THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND. JULY 21, 19U7. Going to the Beach or to the Mountains A mm iHr. iS " III HI iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii 8 , . .,. U-J1U i L . .5 , , , SiilJ.,;;, I 'Hi Hip ir HAL if mk v r w JA , i : ' , ir ., . i i- r ; e i: i j 1 1 ' i tf i . i r n n i p - t ii r : 1 1 fofiji i aw Mmm srii mwww. ira:z iirrniKniuTii i i t j j tim t m u ; mum mmum i a .it i. .Mint nmuii mum With a Defective Tooth You Will Be Robbed of Pleasure Because it is sure to ache, and you can't have pleasure and toothache, at the same time. Before taking your Summer outing, let me examine your teeth. A very little work may save you a great deal of pain. Perhaps a filling is necessary or some useless teeth removed and a bridge inserted that -will perform all of the work of natural teeth with perfect satisfaction to you. Our plates fit perfectly and won't fall out when you are tossed about by the breakers. Our offices are roomy and cool. GOOD SET OF TEETH ON RUBBER PLATE, $5.00 BEST SET OF TEETH ON RUBBER PLATE, $S.OO I ' ' ' " 1 DR. B. E. WRIGHT. DR. B. E. WRIGHT Bentist 342 1-2 WASHINGTON STREET, COR. SEVENTH OFFICE HOURS: 8 A. M. to 5 P. M.; 7:30 to 8:30 P. M. Sundays, 9 to 1. Phone Main 2119. ELEVEN YEARS IN PORTLAND. LOVE OF CUE GAME THEIR DOWNFALL Two Young Men Lose Posi tions Because of Devotion to Billiards. BOTH CLAIM CHAMPIONSHIP .Neither Will Yield, and They Con tinue to Play Until Ragged and Unkempt They Are Arrested as Vagrants Will Leave Town. A dispute six weeks ago between two friends as to which was the bet ter player of billiards has Just resulted in the downfall of both. So interested did the pair become In playing: a series of games that they forfeited their po sitions in a local wholesale house in order to continue the contest uninter rupted. Eventually they got to pawn ins their effects and living about at free lunch counters that they might gro on indulging; their enthusiasm for the competition. And yesterday, pale, haggard and unkempt through continued attention to the game, they decided to leave the city when Judge Cameron ad vised them that they must do some thing more useful than play billiards if they desired to remain here un moleeted by the law. Arthur Eide and Leo V. Strain are the competitors. Friends of the two men say that neither of them can play billiards from the standpoint of an expert. They were working in a Front street wholesale house in menial ca pacities when the initial game was played. It is not learned which of them won, but both claimed supremacy in handling the cue. They got to play ing evenings to begin with. Evenings proving all too short they added noon hour to the schedule. One afternoon they forgot to show up for work until after 3 o'clock. When they reported at that hour it was to find their Jobs had been filled by other workmen, so they went back to the billiard table. From a purely porting standpoint Eide and Strain thereafter proved themselves thoroughbreds of the first water. Day and night they kept at it, now one gaining the advantage, then the other. Like children pursuing the evanescent I rainbow, each kept I after victory which seemed near at I hand. They were so evenly matched that an accident would have turned the tide of victory. but " this accident failed to occur and the game went on. It was only a short time until their meager store of money was con sumed by bllllard r.oom dues. It costs money to play bil liards In a public place at 40 cents an hour. But financial embarassment was nothing as compared with their ardor In the contest and. they parted with most everything but their clothing among the pawnshops of Third street. The scores in none of their games are available, but it is said the figures are nothing out of the ordinary, ex cept for being very close, and not of sufficient difference to satisfy either man of the other's supremacy. The last game they played continued until 1:30 o'clock Friday morning. They did not quit until the proprietor of the place ran them out in order to close up his place. When they started for their modest lodgings in the Eastern lodging house it never occurred to them of the danger of the hour. An ambitious policeman caught eight of them, observed that they were unshaved and unkept and insisted on an Interview. There is a law- that provides no per son can be out after midnight except on lawful business. And the law falls to recognize billiards as lawful busi ness. Of course, persons vita more , nt I than 50 cents in silver and new clothes, are never molested. But let any per son who is shabby try to circulate in the quiet hours before dawn and the chances are 10 to 1 that eome police man who wants to be a sergeant will take him in. So it was that Strain and Eide were taken in. "You men have got to go to work or else leave town," said Judge Cam eron when the case was brought be fore him. The two players whispered together briefly. Their words could not be heard, but their manner Indicated each was demanding of the other that he admit his Inferiority at billiards. Doubtless neither would give In and Eide presently turned to the court. "We will leave the city, your