13 ,inv.ljs MITTKT7IHH' li H WILL BE THE ' SUNDAY OREGOMAN, PORTLAND. MAY' 31, 1914. S JE Ms A 1IO !! AIL WlUN RAISING SALE M Inaug iirated at Gray's Monday Mornin OUR NECESSITY THE PUBLIC'S OPPORTUNITY g, June 1st ii in This is a stupendous undertaking, but with our well-established reputation for handling high-grade merchandise and for abso lute fair dealing to all patrons we are sure of success. ' Beginning Monday morning our brand new $100,000 Stock of Men's and Women's Finest Ready-for-Wear Apparel will be placed on sale at a sacrifice of profit, and in many instances less than cost. We will enumerate the things on sale that are of greatest consequence, the famous Chesterfield Clothes, Knox Felts, Derbys and Straw Hats, Shirts, Hosiery, Neckwear, Silk and Cotton Night Robes' and Pajamas, Suit Cases and Bags. Entire stock of Straw and Panama Hats. Every garment in our Ladies' Dept Suits, Dresses, Waists, Coats, Knickerbockers, Etc. THE FOLLOWING PRICES WILL BE MADE: Chesterfield Suits $20.00 Suits at . . $25.00 Suits at . . $30.00 Stiits at . . $35.00 Suits at . . $40.00 Suits at . . Special Lot Spring Overcoats, silk-lined, $25, $30, $35 values $26. 3 1 2.SO Men's Fine Shirts $1.50 Shirts at . . . . $1.15 $2.00 Shirts at $1.45 $2.50 Shirts at . . . . . . $1.65 Men's Fine Neckwear 50c Scarfs at. , . . . . . . 39c $1.00 Scarf s at . .... . . 55c $1.50 Scarfs at . . . ' . . . . 95c $2.00 Scarf s at . . . . . . $1.35 $2.50 Scarf s at . . . . . .$1.65 Men's Fine Pajamas $ 1.50 Grades at' . . . . . $1.15 $ 2.50 Grades at ..... $1.65 $ 3.50. Grades at . . ... . $2.45 $ 6.00 Grades at $4.25 $10.00 Grades at . . . . . $6.25 $12.00 Grades at . ' . . . . $7.50 Men's Fine Hosiery 50c Hose . 35c $2.00 Silks $1.35 $1.00 Hose . 75c $2.50 Silks $1.65 $1.50 Silks $1.15 $3.00 Silks $2.25 9 Any ad les Ladies' Suits and Dresses Suit or uress m Ladies' Silk and Lingerie Waists the St ore at Mali Price Ladies' Coats $25.00 $30.00 $35.00 $40.00 $50.00 $60.00 $75.00 Values at Values at Values at Values at Values at Values at Values at $12.50 1 5.00 17.50 $20.00 $25.00 $30.00 $37.50 $ 3.75 Waists at $2.75 $ 5.00 Waists at . . $3.75 $ 7.50 Waists at . . $5.50 $ 9.00 Waists at . . $6.50 $10.00 Waists at . . $7.25 $12.00 Waists at . .' $S.50 $15.00 Waists at . . $9.50 $15.00 Coats at $18.00 Coats at $20.00 Coats at $25.00 Coats at $30.00 Coats at $35.00 Coats at $10.00 $ 1 2.00 $14.25 $ 1 7.00 $20.00 $24.50 Ladies' Skirts $ 6.00 Skirts at . $ 7.50 Skirts at $10.00 Skirts at $12.00 Skirts at $15.00 Skirts at 4.SO S.SO 7.25 S.SO $1 l.SO $ $ $ TJ-.f-.o Cnooi'ol White Serge Suits, values $30 to O CZ HfXtra opeCiai S50, your choice in this sale only pAOU Stock all new and latest styles. Take advantage of this wonderful opportunity to buy Men's and Women's finest Wearing Apparel without paying a profit. ' Come Monday 1 I '7q.27 I TPS Tk if T If 1) "SSiT I""" 273-275 I i vrn t? t? totJ strf FT 4tr l fi lfV X Y MORRISON STREET I MQRnIr FOIEET I T0 JJV ILO JT lA'XliL Jl 1 CORNER FOURTH 0FHG1AL COUNT HADE fTASDI.VO OF" CANDIDATES COIJTV CXOJASGED. All Except Few of Return la Primary of May 35 Are Announced Some Mill Are Not Completed. Official returns from Multnomah County, which have been released by County Clerk Coffey, make no differ ence In the standing of candidates as first announced after the primary elec tion. May 15. Several of the counts have not been completed. Those announced follow: Republican National committeeman, Charles W. Ackerson. 10,575; Ralph E. Williams, 19.2S2. United States Senator. R. A. Booth, I3.S5. Representative in Congress. Third District. Nelson R- Jacobson, S3S; A. W. JLafferty. 12,112; C. N. McArthur, 14, 100; George K. Shepherd, 365S. Governor, George C. Brownell, 948: William A. Carter. 540S: A. M. Craw ford. 3618; Grant B. Dimick. 3212; T. T. tieer. 2333; Charles A. Johns. 2521; Gus C Moser. 8526; James Wtthyeombe, 4954. State Treasurer, Thomas B. Kay. 22. 338. Judges of the Supremo Court. Henry J. Bean. 15,847: Henry L. Benson, 14, 645; T. J. Cleeton. 14,737: P. H. D'Arcy, 7281; Lawrence T. Harris. 13,442; Thomas A. McBrlde. 18,89;: Charles L. McNary. 13.241; S. T. Richardson, 7223. Attorney-General. George M. Brown, $911: George N. Farrin. 2334: Frank I 9. Grant, 12,018; J. J. Johnson. 