7 ULSTER BORDERLINE LIKE BUTTLE FRONT They carried a bucket of tar, the two declared. This man, the two said, left town the next day. Mr. Stewart said that he has learned identity of four of his callers, and Mrs. Stewart, who said she owns 25 houses, declared that every one of the men identified Is in arrears Id rent. "It seems to me," she said, "that they were trying to run me out so that they couid get out of paying." Mrs. Stewart also declared that she goue of (&ualitp YOUR MONEY BACK IF YOUR PURCHASE DOES NOT SUIT YOU The Compulsion of Our Early Rival Armies Gradually Are believed the masked callers tried to prevent their wedding. She said that a number of residents at the Locks have had designs on her property and that a keen resentment has been ex pressed in various quarters against her plans. "Our wedding last week," said Mr. Stewart, "was the result of plans of some weeks. I believe the visitors were scared away from our place by the fearlessness of Matt Huckler, who went out into the yard and played a pocket flashlight on the armed men." Creeping Closer. T7 T V T f 3 OUTBREAK IS IMPENDING Every Important Bridge Leading From Free State Blown Up. Many Evacuate Homes. Huckler, Hood River boy, has been working for Mrs. Lee. J V 1A THE 9IOBXIXG OREGOMAX, TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1923 iw i 1W LONDON, March 28. (By the As sociated Press.) The borderline of Ulster is described as "like a battle- front," by the Evening News Belfast correspondent, who says rival forces of the Irish republican army and of Ulster special constables were ac- tuallv within rifle range and contin ually firing- at each other during the week end. The combatants were too well con cealed for serious losses to be in flicted and the exchange fire was mainly intended to prevent surprise attacks. "The rival armies, continues the correspondent, "are gradually creep ing closer and the first collision Is expected to occur on the frontier near Caledon. County Tyrone. "The sound of the blowing up of bridges on the Ulster border during the week-end could be heard miles away," adds the dispatch. "The northern forces were mainly responsible, and as the result of their activities every Important bridge leading from the Free States has been demolished, while hundreds' of roads have been trenched and closed with trees. . "The tension is already "beginning to affect the inhabitants behind the battle line. The unionists along the frontier are much perturbed over the menace of invasion and have asked that more protection . be afforded them. Many close to the battle zone. which is no man's land, have had to evacuate their homes, which immedi ately have been occupied by the fightinsr forces." The Pall Mall Gazette and Globe correspondents today telegraphed: "There are all the elements of serious outbreak on the Ulster-Free State border and only a spark is needed to bring it about. Some shots already have been fired." Cl'XMEX ACTIVE IX BELFAST ARREST OF INDIAN LEADER FAILS OBJECT SOUGHT. Government Officials Admit That Unrest Has Not Abated and Await Developments. LONDON. March 20. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The arrest, trial and imprisonment of Mohandas K. Gandhi, the Indian non-co-operationist, are regarded in official circles as an anti climax, leaving the government with out any definite ideas regarding the turn the Indian situation is likely to take. The placing- of Gandhi into safe keeping resulted in no outbreaks nor disorders, as might have been ex pected, because, in the view of Brit ish officials, the founder of the non- co-operation movement lost much of his prestige even among his own fol lowers as a result of his vacillating policies during recent months. The climax in Gandhi's case came when the government's plans regard- ng his arrest became widely known among the Indians. They received this news quietly, wondering .who would assume the leadership of his cause. Officials freely admit that despite Gandhi's arrest unrest in India has not abated. The question receiving their closest attention is whether new leader will rise and attempt to carry on the non-co-operation pro gramme. Officials conversant with the In dian situation are inclined, however, to believe that any Mohammedan would encounter insurmountable dif ficulties in obtaining a following among the Hindus. THE New Series of the good Maxwell provides the full measure of riding comfort which the average man and woman so keenly want and hope for. Superb performance, money saving relia bility and sturdiness these the new organization has united with a degree of roadability remark able in a car of this weight and size. Touring Car - - $1060 Sedan ----- $1725 Roadster - - - - 1060 Coupe - - - - - 1625 PORTLAND DELIVERY Covey Motor Car Co. Police Barracks at Maghera Cap tured and Constable Killed. BELFAST, March 20. Gunmen again were active in Belfast today. number of carters proceeding to work were stopped by a man who pointed a revolver at thern and. ordered them back. In the ensuing altercation one carter was wounded. An ashman employed by the city was wounded in the jaw while work ing in the Ballymacarrett section. The police barracks at Maghera., county Londonderry, were captured during the night. A Belfast special constable was shot at Tobermore, "hear Maghera, by raiders engaged in cutting wires and obstructing the road. The garrison at the Maghera bar- GRID LEY ESTATE $115,000 Mrs. W. J. Higgins, Sister, Gets Bulk of Vancouver Man's Property VANCOUVER, Wash.. March 20. (Special.) The will of ' the late Charles Clinton Gridley,' who died March 13, was filed for probate today It is estimated by the appraisers that the estate is worth $115,000. In the will, which was made ou March 13, 1921, Mr. Gridley be queathed to his sister, Mrs. W. J. Hig gins, $10,000; to a niece, Mrs. Nellie Higgins McKinley, .