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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1922)
THE '-MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 A. E. F. EX-OFFICER HEADS IRISH DRIVE Colonel Proutt Accomplishes Fall of Waterford. STRONGHOLD IS TAKEN Other Cities Expected to Give Up to ex-Member ot Famous Rainbow Division." BY PAUL, WILLIAMS. CChicaso Tribune Foreign News Service. Copyright, 1922, by the Chicago Tribune.) DUIiLIN, July 20. Waterford has fallen under the aggressive attack of the Free State forces, commanded by Colonel Proutt, formerly an of ficer of the 165th infantry, American expeditionary forces, part of the famous Rainbow division. He served with that reg-iment until just be fore the Argonne offensive, when lie was transferred to another divi sion. He then was Captain John Proutt Waterford was the stronghold of the' irregulars in the southwest and the fall of other cities and towns held by them is expected. NATIONAL- FORCES SUPREME Strong Pressure Exerted on Ex tremity of Insurgent Line. DUBLIN, July 20. (By the Asso ciated Press.) A statement issued today by the Irish provisional gov ernment says the national army forces are supreme in the whole of the 12 counties. "They still have opposition to deal with," it says, "in Donegal and Kligo, and some harder work to do in Galway, Limerick and Tipperary, while Waterford, Cork and Mayo are in subjection to the irregulars. The term subjection is used ad visedly, for in these counties the people are overwhelmingly in favor of the Anglo-Irish treaty and the irregulars rule there by no other authority than that of armed force. The election reeturns showed this clearly." The statement, issued in view of reported suggestions for a peace based on compromising with the ir regulars, concludes: "The safety and future welfare of the nation depend on the power of the irregulars being broken down. Peace built on compromise with forces that behave as the ir regulars have behaved would be a peace too costly for the Irish na tion." Reports from the fighting area today Indicated a pressure by the national army forces on each ex tremity of the insurgent line, de veloping powerfully and extending roughly from Limerick and Water ford, thereby cutting off virtually the whole of Munster province. An attack on Waterford was made by troops advancing from Kilkenny, preceded by parties of engineers, who removed the heavy obstruc tions in the road and reached the outskirts of Waterford Tuesday evening. The nationalists found the main part of the city cut off through the drawbridge over the River Suir being raised. The railway bridge was impassable and the troops opened the attack from the north side of the river with machine guns and rifle fire, while 18-pounders Bhelled the irregulars' barracks. Dublin wag again isolated from Belfast today, both as regards rail road and telephonic communica tions. MAGISTRATES' SEAL LOST Creation of 40 New Officials Is "Held Up Indefinitely. tChicapo Tribune Foreign News Sorvice. Copyright, 3022, by the Chicago Tribune.) BELFAST, July 20. A peculiar situation has arisen regarding the creation of 40 new magistrates for Belfast and County Down. Assent to the appointment was obtained, but the official seal, without which commissions cannot be legally is sued by the lord lieutenant, was de stroyed in Dublin castle. The appointments have been held up indefinitely, but it is believed that sanction for a new seal may be obtained. Luncheons in honor of some of the new magistrates were canceled because of the hitch. PINE BEETLE IS TARGET Timber in Klamath Palls Country Injured, Says Forester. A. J. Jaenicke, forest examiner, Jias recently returned from the Klamath Falls country, where he has been engaged in solving the jjrumem or protecting rorest lands against the western pine beetle. I here are approximately l.OOO.nno acres of timber shared by the gov ernment and private concerns in Lake and Klamath counties, Oregon, and Modoc county, California, where control of the pine beetle is being worked upon. This embraces about 1.000,000,000 feet of some of the finest pine in the west. Many spots in this area have Buffered severely from the western pine beetle," said Mr. Jaenicke, "and an attempt is being made to control the pest. The financing of the work has been solved by the appropria tion by congress of $150,000." HIGHWAY PICNiC SUNDAY North Bank Association to Mark Opening of Road. VANCOUVER, Wash., July 20.,-' (Special.) The North Bank High way association will hold a picnic Sunday to mark the opening of the North Bank highway to traffic. The road has been closed for two months while the 1.5-mile stretch known as the Biddle Cutoff was being paved. The picnic will be held