THE MORXIXO OREGOMAX. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 4, 1922 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF City Editor ; .Main 7070. 560-95 Sunday Editor Main 7070. 5H0-D5 Advertising Dept.. i Main 7070. 500-95 jenteadent of BIdg. Main 7070. 0C0-U5 AMCSEMEXTS. 'ORPHEUM. (Broadway at Taylor) Vaudeville, afternoon only. HIWODROME (Broadway at Yamhill) Vaudeville and moving pictures con tinuous daily, 1:15 to 11 P. M. PANT AGES (Broadway at Alder) Vaudeville. Three bIiowb daily, 2:30, 7 and 9 P. M. Fire Trophy to Be Presented. T. H. Williams, chairman of the committee in charge of th.e fire pre vention entertainment to be held next Monday, in the public audi torium, has arranged his programme. A feature of this meeting will be the presentation of the Thomas Ince cup to Portland for having the best fire prevention record in states on the Pacific slope last year. j Jay iitevens, in charge of the fire pre vention bureau of the fire under writers association, will present the r;up and Edward Grdnfell. fire mar shal!, will accept it on behalf of the city. Mayor Baker will make a short f Exposition Envoy Is En Rodt?. ; Portland Chamber of Commerce and j the 1925 exposition will be repre sented at the commercial conference of the Pan-Pacific union which be gins in Honolulu October 25, by William McMurray, general passen ger agent of the Union Pacific sys tem, Mr. McMurray left Seattle Saturday for the Hawaiian islands, carrying vuh him literature de scriptive of Portland and Oregon and also printed matter advertising the exposition. Officers of the Pan Pacific union have launched a cam paign to have the 19-5 conference of the national foreign trade coun cil held in one of the Pacific north west cities and McMurray will direct his energies toward having Portland recommended as the meeting place. Sunday Shaves Target. Here after travelers who expect to be shaved in hotel rooms Sundays are due for disappointment, if the state board of barber examiners has its way. Roy Neer, secretary of the board, yesterday swore out. a com plaint charging Otto Schwabe with having violated a law prohibiting barbers from working at their trade on Sunday. The maximum penalty ; for the offense is $50 and the board seeks to make an example of the barber The law under which talk, as will Mr Stpvnn. and the fire department will stage a playlet Schwabe is being prosecuted was which promises to be thrilling and Passed 20 years ago in order to give unique. Musical numbers are in cluded on the programme. The pub lic will be admitted without charge. Child's Art Lecture Subject. Friday at 4 o'clock, Dr. S. C. Kohs will speak at the museum of art on "The Psychology of a Child's Art." There will be no admittance fee. This lecture is g-iven in connection with the unusual and highly inter esting exhibition of drawings, paint ings and lithographs by Pamela Rianco, who is not yet 16 years old. The 300 pictures shown include ex quisite line drawings, gay color ef f fects, childish humor and serious expressions of a young artist's .feel ings, all refreshing in their vitality and completeness. . The exhibition will be in Portland for but a short Chiropractors Initiate Class. Alpha Beta Theta society of the Ore gon State College of Chiropracti initiated a class ot" about 50 student Monday night. At different section of the city the candidates were forced to go through laughabl stunts to the amusement of th crowd that watched them. After th. initiation all repaired to the Mult nomah hotel where a dinner wa served to about 100 persons. Speeches, vaudeville acts and mu fcieal stunts kept things busy until midnight. Rev. Charles MacCaughey Anthony Kuwer, Dr. P. O. Riley, John Gratke, Ir. William Hoffman, iJr, Roy Peebles and others, spoke Bible Meeting to Be Held. special meeting of Hebrews and Christians wHI be held this evening at 8 o'clock at the Bible Standard mission, 162 Second street. Rev Charles Rosenstria of . the Hebrew mission of JLos Angeles, Rev. Fred Hornshuh and Alfred Elias Koch of the Portland mission, will be pres ent. .li?s Eva and Uuth Foster, as. sis ted by Foster's orchestra, will give several musical selections. This is the first of a series of meetings to be conducted every Wednesday evening at the Bible Standard mis sion for the Jewish