$10,000; to nephew, Hubert Gridley Higgins, $10,000; to the city library, $500; for fund fo'r the Methodist Sunday school, racks consisted of three members of $500; all the rest and residue., to his the--regular police force and eight specials who were surprised by overwhelming force. Previous to the attack the roads had been blocked with trees, trenches had been cut and a bridge destroyed. Telegraph com munication also was interrupted. The raiders obtained 14 rifles. sister, Mrs. Higgins. W. J. Higgins, brother-in-law, was appointed administrator, who is to receive 5 per cent of the appraised valuation for his services. Mr. Grid ley was 64 years old when he died and his father, 89, died in January. LI TD TENANTS FOUR MASKED MEN SAID TO I HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED. JURY TO BE RECALLED Bridegroom Declares He AVill Find Out Whether Klan Knows of Visit at Cascade Locks. HOOD B.IVETL Or., March 20. (Special.) Albert Stewart, here from Cascade Locks today to call on Sheriff Johnson, declared1 that he would ask for a thorough official investigation of activities of masked men who, he declares, called at his home on Wednesday night of last week. "I do not believ the klan had any thing to do with the call." said Mr. Stewart, "and I intend to go to Port land .headquarters of the organization at once and determine if it really has a. Cascade Locks affiliation or if the headquarters organization is cogni sant of any activities directed at me." Mr. Stewart has been boarding at the home of his bride, formerly Mrs. Mary C. Lee. The two were married here last Friday, two days after the mysterious call. Street rumor today Panel at Bend to Be Asked to Con sider Criminal Matters. BEND. Or., March 20. (Special.) To consider criminal matters now pending. Circuit Judge Duffy will recall the November grand jury either this week or next, he said today. This will depend on the con dition of one member of the jury George Roberts, who is now ill. In preparation for the spring term of court, which v. ill begin on April 10, a, new grand jury will be drawn: as court convenes to take care of new matters and the routine review of county affairs. The chief criminal case which will be, heard this term is that of A. J. Weston, charged with the second decree murder of Robert H. Krug, aged hermit rancher of Sisters, in the spring of 1919. RURAL MAIL IS RELAYED Star Road Work Interferes With Koute Service Deliveries. RIDGE FI ELD, Wash., March 20. (Special.) Owing to road construe tion work in progress on the Pacific highway between Woodland and La was to the effect that the masked Center, mail for the latter dace callers demanded the wedding. Other which is served by a star route, is put rumors were 10 tne eneci mat. Liiey off anj dispatched from this point, sought to make Mr. Stewart leave the David Jones, mail messenger, made city and prevent the wedding. Mrs. his initial trip here Monday under btewart accompanied her nusand here the new schedule. Two round triDs today. Both declared that no requests are made each day, with the exceo- ,were made of them. They said that tion of Sunday, when onlv one Is the masked1 visitors were seen coming from the house of a neighbor, who has won a reputation for shiftlessness. DARKEN GRAY HAIR, LOOK YOUNG, PRETTY made. The arrangement will remain in force until the highway between the two places is finished, probably late this summer. Presbyterial Meets Tomorrow. CENTRALIA, Wash., March 20. (Special.) AH parts of southwest Washington will be represented at the annual meeting of the Columbia River presbyterial, to be held in jcii x- i Centralia tomorrow and Thursday. A JSage Tea and bUlpnur Darkens luncheon tomorrow noon and a ban- So Naturally. That Nobody Can Tell. Hair that loses its color and luster, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and lifeless is caused by a lack of Sulphur in the hair. Our grandmothers made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to keep her locks dark and beautiful and thousands of women and men who value that even color, that beau tiful dark shade of hair which is so attractive, use only this old-time recipe. Nowadays we get this famous mix ture, improved by the addition of other ingredients, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," which darkens the hair so naturally, so evenly, that nobody can possibly tell it has been applied. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morn ing the gray hair disappears; but what delights the ladies with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound is that, besides beautifully darkening the hair after a few applications, it also brings back the gloss and luster and gives it an appearance, of abundance. Adv. , quet inursaay nignt win De the en tertainment features of the sessions. Among the speakers will be Mrs. Charles Williams of Portland, district secretary of the foreign missionary board; Mrs. E. S. Porter of Seattle and Miss Harriet Elliott, in charge of the Indian school and mission at Neah Bay, Wash. Mrs. Hugh McMas- ter of Camas is president of the pres byterial. 