Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, March 17, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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TIIE 3I0RXIXG OREGOXTAN, WEDNESDAY, ttATiCTT 17, 1920
CHILDREN SUB
IN DAKOTA BLIZZARD
Four Sons of Farmer Found
Frozen to Death.
STORFJI WORST IN YEARS
tne employers to suggest the n
of, five members for the comm
which Is also to comprise five
resenting- labor and five representing
the ireneral putrtic.
B. T. Me Bain presided over the ses
sion and George it. Cornwall was sec
retary. The committee of 11 will meet
at 10 A. M. Saturday In the Chamber
of Commerce to pick the five men to
be recommended to the governor, as
the employers' representatives.
The 11 men selected by the em
ployers yesterday were: O. J. Even
son, R. M. Davisson, Thomas B. Kay,
George K. Oerlinger, T. H. McCann,
B. T. McRaln, B. C. Ball, Andrew C.
Porter, W. P. Olds, D. A. Pattulo and
F. it. Warren.
I FIVE LEADERS BUSY
Girl or 18 on Way Home From
School Sacrifices Life lo Save,
Brother and Sister.
TWSMAFU'K. N. V., March K Four
rhildren. sons of Oust Wolilka. a
farmer livins near Ryder, were frozen
to death in Monday's blizzard, it wan
learned tmisrht when their bodies
were found by Wohlka-
The boys, Adnlph, Krnest. Hnrcn and
TTomer. set out for school Monday aft
ernoon with a team. Half way home j
the. hors.es became exhausted and)
could so no further. Adnlph bundled
no bis ycuneer brother, placed thm
in the wason box. and pet out for
help. Hix body was found near his
home bv Wohlka. A mile down the
rond the father ome upon the team
and wapnn. practically burled by
.now. Alter di.rsing away the snow
he discovered the frozen bodies of his
tons.
Reports to the weather bureau indi
rated that North Dakota wan in the
crip of the worst blizzard since 1&8S
Trains were stalled and schedules
annulled in some instances. I wo
Great Northern trains were reported
flailed between M:mt and Williston.
No freights are running in the state.
No Great Northern trains arrived at
Farsro todav- from the west, while
three from the east were late.
Minot was still cut off from wire
communication tonieht. From six to
eicht inches of snow has fallen
throughout the stale.
According to the weather bureau
here the storm extended from Men
tana to Wisconsin and from Manitoba,
Canada, to Nebraska.
8IE BILL CLOSES TODAY
SAKAII IWDDKX AXD BILLIE
SHAW AT ORPlttXM.
Emotional Actress Seen in Two
Playlets of Widely Divergent
riots and Characters.
GIUL DIES roil OTHERS
Youngsters Can si it in Storm Saved
by Presence of Mind.
CENTER. N. D., March 16. Caught
on the prairie in the rapine blizzard
that swept over North Dakota yes
terday and today. Hazel Miner, 18-year-old
daughter of W. A. Miner of
Center, sacrificed her life to save her
younger brother and sister from
freezing to death.
Leaving school yesterday at 3
o'clock the three children started for
home in the blizzard in a closed car
riage. About three miles from the
school house the rig was caught by
the gale, blown over and wrecked.
Realizing the futility of attempting to
make progress through the terrific
storm on foot, the oldest girl took
charge of the party and made prepa
rations to await rescue. Taking
blankets that were in the carriage,
Hazel wrapped them about her brother
and sister, Emmett, 11, Bud Meredith,
8. She then took off her own coat
to reinforce the blanlfet covering of
her young charges.
After spending 24 hours on the
prairie in the blizzard, with only the
broken buggy for shelter. Emmett and
Meredith were rescued by a searching
party, the frozen body of their sister
besicfe them. They wiii recover.
The frozen body of the horse was
still attached to the rig when the
children were found.
Sarah Tadden will say good-by to
Portland today, as the Orpheum show
of which she Is . one of the joint
headliners- will close with the after
noon performance. The other head
liner with Miss Padden Is Miss Billie
Shaw, Dansftise, who is assisted by
three youns men in one of the spec
tacular dance acts of the season.