people of Port' land. The general public is cor dially invit'ed. District Deputies Appointed. Colon Ji. Eberhard of La Grande lodge of Elks has been appointed district deputy in Oregon north for J. E. Masters, grand exalted ruler of the Elks. The appointment reached Mr. Eberhard yesterday. Mr, Eber hard is past exalted ruler of his lodge and has been promiently Iden tified with the Oregon State Elks association. He is a member of the state senate. Frank D. Cohan of Miarshfield lodge has been appointed district deputy for Oregon south. New School Building Needed. A new high school building to re place the present structure at Mil waukle must be built in the near future, it was decided at a meeting last Friday night of the Milwaukie Parent-Teacher association, held primarily as a reception for the old and new teachers of Milwaukie. The present school is crowded, with 155 high and 27 grade school children using it, according to reports pre sented at the meeting, Children Hold Harvest Fete. Drills and psjgeants by the children featured the old-fashioned harvest festival given on the grounds of the St, Mary's Institute, near Beaverton, Saturday and Sunday afternoons and evenings. The Knights of Columbus band of Portland gave a programme of music in connection with the af fair. Dinner also was served. Thou sands of friends of the institute at tended the festival from Portland and other towns of the state. Road Contract Book Issued. A road contract book for the use of the county court and road contrac tors has been issued by Harvey E. Cross, county judge of Clackamas county, and is believed to be the only one of its kind issued by an Oregon county. It goes Into details regarding all possible contingencies that might" arise in road-building and is designed to make misunder standings between county officers and road builders impossible. Trails Club President to Speak. The Old Oregon Trail association, of which W. E. Meacham of Baker is president, will have charge of the programme at the members' forum luncheon at the Chamber of Com merce next Monday Delegates to the meeting from Baker. La Grande, Wallowa, Elgin, Enterprise, Pendle ton and The Dalles will, attend, Frederick V. Holm an will be chair man for the occasion. Lecture on Christian Science. A lecture on Christian Science will be delivered by Blcknell Young, Christian Science board, of Chicago, 111., at the municipal auditorium, Friday evening. Mr. Young is an authorized lecturer for The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Bos ton, Mass The lecture will be free to the public. Lost. Lady's platinum diamond bar pin Saturday afternoon between 4:30 and 5:30 m Olds, Wortman ib King s or .on Tenth street near Mor rison, or in front of Heilig theater, or on Third near Main. If found please phone East 5677, or 6S3 East Madison street. Liberal reward. Adv. Aged Man Collapses. O. Young, a 70-year-old inmate of the Oddfel lows' home at Thirty-third and Hol gate streets, wandered from the home some time Monday and fell exhausted at Thirty-eighth and Gladstone streets, not many blocks away. Poilce found him there and took him back to the home Methodists to Get Together. A dinner and get-together meeting are planned by the officials of the Sell wood Methodist church for next Fri day night. The principal speaker of the evening will be Rev, Charles W. MacCaughey. The dlnn-r will be in charge of the Ladies' Aid society. Landscape Gardener to Speak Howard Evarts Weed will speak at the Vernon branch library. 1039 Sev enteenth street North, next Friday evening, at S o'clock, on landscape gardening. The public is jnvited. Society Will Give Dance. The Franco-Belgium society will give a dance at the East Side Business Men's club this evening. Friends are invited to attend. UALITY and value are strongly combined in these stylish, all-wool Kuppe 11 h e inter Overcoats at $35, $40, $45 The House of Kuppenheimer has produced this season the great est overcoat and suit values in many years. Note well the hew prices.. Remember they're for Kuppenheimer quality! the hair removers a chance to rest .one day in the week and protect j them from competition while resting. Two in Auto Are Hurt. Painful bruises were sustained by Mrs. Reu ben J. Summeriin and' Glenda Sum merlin, both of 762 East Pine street, when an automobile in which they were riding collided with a Monta villa street car at East Twenty fourth and East Ankeny streets yes terday. The car was driven by Mrs. F E. Bevington, 762 Cleveland ave nue. In her report to the police she said that her machine was struck on the rear end by a westbound street car as she was driving north on East Twenty-fourth street. She was not injured. 