Multnomah members still are won dering whether wisely, to affirm their full knowledge of the Halloween thrill or honestly to own up to the scary feeling they experienced. 3 STAB SHOW TO CLOSE MATIXEE TODAY LAST PER FORMANCE ORPHEl'M BILL. Triple Headliner Opens Sunday at Orphenm Theater in San- l'"ra n clsoo Acts Lauclimakers. The Orphenm's triple headliner show will close its Portland engage men this afternoon, today's matinee being the last performance on ac count of the Heilig being engaged by Harry Green. In Ceirge Wash ing; Cohen," at Orphenm. another attraction tonight. Six of the seven acts of this show are laugh makers, and it is one of the most popular shows of the season. The three headliners are . Harry Green, Jewish comedian, in "George Washington Cohen," a satire with the gates of heaven as the stage setting; Lillian Shaw, who has been pro claimed to be America's premier vocal dialect comedienne, and Ciccolini, re nowned Italian grand opera tenor. Harry Green wins screams of laughter with his playlet. Miss Shaw also scores a great individual hit, and Ciccolini is so popular he is obliged to sing several encores at every per formance. Other acts of the three-star bill in clude Ben and Hazel Mann in non sensical nonentities; Flo and Ollie Walters, who also are one of the ap plause hits with an act that includes songs and lively dancing; the Eugene Brothers in gymnastics on the hori zontal bars and the Pickfords in novel comicalities. This entire show will open at the Orpheum in San Francisco next Sun day afternoon. GUY TALBOT IMPROVING Operation Performed on Portland Man in Chicago Success. Guy W. Talbot, president of the Portland Gas & Coke company, who underwent an operation for the re moval of his gall bladder at Presby terian hospital, Chicago, yesterday bore the ordeal admirably and is in excellent condition to. recover, ac cording to a message received by his secretary, George J-. Myers of this city. Filed by John A. Laing, vice- president of the company, who went to Chicago when word was received of Mr. Talbot's critical illness, the reassuring telegram is as follows: "The operation has been completed, with no complications. The gall blad der was removed. Mr .Talbot is in excellent condition and everybody is greatly relieved." Early this year Mr. Talbot was op erated upon twice in Portland for similar trouble. During a visit to New York he suffered a recurrence of the ailment, and while on his way home was halted at Chicago, where he has since been under the care of specialists and where the major operation was declared necessary. The operation was performed by Dr. A. D. Bevan, formerly of Portland. Anto Hits Family on Road. CHEHALIS, Wash., Nov. 4. (Spe cial.) Mrs. O. D. Broadmead of Littell and her two children Warren, 6, and Viola, 10, are suffering severe injuries from being run into by a Centralia man with an automohi'e on the road near Claquato. The ckr approached from behind. The driver lost control of hi3 car while trying to pass them and it bumped into all of them. The little girl was carried 100 feet across a ditch and through a fence. T-he mother and boy were knocked down and bruised. Prisoner's Wife Asks Divorce. CHEHALIS, Wash., Nov. 4. (Spe cial.) Walter Cline, who is alleged to have killed his brother-in-law. Kirk Asbury at Morton some months ago and now is awaiting trial in the Lewis county superior court while being confined in the county jail at Chehalis, is defendant In a divorce proceeding just filed hel-e by his wife, Martha Cline. They, have no property. Cruel and inhuman treat ment are alleged. H ats You'll Like for Fall You young fellows who want smart style and distinctive shapes Hats with "personality," "pep and go," get under one of our new fall styles by Stetson Trimble Mallory Berg or Barsalino The the They're all good, all of fine materials, each a character in itself. You'll find a choice selec tion at this exclusive men's store. The color, the shape and the size you'll want $6, 7, $8, $10 and 12 Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. The Home of Hart Schaf fner & Marx Clothes f Fifth and Alder WAR PHOTOS Oil EXHIBIT PEN AND INK SKETCHES ALSO IN DISPLAY AT LIBRARY. Pictorial Review of Career of 9 1st Division Overseas Is Con tained in Collection. , An official pictorial review of the career of the 91st division overseas is contained in the collection of war photographs lent to the central library and placed on exhibit In the main hall of the second floor. In connection with these official photographs, but not associated with the 91st division, is also an interest ing display of panoramic photos taken about Chateau-Thierry and lent to the library Dy Sergeant J. H. Mellin. Still further amplifying the historical exhibit is a series of attractive peri and ink drawings lent by Sergeant Smith-Hisler. Miss Mary Frajices Isom. librarian, brought back with her from overseas