8892; William P. Lord, 4759. Superintendent of Public Instruction, J. A. Churchill. 23.119. State Engineer, John H. Lewis. 21, 507; L. R. Stockman, 5749. Commissioner of Labor Statistics and Inspector of Factories and Workshops, Fred S. Bynon, 4765; O. P. Hoff. 14, 177'; John M. Madsen, 6368; M. E. Miller, 3656. Railroad Commissioner, Frank J. Mil ler. 18,833; Hal U. Patton, S937. Water Division Superintendent, James T. Chinnock, 21,666. Circuit Court Judgre Adolph M. Brunswick. 987; C. IT. Gantenbeln. 20, 181; Fred L. Olson. 6729; G. W. Staple ton, S617. State Senator, James D. Abbott, 13,- 037: Arthur Langsruth. 14,811. Joint Senator. W. J. Clemens. 9Sol; George M. McBrlde. 17,842. Joint Representative, C M. HuriDun, 19.095; David E. Lofgren, 7571. Democratic National committeeman. W. H. Canon, 2042; H. M. Esterly, 6684. United States Senator George E. Chamberlain, 8114. Representative in Congress. A. F. Flegel. 3193; Elof T. Hediund. 2152; E. L. Van Dresar, 2967. Governor, A- S. Bennett, 2684; G.A Cobb, 530; John Manning. 2634: Robert A Miller, S78; C. J. Smith. S473. Judees Supreme Court, William Gal loway, 4914; William M. Ramsey, 4940. Attorney-General. John A. Jeffrey, 6195. Circuit Judge, John Van Zante, 6240. Renresentative. T. O. Hague, 4662 A. K. Hlggs. 4926; Alva L. McDonald, 4808; Cora C. Talbot, 480o. Progressive National committeeman, Henrv Waldo Cee. 1365. United States Senator. William Han lev. 1394. Governor, F. M. Gill, 823; L. H. Mc Mah&n. 471. - VAGRANT REFORM URGED SWISS FARM COLONIES IS CURE, SAYS DR. C. II. PARKER. Minimum Wne Lawn and System of Federal Employment Offices Are aiethoda Sustceated at Meeting;. Minimum wage laws, compulsory high school education, a. system of Federal employment offices and out- of-work insurance were among the re forms advocated yesterday by Dr. Carleton H. Parker, of the University of California, in his speech before the Oregon Civic League at their luncheon In the Multnomah Hotel. Dr. Parker advocated taking the control of va grants out of the hands or the ponce. and spoke highly of the farm colonies of Switzerland as' a. cure for vagrancy. "News that Portland tried with courage and humanity to care for its unemployed last Winter has come to California from many sources," 6ail Dr. Parker. "No city can hold up its social head unless It establishes a minimum of comfort for all who are destitute within Its gates. On ae count of labor-saving devices and automatic machines, we find, in the Industries that produce the necessl ties of life, a constantly increasing output of goods with a relatively con stant orce of -employes. - This condi tion has led to the employment of large numbers In the production of luxuries that, in times of panic or depression, find no market. The em ployes are then thrown out of work. "To reznedv this condition, we must first establish minimum standards for Industrial life. One such, is the mini mum wage. Hardly less Important Is I legislation controlling woman ana child labor. Children under 17 should be sent to high school, and excluded from the ranks or labor. The condi tions of woman's work should be ruled by laws that will maintain her physical and mental vitality. "We should have a system lor regulating the supply of labor. Per haps a Federal employment bureau, with offices in every large city, like the postoffices. would solve that problem. By putting the system on a strict civil service basis, ana preserv ing absolute neutrality on the part of the agency in struggles between eapital and labor, this agency could be made a great factor in. bringing em ployers and employe together. "Finally, Dy doing as mucn pudiic work, as possible in dull seasons, and by out-of-work Insurance, we must care for workers whose employment Is not steady. In Switzerland, farm colonies for confirmed vagrants are organized as institutes of social hygiene. When a man graduates from one of these colonies, 'fie is announces as physically sound. He has a trade suited to his Individual ability. Those who will not work are sent to the dark cell." Coitvloted Slayer Entertained. Nearly 20-J members of the Grand Army and the United Spanish War Vet erans anri the Boy Scouts' drum corps visited A. J. Pender. the