1 Chamber Officials Leav& O. W. Mielke, president of the Chamber of Commerce, will leave this morning for Bend, where he will attend the Oregon irrigation congress, October o, 6 and 7. W. D. B. Dodson, general manager of the chamber, left last night for the same distination. Today he will attend the sessions of the Oregon development board at Bend, which meets one day in ad vance of the irrigation gathering. Both the Portland men are on the programme at- the sessions to de liver addresses. Rail Officials Here. J. G. Wood worth, vice-president in charge of the traffic of the Northern Pacific railway, returned last night from Seaside, where he spent the past two days. Mr. Woodworth expects to remain here two days longer. George T. Reid of Seattle, western vice-president and general counsel for the Northern Pacific, reached Portland yesterday and Wilbur E. Coman, western traffic manager for the same company at Seattle, is also In Portland All three officials are frequent visitors. Fire Work to Be Demonstrated. The inside operations of the fire bureau will be shown at the lunch eon of the Ad club at the Benson hotel today noon.. Fire Marshal Grenfell and Lieutenant Boatright will h in chn rfp nrt will ricmnn. I nnnnlopUu nf "ToVo TV rnm A1 a" strate the use of fire alarm boxes, I is said to be due to its story as the house of Kuppenheimer good clothes MORRISON STREET AT FOURTH Drainage Budgets Inspected. Tax budgets for drainage districts of Multnomah county came under the scrutiny of the tax supervising and conservation commission yester day morning at the initial session of that body to consider levies for next year. The commission will hold meetings every morning from now on until it has passed upon the yearly budgets of the 80 odd tax levying bodies of the county. The districts under discussion yesterday were Peninsula Nos. 1 and 2, Sandy and Multnomah No. 1. Two Ask Divorces. Two divorce suits were filed in the circuit court yesterday. Both plaintiffs charged desertion. The suits were those of Spencer T. against Ethel G. Num rich and Lillian against H. C. Hays. Dr. A. A. Grossman, SIS Selling building, has returned. Adv. Dr. Wm. F. Fiebig has returned- Adv. : 'HOSPITALITY IS LUED BISHOP SCMXER GRATEFUIi TO PORTLAND PEOPLE. HE1LIG OPEN TOMORROW "Take It From Me," Musical Comedy, to Be Shown 3 Pays. The Heilis theater will open its season tomorrow with a three-day run of the musical comedy success, "Take It from Me." which has scored heavily in New York, Chi cago. Philadelphia and Boston. The tickers and Bending and receiving apparatus, all of which will be In stalled in the Crystal room for the occasion. Moving pictures of the fire bureau in action also will be shown. Byard Johnson of the fire bureau will sing. Bond Ordinance Up. An ordi nance authorizing City Treasurer Adams to call in redemption bonds of the former city of St. Johns will be considered by the city council to day The bonds included in the call are numbered from 662 to 672, in clusive. Another ordinance to be considered today would authorize Treasurer Adams to call in a series of improvement bonds of the city of Portland payable out of the im provement bond sinking fund. Personal Damages asked. Onnie Bishop, guardian for Karlo Bishop, 18 years old, filed suit in the cir cuit court yesterday against Mont gomery Ward & Co. for damages of $434.89. The suit alleged that the boy was injured in the amount prayed for when a box fell on him. It was alleged that the company was careless in permitting the minor employe to work without requisite assistance. Chamber Excursion Arranged. Reservations are still pouring in to the Chamber of Commerce for the pecial excursion train that will carry 100 Portland business men nto 23 cities and towns of south western Washington, leaving here October 22. The communities where the special will stop have arranged varied programme of entertain ment that will be