For good measure this season Sarah
Padden is offering two acts. She first
SEEKIi DELEGATES
Middle West Becomes Storm
Center for Republicans.
SOUTH DAKOTA FIGHT HOT
La Folleltc Still Wields Great In
Huencc in Wisconsin and Can
didates Are Warned Away.
(Contlnn'd From First Page.)
both
3
w
Sarah Iraddrn who Mill rle Orphean
Knit -cement Today.
CO UP
EXDOWJIEXT ITXD PERMITS
KISE FOR TEACHERS.
Fall Professors to Receive $6000
to $8000 Instead of $1000 to
$5 5 00 of Former Schedule.
CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. March 16.
Salaries for the teaching staff
Harvard will be advanced from 40 to
50 per cent on September 1. Presi
dent Lowell announced to the faculty
today that the results of the Harvard
endowment fund campaign had en
abled the governing board of the
university to draw up a new scale of
salaries.
Full professors will receive from a
minimum of JtiOOO to a maximum of
ISO00, whereas up to this year they
have received from JtOOO to JaOOO.
Associate professors will be paid
I.IOOO for five years and $3500 there
after, as against an old rate of $3500
to $4000. Assistant professors, who
received from $2500 to $3000 will start
at $3500 and receive an annual in
crease of $200 until they reach a
limit of $4500.
In the lower grades the percent
age of increase will be, if anything,
somewhat higher. Faculty instruct
ors and other instructors, hitherto
paid from $1000 to $2000, will receive
.from $1600 to 2750.
EMPLOYERS GIVE NAMES
Compensation Advisory Committee
List Given Governor.
Pursuant to a call sent to em
ployers of labor throughout Oregon,
a meeting- was held yesterday at the
Chamber of Commerce green room
at which a committee of 11 was
named as andvisory committee and
from the membership of which five
will be chosen to represent the em
ployers In the committee of 15 that
is to revise the state compensation
act.,
The committee of 15 will be named
by Governor Olcott. who requested
presents "Betty Behave." a comedy
n which ahe has the principal laugh-
provoking role. Miss Padden then
atages "The Eternal Barrier." the
emotional one-character playlet in
which Miss Padden won triumphant
success last season. At the close of
this act Miss Paddan has never failed
to win an ovation.
Iaughs galore are won by Bos-
tock's riding school, the extra attrac
tion. In -the finale of this act four
expert circus riders show, with the
aid of boys selected from the audi
ence, how circus riders are made, a
mechanical contrivance saving the
boys from injury, as they bounce
around on a real circus steed. The
fourth feature of the show is Phil Ba
ker, accordionist, who is programmed
as "A Bad Boy From a Good Family."
Baker and his assistant "stop" every
show, so great is the applause won by
their comedy.
BRITISH PARTY COMING
Merchants to Visit Portland to In-
$lcct Department Store.
Twenty-two British merchants, rep
resenting the largest department
stores of the United Kingdom, will
visit Portland during the early sum
mer, on a tour of this country. - to
study American department store
management, with a view to intro
ducing its use in England. The party
wiil travel in a special car that will
make stops in about 25 American
cities and will include in the itinerary
visit to spots of scenic interest to
tourists, including the Grand Canyon
and the Yosemite. a
The Pacific coast portion of the
tour will start at Los Angeles and
will include Portland andSeattle. The
party will return east over the Union
Pacific lines. The Chamber of Com
merce and local civic bodies will unite
with the merchants in making the
visit to this city one that will be
remembered by the business men from
overseas.
UNITED BRETHREN CONFER
Pacific Slates Leaders Ojien Two-
Day Session in Portland.