convicted Wehrman murderer, in his cell in the County Jail yesterday, the drum and bugle corps furnishing the special en tertainment, Pender served in the Army 18 months during the Spanish and Fhilippine War, 14 months of which he was In the Islands witn tne utan mi tery. which fought side by side with the Second Oregon. . Try Eantiseptic Lotion after shavtns. Adv. STREET PROTEST MADE RESIDENTS OF LAUD'S ADDITION OBJECT TO PAVING PLANS. Declaration Is Made That Property Should Be Exempt From Such As sessment for Ten Venrs. Property owners of Ladd's Addition took action Friday night at a meeting held in the United Evangelical Church to protest against assessment for 1m nrovine- Ladd avenue or any other street in the addition. It was decided to form a - permanent organization called the Ladd Addition Improvement Association. It was declared that the streets in Ladd's Addition had been paved six and one-half years and that the city was about to repave Ladd avenue at heavv expense to the property owners. owlnir to the bad condition of the street. It was j-eported that East Sixteenth and other streets show much wear. Frank S. Grant has been asked for an opinion as to the liability of the owners of the addition and the city to the property owners to main tain the paved streets tor ten years. and he will Rive an opinion next n dav nlsrht. The following resolution was adopted at the Meeting Friday nlcht: We, the property owners of Ladd's Addition, assembled in the First United Evangelical Church, May 29, declare that It is our united opinion that we are entitled to ten years' exemption from street Improvements, and since the improvement of Ladd avenue, after six and one-half years, is necessary and being considered by the City Commis sioners and the expense of the said im provement Is to be assessed to the property abutting thereon; therefore Resolved, That we voice our strong disapproval of being , held financially responsible by the City or Portland tor any street improvements to De maae before the expiration of the said ten years, or 1917." H. S. Joslyn. C. D. Frazler and H. '. Johnson were appointed to prepare constitution ana bylaws for the perma nent organization to be formed next Friday night. Elks' Band Flays Wednesday. The Elks' band will give a conceit in the bandstand at Park and Jeffer son streets Wednesday ntglit. City Commissioner Brewster invited tli band to play last Wednesday, but tha concert was postponed on account of bad weather. WOMAN PORTLAND WINS HEALTH WITH WONDERFUL STOMACH REMEDY Mrs. Hellman Tells Friends How , She Has Been So Quickly Restored. Mrs. W. H. Hellman, of 223 Ains worth street, Portland. Or., was a vic tim of disorders of the stomach and digestive processes. Her trouble af fected her general health and made her unhappy. She took Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy and soon was recommending it to all her suffering friends. In a let ter sending for more of the remedy she wrote: "About eight months ago I sent to you for a bottle of your wonderful stomach medicine, and after taking It sent for three bottles more, which I have taken with the best of results. I am beginning now to feel like a dif ferent person. I have been telling my friends about your wonderful medicine I thank you for the good your medicine has done meT' In such words people in all parts of the country, thousands of people, praise Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy. . The first dose shows results' no long treatment. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and removes poisonous mat ter. It brings swift relief to sufferers from ailments of "the stomach, liver and bowels. Many say that it has savd them from dangerous operations arid many declare that it has saved thpir lives. Because of the remarkable sui'cesa of this remedy there are many Imit-i-tors. so be cautious. Be sure it's MAYR'S. Go to the Owl Drug Com pany and ask about the wonderful re sults it has been accomplishing anion people they know or send to Georce H. Mayr. Manufacturing Chemist, 154 156 Whiting street, Chicago. 111., for free book on stomach ailments and many grateful letters from people who have been restored. Any druggist can tell you the wonderful effects. Adv.