21st at Washington Sts. Broadway 6244 rTht Good THREE JURORS ACCUSED ARGUMENTS IN OBENCHAIN CASE REPORTED SPURNED. One Said to Have Beep Seen Talk- ing to Defense and District Attorney Is Notified. LOS ANGELES. Cal.. March 20. Three members of the jury who dis agreed in the case of Mrs. Madalynne Obenchain, charged with the murder of J. Belton Kennedy, visited Thomas Lee Woolwine. district attorney, to day to discuss1 with him incidents of the jury-room deliberations. They were among the nine who voted for conviction. The assertion was made, Mr. Wool- wine said later, that one of the three jurors who held out for acquittal, had been seen talking to a person inter ested in the defense during the prog ress of the trial and that all three re fused to listen to any arguments in the jury room. The district attorney declined to say what, if anything, he proposed to do as the result of the jurors' visit to him. Mr. Woolwine also said tne prose cution would move for a joint trial of Mrs. Obenchain and Arthur C. Burch. her co-defendant. Burch's first trial also ended, in a disagree-: merit. The motion may be made to morrow morning to which time Mrs. Obenchain's case was continued after the disagreement of the jury Sunday night. Bonus Bonds to Be Delivered. SALEM, Or., March 20. (Special.) Approximately $3,000,000 of the so called soldiers' bonus bonds sold re cently to a Portland bidder will be delivered to the purchaser April 1, it was announced here today. A total of $10,000,000 of these bonds were sold, approximately $3,000,000 of which were delivered some time ago. Milk Plant to Resume. HAINES. Or.. March 20.-(Special.) The Commercial Creamery com pany, which, with the exception of buying and shipping cream, has been closed down for the last two months, has announced that it will resume the manufacture of sweetened milk beginning May 1. The company will begin the manufacture of powdered milk. Several thousand dollars' worth of new machinery and equip ment will be installed, arid an addi tion to the building is also contem Postmaster to Take Office. JEFFERSON, Or., March 20.- (Spe cial.) Harry Jones, the new post master, has received his commission and will take office April 1. He has been for several years a plumber and machinist of this city and won the appointment in a race with several applicants. Epworth League Elects. JEFFERSON. Or , March 20. (Spe cial.) The Epworth league of this city met recently at the home of Mayor Allen, had a social time and elected officers for the ' ensuing year. Miss Elsie Powell is the new president, and Misses Georgia Witherite, Laura Mason, Alice . Davis, Keith Allen, Lindsay Doty and Clella Curtis are the officers to assist. The newly elected officers are planning a notable year's work. "Y" BOYS ADD MEMBERS Campaign Jubilee to Be Held by Youngsters March 31.. More than 150 members were added to the boys' division of the Portland T. M. C. A. through a campaign which covered all of the city and lasted for ten days. The crusaders were di vided into" two teams and the spirit ' of rivalry led to an effective drive. The boys' division, which consists of youths between the ages of 10 and 17 years, has swelled its membership to close to 500. Preparations have I been begun for. a season of outdoor sports. New members will be guests of honor at a campaign jubilee to be held in the association building Fri day night, March 31. Prizes in the ' campaign, wo,n' by boys signing the most members and consisting of baseball passes to the Pacific Coast league games in Port- Makes great sacrifices necessary. You know we cannot afford to spoil our reputation for good footwear gained in the last twenty years All CUT PRICES Are From Our Regular Stock and are guaranteed the same as at regular "prices. No shoes were bought special for this sale. HERE ARE JUST TWO SPECIALS taken from our immense stock. Every pair of shoes in our store is just as big a bargain because we do not want to move any shoes if low prices will do it. Ladies' and Big; Girls' PUMPS in 1 and 2 strap; all the new lasts and perforations; all leathers and every kind of heel. Ox fords come in black and brown kid and calf. Every kind of toe; all Goodyear welted oak soles; no nails or tacks to bother you. We have sold a great many of these in the last three days, but assortment and sizes are still complete. $35 5.85 Men's Ox fords, Eng lish Bis. and Bluchers are high-grade shoes taken from our regular stock; made of black, brown and tony red calf and black and brown vici kid; genuine oak tanned soles cut from the back and every pair is guaranteed to wear. None of these cost less than our special price and lots of them a great deal more. SEE THESE IN OUR FRONT CENTER WINDOW 149-151 FOURTH STREET vHOE CO. HOES Bet. Morrison and Aldrr Sts. land, credit on Y. M. O. A. member ship and on the Spirit lake summer camp and merchandise articles, will be awarded. . Winners are Robert Warner, Fred Felter. Ellis Fall, Albert Sieglinger. William Knorr, Maurice Pease, Arthur Young and Elmer Price. If Stomach is Out of Order "Diapepsin" FT 1 at. wwf Temporary Receivership Vacated. PUGET SOUND BUREAU, Seattle. Wash., March 20. The temporary re ceivership or tne Wstman Service company, and other financial concerns operated under the auspices of or ganized labor, was vacated today by order of Superior Judge Frater and hearing of argument on the