on the place of Henry J. Bid die, six miles east of Fishers. R. M. Gillis, state highway engi neer in charge of the district of fice. Judge A. L. Miller of Van couver, M. E. Carson, county com missioner, and Arthur L. IThayer, president of the association, will speak. The association was formed for the purpose of getting the high way paved. The road is now com plete from Vancouver to Camas. . U CONCERNS CHARTERED Ajax Lumber Company, Portland, Flies Incorporation Papers. SALEM. Or., July 20. (Special.) The Ajax Lumber company, with a capital stock of $25,000 and head quarters in Portland, has been In- corporated by V. J. Phillips. E. G. Leighy and M. A. Phillips. Other corporations filed today follow: Pioneer Soda Works, Portland, $1000: I. Freeman, R. Parson, and A. Mschln kl. Sundown Ranch, Sisters, Deschutes county, $10,000; B. L. Tone, Helen Tone and Gilpin Lovering. Sugar & White Pine company, Port land, $50,000; D. C. Eccles, Gus Leull witz and Frank H. Hilton. Long-Bell Ferry company, Portland, $20,000; Ben C. Dey, Alfred A. Hampson and I. Edward Tonkon. L Perkins Auto company, Hillaboro, $uuuu; vv. H. Masters, Ijrace J. -tsuriun and Roseoe P. Hurst. Parisian Shoe company, Portland, $15,000; L. B. Greenfield, Karl Herblng and A. M. Dibble. Dindla & Co, Portland, $20,000; Aug- Carter E. Talman, Richmond, Ya elected president of American Institute of Bdfcktng in closing scHHion yesterday. iiat Dindia, Tony Valpe and lLawrence Oberer. The Columbia Hotel company lias in creased its capital stock from $1100,000 to $300,000. The Producers Finance corporation, or ganized under the laws of Delaware, has made application to operate in Oregon. TDWH REPORTED BOBBED BLUE RIVER ALMOST WIPED OUT, SAYS MESSAGE. Antlers, One of Best Mountain Hotels In ' State, Among Buildings Destroyed. EUGENE, Or, July 20. (Special.) Most of the town of Blue River, 45 miles east of Eugene on the McKen- zie river, was destroyed by fire late this afternoon, according to word received here tonight. Only meager details of the blaze have been re ceived here, the single telephone line up the McKenzie valley being out of order and the only means of com munication being by way of the for est service telephone through a roundabout circuit connecting with Oak Ridge on the upper Willamette river. The fire started in the Antlers hotel, a structure valued at about $20,000, including improvements re cently installed by the new owners, Maurice MarquisS and William Price of Eugene. , According to information from Mc Kenzie bridge by way of Oak Ridge, the fire spread to nearby frame buildings, then rapidly ran up the tlnountain back of the .hotel. Smith L. Taylor, chief ranger in the Cascade national forest, had a large crew of men at work trying to prevent the flames entering the tall timber. - If most of the town burned as re ported the buildings destroyed in cluded the large stage station across the road from the hotel, a store op erated by Mrs. Nellie Edwards and between 15 and 20 residences. The public school building, near by, also may have been destroyed. The hotel was one of the best mountain hotels in the state, the new owners having recently spent between $4000 and $5000 on improve ments. It was built in 1903 during the height of the mining boom in the Blue River district and remoTdJ at an expenditure of 10,000, 15 years ago. AUTO COMPANY IS SUED Local Firm Charged With Con spiracy to Defraud. With the charge that David A. Pepp, president of the Pepo Motor Car company, and his wife, Ida Pepp, secretary-treasurer of he company, conspired to defraud him of $7644, Chester A. Adwen filed suit to re cover that amount in: the. circuit court yesterday. Adwen asserts that the Pepp Motor Car company "is used as dummy and subterfuge in deceiving and defrauding the public" His complaint is that be traded an auto mobile valued at $3350 for another to the company, giving $1000 cash and a note for $2350, later to find that Pepp had assigned his note to the Western Finance company, which foreclosed on the mortgage given. Adwen asserts he lost $1944 in the deal. The remainder of the sum sought is for promised advances and commissions while working for TPepp as a Balesman. GUNMAN TO BE DEPORTED Tong Affiliations of Chinese In dicted for Murder Are Mystery, "A solution devoutly to be hoped for in the case of all Chinese tong gunmen not directly guilty of murder," was the comment of Stan ley Myers, district attorney yester day as he turned Chin Sic, gunman, over to Raphael P. Bonham, immi gration inspector, for deportation. Chin Sic was indicted jointly with numerous other Chinese on August 30, 1921, for murder in the first de gree as the result of the shooting of Lai Lung on August 1, 1921, dur ing a tong