TIIE SUNDAY- OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY ft TRIP TO CALIFORNIA ABOUNDS IN BEAUTY Wonders Met Along Pacific Highway on Tour to Red ding Recounted. SCENERY IS AWE-INSPIRING Colonel E. Hofer Tells of Perils to Automobile on Dangerous Portion of Koute Thousand I'eet Up Side of Mountain. BT COLONEL E. HOFER. r.EDDI.VG, Cal.. July 17. (Special.) It is a vain attempt to describe the natural wonders an4 beauties of the ecfnery from Roseburg, Or., to Red ding. Cal. Douglas County is an empire as big as Switzerland and far more beauti ful, with its masjestic rivers, golden grain fields and billowy foothills cov ered with endless orchards. The high way is graded, dragged, rolled, drained, rocked or graveled, dustless and de lightful. The deep blue on the moun tains is reflected in the clear blue and dark green waters of the Umpqua. To ppe a whole mountainside, several thousand feet high, with towering walls of rock, perfectly reflected in long reaches of the river is a . ight worth going a thousand miles to see. Spinning along at 25 miles -an hour on & two-ton car over the perfect roads, breathing in mountain air clear as a crystal, and seeing this great scenic motion picture unfold is royal pleasure Indeed. The first night out we camped on the bank of the South Umpqua, 14 miles beyond Roseburg, where the wa ters foam over rocks and circle in big, cool eddies below. The new grade on the Pacific High way on the west side of leer Creek Canyon Is a dream of mountain beauty besides being a work of good roads art. One fill across a canyon is nearly iOO feet high and is pierced by a four foot culvert, tunneled through eolld rock, a piece of road engineering hard to duplicate in the whole world. This grade is nowhere more than 7 per cent and eliminates the hardest mountain pull on the Pacific Highway In Oregon. Glendale is a good roads town, where they keep the rock-crushers going all the time. The run down the mountain to Cow Creek, which we crossed here, is as smooth and hard as a pavement. The Pacific Highway crosses the mountain from Glendale to Wolf Creek on a perfect grade, while underneath your motor car the range is penetrated by the tunnel of the Southern Pacific. Viewed from the top of the mountain, the Wolf Creek loop, and overland trains, drawn by the mogul engines, shooting into the tunnel, is a sight not easily equaled in significance. South of Lane County we reached a dry belt, a land of lighter rainfalls. Good roads once built are easily main tained. There are no washouts and the roads do not mud up or cut up as they do in the rain belt north of Cali pooia. Going down the grade to Grants Pass we got our first view of the Rogue River Valley, the snowfields on Grizzly' and " Grayback Mountains, where lie the Josephine County Caves. Grants Pass is the goods roads hub of enthusiasm and motor center of Josephine County. Leaving Ashland, we soon ascended the new Pacific Highway grade over the Siskiyous. We went up the 6 per cent grade at 20 miles an hour. At one picturesque place the highway crosses under a concrete viaduct, swings around a loop, up a beautiful grade and then over a viaduct. The Southern Pacific and the highway are crossed on the same overhead viaduct. The grade is 30 feet wide, of heavy fills, and in many places deep cuts through solid rock. We motored to the top of the Siskiyous, 15 miles from Ashland, in 50 minutes. We camped the second night out on an oak ridge of the California Siski yous at an elevation of 4500 feet. As we approach Shasta the country grows greener, the air cooler, apd clear streams of mountain water are running everywhere. Black Butte looms in gaudy gran deur as a kind of a motley little brother to snowy sky-piercing Shasta. It is a cone of crumbling material ready to retail to the rock crushers in million-carload lots, and. by the billion at wholesale. From the Shasta plateau the grades drop 4000 feet to tide-water on the Sacramento. At Mott station the Pa cific Highway gives the first glimpse of the Sacramento River foaming over the rocks 1000 feet below. Heavy grade work on the Pacific Highway is being done all the way from . Dunsmuir to Delta, 30 miles. Borne of this is hard motoring, but all passable. The Sacramento Canyon has many charms and great beauty. For nearly 200 miles the river winds in