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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1908)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SECTION TWO Pages 1 to lO ' ; TnnTT vt nT?T.-nnv sTTVmV ITORXTXfi. ATTOTTST 9. 1908. O. 32. YQL XXV1J.. 1 m JU.. J-. vxnjvfi t New Fall Neckwear in Great Varieties New Autumn Veilings, Dress Goods, Millinery, Etc 1) r . .r- n 17 . ll I II Soma drag stores sell some things at cut rates soma of the time, others some things at cut rates all of the time, but the "OWL" Drug store sells ALL drugs at cut rates ALL of the time. Established 1 850-FIFTY-EIGHT YEARS IN BUSINESS-Established 1850 Optra!, off e Good Merchandise Only Quality Considered Our Prices Are Always the Lowest. THE VICTOR Talking Machine, $1 Down, $1 a Week A Theater In Your Home The SlnKer and Players of the World at Your Command. r All Fine Wash Skirts, Values Up to $15 at $3.48 Tomorrow we close out our entire stock of finest Wash Skirts. They'll be good to wear during the warm spell of the next two months, and good for next season, as well. These are all strictly first-class tailored skirts, from the best makers, made of finest pure linen, rep and poplin. Mostly white, but some novelties in tan, Copenhagen and leather. All wide, iun-iiare shirts, some iun pieaiuu, uuimicu. with bands and buttons. Regularly sold from $6.00 up to $15.00. Your unrestricted choice Monday morning for only $3.75-$4 Bathing Suits at $2.47 Women's Navy Blue Mohair Bathing Suits, trimmed with fancy white braid, sailor collar or Dutch neck. Regular tfn AH $.1.73 and $4.00 values V- , , Children's Bathing Suits, made of navy blue diagonal, trimmed with white braid, sailor collar. Ages up to 16 years. A TJg great bargain at only 3.48 $5-$6 Sweaters at $2.67 1000 Women's Coat Sweaters, white and all colors, plain and tf fancy styles. The entire lot bought trom trii manuiacturer at a sacrifice because some are slightly spotted in most cases spots cannot be detected. Regular $5.00 and qr rJ S6.00 values ?..V.t r a i i i 11 i ia i Ask to See the Exclusive New Colors It New Fall Suits and Hats Are Here Hundreds of new Fall Suits are now being shown in our Suit Section, at all prices. Just arrived from New York in all their novelty and freshness. Two important features this season the Directoire effect and the exquisite new colors. We show ex clusive shades in the new catawba, smoke, olive, amethyst, wisteria, electric, sage and grass. The accompanying illustration, while an extreme novelty, shows the features of the modified Directoire style. With the revival of the modes of the Directoire period, there will be many innovations in the way of long draped sashes, broad revers, long close-fitting sleeves, high turnover collars, etc. All of these will be woAi this Fall, and if you wish to see just how they are going to look, our Suit Section will interest. The new Neckwear novelties are also shown in scores of styles. LONG AND SHORT Kimonos, Vals. to $5 at $1.85 All of our stock of best long and short Kimonos go into this Monday sacrifice sale. lhev are made 01 rancy ngureu iawus auu u.un,uu. fooo, umuutu a.ixj ings, scalloped edges, purr or riowmg sieeves. vames uu p.w. sale Monday, while tney last . Allover Embroidery Sale Values to $3 Yard at $1.19 An immense special purchase of Nainsook All over Embroideries in a beautiful assortment of patterns in floral effects and eyelet work. Just the wanted kind for waists, etc. n- -Q Values to $3.00 yard for ; . .. pX.Xi7 50c-65c Neckwear at 25c A large assortment of Lace and Embroidered Bows, beautiful effects to wear with linen col lars, just the thing for present wear. rC Regular 50c and 65c values AUt $i.85 gl.50-$2 Chiffon Veils 98c Ready-to-Wear Chiffon Veils in all the new shades just the thing for street, auto and beach wear, full 1 and 3 yards long. Sold regularly for $1.50 and $2.00 each. Monday, qo. while they last. ... 