Heads of the United Brethren
church of the Pacific states yesterday
opened a two-day conference In Port
land, with Bishop William H. Wash-
lnger, who is bishop of the Pacific
coast district. At the session last
night at the First United Brethren
church. Thirteenth and Morrison
streets. Dr. L. S. Woodruff of Stock
ton, Cal., was the speaker. Tonight
Dr. G. L. Stine of Beach, N. D., will
address the conference.
The churchmen are considering
chiefly the relation of their denomi
nation to the inter-church movement.
Important officials present at the
conference, other than Bishop Wash-
inger. include: Dr. Woodruff, superin
tendent of the California district: Rev.
W. A. Nicholes of Spokane, Wash.,
superintendent of the northeast
Washington district, and Dr. G. E.
McDonald of Portland, superintendent
of the Oregon district.
rious politicians concerned,
within and without the state.
It is not bevond possibility that the
Indiana delegation may finally land
behind a dark horse, and if the con
vention should turn out to be a case
of dark horse at all, then any dark
horse who is backed by Indiana will
have, by virtue of that fact, more
strength than is Implied by the num
ber of Indiana delegates. The tradi
tion about Indiana, as a state, where
people take politics more seriously,
where politicians are shrewder, and
as a state which has unusual weight
In the determination of national re
sults is abundantly justified by the
facts. This year Indiana is more than
usually a state to be watched.
Michigan Is a fighting .ground for
three candidates: Lowdcn, Wood and
Johnson. Johnson has unusual
strength In Michigan.
I.aFnllette Strong tn W lnroasin.
In Wisconsin the fight will be what
all Wisconsin fights have been for a
generation, more or less, that is to
say, pro-LaFollette and anti-LaFol-
lette. LaFollctte is believed to con
trol about half the republican party
in the state. T-tait half which La
Follette does not control has united
in requesting all the candidates for
the oresid--i cy to remain outside the
state, so as not to disturb the unity
of the anti-LaFollette forces. Where
the Wisconsin delegates may land in
the national convention no man can
foretell.
Minnesota's primary does not rest
upon the statutory sanction , of the
state, but was called by the repub
lican state committee and waB open
only for one evening. , Informal
though it may be, both the Wood na
tional headquarters and the Lowden
national headquarters seem Inclined
to accept it as providing a fair test
of strength, and the result of it may
reasonably be interpreted by the pub
lic as giving a- clue to the relative
strength of the two men. Johnson is
also expected to make a good show
ing in some parts of the state. Near
ly all of next week In Minnesota will,
be filled with politics. There will be
county conventions on the 17th, dis
trict conventions on the 19th and
state convention on the 20th.
In North Dakota Senator Johnson
will Inevitably get the ten delegates,
but he will -get them under protest
and there will undoubtedly be a con
testing delegation leading to a con
test before the credentials committee
of the national convention in June.
It is South Dakota that presents a
clear situation. The primaries are
formal, aguarded by.state, statutes
and are "worked out in a Vnmute and
painstaking1 effort to provide a real
test of popular strength. All of the
candidates realize this" and each of
them has put his beet foot forward
in South Dakota. ;
Sooth Dakota Affords Teat.
The state has been canvassed and
recanvassed. Lowden and Johnson
have each spent a week in the state.
Wood and Poindexter have already
been there and each of them will
spend ten days more. On March 20
Wood and Poindexter will hold a
joint debate at the state capitol. Mra.
Lowden has visited the state with
her husband on one trip and Mrs
Wood will accompany General Wood
next week.
The contest has been on substan
tially all the time since'last Decem
ber. Nearly all the voters have had a
chance or will have had one by the
time the primaries come, to take a
look at one or more of the candi
dates. The great bulk of the voters
will have heard one or more of the
candidates speak. The state has been
talking politics steadily for more
than three-months.- It is an unusu
ally well-read and intelligent body
of voters. It is a good community in
which to make a test and the candi
dates realize It is so. -The results of
the primary in South Dakota on
March 23 can be fallen by the public
as a fair measure of the relative
strength of the various candidates.
on-strlnged ukulele began to sink I
deeper and finally touched her nerves, j
now wonaeriuiiy uie-nae your
phonograph sounds," cooed Miss Paul
ine Sethlar, a friend and also an
actress.
