The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, May 17, 1908, SECTION THREE, Page 4, Image 28

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    THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, 3IAT 17, I90S.
FOR THE NEWEST, IN WEARING APPAREL VISIT THE STYLE STORE
Light Spring Goat Now Seasonable Item , of Feminine Apparel
You have not alone the guarantee of the makers but of this firm, which handles
only high-grade goods, and which represents every article exactly as it is. Your
purchase will satisfy because it combines Worth with Beauty and Up-to-Dateness
and is most reasonably priced.
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wp N important item for the feminine
wardrobe, just at this season of
the year, when Winter wraps are
little too warm, and Spring gowns and
waist not quite warm enough, Is the
light Spring coat. A wide variety, in
vtyle. material and .color, is to be found
in the local shops, under the name of
Spring coat or jacket.
In the new novelty materials, of blend
ed stripes and other patterns, the Spring
coat can be found to match almost any
of the new suitings, this type usually
being made In the loose box style, fall
ing free from the shoulders.. Such a coat
Is shown in picture No. 4, the tone being
in blended brown and tan stripes.
This type of coat Is announced as one
of the important "leaders" by the iocal
establishment through whose courtesy the
accompanying photographs were secured.
All the various blend in era of the new
triped goods are to be had in this pat
torn. The sleeves are long, with narrow,
turn-back cuffs, and the front is loose
and innocent of fitting lines as is the
back, being fastened in the double-breasted
style, with pearl buttons.
A similar coat is shown in Xo. 4, which
Is of Panama cloth, in dark blue, pin
striped wtih white, and with a smart
white facing at the lapels. The two side
pockets shown in this picture are a fea
ture of the new style coats, and a good
idea of the correct sleeves and its shoul
der plaitings is to be had from- this gar
ment. One of the higher grade coats, with
semi-fitting lines, and very smart, is
shown in picture No. 3. This coat is of
very light tan cheviot and the long, sharp
points at th front complete the smart,
straight frost line, are held in place by
weights In the binding. Stitched straps,
finely tailored, outline the back seams
and emphasize the curves of the figure.
The seams are left open at the hips and
in the back almost up to the waist line,
the edges being smartly tailored and
finished with buttons at the back. But
tons are also used at the cuffs, which are
of fancy cut. Another feature of this
garment is the three horizontal knife
plaits across the upper sleeve. The pockets
are finished with tailored flaps, and col
Jar and lapels are also smartly tailored.
A light wrapper is shown in No. 2,
which is of black silk, with a length of
sleeve which compromises between the
new long sleeve and the passing kimono
- Btave- The Tittlff silk jacket Is almost
frfoctly fitted to the figure, and buttons
snugly down the front by means of smart
little vest strips in white. Larger buttons
with white rims down the finished sides
of the silk portion add another bit of
smartness to the garment, which is made
coltarless. A stitched strip, cut to the
curve of the neck and shoulders, serves
as a collar line. For wear with a fancy
waist or light-weight gown, this type of
jacket is very effective.
More elaborate is the little dress coat
shown In No. 6. This is of rajah silk
in natural color, lavishly embroidered
silk braid of the same shade, and wlt.h
silk borderings of dark blue under scroll
Ings of the silk braid, and with sleeve
finishings of heavy lace. The back of
this garment is semi-fltted and with the
scrolllngs of silk braid to emphasize the
lines, is suggestive of the military in
style.
The lace at the sleeves is gathered very
fully, and combine very daintily with
elaborate matinee or afternoon gowns.
The garment Is lined with soft silk in a
blending tone. This Is one of the lead
ing varieties of matinee coat, and Is be
ing shoVn in attractive varieties of color
and detail.
of sobriety. A number of tents have been
erected therein and a provost guard from
the warships has been placed in charge.
The square stands at the edge of the
Barbary .Coast, and the convenience of its
location prompted the -selection. The pro
vost guard nightly patrol the "coast."