war. He was not thought, one jt the men who fired the fatal shots but was indicted as a co-conspirator in the murder. There was little likelihood of con victing him of the crime. The exact tong affiliations of Chin Sic are something of a mys tery. That other gunmen under indict ment may be deported also is prob able, according to Mr. Myers. Minors Get Marriage Licenses. VANCOUVER. Wash., July 20. (Special.) Marriage licenses were issued today to two minora Joseph Van Gastel, 20, a soldier stationed at Vancouver barracks, married Miss Laura Chllds, 20, of Vancouver. The boy had his guardian's consent to the marriage. Joy E Weedin, 17, was married to Charles Zirkle, 22, of Clatskanie, Or. The girl's mother, Mrs. Agnes Weedin, accompanied her. WALLOWA LAKE EDS H Beauty Spot Is Declared Visited by but Few.v FLORA WORK DISCUSSED Extension Would ' Connect Witli Route of Travel That Ex tendVFrom Lewiston. : PENDLETON. Or.. July 20. (Spe cial.) For scenery and roads to- day's run of the highway commis sion was especially notable. Day break found R. A, Booth, John B. Yeon and W. B. Barratt of the com mission and Governor Olcott gazing at one of the most beautiful outdoor pictures in Oregon. . Wallowa lake, nestling at" the feet of a semi-circle of Sawtooth mountains, presented an entrancing picture. With the Jagged, snow spotted skyline and the placid lake mirroring the crags, it all was like a bit of scenery from the Swiss Alps. It is surpassed only by the grandeur of Crater lake. Few tourists penetrate to Wal lowa lake, a few miles out of Jo seph, Or., because Wallowa county has nothing but a dead-end high way and tourists object to back tracking. Extension 1m Proposed. One result of this inspection tour of the highway commission is the prospect of developing an extension from Flora to the Oregon line, to connect with a highway coming down from Lewiston. If this road is completed and in time it must be constructed tourists will flock through Wallowa until there will be such a throng that as one enthusi astic citizen of Enterprise put it, there will have to be a gate built to keep out the crowds. A highway extending from Flora to Lewiston would, to the lay mind, be more ad vantageous than the talked of Wal lula cutoff. The members of the commission traveled 223 miles yesterday, from Ontario to Enterprise, arriving near midnight. This morning they back tracked to La Grande over the first- class highway which the state and county have co-operated in building. The highway, is now graded around Minam mountain, ascending on a rive per cent, grade until it is 1000 feet above the Wallowa river, a, picturesque, rushing stream. This grade is nearly five miles in length. At La Grande this afternoon the commission held a meeting with the local citizens. The latter urged im mediate construction of the over crossing at Orodell, explaining that Union county has bonded itself to the 6 per cent limit and can aid no more. Speakers argued that this overhead should be finished before gaps elsewhere in counties which have not bonded heavily are pro vided for. Bonds Held Sufficient. ' Chairman Booth explained that the bonds voted by Union were euf ficient for the road programme, but that it was not properly distributed Thus, one road has more money un der the bonds than is required and the main highway road is a little short, he said, adding that if the surplus on one can be used on the other this financial problem-could be solved. Speakers said, however, that all attorneys they had consulted on the matter were of the opinion that the transfer could not be made. One citizen proposed that 40, 50 or 100 individuals personally guaranteo that the country's quota for the overhead at Oro Dell be paid. When the commission, departed for Pen dleton it was with the understand ing that the money situation would be studied further. In the course, of his remarks, Mr. Booth declared that the saving for each mile between a good road and bad road for an automobile . is 5 cents. Mr. Booth quoted Engineer McKesson of the bureau- of public roads. This would mean, continued Mr. Booth, a saving of $25 for every car traveling the Columbia river highway and its extension, the Old Oregon trail. . , Saving In Estimated. One thousand cars a day would mean a saving of $25,000 and the highway chairman projected his fig ures further when- traffic will be more heavy, so that the totals ran into the millions. Using the figures of Mr. McKesson, Chairman Booth showed that the east and west high way will pay for Itself In economic saving to motorists in five years. This is the first time that the com mission has presented this aspect of the value of rdan improvements. The message was delivered to the La Grande residents, as