27 Ot, 75c-$l Silk Gloves at 49c An extraordinary sale of 2-clasp Kayser, Fownes and Niagara Silk Gloves, double finger-tipped, all sizes in black, white and colors All 75c and $1 Qualities at 49c Fair Best $1.25 Quality Reduced to 79c Pr. Regular $2.50 Straw Sailors for $1.39 The Summer girl's costume is not complete this year without a smart Banded Sailor. Special offer fine quality Milan and rustic straw sailors, black and straw (PI OQ color; well made in most correct shapes, all silk bands; $2.50 values. .r 25c Embroidered Stiii Collars 10c 100 dozen women's colored Embroidered Linen Col lars, all sizes, large assortment of figures; 1 Q regular 19c and 25c values for A ' st Toile G00 I Our August Sale of Toilet Goods opens tomorrow morning. Very extensive purchases were made for this sale and Ave are in Tinsition t.n offer manv of the finer errades of toilet prep arations at reductions of from 10 per cent to 40 per cent. The lists below tell a wonderful tale of econ omymade possible only, by the monthly sales of Lipman-Wolf e 's "Owl" Cut-Rate Drugstore. Soaps for Toilet and Bath Jergen's Heliotrope de Lorme oap, Or box. Imported Castile Soap, 4-pound bar. Hoc. , Imported Castile Soap, 2-pound bar, SOc. Colgate's Turkish Bath Soap, 4Se doz. Kirk's Iris Soap, per cake, 8c. Jergen's Turkish Bah Soap, 48c doz. Carmel's Castile Soap, per cake. 8c. Life Buoy Soap. cake. Soclete Hygienlque Soap, per cake. 33r. Roger ft Gallet Sandalwood Soap, 3JH-. Rofrer & Gailet Violet Soap, 39c. Wool Soap, per cake. Sc. Bath Preparations Bathasweet Bath Powder, 18c. Bradley's Woodland Violet Sea Salt X3r. 47 il Sea Salt. SSc. Perfumes and Toilet Water Roger & Gallefs Popular Ex tracts, per oz.. 3c. Dorothy Vernon Extract, per ."Z., fOC Hudnut's Toilet Water, 4 oz. T5ci S oz.. S1.40. Vlolette De Mai Toilet Water 40c 4 711 Toilet Waters. BOc. Pinaud's Vegetal, SOc Creams and Powders Quinine Hair Tonic, 8-oz. bot tle. 9e. Vesciflora Hair Tonic. T9e. Thespian Cold Cream. 4Sc Azurea Toilet Water. o. Benzoin and Almond Lotion, 2Sc. Insram's Milkweed Cream. 33c. Pompeiian Cold Cream. S3c. Mine. Tale's Almond and Blossom Cream. S3c and 3o. Mme. Yale a Massage Cream, 83c una 3c. Mme. Yale's La Frecla, 83c Pinaud's Tivola. SOc. Mme. Yale's Skin Food, H.23. Dickey s Cream De Lis. 4c. Glycerine Jelly, with violets, 2Sc. Espey's Cream, 12c. Holmes' Frostilla. 14c. Wisdom's Robertlne Powder. 30c. Eastman's Talcum powder, lc. Palmer's Violet Talcum Pow der, 16c. Roger & Gallefs Anthea Pow der. 75c. Piver's Le Trefle Incarnot or Azurea Powder, 8c. Derma Viva. rsoc. Sana Dermal Talcum Powder, 21e Bradley's Talcum. 13c. Eastman's Talcum. 1-lb. cans, 21e Colgate's Talcum Powder. 13c -Face Chamois, 7c, 15c 35c. Powder Pui's, 25c and SOc. Manicure Accessories Emerv Boards, 12c. 4711 Nail Enamel, 19c. Luntr-ite Nuil Enamel. 23c. Lustr-ite Cuticle Softener. S3c. Harnis,ch's Nail Enamel, 3Sc. Ongalinc, SOc. Hudnut's Nail Enamel, SOc. Buffers. 35c, 45c, 5c. Flexible Emory Boards, Oc. Peroxide, 20c, 35c, 65c. Flexible Nail Files, 35c, SOc, 5c. Pearl Nail Cleaners, 25c. Brushes Nail Brushes, 4c. Shoe Brushes. 19c. Bottle Brushes. 5c Dupont's Tooth Brushes, 12c and inc. Ebony Combs, 26c and 43c. Whisk Brooms, extra quality, 18c Ladles' Skirt Brooms, 2Uc. Whisk Brooms, 12 and 14 inch, 38c. Ideal Hair Brush, 70c. Dupont's Ebony Hair Brush. $1.80. Hand Mirrors, rosewood and cocobolas, gl.08. Tooth Powders Grave's Tooth Powder. 14c. Eastman's Tooth Powder. 14c. Cheney's Liberated Tooth PowJ der, 21c. f Sanitol Tooth Paste or Wash, 10c. Sheffield's Tooth Paste. 14c. Hyglenal Antiseptic Tooth Wash, 19c Borodont Tooth Paste, 12c. Zodenta Tooth Paste. 13c. Sozodont Tooth Paste, 19c. New Black Hosiery 35c Values at 23c Women's Imported Black Gauze Cotton Stockings, full regular made, double sole, garter top, Hermsdorf dye, regular 35c quality rio for only Gauze Li'le Hosiery - 50c Value,3Prs.