graceful curves between rock-bound banks among the highest mountains bounding any streams in the United States continuously for that distance. The highway follows the higher levels and grades, and ever below foams the sea-green waters of the sacred river of California. We rambled along 120 miles the third day out in the Sacramento Canyon, closing the day with a nerve racking pull of two miles at least 1000 feet up the mountainside. The driver kept his eyes glued me chanically on the outside edge of the narrow crevice of rock we were trav eling over. The highway Is laid in gracious lines horizontally. It was built three years ago, but will be abandoned from Delta to Kennett. as the new Pacific Highway will follow the east bank of the river. The great curves of the canyon af ford wonderful vistas. First is the white bed of the river, with foaming cataracts and great pink granite boul ders splitting the emerald water. Next is the steel rock-ballasted track of the Southern Pacific. Then the crushed-rock highway hanging like a cobweb in midair. And above all the white-blue California sky. ABERDEEN BONDS ARE SOLD Issue of $500,000 for Water System Sells on 5 1-2 Per Cent Basis. ABERDEEN Wash.. July 17. (Spe cial.) Selection of an engineer to su perintend the building of the 1500.000 Wishkah River gravity water system for Aberdeen shows City Engineer Kel sey and R. H. Thomson to be favor ites for the job. According to an agreement reached by the Council in an executive session the bonds are to go to a Chicago firm represented by the Hayes & Hayes Hank of this city. The bonds are to . draw 54 per cent and will be sold at par -nd accrued intreest. Junetion City Oddfellows Install. JUNCTION' CITY. Or.. July 17. (Spe cial.) The semi-annual installation of the Oddfellow officers was held, with T. O. Rnrman v A.v.rt . a. .u a. a - 1 C. Barker, financial iMTAtipv anA 7 Strome. treasurer, retaining their po sitions, ine onicers installed were: William Jensen, noble grand; C. E. i-ogsaon, vice-grand; W. W. Hicks, right supporter noble grand; S. S. SnelU lff RIlnriAPl.p nAKI. D Tn-f 1 warden: A. Ruff, conductor;' E. H. Clark, nsiue guara, and Kelso, chaplain. EMPLOYER IS HELD EXEMPT Compensation Is Denied Workman Injured Ontside of State. OLYMPIA, Wash.. July 17. (Special.) A Washington workman, sent by his employer on work across the state line temporarily, and there Injured, cannot recover compensation under the stat utes of thia state, Assistant Attorney General John M. Wilson has ruled In an official opinion rendered to the In dustrial Insurance Commission. This ruling is the exact reverse of an I -formal opinion rendered, a few week earlier, Mr. Wilson declaring that further study of the subject convinced him of his error. The case at issue was that oT a Spo kane telephone lineman injured at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. The ruling is ex pected to be of particular importance In connection with accidents that may arise during the construction of the Portland-Vancouver Interstate bridge. FARMER-DEALER IS TAXED Co-operative Marketing Associations Must Comply With Xew Law. OLYMPIA. Wash.. Julv 17. (Special.) Co-operative marketing organizations of farmers have been notified by the State Department of Agriculture that under a ruling by the Attorney-General they will be called upon to comply with the provisions of the commission merchant law of 1907, which now will be put in effect for the first time. The law requires a $10 state license and a $3000 bond from all persons or or ganizations handling fruit, vegetables, milk or' its products or poultry on a commission basis. The law has been a dead letter on account of its doubtful validity, but the Supreme Court recently upheld it by a 5-to-4 decision. Seattle commission merchant are planning to "carry the fight against it to the Supreme Court or the United States on a writ of error. BUREAU JILL OPEN Republican Publicity Work to Rival Mr. Bourne's. OFFICES NOT TO CONFLICT SCHOOL HEADS STUDENTS Superintendents Week at Puyallup Part of Summer Session. PUYALLUP, Wash., July 17. (Spe cial.) A novel school was held at Puy allup from Monday until today. It was known as the superintendents' week of the Puyallup Summer session. Its pur pose was to give definite, specific in struction and practical work in certain new subjects