well as to those at Ontario, Baker, Prairie, Coos bay and elsewhere, to, hang together until the road programme is wound up. With proper assist ance from the state and co-operation with the federal government the assertion was made that in five years all the state roads would be constructed. f One of the main objects of the present tour of inspection has ben to visit the border counties and see what conditions are and what must be done in the way of road building to hold them closer to the heart of Oregon. The wealthier counties of the interior and the Willamette valley, it has been told time and again at hearings, can wait better than the expansive and sparsely settled counties. : Good Roada Held Needed. The best way to ihold the people of Oregon together and make them neighbors, contends the commission. ts to furnish good roads. At La Grande, Governor Olcott took occasion to say that, despite rumors in the press that two or all of the highway commissioners are aoout to resign, that he has no res lgnations from these roadmen on his desk, nor does he want them to re linquish their task. He said that it is an easier matter to select and appoint a United States senator than to find a man properly qualified for a highway commission appointment and who win neglect his persona affairs 80 per cent of the time. From La Grande the commission covered the Old Oregon Trail sec tion to -Pendleton. -The last unim proved portion of this Toad was placed un-der contract last month, and already the contractors are es tablishing camps. This section from Deadman's hill to Kamela will not be completely graded be fore next year. Following the hearing at Pendle ton tonight, the commission, leaves Friday morning to look over the so-called Pilot Rock road, which was placed on the map several years ago, but on which nothing has been done. The tracing of this highway will take the commission to the John Day highway at Prairie. The party; will swing through Spray, along Picture gorge;- te -Heppnerj whre they will rest Friday night Saturday night, according to pres ent plans, will find the inspection tour ended. GUARD'S RECORD GOOD 26 Oregon Companies Improve in Attendance at Drill. SALEM. Or., July 20. (Special.) Twenty-six .of the 32 organiza tions of the Oregon national guard showed an increase in drill attend ance during the past month, acr cording to the monthly compar ative statement "put out yesterday by George A. White, adjutant gen eral. The Cottage Grove machine gun company again led the list of companies- with an average of 70 out of 75 men attending each drill during the month. Company B, 162d infant ry of Portland was in second place, the Silverton infantry company third and company B, 186th infantry of Portland, fourth. The Medford in fantry company and Ashland ar tillery company were again at the bottom of the list, although both showed slight gains over the pre ceding month. CONVENTION HERE LIKELY . R. Ritter of Portland Also in Line to Head Realtors. VANCOUVER, B. C, July 20. Ad vertising and city planning were the principal topics of discussion at to day's session of the sixth annual convention of the Northwest Real Estate association. The meetings were conducted in district sections attended by delegates from Idaho, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia. Portland, Or., is regarded as likely to be the choice of the association at Its next meeting place and A, R. Ritter of that city will probably be chosen president. - Decision in these matters will be the last business of the convention before it closes Sat urday. ' BIG PEAR PACK LIKELY Salem Dealers Expect to Get 850 Tons of Fruit. SALEM, Or., July 20. (Special.) 1 Approximately 350 tons of pears will be handled by Salem packers this year, according to announce ment made here today. This year's pack probably will exceed last sea son's receipts by more than 500 tons. Only about 1200 tons of this year's pack will be grown in the vicinity of Salem. The remainder of the pears will be shipped in from southern Oregon and Wash ington. In 1921 the growers re ceived approximately $60 for their pears, but it is not believed they will receive more than $50 this season. - ROAD MOTION IS HEARD i Folk County ' Asks Reimburse ment by Highway Commission. SALEM, Or., July 20. (Special.) Hearing on a motion to amend the decree of the court in the case of Polk county against the state high way commission, was granted to Martin L. . Pipes, representing the county, by Judge Kelly. The motion asked that all funds, amounting to $43,000, paid from the market road fund of JPOlk county to the highway commission, he re turned to the county. Although no ' decision was given by Judge Kelly, he Intimated that the records did not