"Phonograph nothing, vehemently
broke In M1ss Cozzens. "That's an
oil can that's been singing to nre for
a week."
"Why don't you put your foot on
the brake?" asked her friend.
"I've shied everything at him from
a teacup to a mattress," answered her
friend, "and still he sings on."
And then, tiring of the lad who was
trying to "out-Mac" McCormick, the
little actress called upon the majesty
of the law. When Policeman Robiti
son clapped his chubby flst over the
yawning cavity that was emitting
howls in every octave known to music
it was the first peaceful moment the
neighborhood had had for ten days.
In court today Eisert freely admit
ted singing under the window of Miss
Cozzens' apartment. He also pleaded
guilty to plunking away at the de
crepit ukulele.
"Are you crazy?" asked Magistrate
Sweitzcr.
"Sure." answered Eisert, "I'm crazy
about her."
As Eisert was led away, the at
tendant in the psychopathelic ward
at Bcllevue was dusting out a nice
new room where Eisert will spend
the next 10 days.
KIM IS RELEASED
CHTVESE BANDITS FREE MAX
CHURCH WORKER.
IS
Brigands Even Score by Promptly
Seizing British Laborer Among
' Tribes of Interior.
BROTHER OF REPRESENT.!
TIVE IX CONGRESS SUCCUMBS.
Romantic ' Serenader Gets
Ten-Day Sentence.
Harmonloa Dlacordn Coaxed From
Slna-le-Strlnged Ukulele Kail to
Blend With Rancos Voice.
N
'EW YORK, March 16. (Special.)
GLAD INDEED
Cover that itching skin disorder
with Poslam now you have real re
lief and your skin is being urged
through the most persuasive healing
influence to throw off its diseased
condition, to yield and become clear
again.
Splendid response is the rule when
Poslam is used for eczema, however
stubborn, acne, pimples, scalp-scale,
herpes, all itching troubles, inflam
mation, undue redness of nose or com
plexion. Sold everywhere. For free sample
write to Emergency Laboratories, 243
West 47th St.. New York City.
Poslam Soap, medicated with Pos
lam. should be used if skin is tender
and sensitive. Adv.
M. L. Kline Bowlers Win.
The M. L. Kline bowling team won
from the Equitable Savings & Loan
company quintet on the Multnomah
Amateur Athletic club alleys last
night, 2837 pins to 2784. Fred Con
verse of the Kline team rolled the
high, total of 626 pins, while Kruse
was Becond with 620. Both teams
will compete in the Pacific coast tele
graphic tournament, which will be
run off next Sunday.
Aerial Gunnery School Assigned.
SAN DIEGO, Cal., March 16. Major
Roy Kirtland, commandant of Rock
well field, announced 'today that an
advanced aerial gunnery school' will
be maintained at the field In addition
to the district supply and aeronau
tical repair base to be kept there.
Potato Contract Snlt Filed.
OREGON CITY, Or.. March 16.
(Special.? Plass & Sons filed suit
Tuesday against Mrs. Lena Newman
on a contract for 300 sacks of pota
toes which the plaintiff alleges was
contracted to be delivered to them
by the defendant,
insisted upon giving an imitation of a
Hartz mountains cuckoo bird calling
to its mate at all hours of the night,
according to the charge preferred to
day against him by Athep Cozzens, an
actress.
According to the charge, Eisert
caught a flash some days ago of Miss
Cozzens' pctty face and walked right
up to her and asked her to go to Palm
Beach with him. Having seen lome
of the photographs published from
that resort. Miss Cozzens says she In
dignantly declined the invitation and
told her volunteer acquaintance to
seek a clime far warmer than Palm
Beach. She told Magistrate Sweitzer
that ever since the first impromptu
meeting Eisert had appointed himself
her official serenader and held forth
under her window at all hours of the
day and night.