No seamen are arrested by the police for
Intoxication. The men of the provost
guard take them in hand and convey
them to the tents In the square. There
they spend the night and In the morning
go about their business. The provost
guard has not been busy, but it has kept
such seamen as have danced the dance
with Bacchus free from the police station.
The co-operation between the police and
the seamen has been complete.
The men-of-warsmen scored their high
est triumph last night when they danced
with the society girls of the city.- It Is
doubtful if such an entertainment was
ever held under the Stars and Stripes, and
It is equally doubtful if any more success
ful event has been carried through under
the auspices of the Navy. In the receiv
ing line were members of the California
Club, embracing women who lead in the
various activities .of the city. With them
were the society matrons of the Western
Addition and the leaders of the telephone,
waitresses' and laundresses unions.
Among the girls who danced were the
young society women, the daughters of
the most exclusive households, telephone
girls, laundresses and waitresses. Their
partners were the enlisted men and the
petty officers. No civilians were allowed
on the floor. The entire affair had the
tone of a college dance. The young wo
men found the seamen not only delightful
partners In the dance, but interesting in
conversation. The wife of Admiral
Thomas led the grand march with an en
listed man. Precedent was shattered, and
successfully shattered.
The fleet will be here for some days yet,
but if the enlisted men continue to grow
In favor as they have since the day of
their arrival, they will have no stronger
champion in this broad continent than the
city of San Francisco.
BIG CLASS TO GRADUATE
Each Man of Marines Regiment in Himself
No Furopcan PU-fcrd Corps fan Boast na Flnr-I.ooklujr Fiehtlng; Men as
, the Blucjncltrta From tbe Fleet Like College Men at Field Day Prece
dent Smashed In Dances With Society Girls.
BT P. A. SINSHEIMER.
SAN FRANCISCO, May 16. (Special.)
Out of the maze of events that have
followed with such rapidity since the
arrival of the fleet in San Francisco Bay
It is naturally difficult to select any one
feature of the visit as more impressive
than another. To the writer, however,
one thing stands apart, and that Is the
strong personnel In the enlisted service.
A great deal has been said and written
on this point in a sort of sentimental
fashion, but to see and talk to the seamen
and marines of the fleet is to feel anew
a confidence in-the Nation and Its lofty
destiny.
Seven thousand bluejackets passed up
Market street and trod the bitumen pave
of Van Ness avenue on the day of the
his parade. Every man was an athlete.
very pair of shoulders stood square and
broad to the front. Clean, trim lines
marked the figures of the men. There
was lltheness as opposed to solidity. The
gait was just as springy at the end of
the flve-mile hike as at the beginning.
Every man was in dress so trim that it
delighted the eye to look upon the scene.
Every face was freshly shaven and every
head of hair was newly brushed. Strength
breathed from the faces that passed in re
view. The marks that tell of dissipation
were strikingly absent. It was such a
throng as one would meet at a college
field day, where the picked men of the
university gathered to match strength and
prowess. In looks, the advantage would
rest, if anything, with the enlisted men.
Regularity of life and discipline is writ
ten upon their countenances.
As tb. writer stood in the middle of
Van Ness avenue, with the marines pass
ing up one side and down the other, a re
tired Army officer next to him said:
'I- have seen the picked regiments of
Europe and the Orient. I have watched
the evolutions of the crack German
troops that enjoy the special favor of the
Emperor, but I tell you that right before
your eyes there marches the finest set of
soldiery the world has ever seen. Look
at their magnificent figures a,nd see the
Intelligence written in their faces. Those
men not only excel in physique, but I tell
you that if you take them- into action
every man of them will know what to do
as well as his commander. Each man is
a regiment in himself."
As one looked, he felt the truth of the
words. But later, when he talked to the
men and discussed with them the serious
business of the day, he was more than
ever impressed with the truth of the re
mark that every man was & regiment in
himself.