show that the county had paid the commission any of the $43,000, B Portland's Oldest Specialty Shop partfjolometa'si . WASHINGTON AT TENTH Dissolution XT 1NINE days more to sell every garment in our 'entire . stock. Positively everything must go, regardless of cost Tweed suits at fifteen dollars, fur scarfs at less than half, sport capes at ten dollars are a few of the many savings. All suits, coats, dresses and waists at prices never before seen in our store. Bartholomew sales are always real sales. This one we believe the greatest of all. We will not disappoint TS E- Culberson of Jexas in Ser ate for 23 Years. RECORD HELD PERFECT Veteran Legislator Votes o Every Bill, but Never Speaks; Opponents Are Five. BY MARK SULLIVAN. (Copyright by the New York Evening rosi. ruBiished ty Arrangement.) WASHINGTON', D. C, July 20. (Special.) The primary in Texas Saturday, so far as the United States senatorshlp is concerned, revolves around the only member of the sen ate in the present generation and i probably one of very few in the sen ate's history, who could insert in his appeal to, the people of his state for another term the following sen tence: "The sessions of the congress during my present term covered 1217 days and I haven't missed a day." With this goes the fact that Sena tor Charles A. Culberson has made fewer speeches than any of his fel low senators; that he has probabaly actually sat in the senate chamber for a larger number of hours, ac tually answered a larger number of roll-calls, and actually voted one way or the other on more measures than any other sitting senator. Mr. Culberson is one senator on whom it does not take any cloture rule to enforce silence. If silence Is the supreme virtue of a senator. Mr. Culberson is the first in the body. He votes on every measure and speaks on none. Record Held Perfect. The reason for Mr. Culberson's silence is a physical disability in the nature of what old-fashioned persons usel to call palsy. This physical disability, which merely prevents Senator Culberson from speaking and does not at all pre vent him from otherwise carrying his full weight according to his convictions, is being put forward by some, of his opponents in Texas as a reason for retiring him into the private life. A good many other persons in Texas, however, make precisely the opposite argument, and it has been , said occasionally during the campaign that Mr. Cul berson, as a senator who talks least and votes oftenest, has - close to a perfect senatorial record. "He hasn't missed a rolleall," is a phrase frequently heard among his supporters. Mr. Culberson is also helped by the very length of his services. His 23 years give him the longest record of continuous serv ice among the democrats. Simmons of North Carolina is next, wtth 21 "years. In this respect Mr. Culber son has among democrats the posi tion that Lodge has among repub licans. Ha KIux Klnn la imue. There are four other contestants for Culberson's seat. One of them, ex-Representative Robert L. Henry, Is putting the burden of his can didacy on his membership in and his outspoken " loyalty . to the Ku Klux Klan, which is one of the ma jor Issues in the contest. Mr. Cul berson at the very beginning of his candidacy denounced the klan in a public letter which said: "I have no affiliation directly or 1 SHE ENATOR ASKS R ELECTIO Sale - . you. Indirectly with this organization and I am unqualifiedly opposed to its operations. If not curbed it will usurp the 'functions of state and de stroy government itself. It will in deed overthrow our Anglo-Saxon civilization in its relation to govern ment. Steps should be taken, there fore, at once to arrest its progress and finally to destroy it." N- Doable Primaries in Effect. The other candidates for Senator D0UBI 2.VC GREEN mm TRADING STAMPS 1 Leather Goods Collar Boxes, Manicure Sets, Bill Folds, Vanities and Ladies' Patent Leather Purses. Values to ?5.00; while they PO Art last, special only. . wUl Coat Hangers, with case, reg ular $1.50; special... $1.00 Vanity Boxes, regular price $17.00; special at.. $11.50 Shopping- Bags, placed on sale at only 750 ft m. X. ' '1 . it r: Traveling Bags Regular $85.00 to $38.00 special . .$22.50 Likly Kit Bags Regular $60.00 special.......... $42.50 Likly Traveling Bags Regular $24.00 special $18.50 Likly Traveling Bags Regular $42,00 special. .. . .$29.50 Suit Cases Regular $20.00 special $15.50 Likly .Cowhide Traveling Bags Reg. $50 special. .$30.00 Traveling Bags Regular $15.00 special $12.50 Summer Beauty Needs Clawood Lemon Cream for out ing trips, sunburn, windburn and chapped hands or face; P)Q Miolena Freckle Cream. .