At first Miss Cozzens laughed at the
warblings of her unknown admirer,
then his songs and his plunklngs at a
Well-Known Portland Lawyer Is
Victim of Attack of Heart Dis
ease Widow Survives.
Roger Sinnott. well-lttio'n Portland
lawyer and brother of N. J. Sinnott,
representative in congress from east
ern Oregon, died suddenly from heart
disease at S:30 o'clock last night at
the family home, Trinity Place apartments.
Mr. Sinnott was nearly 48 years old.
having been born at The Dalles. July
15, 1872. He had lived in Portland for
the past 20 years and was a member
of the law firm of Sinnott & Adams
in the Chamber of Commerce build
ing. Mr. Sinnott had been ill only three
days, having been affected with pains
about the heart and stomach. He had
been about most of the time and yes
terday was down town to visit his
physicians.
Upon his return home his condition
became worse until the heart attack
caused his death. Lesion of the organ
his physician said, probably caused
his unexpected collapse and death.
Mr. Sinnott is survived by his
widow, Mrs. Gertrude L. Sinnott, who
was with him at the time of his
death. Funeral arrangements have
not yet been completed.
CONCERT SERIES STARTS
COLIi.HBIA PLAN'S TO ENTER
TAIN AFTERNOON SHOPPERS.
Programme Each Day at 3 o'CIock
Will Include Both Light and
Classical Selections.
First of a series of weekly after'
noon concerts for housewives who
may be downtown shopping will be
given at the Columbia ' theater this
afternoon at 3 o'clock. . '
The programme arranged by A. C.
Raleigh, manager, ana Vincent
Knowles. director of the orchestra,
will include both light and classical
selections. Among the numbers al
ready announced are the overture
from "Undine." by Lortzing: waltz
from the ballet "Dornroschen.". by
isenaikowsky, and Dardanella.
"Dardanella" has been- played at
previous performances at the Colum
bia theater, but in response to many
requests the number will be repeated.
The Columbia orchestra was the first
in the city to play this popular num
ber, according to Manager Raleigh.
A vocal soloist will be featured in
this afternoon's concert. She will be
the same soprano that sang off-stage
during the final scenes of "Male and
Female" when that production was at
the Columbia. Manager Raleigh will
not make public her name until this
afternoon.
GRILL IS J0 REOPEN
Arcadian Completely Remodeled
at Cost of $70,000.
The new Arcadian grill In the Mlut-
nomah hptel, which has been com
pletely remodeled and redecorated, at
a cost of $70,000, will b the largest
and best-equipped dining room on the
Pacific Coast, according to Eric V.
Hauser, manager and owner of the
hotel. The reopening of the grill will
be celebrated on three opening
nights tonight, tomorrow and Satur
day of this week, with dinner-dances
and special entertainment features.
Beginning Monday night March 22.
the grill will be opened for regular
dinner and late supper service.
George M. Olsen, a former Port-
lander, who has achieved success as
an orchestra leader in the east, will
have charge of the orchestra and en
tertainment at the grill.
LOST GIRLS ARE. LOCATED
13-Year-Old 'Portland Damsels
Say They Took-Auto Ride.
The police" early this morning re
ceived a telephone message to the
effect that Mildred Ericson, 412 Flint
street, and Louise Gentry,. 193 Russell
street, two 13-year-old girls, had been
captured in Newberg, Or., and were
being held for the Portland authori
ties. v
The girls said that a man had
picked them up in his automobile and
taken them for a ride.
FEKIN, March 16. Rev. Dr. - A. L.
Shelton. a missionary of the Disciples
of Christ church, captured by bandits
January 3 at Laoyakuan. near Yun-nan-Fu,
was released through the ef
forts of the American legation and
is proceeding under escort to Yunnan
Fu, where he is due to arrive next
Monday." Ho is reported to be well.
Simultaneously with the advices of
the release of Dr. Shelton came news
of the rapture by the same bandits
of a British missionary named Met
calfe, bolonging to the China inland
mission.