For some reason to be more correct, for
no reason an Impression had gone
abroad that San Francisco, with 30.000
bluejackets in port would be given over
to a carnival more hilarious than digni
fied. The men themselves by their con--duct
have proved the foliy of such antici
pations. It is not the intention to paint
the seamen as angels. They are no nearer
that happy condition than is tne average
landsman. Many of them have a hanker
ing for liquor, and some of them get
drunk. But the intoxicated seaman In
San Francisco has been the exception
the great exception.
When he has fallen from grace, he has
been' decently taken care of. Portsmouth
Square has been dedicated to the purposes
Thirty-nine Tteccive Diplomas at
Dental College Thursday.
The annual commencement exercises
of the North Pacific College of Den
tistry will be held Thursday, May 21, at
S P. M. at the Heilig Theater. There is
a large graduating class this year, tha
students who will receive the decree of
doctor of dental medicine numbering:
39. These young men are from vari
ous parts of the country, hailing- from
many states, both Eastern and West
ern. Naturally the states of the Pa
cific Northwest are particularly well
represented.
A notable musical program has been
prepared. Judge M. C. George will de
liver the annual address. All friends
of the students and others interested
are cordially invited to be present. The
programme follows:
Duet. "Due Perle" Plnsuti
Miss Kathleen Lawler, Mrs. Walter Reed.
Accompanist, F. L. Douglas,
Annual address..; : .Hon. M. C. George
Tenor solo. "I'll Sing Thee Songs of Araby"
Clay
Dr. GeorEe Alnslie.
Conferring of degree of Doctor of Dental
Medicine Joseph A. Pettit, M. D.
Contralto solo. "The Angetus" DeKoven
Mrs. Walter Beed. '
Coarse to the graduates..
Kobert C. Coffey. M. D.
Soprano solo, "11 Bacio," waits song. .Arditl
Kathleen Lawler. .
The graduates are:
George Edward Barton. Van Robert Bilyeu,
Charles Clifford Burrow, Donald Campbell,
Fred Bdward Casey, Arthur L. Cornell,
Elmer Elbert Cummins, Harvey Lincoln Cum
mins. Charles William Endlcott, Rufus Sid
ney Eshelman, Wilbur Willard Faulkner,
Walden Irving Ferrier. Alfred Evan George,
Lawrence Egbert George, Orr Cecil Goodrich.
Huber Vincent Guiberson. Charles Augustus
Haentze. Henry Villard Hatfield. Frank Lan
drine Ingram. Coalby Smith Long. Marshall
Young Lucas. Arthur Truecott MacMiilan.
Lome Gilmore McAloney. John Robert Mar
shall. Martin Louis Mlllgard. James Riley
Morgan. Stanley Casper Peters, Maurice Fran
cis Power, Benton Percy Rand, Thomas James
Rederich. James Vinton Scott, Thomas Ben
jamin Short, David Vaughan. Otto Floyd
Vinson. Frank Albert Voge, Lee Arrlngton
Wells. Oliver Howell Whaley. Arthur Hall
Williams, Paul Christian Yates.
TEAMSTERS HEED WARNING
Many Call at City Hall to Pay Their
Vehicle Tm.
Large numbers of teamsters called
at the license department in the City
Hall yesterday morning to comply with
the Menefee law. regulating the tax
for wheeled vehicles. . Having read in
The Oregonian that City Auditor Bar
bur would instruct the Chief of Police
to arrest all who failed to take out li
censes, those who could do so. called to
comply With the provisions of the law.
Under the terms of the ordinance.
b the Jewelry Ssctioi
This Cut Glass Set, Spec'l $3.25
Engagement and wedding
gifts, elegant presents, or
dainty remembrances at a
trifling cost are shown in
the greatest variety of rich
designs in guaranteed"
goods of rare beauty. By way of suggestion:
Watches in handsome cases with Elgin or Waltham movements . $ 1 S.OO up
Small Gold Ornamental Clocks, guaranteed timekeepers, $2.15
Cut Glass Nappies, two designs to choose from, special price $1.35
All Flat Tableware, stable and fancy pieces , $1.25 up
Exquisite 4-piece Silver Tea Set, splendid value $13.00
Stouffer's Hand-painted China Plates, Nappies, Vases, Bon Bon Dishes, $ 1 .25 up
Their,
N
3-DAY SPECIAL: Monday, Tuesday and Wednes
day straw and reed suitcases and handbags will be
priced V Off.