which have been added to the educational system and in which superintendents are called upon to direct the work. Conferences were arranged for su perintendents with the expert of the Summer school and Western Washing ton Experiment Station. The attend ance of superintendents from various parts of the state was large. The faculty of the Puyallup Summer session was assisted by the extension force of the State College. ROAD SECTION IS IMPROVED Clarke County Hardsurfaces Por tion of Pacific Highway. RIDGEFIELD. Wash., July 17. (Spe cial.) Placing crushed rock on about two miles and a half of road from Crabb's corner on the Pacific Highway to Horn's Corner, by the county, was completed this morning, after working on this stretch for over a month. Three layers, coarse, medium and fine, were placed on the entire section. Work on one of the three perma nent highways in this section of Clarke County, consisting of about 5700 feet, which is to be macadamized, from the city limits of Ridgefield to within a half mile of Horns Corner, will be started Monday. Charles C. llart, Spokcsiuan-Itevlew Correspondent, to Have Charge of Xew Enterprise of Pro gressive Wing of Party. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, July 17. Ex-Senator Jonathan Bourne, Jr.. who for several month has had a monopoly on the political press agent business at Washington, other publicity bureaus having been silenced by the lack of funds, la now to have a rival in the National Progressive Re publican Union, In which Charles C. Hart, Washington correspondent of the Spokane Spokesman-Review, Is to be an active figure. The two bureaus will not conflict, however, for the Bourne bureau is furnishing matter exclusively to country newspapers, while the Progres sive Republican Union is to keep in touch principally with the dallies. Mr. Bourne has been making no fuss whatsoever in the conduct of his big bureau, for it is a rather sizable af fair, and apparently well supplied with funds. He has, however, cut the dally papers off his list, and Is to ignore them entirely, preferring to reach the public through the nnuntry papers, particu larly the weeklies. Every Coantj Reached. The Bourne bureau Is supplying one newspaper in every county In the entire United States, and is sending out Re publican doctrine, sprinkled with criti cism of the .Democratic Administration. It Is the prime aim of the Progressive Republican Union to build up sentiment in favor of the Republican candidates of the progressive type, such men as Borah, of Idaho, and to do what can be accomplished by publicity to head off the nomination of a standpat Repub lican in 1916. Whether well founded or not, the charge is frequently made that the Bourne bureau Is operated in the Interest of Senator Weeks, of Massa chusetts, but the matter that has been sent out under Mr. Bourne's direction has not favored any candidate, and the charge that his is a Weeks bureau Is probably attributed to the fact that Mr. Bourne, when asked what he thoucht or Mr. weeks as a nominee, replied "Wouldn't he be a corker?" Bonrne Barraa to Coo tin nr. The Bourne bureau is to continue in operation up to the time the nominating convention meets next year, and then. in an proDaollity, it will turn in and boost the Republican nominee, whoever he may be. Mr. Hart is now on a trln Ihrxm-h the West, which will Include stops In Spokane, Seattle, Portland. San Fran cisco and other points on the Pacific Coast. He will Moo at Boise to Senator Borah; will visit Colonel Roose velt s manager, ex-Senator Dixon, at Missoula, Mont, and get In touch with progressive Republicans throughout the West. On his return to Washington Mr. Xart will get his bureau into active operation. Party of 1 1 Carries Camp Outfit. WEISER. Idaho. July 17. (Special.) A Portland party of 11 arrived here yesterday in autos on their way to San Francisco. In the party were Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Secor and baby, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hanson and two chil dren, William Monroe, Fred Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Straw. They left here going south through Central Ore gon. They have one car and two trucks which are loaded with every thing for a complete camping outfit, including two portable houses. They are jogging along at the rate