Dr. Shelton and his wife and daugh
ters were on their way from Batting
to Xunnan-Fu and had reached Ku
feng. less than 50 miles from their
destination, when captured. The
Americans had a small escort, which
gave battle to the bandits, with the
resuit that several of the escort were
killed. Mrs. Shelton and the children
were, allowed to proceed, but Dr.
Shelton was held with the purpose of
enforcing political demands made by
Yang Tien-Fu. the bandit chief.
No effort was made to exert mili
tary pressure against the bandit be
cause of fear of endangering the life
of the captive. The central govern
ment and the local governor took
active part In the negotiations for Dr.
Shclton's release and the French mis
sion priest also assisted. After scv
oral weeks of fruitless effort, the
American legation instructed Colonel
Drysdale, the American military at
tache, to proceed to Yuiinan-Fu. He
arrived there and shortly afterward,
at his request, the legation tele
graphed him J30.000, presumably to
meet the expense of the release of
Dr. Shelton.
ARRAIGNMENT PUT OVER
Alleged I. W. W. May Appear in
Clichalis Court Today.
CENTRALIA, Wash., March 16.
Arraignment of Mike Sheehan and
Elmer Smith, alleged I. W. W.
charged with murder In connection
with the death of Arthur McElfresh,
Centralist Armistice day parade vic
tim, which was to have been held at
Chehalis, Wash., today, was again
postponed.
It was said today the arraignment
might be held tomorrow.
LOGGER DEAD, MONEY LOST
Body of Logger Found With Bullet
Wound in Seattle.
SEATTLE. Wash., March 16. The
body of Robert Smell, 43, a logger,
was found in a roohi in the Russell
house on Sixth avenue outh, here late
tonight, a bullet wound through the
head. Police say they believe Smell
had been robbed and murdered.
Smell, they say, was known to have
had a large sum of money in his pos
session.
CIGAR LIGHTS AUTO TANK
Car Parked Down-Town Set Ablaze
' by Careless Smoker.
Fire apparatus was called to Sixth
and Morrison streets last night by a
fire which did $125 damage to an
automobile owned by E. R. Truman.
The blaze is said to have started
from a cigar thrown into gasoline
which had leaked from the tank.
a n
1 . M M
ZMr I
mm
Samuel GcJcfwyn
itrtsenrt
Geraldine Farrar fn
Other New Coldwyn Releases
ml Kotfara In "JubOo"
Tom Moore tn "Lord and Lady Algr
GeraMlm Fatrsr In "The World and Its
Woman"
aalie Frederick In "Bond of LeT
Mabri Nontwnd In "Jlnz
Paulina Frederick la "The Lew of
Ly'-
Coldwyn Bra Aalmstad Cartoons
ame of the Desert
She dared not tell him that the loved Aim
He dared not tell her that the might
An English woman In lor with an BftTptlaa CErrlo
Man In the arms, oi M ohamof I tho at-ol4 boxrlora
of race and reUtfon forgotten for one flooring monMnt
In the eternity of fierce and forbidden em brace end
then, midnight and revolution against England under
tne anad6r of tne Pyramids.
If ever there waa greet photoplay adapted to the
temperament and talent el tne labuloue
Geraldine Farrar, It at "The Flame of
tne Deeert," her lateet.
groatest Coldwyn triumph,
with Loo TeUegea for an
Anthonr ehe blende Into the
Inscrutable mrsterjr of F.gypt like another
Cleopatra. And yet well, what should a
daughter of the English nobility do in the
circumstance? What did ehe dor Either
way you gueae, you're wrong I
WATCH FOR THIS GOLDWYN PICTURE
AT YOUR FAVORITE THEATER
MOTION PICTVREi
Wolfsicin Funeral Is Today.
Ftrheral services for William Wolf-
steln, pioneer merchant of Portland
will be held at the family residence,
173 Vista avenue, at 1 P. M. today.
Interment will be at Beth Israel cem
etery. William vvolfstein was born
in Westphalia. Germany, January i.