noted for its vari- ty and sincerity. Portland Railway Sued. Hazel FJoyd stepped off a Mount Scott car ne day last June and sprained her ight foot, she alleged in a damage uit filed against the Portland Rail way, Light & Power company yes terday. Damages of $5000 were sked. The company was declared o have been negligent in allowing pile of earth to be placed at the point where the plaintiff alighted from the car Bank Superintendent Sues. Frank C. Bramwell. superintendent of banks for the state of Oregon, yesterday filed suit in 'the circuit court to collect $7499.53 due on a promissory note in favor of -the State bank. The defendants are the Seaborg Packing company, Frank L. We,Uer, Christian TJosevig and W. S. Short. Bridge Proponents Meet. Pro ponents of the Ross island bridge proposal will appear before the Mount Scott Improvement club to. night at the club's regular monthly meeting in the Arleta branch library at S o'clock. R. B. Wright, United States engineer with the bureau of public roads, will speak on the ad vantages of the proposed structure. Social Work Luncheon Topic W. H. Stone, general secretary of the Y. M. C. A., will be the speaker at the social workers' noon luncheon at the Seward grill today He will tell of the welfare and educational activities of the Y. M. C. A. Reser vations for this luncheon made at( Seward grill desk. Figuiara Hearing Today. Juan Figuiara will appear in Municipal Judge Ekwall's court today to an swer charges of possession of stolen goods. He was arrested at Third and Burnside streets Mondav after he hart ' sold a suit said to have been stolen from a Lipraan & Wolfe delivery wagon. Street Car Patron Hurt. The sudden starting of a street car at East Sixth and Morrison streets yes terday threw J. A. Curley. 1034 East Morrison street, from the platform to the pavement. He was taken to St Vincent's hospital with a frac tured left shoulder. Robbery Is Reported. A. N. Arnes of Woodburn complained to the police that someone had taken his purse from his pocket on his way up town from the St. Charles hotel yesterday, removed 45 from it and placed it back in his ppeket. Marguerite Jackson, stenog rapher, has moved her office from room 712 to 209 Chamber of Com well as many novelties, colorful productions and its music, which is full of tinkley melodies. There will be a matinee showing on Saturday. The cast cl "Take It From Me" includes Alice Hill, Marjorie Sweet, Robert Capron, Joseph M. Wilton, Myra Treska, Beach Cdoke and many others. The book and lyrics for the play are by Will B. Johns tone and. the music is by Will R. Anderson. Joseph M. Gaites is the producer. GERALDINE FARRAR SALE Prelate Tells ; Mayor Episcopal Convention Success- Was Due Largely to Co-operation. Expression of appreciation of the co-operation of Portland in making the recent Episcopalian-general con vention a success is contained in a letter received by Mayor Baker yes terday from Bishop Sumner. The letter is as follows: I eacnot resist writing to you of my deep gratitude for the sustained nd splendid co-operation which you gave ua in making our general .convention the great success that it was. If you had talked to our visitors you would have readily understood how happy they were for all that Portland attempted to do for them. Ths con vention was by far the largest in the .history of the ohurch, and I think we can say, without hesitation, the happiest and most successful. The citizens of Port land, with their usual happy vein of hos pitality, vied with each other in render ing the complete stay of our visitors enjoyable and profitable. The above results never could have been obtained had it not been for such warm-hearted support and help as yours. The diocese of Oregon, as well as I, per sonally, never will forget it. We are receiving from the highest : officers of the church, wonderfully vivid and warm appreciation of the hospitality showered on them by the Rose City. TH SERVICE TO BEGIN USE OF LINE BEYOND VER NON I A IS PROMISED. Mail orders are being received for Geraldine Farrar concert at the au ditorium Thursday, October 12: Floor, 2.50, $2; rear balcony, $2.50, i side balcony. $2; upper side bal cony, $l.b0, $1; war tax 10 per cent extra. - Orders will be filed in order of receipt and filled -before the box office sale opens, if accompanied, by check and self-addressed, stamped envelope sent to Steers & Coman, Columbia building. Box office sale opens Saturday, October 7, at Sher man Clay & Co. Adv. Hunter Shot Accidentally. VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. 