SUITCASES: All sizes, all shades of alligator, walrus,
cowhide, buffalo grain, sheepskin, pin seal. Prices I
range from $35.00 down to $2.00.
TRUNKS: For every purpose, of every size: wardrobe, bureau, theatrical, steamer,
metal covered, veneer trunks, gentlemen's trunks, all of highest grade materials,
strongly put together, well lined and trimmed. Prices ranging from $45 down to $8
Credit if Desired
You have the privilege of having all your pur
chases charged to your account,' remitting in
weekly, semi-monthly or monthly payments, as convenient.
See Window 20 for Daily Specials
EASTERN
OUTFITTING .COMPANY
Corner Washington and Tenth Sts.
The Store Where Your Credit Is Good
which was recently amended by Coun
cilman Beldlng, every one who owns &
vehicle for pleasure only and those who
operate free-delivery wagons, must pay
a tax. The annual license fee for single
rigs in free-delivery service is $2,- and
for double-tearri rlga in similar service,
the fee is $5.
Wagons drawn by one horse are
taxed $5 a year each, and double-team
wagons are assessed $10 a year. Au
tomobiles and hacks are taxed the same.
In the original ordinance, as introduced
by Councilman Menefee, vehicles driven
for pleasure only were exempted from
taxation, but Councilman Beldlng's
amendment adjusted this, so that all
having wagons must now contribute
to the city's treasury.
, Deputy Auditor Pierce was obliged
to give his entire time yesterday morn
ing to the issuing of licensee for all
kinds of wagons. -
22, a rate of 50 cents per 100 pounds, car
loads, has been authorized. Local traffic
officials have put in a special Summer
rate on pianos from Portland to points
on the Ilwaco Railroad. The rate, when
pianos are boxed, is $4.50. This Is lower
than the usual tariff and is put in for
the benefit of Portland people who wish
to take their pianos -to the beach with
them for the Summer,
Death of Katherine E. Quinn.
Katherine E. Quinn, wife of Thomas
E. Quinn, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Lyons, died at Walla Walla,
Sunday, May 3, following a serious sur
gical operation performed the preceding
Wednesday. Mrs. Quinn was a member
of one of the oldest and most respected
families In Walla Walla County, having
been born in Walla Walla. She is sur
vived by her husband and two young
children. Funeral services wore held
from St. Patrick's Church in Walla Walla
with solemn requiem high mass Tuesday,
May 5. Mrs. Quinn had a wide circle
of friends in Portland who will gneve 10
learn of her death.
New Rate on AVater-PIpe,
New rates have been made by the local
traffic office of the Harriman lines on
wooden water pipe from Portland to all
points on the O. R. & N. and Oregon
Short Line, from Portland to Granger,
Wyo.. and stations west. Effective June
SPECIAL OFFERING
I FOR MONDAY, MAI 18
GLOVES
UMBRELLAS
HOSIERY
Women's 16-button length fine French kid, 10 AC
all sizes, black only; $4.00 value, pair PTrO
Women's loose-wrist Cape Gloves, in tans; genuine vel
vet 'Mocha, black and colors; Pique Kid QC-
Gloves, black and colors; $1.50 values vJC
Women's Silk Mercerized Lisle Hose, in tan OC
and black; 40c values, pair
Men's "Jupiter" Umbrellas, 28-inch, 8-rib; best wa
terproof Italian Gloria, silk-finished; Congo QP
handles; $1.75 value 3C
UMBRELLAS REPAIRED AND RE-COVERED
dCetm&ttf
309 MORRISON STREET, OPP. POSTOFFICE
I M A Y 23 ff
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