of from 30 to CO miles a day at easy stages and expect to reach the Exposition the latter part of September. Woodland Sales Day Changed. WOODLAND, Wash.. July 17. (Spe cial.) The Woodland Commercial Club has announced the plan of holding the farmers' public sales on the last Sat urday of each month. These sales are beginning to be -looked forward to by all who have anything to sell, or want to buy. and are regarded as a great convenience as well as affording a day that all feel that they can be sure to meet their friends and neighbors in town. Logged-Off Tract Xcar Kelso to Go. KELSO. Wash., July 17. (Special.) Fifteen hundred acres of agricultural logged-off land, lying a few miles east of Kelso, will soon be opened for sale by the Hammond Lumber Company to actual settlers. A new road will be opened to this tract in the Spring by the county. County Commissioner C. F. Jabusch having just authorized the road. $200,000 Sought on Klamath Work. K LA-MATH FALLS, Or., July 17. (Special.) A telegram was received yesterday by Project Manager Camo. of the Klamath irrigation project, from Representative N. J. Sinnott to the ef fect that the matter of the expenditure on the project would be reconsidered upon the return of the appropriations committee to Washington. Mr. Camp hopes eventually to have the allotment increased to at least $200,000. Silver Lake Votes School Bonds. KELSO, ' Wash.. - July 17. (Special.) At the election at Silver Lake it was decided by the voters to bond the dis trict for $7000. which, with the $4000 insurance money from the burned schoolhouse. It is believed, will provide ample funds for the construction of a new school building. A large assem bly-room or auditorium will be one of ine features. Individual Pumping Is Tried. WAPATO. Wash.. July 17. (Spe cial.) Because of the scarcity of irrl gation water on the reservation, and the probability that the supply would cease almost entirely in a few weeks from lack of storage, many ranchers are installing pumping systems in an errort to save their crops. A textile made In China from raw Ilk ci do nun in ine earth a year without Echo Tries Using Oil on Streets. PPHO -t..t . . ... -' ' ' juijt ii. special.) Echo is oiling its streets. A tankcar hnlHIni, 1 TA ..ii. - a . . . n 6-iiuiib vi cruae oil supplies all the principal streets of the town. The oil is first heated witn live steam in the tankcar and then i ie sireeis in a nested con dition with a 600-gallon oil spreader. Testa r bv Europoan scientist have shown that the durability of v.rlou. hronzea la pripnrt1onat to th.lr rnat-nt of tin. Soap Is Bad For the Hair Soap should be used very sparingly, if at all. if you want to keep your hair looking Its best. Most soaps and pre pared shampoos contain too much al kali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is Just ordinary mulslfied cocoanut oil (which Is pure and greaseless). and is better than soap or anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub It In. It makes an abundance of rich creamy lather, which rinses out easily' removing every particle of dust, dirt' dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it IcaTes the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulslfied cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, if, very cheap, and Z-ieW, .lnC.S V1 8uPPIv every mem ber of the family for months. Adv. Dental Work THAT IS PRACTICAL LASTING SCIENTIFIC and MODERN 10 Y-on.-f ran Ice r-2" $.5r.." Jaj AJaW.-. " V f; ' V .' DR. B. E. WRIGHT Improvement has been my con stant aim. I am still learning. My work Is placed to stay. It is the best obtainable. I give you my personal atten tion. I am assisted by every mod ern Instrument and agency known to dentistry. Painless extraction of teeth. Moat Reasonable l'rlcrau. DR. B. E. WRIGHT ' N. W. Corner Sixth and Washing ton. .orlbnmt III OK. rioan Main 2119, A -1 1 II. Office Hours K A. M. to I'. M. Consultation Frrc ROtroPATRIO PHBSCKIPTION9, SPECIFICS. THITIIHATCj, Pad-LaCTA. A HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACY IS CHAKGB UK A TRAIXKO HOMtO PUAKMACIST. ttC.ND KOIt CATILOCFG, WOODARD, CLARKE & CO. aaa-Lark Bids, Aider Utreet at Wea Cut. rartlaat Oc We Have' Inaugurated in This City a Weekly Half-Holiday for Department Store Em ployes. Closing. Our Store on Thursday Afternoons at 1 P. M. During: July and August. We Maintain That a Weekly Half-Holiday During These Hot Months Should Be Universal, and We Solicit Your Co-operation. Lend This Movement Your Support "YOU CAN DO BETTER FOR T.ZSS OX THIRD STREET" Store Opens Daily at 8:30 A. M. On Saturdays 9:00 A. M. Pacific Phone Marshall 5080 mm The Most in Value The Best in Quality Store Closes Dairy at 5:30 P. M. On Saturdays 6:00 P. M. . Home Phone A 2112 Stamped Ready Mado Dresses 19c REGULAR 33c GRADE For tomorrow we place on sale s fine line of ready-made Stamped Dresses. They are made of high irrade linen-finished material in the popular colors of tan, blue, pink and white. They are shown with the popular kimona sleeves and are stamped in several pretty designs. The best 25c Trade. " Q Priced special this sale at XiC sm ii z tu JT ilk iL S JUL Towels A Sale of Timely Importance Through a clever trade event we secured a fine lot of Turkish Towels at price concessions of unusual importance, and tomorrow we will place the entire assortment on sale, underpriced to you in the same attractive manner. They come full bleached, neatly hemmed and in all sizes. It is a sale you should not fail to profit by. Six lots to select from as follows: 15c Quality, this sale at, each 18c Qualitj this sale at, yard . . . . 11c 14c 20c Quality, this sale at, each 25c Quality, this sale at, each 17c 19c 30c Quality, this sale at, each. 45c Quality, this sale, ea. .24c 33V3c As the Quantity Is Limited We Suggest An Early Attendance at This Sale mi crmtshsrr lit a 031 An Extraordinary Underpricing of One, Two and Three-Strap Pumps Comfortable, fashionable, up-to-the-minute, in kid, patent, velvet and gunmetal leathers; all sizes for women and misses ; values $2.75, at, pair. Let us emphasize they are frood-wearing, stylish Pumps that will both fit your feet and will cost you little if you profit by this sale. You have choice from one, two and three-strap styles in dull kid, patent, velvet and punmetal also brand new BABY DOLL PUMPS, with flat heels and ankle straps. All are kid lined lines regularly sold up to .?..$. 79 $2.75, priced in this sale at, the pair. S1.79 Women's $3.50 Pumps in all leathers and styles at. -S2.4T Girls $1.75 Broad-Toe Mary Janes on sale at, pair. .SI. 57 Girls $2.00 Broad-Toe Mary Janes on sale at, pair. - SI. 77 Boys Velour Calf Shoes in mannish styles at, pair. Sl..r7 Boys Velour Calf Shoes,.in sizes 1 to 6, priced at. . .S1.97 Fine "Vest Pocket" Mammocks They Come Complete With Ropes, Hooks and Bag Full Size and Durable Regular $1.25 Grade, o O in This Sale at ; Ot7C A timely underpricing of fine Hemp Hammocks, especially desirable for outing and outdoor use. They are made full size and are exceedingly strong and durable. They come complete with ropes and hooks and each outfit is put up in a neat, small bag, which makes it convenient to transport. Secure anon outfit at this sale tomorrow; $1.25 grade at Oa7C WOOL ROBES, S1.9S Regular $3.00 Values Wool Auto Robes in cross stripe styles desirable also for beach use. They come 57 by 72 inches and are the kind regularly sold at $3.00. Priced f or t 1 qq this Sale at l.iJO AUTO ROBES, S2.9S Regular $5.00 Values Plush Auto and Outing Robes in the popular Tiper styles. They come in a good large size. Reg ularly sold at $5.00 a limited number priced this J0 OQ Sale at IO Boys' and Girls Wash Suits and Dresses In the Best New Styles Economies in chil dren's Dresses and Wash Suits at practically the opening of the s e a s o n a rare opportunity the workmanship and quality of materi als are as fine as the styles are ef fective. Let the following items serve as ex amples of the price reductions which prevail throughout our entire stock. WASH DRESSES, 9S? For Values to $1.50 An extensive showing of Girls' Wash Dresses in the season's best styles in Percales, Ginghams, Chambrays, etc., plain colors and neat checks, stripes and figures high and low neck models with long or short steevcs-QQ Values to $1.50. This SaleOC WASH DRESSES, 50 For Values to $1.00 Dainty Gingham, Percale and Chambray Wash Dresses in fancy checks, plaids, stripes and plain colors both high and low neck models with long or short sleeves. Values to $1.00. To c,O8ej0c WASH SUITS AT 9S For Values to $1.50 Oliver Twist Middy, Buster Brown and other popular styles in plain colors and stripes all