2. (Special.) Roy Goodburn was out hunting "near Sifton yesterday, the first day of the season, and tried to crawl through a fence. The gun caught and the charge went through his right forearm, I'reaking both bones. He was taken to St. Joseph's hospital, where the doctors were attempting to save the arm. Roy is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Goodburn, 407 East Twenty eighth street, and he was hunting with Ralph Wneaton when the acci dent befell him. Phone your want ads to The Ore gc nian. All its readers are lr.ter terest in the classified columns. THIS MORNING Doors Open at 10:30. Spokane', Portland and Seattle Road Likely to Be in Operation Soon. Inauguration of train service over the newly completed Portland, Astoria & Pacific railroad between Portland and Keasey, 12 miles into the forests beyond Vernonia, is being planned by Spokane. Port land & Seattle railway officials, and it is expected that service will be started October 15, unless difficul ties that cannot now be foreseen arfse. One passenger train will be oper ated in each direction daily to Ver nonia at the. start, and as soon as operations in the timber about Keasey begin passenger service will be extended to that place. Trains will run in and out of the Union station at Portland. Between Linnton and Wilkesboro, on the United Railways, which will be one leg of the journey to Vernonia, the Spokane, Portland & Seattle man agement will take down the electric trolley overhead and convert the We are featuring many delicious OYSTER and CRAB dishes. HEILIG Theater Broadway at Taylor. Star Ball Board WORLD SERIES Baseball Games GIANTS vs. YANKEES Direct Wire to 3S. Y. Hot Dogs, Coffee PRICES IN LOT. CLUDINC WAR TAX 50o Don't Take Druoless Thbatments merce bldg. Phone Bdwy. 6640. Adv. without seing me first. I have thej One Room makes two rooms with latest. Jr Sherman. Atwater SloS. j Oscillating Portal Wall Beds. Crees Adv, j& Co., 96-9S Front street. Adv. School of ADVERTISING ART Open Monday, October ft Classes Daily, 10 A. M. to 4 P. M. HELEN M. fROWSOX, .'..M Washington Tlldar. II d IV jr. GJHtS. 4tit and Waah. Sts. Eastern or Olympia Oysters tried fat butter. Eastern Oyster Milk Stew Oyster Pan Boast Oyster Csdctaul H&zelwood Crab Louis Crmeked CM) wt& i&mjotmmis. Crab Look Taeastooa tnfd wtifc Ctasfc THE HAZELWOOD Confeclicnery and Restaurant ass WMkiiftM at. 1S7 Crosttwsy trackage into a steam road. Oil- burning locomotives will be em ployed to haul trains so that the danger of fire in the timber from engine sparks will be reduced to the minimum. THREE SHOPS ENTERED Intruders Obtain Total of 3.50 in Pennies. Marauders Monday night entered three establishments in the blocks bounded by Alder and Washington streets at Fifteenth v street, and stole a total of J2.50 in pennies. Investigation yesterday morning showed the knob on a safe in the office of the S. & 8. Auto Wreck ing company at 501 Alder street to have been blown off, the office of the Boston Oven across the alley at 508 Washington street to have been ransacked and the pennies re moved, and a nearby auto repair shop operated by Pentecost & Wick at 600 Washington street entered, but in no way molested. S. & H. ereen stamps for easIL Holman Fuel Co.. coal and wood. Broadway 6353; 650-31. Adv. Feaeock ftocic springs eoai. Ota tnnH Coal Bdwr S0S7 Aw Auditorium i Sd and Clay - Phone Mala 411 TODAY 2:15 TONIGHT 8:15 ALL THIS WEEK Except Krl. and Sun. Eve, Kvery Afternoon, Including; Sim day. AITS - 2.30 EVE'S 8:13 THE IE? IN MOTIOJf PICTURES. POPULAR. PRICES. (Includinr War Taxi ADULTS 50c Sh,'re 25c What advertising consists of Advertising is the use of printing to tell a lot of people what you sell and why it is to their interest to buy it. If you sell something that people would want to buy if they knew the benefit they could get from it, advertising is almost bound to pay you. Let your catalogs, your booklets, your circulars, and your letters tell people how they can use what you have to' sell not why you want to sell it. If this printing is done well, it will reflect credit on the thing you are selling. Good printing attracts and interests people quicker than ordinary printing or poor printing does. The printer who -recommends a good paper wants to do a good job. He assumes that you want one. Don't do anything to make him change his opinion. better paper COO better printing Mking h Easy to Plan Printing" i the title of a series of books on better direct advertising which print ers and advertiser csn secure on spplicition to distributors of Warren's Scandsrd Printing Papers. S. D. 