$1.00 Miolena Face Powder 750 Miolena Liquid Face Pow der for 500 Miolena Nail Glow 250 Miolena Hand Lotion 250 Miolena Cucumber Cream. .500 Miolena Vanishing Cream. .500 Miolena Cleansing Cream.. 500 NIKK-MARR DEMON- : STRATION Liquid Face 1 Dressing, special. .... .500, $1 Velvet Balm... 500, $1 Velvet Cream.. 500, $1 Velvet Liquid Rouge at only 250, 500 Elastic Hosiery Silk Anklet, each... $3.50 Silk Knee Caps, ea.. .$3.50 Silk Garter Leggings, each $3.75 Silk Garter Stockings, each $5.00 Made to your measure on our own loom. of the beat . material obtainable. Candy 5 Assorted Jelly Can- E dies, per lb... 250 E Creamed Almonds, E per lb... 390 jmiimiuiiimiiiiiiimiiiimiiL AT NOR A number of the Great Northern. Railway company's regular employes having left its service, it is necessary to hire men to fill their places t 7 at wages and working conditions prescribed by the United States Railway Labor Board, effective July 1, 1922. APPLY 214 CHAMBER COMMERCE Culberson's seat have set them selves forward on platforms which include charges of mismanagement of the federal reserve system, ad vocacy of the league of nations. In dorsement of prohibition and the Volstead act by one candidate and denunication of it by another. Texas has an unusual system of double primaries. Of the five "men in the primary on Saturday the two who get the highest vote will engage on Friday and Saturday JULY 21 AND 22 WE WILL GIVE . Double Green Trading Stamps Stationery Saxon Linen, clear white pound paper, 72 sheets and 50 en- ' velopes; special ...'....540 Deckle Edge Correspondence Paper, Irish linen, 72 sheets and 25 envelopes. .. .$1.00 Correspondence Cards, Coy more linen, gilt edge... 470 "Miss Simplicity" delicately tinted paper and envel opes; special at 430 Vacation Sneeial Bags Sale SWP PAINT Regular colore, tfQ f9f? per gallon J White only, per &A ff gallon D'.UU (10c less per gallon Inside Floor Paint per gallon Inside Floor Paint half gallon Inside Floor Paint per quart Sheep Dip Fine ' For Hair and Scalp BactorlologiBU. Medical Scienc, ndor the wonderful action of Sheep Dip. After yan of experimenting- to obtain the exact requirement in formulating St pol combined with Sheep Dip Dradorlnd and other imdioal properties th. result, have met the approval of thousands of men and women. . . Th. remarkabl. action of Sepol protect, tha scalp from gum lif. which is isMntial to proper hair growth and beautiful hair. Giving a new life-like gloss, lustre and attractiveness. For Excessive Oil, Llfeles. Hair. Itchlnr Scalp. Dandruff and Fallinr Hair it haa no equal. You today can double th. beautj of your hair by th. regular use of Sepol. Being far superior to ordinary Soap and water. Delightful to use. illlli DRUGGISTS Alder Street at West Park THERN RAILWAY Machinists . . . .70 cents per hour Boilermakers 70 cents per Wir Blacksmiths 70 cents per hour Stationary engineers 57 cents per hour Stationary firemen ............ 47 cents per hour .. Sheet metal and other work ers in this line 70 cents per hour Freight car repairers 63 cents per hour Car inspectors 63" cents per hour Helpers, all crafts 47 cents per hour Engine house laborers 35 cents per hour August 26 in a second primary known as the "run off." It is gen erally conceded that Mr. Culberson will be one of the highest two in the primary on Saturday. Multnomah Camp, No. 77, W. O. W., will give away $300 worth of prices at their annual picnic at Crys tal Lake park, Sunday, July 23. Adv. mi': Fountain Pens 1 Our Fountain Pen department has an expert in attendance. Let us fit your hand to a WATERMAN COXKLIN MOORES DUNN or SHEAFFER FOUNTAIN PEN ' If your old pen misbehaves j see our Pen Doctor E Our stock of Eversharps is H always complete. E Household Needs 1 Clawood Imported Olive Oil, E guaranteed; 8 ounces 60, 1 E pint $1.00 Cream Tartar, lb. 400, 1 E pound 756 E Extract of Vanilla, 2 oz.. . .256 E Extract of Lemon, 2 oz....250 E Parowax, 1 lb. 15 For sealing fruit no phone orders. Deliveries only with other goods. Certo, makes perfect jams and jellies 350 Genuine Russian Oil, pt $1 C. & W. Insect Powder, 2 oz. for 250 Sherwin-Williams SWP PAINTS You cannot make . a mistake in buying SWP label paints. They go farther, last longer and are cheaper in the long run. Thirty-one colors, black and white to select from. PORCH PAINT Porch Paint, per (j0 rrr gallon I O Tha best for your front porch and steps. in 5-eallon lots.) $3.50 ." .-'...$1.00 $1.00 Sale of .. . Bathing Suits We carry a complete line of E the famous Jantzen and E Cascade bathing suits. E Ladies' $6.25 Boys' ....$4.50 Men's $6.00 Girls' $5.50 E Oregon's Knitting Co.'s all- E wool bathing suits Sizes 32 to 86; (PQ QQ special at DOVO Sizes 38 to 42; QO special at tDt.JO E Vim Alarm Clocks Regular $1.23 Now 89? iimiuiiiimmiiiiiiiimiiMi BLDG., Stark and 4th A ? A