honor," he said. Isaach Gruble, would-be founder of a new school of philosophy, was in court yesterday forenoon. Gruble's system of life is a sort of antithesis to the code of the Stoics. He believes not only in giving play to his feelings, but in stimulating them. He is a mix ture of anarchist, Socialist, Satyr, roue and vagabond. Gruble was try ing to convert a group of men to his view of life when the police picked him up; for while this la a country of free thought, in dividual habits of mind must not openly stray be yond certain pre scribed limits. Ant Gruble was en deavoring to im press upon his auditors that life is a transitory ex istence beset with miseries such as should be dispelled by any means whatsoever. Including morphine, opium, liquor and any other agencies of artificial pleasure which might suggest themselves. Just to impress upon his hearers the logic of what he was saying, Gruble went into his ragged clothes for a hypodermic needle, plunged it into his bared wrist, and in an instant his rabid mood passed away and he stood beam ing and genial. At which moment a plain-clothes officer who had been lis tening to the pernicious lecture stepped forwards and arrested the fellow. "That a man should use morphine and liquor is a sad misfortune which MM IJ Holi,-3 Reserve Force that's the word for 99 Grape-Nuts FOOD "1 want to tell you about Grape-Nuts food, and my experience with It. "I had for a year or two, felt a gen eral debility creeping on me, and also suf fered from flatulency, piles, etc., which I began to think was due to advancing age, now being 65 years old, when, in the providence of God, as I believe, Grape Nuts was brought to my notice, and tried as an experiment. "In a week I found a decided improve ment in myself, and have kept improv ing ever Blnce, and am now being con gratulated on the great change in my appearance by all acquaintances. . Not only so, but I feel I have reserve force so that I do not feel wearied at night, although I have worked continuously from 7:30 A. M. until 9 P. M. "I recommend Grape-Nuts to my friends and acquaintances, and all of my family use the food, and it la on the table at every meal whatever else Is omitted. I write this being desirous of giving vent to the grateful feeling I entertain for the benefits received from the use of this Incomparable food." The particular element which produces the feeling of strength la the delicate particles of Phosphate of Potash, not the phosphate of the drugstore, but that which is prepared by Nature and fur nished in the field grains. This delicate element, not observed by the taste, is used by Nature in connection with the albumen of food, to rebuild the gray matter In the nerve centers throughout the body and in the brain and solar plexus, so that one thus nourished and rebuilt is very sure to feel the effects of this rebuilding within a week or ten days, and this feeling grows and becomes fixed as one becomes a steady, every-day user of Grape-Nuts. "There's a Reason." Kead, "Tie Road to WellvlUe," In pkgs. entitles him to the pity as well as the contempt of all mankind," said Judge Cameron, in passing on the case. "But that a man should endeavor to con vert others to any such deadly habits brands him as a dangerous person. I will give you the limit of the law 90 days at breaking rock." Looks Idke Railroad Work. EUGENE, Or., July 20. The South ern Pacific Company has unloaded a carload of scrapers at Natron during the past week, which Is taken as an indication by the people in this vi cinity that the work of constructing the Natron-Klamath extension will be gin very soon. An official of the company, while in Eugene yesterday, passing through the city on his way South, stated that the company was looking for terminal grounds in Eugene and that this city stood a fair chance of becoming a division point for all the trains of the Natron-Klamath extension, as well as for those of the line across the state to Ontario, when It is built Incorporate New Road Tuesday. EUGENE, Or., July 20. The Eugene & Siuslaw Railroad will be incorpor ated here next Tuesday at a meeting of the subscribers to the $60,000 stock taken by Eugene "people to help Ste phen Garver build a line from Eugene to the mouth of the Siuslaw river. The Eugene and Corvallis lines will be merged into one near Blachley, in the Lake Creek Valley, about 35 miles west of here, and then proceed to the Sluslaw's mouth. It is probable that work on the line out of Eugene will not begin until early next Spring. Salem Pen Holds S80 Prisoners. SALEM, Or., July 20. Superintendent James, of the Oregon penitentiary, filed his quarterly report with the Secretary of State this morning, showing there were 380 Inmates at the close of the quar ter, as against 373 at the close of the last quarter. The earnings of the institution from convict labor amounted to J5326.35, of which J3917 was earned in the North- Buys an Indestructible Range Buys a Range That Burns All the Coal Tabouret es, 12 inches square, made of se lected quarter-oak, strong, substantial and nicely polished, worth double the price we ask, 50d Gold frame picture, 15x20 inches, copied from famous oil paint