'WAR-REN COMPANY BOSTON Warren's Standard Printing Papers are "Distributed by ZELLERBACH PAPER CO. Fourth and Ankeny Streets, Portland, Or. Phone Broadway 1193 FRESNO SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO OAKLAND SACRAMENTO LOS ANGELES SPOKANE SALT LAKE CITY SEATTLE Print! rgFtapera Phone your want ads to The Ore goiiian. All its readers are inter- terest in the classified columns. . "fo J'' A SMALL GRAND THAT YOU MAY TRUST LUPWflG More than thirty years ago we first sold Ludwig pianos. In that time we have learned what pianos to avoid and what pianos we may trust. . We trust the Ludwig fully and our judg ment has been indorsed by more than twelve thousand Pacific Coast buyers. " This new small Grand has proven to us the importance of earnest effort. It is trustworthy. Aside from that, it is all one could ask in daintiness, in beauty of tone and action and in every quality that endures and endears. THE PRICE38S0 ON TERMS VilgrBAUenig. MASON 6c HAMLIN PIANOS 148 Fifth St., Near Morrison Other Storta. . Oakland. FTesao. Saa Ila. Saeraaiaata, Sam Joaa. I-oa Ancelea. Ma Framciaeo. ss. aaEr"'''t mrvu 1 f 11 " ia 1 Cured without Surgery MY guaranteed cure for Piles Is a non-aurgical method, eliminating knife, operation, anaesthetic, pain and confinement- I have never failed to cure a case . of Piles in the history of my practice, proof of which may be had by obtaining the long list of prominent Northwest people whom I have treated. I nana ail aoabt as ta raaulta kr asraaiaa ta rafaaa yaar f aa kt I fa4 ta car. roar Pilas. Writ, mt aaA ta. aay far mr FREE baaUat. DR.Ct.AS. J. DEAN IND AND MORRISON POrrriAND.OftrMN MENTION THIS PAPER WHEN WRIT INI E 1 WHEN YOU OO TO SAN FRANCISCO HOTEL STEWART Oa Geary St, Jort off TJnlon Square, la Biidat of beat stores, cafes, theatres. Oood eecenunodsUoae at very moderate rates. Bast knows maala in the United flutes. Breakfaat, 60c, 60c, 75c; Lunch. 6So. SnnifaTS, 7fte: Dinner, 11.28, Sandaya. (1 SO. Municipal car paaaes doors. Stewart Bna meet a tralne and ateamers. It ta advisable to stake reservations la advance. Rosicrucian FELLOWSHIP LECTURES MRS. ARLI.VK D. CRAMER cf Oceanalde, California Will srlve a series of three lec tures In the Auditorium Hall of the Public Library at P. M. October 6 The Kiddle of JUie and Peath. October The Web of Destiny. October 7 How the Roalcruclane Heal the Hick. You are cordially invited to attend. J L A Successful Man Among- the nolahle profp.alonal men of this country who achieved rreat success alone; s'ri-t!y larltl- mate lines was Ir. R. V. I'loroe. Devotlns; hla attention to the spe cialty of women'a diaeaaea, he be came ft recognised authority In that line. Over fifty years ae this notes phyaiclan rave to the world a Pre scription which has never been equaled for the wekn"eee nf women. Dr. Pierce of Hiiffali. N. Y oner aince found out what ia nat'i- rally beet for women's diaeaeea. fie earned It all throuarh treating thou sands of caeea. The reenlt of hie studies was a medirlne called Lioctor Plerce'a Favorite Prearrlptlon This medicine Is made of vegetable rrowtha that nature purely Intended for backache, headache, weakenln nalna. and for the many disorders common to women tn all ages of life. Women who take thle standard remedy know that In Dr. pierces Favorite Preerrlntlon they are et - tins; a safe woman's tonic so pood that druKKlsta everywhere sell It In botn tablet and fluid f'irm. riend 10c to Dr. Pierre's Invallflf Hotel In Buffalo, N V.. for trial pkar. Write for free medical advice. Adv. Phone your want ads to The Ore eronian. All ita readers are inter ested in the classified columns. JJMJsi aa ' e'jta.aWMSva a i,.. -, - I : i . 1 y ' 1 , 4 1 , Phone Your Want Ads to The Oregon ian Telephone Main 7070 t