sizes from 2 to 6 years well finished, neat ly trimmed garments in Galatea, Percale, Romper Cloth and other materials. Regular values qq This Sale itUC to $1.50. WASH SUITS, 31.35 For Values to $2.C0 Popular Middy, Oliver Twists and other styles for boys from 2 to 6 years of age. Well-made gar ments of the finest materials in plain colors and stripes. Regular values up to $2.00. To - O C close at .V 50 Without a Parallel Notable Lace News thousands of yards of pretty, dainty Laces suffer great price reductions at this sale, just because assortments are broken and we are overstocked on several lines. They are all of this season's make and the patterns include the most effective and dainty designs we have ever shown. The price savings are so important that you'll be tempted to purchase for both present and future needs. You nave choice from : LACE VALUES TO 50c LACE VALUES TO 25c AT 10? YARD 4 to 18-Inch Shadow and Oriental Edges and Flouncings in dozens of floral and artistic designs they come in cream, white, ecru, and in many pretty colors. Values to 25c yard. Clearance 1 f Price, yard 1UC LACE VALUES TO 75c AT 35 YARD 12 and 18-inch boautiful Kpt Ton Chiffon Cloth and Silk Mr- i Klouncings in white, cream and quisette in 40 and 43-inch widths. j ecru all desirable new patterns values 10 ?1.WJ a " CQ- It " values to 75o. Clear- Q C Clearance Price, yard JjG ance Price, yard OOC AT 19 YARD 12, 18 and 27-inch Shadow and Oriental Edges and Klouncings; also Allover Lacea in rich designs. They come in white, cream and ecru; values to 50c yard. Q Clearance Price, yard AiC LACE VALUES TO $1.50 AT 59 YARD 27-Inch Silk Run Shadow Net Top t louncings. r llet Mesh and A Complete Showing of New RoyalSociety Packages Priced at 25o to $1.00 Come in and inspect our complete stock of Royal Society packages. Included are the new Fall patterns, shown for the first time. These packages come to you complete, clean and in tact, in a sealed envelope. They contain the article to be embroidered, stamped on material of the highest quality, exact instructions and a carefully prepared chart of stitches and colors, with sufficient floss to entirely com plete the embroidery. You hare choice from women's waists, nightgowns, combination suits, tripelope combination, empire combinations, corset covers, aprons, dressing sacques, boudoir caps, children's dresses, rompers, drawers, chemise and petticoat combination, nightgowns, bibs, caps, doll outfits, also centerpieces, towels, scarfs, shirt cases, necktie racks, util ity bags, broom holders, shaving pads, collar bags, laundry bags and many others. 1 " A Worthy' Underpricing to Demonstrate Our Su premacy in Value-Giving Silk Offering's This unusual opportunity to buy the most beautiful and fashionable new Silks should not fail to interest great numbers of intending purchasers. Our su premacy in value-giving is well demonstrated by the following unmatchable offerings: 26-Inch Messalines at 69 Yard A fine soft Swiss-finished Mes saline Silk, full 26 inches wide, comes in every desirable plain shade a most reliable ?Q quality. Underpriced, yardOC Plain colored Crepe de Chines shown in the season's most popular colors they come in 40-inch width and in a beautiful rich finish two standard qualities underpriced for this sale as follows: Regular $2 quality at $1.50 a yard and regular $1.50 quality at $1.1!) a yard. Yard-Wide Silk Poplins in All Colors Priced This Sale at G9f a Yard Yard-Wide First Quality Chiffon Taffeta Silk All Colors, Yard $1.29 36-Inch Messalines at S9 Yard Extra wide and extra fine Swiss finished Messaline Silks, shown in all wanted plain shades a silk that will make up beauti-QQ fully at yard OiJC Big Savings in Xiittle Tilings Notion Section 25c Shaving Mirrors priced l. 75c Hand Mirrors, this sale, 50c Hand Mirrors on sale at iiTf j 75c Hair Brushes priced at :J9 i 20c Clothes Brushes, on sale 12 !j 75c Leather Back Cloth BrT 40f ii 25c Stickeri Braid priced at lof ,i 15c Wave Wash Braid priced 10f J 15c Large Bx Wire Hairpins lOf ij 25c Whisk Brooms priced at 19 25c Round Gaiters, this sule lOc 15c Crown Dress Shields fcr IOC 50c Queen Dress Shieltls f i r ;i."k lOcLightweight Dress Shields. ."p f 1.75 Dress Forms, 36 and 3S. OStf 15c Dressing Combs priced IOC 25c Dressing Combs priced l.T 10c Shoe Trees, this sale, pr. 6 4 i I