ings. $1.25 value, for 65 Most likely you have been -throwing away good coal every day without know ing it. Coal that is only partially burned in the firebox. Because, with the ordinary range draft the air current only strikes part of the fire. Usually the damper door in such a range is situated at one end of the firebox only, which makes your fire hot at the draft end and cold at the other end. Now the draft in a MONARCH RANGE is entirely dif ferent. Instead of one damper door, there are TWO. one in each end of the firebox, and both are regulated by the same handle.. So you get two different currents of air at the same thne, and your smoothly and evenly. Ore burns which gets make more The draft striking the fire from both directions con sumes ALL THE FUEL, and gives you all the heat ing power from the coaL When you empty the ash pan in a Monarch Range you are throwing away ASHES and ashes only not coal, and In addition to this, the Monarch Is con structed of MALLEABLE STEEL, which can be riv eted so tight and solid that no air-leaks can possibly happen, as they do in cast iron ranges. The top .Is malleable steel, polished and bright. You can keep it clean without smearing your range with blacking, on your cooking; vessels to work for you. The MONARCH Malleable Range High-Grade Chiffonier $31 Carefully made of beau tiful quarter-sawed oak. It is 33 inches wide and has four large and two small drawers. The total height of this piece, in cluding the French plate mirror (16x22 inches), is 6 feet and 3 inches, making a most beautiful chiffonier of splendid proportions. U ALWIN GO-CARTS Full size double bed, exactly as pic tured, a good sensible pattern with seven spindles In the head end to keep the pillows from falling through; $6.50 value; special this week..$4.50 China Matting, per yard 15i Jap Matting, per yard 25 Napier Matting, per yard 36 Granite Carpet, per yard 43 Half Wool Carpets, per yard 6S No extra charge for sewing and laying carpets. Children's Iron Cribs $9.00 Children's Iron Cribs with wire spring, special this week S6.50 Odd Lot of Hassocks Odd lot of Hassocks, val ues up to $1.50, to close out 45 ntaov row use I KM 1l it I J " Mi j i ill I hi i iP i I Ikbai iifasSsliillismni t tiiia snf'l ijl nl 1 Mi PJ Ml mmmM ii 'iiilii I 1 .1 M i pi HI jf 'I ip i f' UL Ja id Ply aWiiBB nil ini kWUA t m OQOD PLiiffiECTS TO THMDHS 1 west stove foundry, while the balance was for labor outside of the prison, for which no cash was received. The expenses for the quarter were $15,951, of which $2045 is credited to repairs and improvements. Articles for Corvallis & Alsea. SALEM, Or., July 20. Articles of incor poratlon of the Corvallis & Alsea River Railroad Company have been filed with the Secretary of State. The company, which has a capital stock of $150,000 pur poses to construct two lines of railroad, one out of Corvallis to Blacky postoffice, on Lane Creek, In Lane County, and the other from Corvallis via Alsea River to Alsea, also In Lane County. F. C. Miller, C. J. Johnson and Virgil H. Watters are the incorporators of record. Mysterious Surveying Party. JACKSONVILLE, Or., July 20. Spe cial.) A mysterious party of men has been seen the past couple of days survey ing some kind of a route up Jackson Creek, south of this place. No one has been able to speak to them, as they dis appear when anybody shows up. As this is the only feasible route for a railroad to the coast, it is thought they are rail road surveyors. Hotel for Jacksonville. JACKSONVILLE, July 20. (Special.) A hotel company is being organized In Jacksonville, with a capitalization of $15, 000. A large brick structure will be put up and a first-class hostelry conducted. Last Week of Clearance Sale One more week will complete our Clearance Sale, and on going over the stock we sorted ont odd garments to hats of all kinds. These should have no place in a well-kept stock. We will place some of these on Special Sale daily at prices that will clear them out quickly. SILK SUITS Demi . Costumes and Street Suits Values up to $75.00 $i295 Advance Showing of Fall SUITS and GOATS Waists Waists valued up to ((JO QC $25.00; Monday pO.I7iJ Corset Covers Corset Covers, regular 35c O C value, 15c; TWO FOR Silk Petticoats 9 Guarantee Money-Back Silk Petticoats, $16.50 and $17.50 Q Qt values pUZ7J Hose Tan Lace Hose, regular 35c 1 Q values 1.ZJK MW i M-m.m. x Boleros Extra Specials EVERY ARTICLE REDUCED Fancy embroidered, lace and Bat- Slightly soiled Cream Panama and ron&v!,!!:s..,1.p....$7.95 o.!8..?.!0.... $2.95 Skirts Fancy Voile Eajah and Pongees, values Another Big Lot Out- $7.75 ing, Beach Hats at 95c SOLE AGENTS FOR STAND ARD PATTERNS SOLE AGENTS FOR HEN DERSON CORSETS The great demand for these popular Hats compelled us to secure another lot for Monday's selling. Large, drooping straw shapes, with drapes, and rosettes of mull. Others with flowers, rib- ftC bona, quills, etc.; choice , I7JC THE BALANCE OF OUR READY-TO-WEAR HATS not over two dozen left; absolute $1.50 OCr values &JC Clever line of new, stylish Midsummer Hats large, fine Java straw shapes, trimmed with f Ppfrp white wings, chiffon, etc.. -3 vO Wholesale and Retail Aclhieson Co. Fifth and Alder Sts.