an immense collection of war posters, war loan posters, etc., which has also been placed in the central library and is exhibited in the hall on the third floor. Besides the war exhibits now in stalled in the library, the flax and sisal exhibit, placed by the technical department of the library, is also a center of interested groups every day, and is being continually ampli fied by additional loans .from new concerns which have become in terested in the exposition of Oregon industrial resources that the technical department is devoloping. Robbers Must Reckon With Inventor. Modest Individual Explains Mys tery of Brlsht Lla-ht Seen by Hose City I'arli Residents. PREFERRING to remain incognito, for the nonce, Portland's deliverer from the scourge of footpads has an nounced himself and his singular dis covery. With the imaginative faculty of the late E. A. Poe, and the calm, scientific certainty of T. A. Edison, he retails his invention in a recent let ter to the editor and modestly con ceals him identity under the matter-of-fact nom de plume, ""Inventor." The other night many residents of Rose City Park, a peaceful suburb of trim and conscious bungalows, in terspersed with verdant cow pastures, were vastly excited and concerned over certain intermittent and myster ious flashes that illuminated the cloudy prospect and that gave no earthly account of themselves or their origin. It has remained for "In ventor" to allay the public mind by a confession. Moreover, he discloses a solicitude for the police bureau, for the con venience and well-being of its blue coats, that is touching to a degree and that would be even more so were it not for the gradual and subtle suspicion that the hidden genius is toying with the sharp edge of sar casm. At any rate, here he goes: "The brilliant light observed by the Rose City Parkers," writes the anony mous genius, "is due to my testing out a new protection from hold-up men. I have perfected a 'chemical which can be compressed into a small pellet about the size of a pea. When dropped from the hand and coming into contact with the pavement or the ground it gives out an intense light of great brilliance. My experi ments were successful, far beyond my expectations. I consider the inven tion perfected and ready for the mar ket." Here Is the sublime Juncture of Poe and Edison, the wizard of fancy and the necromancer of fact a blended "bird" of a scheme that renders nightly pedestrianism as safe and happy as it was in the dear old days before the war. Listen to him: "The idea is that a. pellet of this chemical be carried in the palm of the hand and upon meeting a high wayman it may be dropped without any perceptible movement, immedi ately creating a brilliant light which will last for a half hour or longer. Fancy pauses at this. The potent pellet would seem to have accom- lished Its design. One hears the pat ter and thud of the retreating bro gans of Dick Turpin the modern. But not so. "Inventor" has another card style shown here is one of new "Mallory Hats" for young men. up his sleeve. The fertility of his scheme is scarcely scratched. "The brilliancy of the illumination makes it entirely safe," he assures, "for policemen observing the signal to approach without danger. The fact that it will give forth light for a period of half an hour or more will give the nearest policeman plenty of time to secure necessary reinforce ments and reach the scene of the hold-up in time to assist the victim io his residence. It also will enable the hold-up artists to recognize the uniform and not molest the police men." What's he trying to do? "Kid" a policeman? Or Is it possible that, beneath this verbiage and really lies hidden an invention as epochal and efficacious as that of the Chinese stink-bomb? EGGS SELL FOR 80 CENTS FURTHER INCREASE OF '. 3 CENTS EXPECTED. TO Storage Variety Slay Be Obtained at 65 and 70 Cents, With Good Supply Available. Eggs of the fresh ranch variety ad vanced to 80 cents wholesale in the local market yesterday and to 85 cents in some of the retail stores. An other advance of 2 to 3 cents is prom ised today. The supply of Oregon eggs is un usually short, even for the short-egg month of November. Persons who are not averse to using storage eggs, however, may buy the best grade of Oregon storage eggs in the retail stores at 65 to 70 cents, and there is an ample supply of these in the lo cal storage plants. Eastern eggs of good grade also can be retailed at 65 to 70 cents. ADVICE GIVEN TO WOMEN Campaign on National Suffrage Amendment Is Outlined. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 4. On the ground that the governors of all the states have enough to do in these times of stress" without being "nagged" by women seeking ratifica tion or the federal woman suffrage amendment, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the National Equal Suffrage association, urged Wash ington women here to adopt a differ ent campaign. Work with the gov ernor, she urged. "Exact a pledge from each legislator that nothing else will be considered at a special legis lative session than the suffrage amendment." Mrs. Catt was speaking before the League of Women Voters and the King county legislative federation. WITNESS IS FOR HOWELL Ban don Woman Reported as See ing Man Leave Murder Scene. MARSHFIELD, Or., Nov. 4. (Spe cial.) A report reached here today from Bandon that a new witness has been' found who will be very favorable to Harold Howell, the 14-year-old boy accused of the murder of Lillian Leuthold. From the scant information It ap pears that a woman who hesitated to become a witness in the first trial, because she believed the case was strong enough for. the defendant, oi for the reason she did not desire to appar in court, saw a man carrying a small rifle hurrying from the scene of the murder on the Sunday night when the gil was killed. COWLITZ TEACHERS MEET Annual Institute at Kalama Has 140 in Attendance. KELSO, Wash., Nov. 4. (Special.). The annual Cowlitz county institute opened at Kalama yesterday in the high school building with a full at tendance of teachers from all parts of the county. More than 140 were en rolled. George H. Black, president of Ellensburg normal school; Ralph W. Swetman. extension director of that school: Mrs. .Edith Morton, grade su pervisor at Ellensburg, and Frank W. Zink, physical director at Washing ton' State college, addressed the in- a dmBstoalisii IF tmireCompcfre the lOorli 3. Bss O j 13- ! " ' . - J j 0 T&' 15 tJ70u: l . i i. , ni' ,,- ...,1 stitute. County Superintendent Gard ner is directing the institute. Increase in Salaries Favored. SPOKANE, Wash.. Nov. 4. The Employers' Association of the in land Empire yesterday went on rec ord In favor of an Increase in sal aries for teachers in the public schools of Spokane. The resolution opposed any movement on the part of teachers to affiliate themselves with the American Federation of Labor. Seattle Capitalist Injured. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 3. Law rence J. Colman, Seattle capitalist and president of the J. M. Colman company, was Injured and rendered unconscious here today when he was struck by a quantity of planking and debris thrown from the roof of a new three-story garage building. Victory Loan Essential to Work. VANCOUVER. B. C, Nov. 4. Sir si do Rqyal "typewriter Cbmpanyc 216 RAILWAY EXCHANGE BLDG. Phone Main 189 Branches and Henry Drayton, federal minister of finance, informed a delegation of the local board of trade yesterday that nothing would be done anywhere in Canada in the matter of expenditures on public works until the success of the victory loan was assured. Kelso to Improve Streets. KELSO. Wash., Nov. 4. (Special.) Organization of an improvement dis trict on Columbia street, between Sec ond and Seventh streets, was com pleted at a meeting of the city coun cil. The street will be improved by grading and construction of sew ers, concrete sidewalks and curbs. The estimated cost of the work Is $8000 and bonds will be issued by the district to meet the cost of the im provement. Hood Kiver Man Sell Orchard. HOOD RIVER, Or.. Nov. 4. (Spe cial.) J. J. Gibbons has sold his Bar rett 30-acre orchard place to Edward Axup, formerly a resident of Yakima, Wash. Mr. Axup, with his wife and family of five children, will come nn Agencies the World Over. here at once to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Gibbons, old-time residents of the community will remove to Portland. 40 YEARS AGO BLCOD POISON WAS CONQUERED BY OLD DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION WITHIN YOUR REACH TODAY 40 years ago "Number 40 For the Blood" conquered many cases of spe cific blood poison in its worst forms, which have not returned. This dis ease is manifested by mucous patches, copper-colored spots, aching bones, ulcers or running sores, falling hair, glandular swellings, pimples on the face, constipation and a form of dys pepsia. Your health is important, in sist on "Number 40," put up in a blue carton bearing the signature of J. C. Mendenball, 40 years a druggist, Ev ansville, Ind. Sold by Laue-bavis Drug Co., Third and Yamhill streets, Adv. : i r 5 - - r - H U K:' A 1 .-V ft A-' ' mm a f ; ir MAIL ORDER SALE OF U. S. ARMY SUPPLIES Wo have purchased the Govern ment stock of the following, items aaid offer them to the public. One, or as many as you wish. Prompt Delivery to Any Part of the United States. Charges Prepaid. Send Money Order Army shoes 5.SS Navy shoes 7.75 Officers' raincoats . 13 no Army blankets 7.."0 Rubber boots 4.M Knitted stocking caps .70 Markinawi 9.50 Army wool socks .40 Army sweaters, all wool 4.00 All-wool underwear, heavy win ter weight, per suit 2.75 Order by Sine. Write Plainly. Tour Monev Refunded if Not Satisfied National Equipment Co. 18 Weit 23d St New York. City. mm