$l Women's Imported Gauze Lisle Stockings, Onyx brand, double sole, garter tops Hermsdorf dye. Regu larly 50c pair. Box f( of three pairs for Vvv 29c Rib'd Vests 23c Women's Swiss Ribbed Vests, low neck, no sleeves, nicely trimmed; reg- OO ular 29c value .iOC AVomen's Fine Ribbed Umbrella Draw ers, deep lace edge and well 00 made; SOc quality... JJ Women 's Swiss Ribbed Union Suits, low neck, no sleeves, umbrella style; CO - I STw nnalitir - "ut I w j j J Lace Curtain Sale) Lace Curtains of all kinds are greatly reduced for this week's sale. Large variety in Marie Antoinette, Irish Point, Cluny, Nottingham, Battenberg, Cable Net and Renais sance styles. White or Arabian col or, lYt and 3 yards long. $3.50-$3.00 Curtains $2.39 $4.50-$4.00 Curtains $2.98 $5.50-$5.00 Curtains $3.89 $6.50-$6.00 Curtains $4.68 $7.50-$8.50 Curtains $5.95 HEARST TO TALK THROUGH OREGON Campaign Managers Arrange His Tour. WILL SWING AROUND CIRCLE Repeat Performances of Can vass for Governor. MAY FORCE BRYAN OUT Attacks of Independent Leader Are Likely to Drive Xebraskan on Stump Man Cast Out by Hearst Predicts Failure. BY LLOYD F. LONEKGAN. NEW YORK, AUS. 8. (Special.) William Randolph Hearst will probably speak In Oregon during the present campaign. Up at the Independence pri'. 1-Mnh in Oramercy Park, the high moguls are busy with time tables figuring- Just how much territory the proprietor of the new organization can cover between now and November. Mr. Hearst, it is said, realizes that the only newspaper support he will have in the campaign of the Indepen dence party will be that of papers un der his ownership. To reach the great mass of voters outside hia circulation he has determined to make a personal canvass. It has been his experience in the state and city campaigns that his remarks have been quoted quite fully and fairly by the opposition press. By a rear-end platform tour of the coun try, striking the centers of population and large newspaper circulation, he hopes to get his doctrines and ideas before the oeoDle In general in a favor able light. Because of his advocacy of a Navy large enough to protect the Pacific as well as the Atlantic Coast, and his con tinued opposition to Chinese and Jap anese immigration. Mr. Hearst hopes . moVo a bio- Imnression with his epeeches In California. Oregon, Wash ington and the Far West generally. Keep Hearst Talking. The tentative plan mapped out con templates personal oratory by Mr. Hearst beginning August 15 and end- lna: a few hours before the polls open .Untlnn mnrnincr. HOW this will appeal to Mr. Hearst has not yet been made public, but his managers believe he will consent. It is the intention to maroon Mr. Hearst on a special train. keep the train moving, and keep Mr. Hearst talking. In this way it is be lieved that many thousands of votes will be captured for the Independence party. The schedule calls for a preliminary tour of the West, taking In the Coast states. Then a jump will be made to Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio and Indiana, where good results are expected. This will be followed by an invasion of New Jersey and New York. From the At lantic Coast Mr. Hearst will drift down South, paying particular attention to Georgia and other states pointed out by John Temple Graves. The next stand will be New England, -where Mr. Hearst and. Mr. Hlsgen will appear on the same car platform. The remaining days of the campaign will be devoted to New York. Anybody will admit that this is pretty ambitious programme, but it Is bound to appeal to Mr. Hearst on paper, anyway. It calls for his appear ance in the following states: Oregon, California, Washington, Idaho, Minne sota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana. New Jersey, New York. Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Georgia, Ala bama and Tennessee, with other states to hear from. Graves Will Join In South. During his trip through the South. Mr. Hearst will be accompanied by John Temple Graves, nominee for Vice President, who will be given a leave of absence by the New York American. Presidential Nominee Thomas L. Hia gen will have a section of the train while It wanders around New England and New York. The leading people in the Far West tour have not yet been announced. Clarence J. Shearn- has been signed for the entire season. During recent campaigns Mr. Shearn, who Is Mr. Hearst's lawyer, has always preceded him on. the platform, and made a good impression on audiences all over the state. Mr. Shearn is a little man with a loud voice and a convincing style of oratory. Mr. Hearst's original plans provided for a calm, safe and conservative tour of the country. He thought that, if he appeared in a number of big cities and spoke at large, well advertised mass meetings, he would- be doing his duty to the party he created. But other en thusiasts do not look at the matter in that light. "We must keep Hearst talking," de clared one man at the Independence Party's Clubhouse today. "We must keep him talking day and night. Then and only then will victory be assured." The contemplated Hearst train service recalls the exciting times the then Demo cratic candidate, for Governor had In 1903. The same master minds are mapping out his tours now. Day after day Mr. Hearst was routed out at 6 A. M. to speak at 10 minute intervals at water tanks along the line. Then at 8 o'clock at night he would reach some big city, and make whirlwind tours in, automobiles and trol ley cars, winding up long after midnight. On one occasion he reached New York . city after a day of long continued vocal effort to find he was billed for 26 speeches at 26 widely separated points in the me tropolis. Even Invaded Other Stales. Another time he addressed 500 enthusias tic farmers at Susquehanna and nobody discovered until the next day that Sus quehanna is in Pennsylvania. The Erie train had crossed the Hue, that was all. His managers also arranged celebrations in New Jersey, and had to be sharply called to account. The famous "Flying Wedge" is also anxious to get into the game again this year. The "Flying Wedge" was the In vention of a Hearst employe, who hap pened to belong to a labor union two years ago. He gathered together a hap- py band of union "worklngmen," and they; had a lovely time galloping about the state. Their efforts met with great suc cess, except for the fact that nobody could ever tell exactly "where they were at." If the "Flying Wedge" was due to Invade Sag Harbor, at the extreme edge of Long Island, on a certain night, it was more than an even bet that Its voices would be heard in the wilds of St. Law rence County, up on the Canadian border. But the "Wedgers" enjoyed themselves, and their expenses did not come to much more than the cost of two brass bands, and everybody admitted that they mada far more noise. The "Wedge" is anxious to perform again this year, but the consensus of opinion is against it. It is believed that a compromise will be effected, and a few "Wedgers" permitted to accompany Mr. Hearst on his train. Prominent Democratic leaders who have been told Mr. Hearst's plans say that such a programme will probably result in forcing Mr. Bryan to take the stump during the last six weeks of the campaign. This prospect is regarded with varying favor by Democrats. Some believe that Mr. Bryan will be stronger at home than on the stump. Others say that the time is ripe for Mr. Bryan to get out and show that he Is a bigger and broader man than he was 12 or eight years ago. Criticisms of Outcast. ' C. Augustus Havlland, once chairman of the Independence League in Brooklyn, has proudly enrolled his name on the list of Hearst traitors. Mr. Havlland, who has Just returned from Europe, gives out an interview more in sorrow than in an ger. In which he says: "The Independence League is taking a suicidal leap. Mr. Hearst is being used by a lot of local pollticluns who want