petition for a permanent receiver was fixed for next Thursday. After listening t3 counsel for the defendants the court declared itself convinced that the emergency was not pressing and that the interests of the petitioners would not be further endangered by the few days' delay. Phone your want ads to the Ore gonian. Main 7070. Automatic 560-95. Every year regularly more than a million stomach sufferers in the Unit ed States. England and Canada take Pape's Diapepsin. and realize not only mmediate, but lasting relief. This harmless antacid helps digest any thing you eat and overcomes a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach in five minutes. If your meals don't fit com fortably, or what you eat lies like a ump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartourn, mat is a sign of indigestion. Get from your drug gist a sixty-cent case of Pape's Dia pepsin. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no gas or heartburn, no fullness or heavy feeling in the stom ach, no nausea, headache or intestinal griping. Prove to yourself in five minutes that your stomach is as good as any: that there is nothing really wrong. Stop this food fermentation and begin, eating what you want without fear of discomfort or indi gestion. Adv. DRINK HOT TEA J 1 FOR A BAD COLD j Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of this Hamburg tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacupful at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving conges tion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely vege table, therefore harmless. Adv. . Announcing a New Store Opening Today cogOTBAveL -.... I Wg" SIXTH STREET -Offering Suitcases ranics, oags, AND ALL MANNER OF LEATHER GOODS including an unusually fine assortment of "Ladies' Hand Bags " An exclusive specialty store of a type new to Portland dealing only in the highest class of goods but, because of expert merchandising, selling them for less than you have formerly paid for an inferior quality. . We are proud of our store. '- It will be a genuine pleasure at any time to show you what we have whether you wish to buy or not. Out service and our methods are so different from anything you have known in this line that we know you will be unable to resist praising us to your friends. In commemoration of the event we offer you on our opening day the opportunity to purchase a selection from three groups of won derful new handbags in latest Fifth avenue designs both in leather and silk at $4.95, $9.95 and $14.85. , Remember the Location: 143 Sixth, Near Alder CORNS Lift Off with Fingers 2 m SHE COOKED A MEAL Took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Read the Result Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little 'Freezone" on an aching corn, in stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift 1' right off with fin gam. Truly'. Tour druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn "between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or lrrlta tion. Adv. 1 A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes Most Women (Jan Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Weil-Known Ohio Physician. Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 year treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years h gave to his patients a prescription made .of a few well-known vegetabls ingredients mixed with olive oil, nam ing them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olv color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in sne's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts. Inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tab lets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets the suc cessful substitute for calomel now and then Just to keep them fit. 15a and SQcy Adv. . ! 1 1 1 1 I I I I I 1 1 I 1 t i L 1 1 1 I I U Cincinnati, Ohio. "I suffered for a year with nervoustroubles and irreg ularities Deiore i took Lydia B. I'inkham'a Veg etable Com pound. My back pained all the time and I was unfit for house work. I was worn out if I cooked a meal, and was un able to do my washing. My girl friends and my sister told me if I would take your Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills I would be relieved. After takinir the first bottle I felt better, and ne glected it awhile, but found I could not do my work until I was stronger. So I took the Vegetable Compound again and now I am the mother of a 19 months old boy. He is fat and healthy and I am sure I could never have carried him if it had not been for your medicine. I recommend your medicine to all women although I am young to be advising some one older. ' Mrs. Christ. Petroff, 318 W.Lib erty St., Cincinnati, Ohio. FIERY, ITCHING SKIN IS QUICKLY SOOTHED WITH THIS SULPHUR Menthol-Sulphur, a pleasant cream. will soothe and heal skin that Is irri tated or broken out with ecscma; that is covered with ugly rash or pimples. or is rough or dry. Nothing subdues fiery skin eruptions so quickly, says a noted skin specialist. The moment this sulphur prepara tion Is applied the itching stops and after two or three applications the ecsema Is gone and the skin Is delight fully clear and smooth. Sulphur Is so precious as a skin remedy because It destroys the parasites that causs the burning, itching or dlft, urement. Mentho-Sulphur always b?'ls ecsema right up. A mmmU 1r nf f en t hf -K?i 1 nhur rnftv I be had, at any good deg store, Adv. (