184?.-and migrated) to this country in
his boyhood. He came via Nicaragua
to the west coast, and, after arriving
in the Pacific northwest, located in
the Walla Walls? country for a short
time, then, engaged in the mercantile
business in Portland and was for 50
years actively identified with business
life of the city. He is survived by
his widow and three daughters,
Misses Bertha and Isabel Wolfstein
and Mrs.. Harold Vetsberg.
Salvationist Arrives Here.
Mrs. Commissioner Thomas Estill,
whe arrived in Poryand late lat
night from Chicago, will address the
conference of the Salvation Army
home service Droerramme for 1020 at
the Portland hotel today at 10 o'clock.
Commissioner Estill has charge of all
Salvation Army' work relative to
women west of the Mississippi river,
ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE
Name "Bayer" is on Genuine
Aspirin say Bayer
V CANDY
Cathartic
Really
'DELICIOUS'
-f 5 ?
(jaib'
FOR CONSTIPATION fS
Insist on "Bayer Tabloia of Aspirin"
In a "Bayer package," containing
proper directions for Headache. Colds,
Pain. Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheu
matism. Name "Bayer" means genu
ine. Aspirin prescribed by physicians
for nineteen years. Handy tin boaes
of 11 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin
is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture
of Monoaceticacldester of Ballcyllca
cld. Adv.
1
.Mymmiin,A
A
S3
V
Wm
Now Playing!
Admission Prices:
Lower Floor Matinee 25c, night 33c;
Lower Balcony Matinee 25c, night 35c;
Upper Balcony Matinee and night 25c,
Sat., Sun. and Holiday evenings 35c;
Loges Matinee 50c, night 60c; Children
Matinee and night 15c. All prices in
clude war tax.
CgUrs- '-r
and in her talk before the local con
vention will touch on the work to be
accomplished by the White Shield
home, which has- been recently pur
chased by the Portland Salvation
Army and which, members of the or
ganisation say, will be the largest
rescue - home in the United States
when completed.
Dentists Discuss Free Clinic.
At the meeting of the Portland Dis
trict Iental society last night in the
assembly room of the" Portland hotel,
resolutions were presented and a com
mittee appointed to further the In
stallation of a free dental clinic in
connection with the city schools for
the care of poor children's teeth. Ten
minute papers were read by Doctors
T. W. Anderson. F. II. Walgamot,
Frank Mihnos, V. C. Shearer, Joseph
W, Boisol, Byron I.oomls and Neal L.
Zimmerman on subjects of technical
interest to members of the profession.
information that enlistment in tho
military service by the rural mail
carrier who has been serving t'or
bett. Or., creates a vacancy now lo
be filled. An examination to fill thu
vacancy will be held in Portland
April 10. It Is announced hy th
commission also that a bookkeeper
examination will be held here April 1
so as to create an eligible list from
which to fill varancies that may oc
cur In federal offices of the eleventh
Rural Carrier Kxan.lna.lon Set. "J" ""I" .l". "u rlZ
Announcement by the civil service pay ranges from 1900 to IHOft per
commission of thia district jrlves the I annum
!
That in Reality Are v
ALL-YEAR-ROUND WEIGHTS
Are a Big Feature of Our Splendid New Stock of
SPRING CLOTHING
HE assortment is so extensive as to provide just trie
model that best fits every man's individual require
ments, and the ranee of patterns and fabrics also pro
vides for complete satisfaction, no matter if your preference be
for the ultra-conservative or something with genuine snap to it
After all, however, all the praise that we could think of to
shower on these remarkable stocks of spring clothing is really
best expressed when we tell you that garments representing
the following makes comprise our stocks:
T
o
o
Stein-Bloch
Fashion Park
Langham and
Langhain
High
;May we have the pleasure of simply showing you today?
Men's Store, Fifth Floor
Merchandise of cJ Merit Ontf
I I II
f ; ;
1