to ride Into local office. The sincere men. the thinking men who have no axes to grind, and who are in the league move ment for honest purposes, are not one idea men like the Prohibitionists. They cannot be Induced to throw away their votes. The mere politicians who Joined in the movement are for the spoils of the office, and for nothing else." Mr. Havlland figures that the Independ ence League movement will hurt Mr. Taft and injure Mr. Bryan. As a matter of news, it may be interesting to listen to hla reasons. Here they are: "If Mr. Roosevelt had been nominated on the Republican ticket, the Independ ence League vote would have been about equally divided. All that is likely to happen now is that the dissatisfied Repub licans of the Independence League who respect Mr. Roosevelt for ills fearless course may possibly support the leagua ticket in preference to supporting Mr. Taft, while the men of the Independence League who were Democrats will support Mr. Bryan. It is ausurd to suppose for a moment that the men recognized as those who have the best interests of their country at heart will be mere puppets and register a vote which cannot mean anything except to keep before the publlo lot of politicians who want local oi- fices." This argument is not convincing to me average politician, nepuuuciiu uuu .-,v-crat alike. For the old party men agreo that Mr. Hearst's strength Is mostly Dem ocratic, and analysis of his votes in past campaigns has demonstrated this to their satisfaction. But navnana naa inren thrown out of the Independence party. and will not be allowed to "hitch on" to Mr. Hearst's special train, even should he feel so inclined. JAPAN'S TASK NOT EASY educated Corean Says Insurrection Is Serious Affair. TOKIO, July 20. Kim Yunzik, Pres ident of the Privy Council in feeoul. u ni.,A,4 in Tnnan with Prince ItO. u iiu (1 1 I II hi i - is quoted by Tokio papers as saying that the object of his visit is to ob- . .1,0 nmcroQa nf the Prince Im- oc:iv3 n - perlal's studies and at the same time to make himself acquaintea wiui Anni,inn ami d. vclnnmen t. He gltl 11 O ...'I'll' ...... . - expresses himself in very courteous and complimentary terms about this country and Its doings In Corea. but he disavows all intention of flatter ing, and he Justifies this claim to can dor by speaking frankly about the in- lurrection. , He has little hope that it will be in.. .,ciiH It main causes, ac- cording to his view, were the sudden disbanding of the uorean army ani m abdication of the Emperor. Many of he disbanded soldiers reiainea p.) ilon of their arms when they fled from Seoul, and they thus formed the nu ;leus for a dangerous body of mal ;ontents. . . viM t. further minted as sayinic that while it would be distinctly ad-' antageoas for tne uorean uvcrc.... o visit Japan, so as to be able to sea . a i- .1 .viHunpfl nf material prog- O.X. 11I. ii" - . ress and modern civilization, there was s yet no possibility or saying ueiiimo r when the visit will be made. As for le ex-Emperor, he is now living en- i.. ..Hrnri from the world, and ha takes no part whatever in administra tive affairs, so that little would ba gained by his visiting Japan. It appears irom air. it-uu . . v. . .uA L'mn.rnr hflft been SUf-1 menis i n L - fering from severe indigestion, caused r the state oi nis mem. nu iw under the care of Dr. Koike. The -Emperor, also., is lam up wnn m elling on nis root. 8W Vorys Will Open Campaign. CEDAR POINT, Ohio, August 8 Arthur Vorys, manager of the movement diich culminated in William H. Taft'a in tnr thp Presidency, will pre- -u. v. nnenine meeting of ReDub- Means at Youngstown, September o. The. orators will be (jovernor narns, wno win peak on state issues, ana oovemor j, Vot- York, and Senator Bev- erldge, of Indiana, who will explain the National Issues, invuaiions win oe ex tended to Senators oraKer ana dick. ihnnrh their names will not be on th programme, for addresses