EMBER 2G. 1922 17 iih.'ifcm v.r.v. ,wg lilll!l!IIIIIi!!IIIIIII!!II!III!IIH EE 3 PVTT "1 1 THE SUNDAY .OltEGOXIAX POKTLATV TTTO IX TJ J Jo yV art p r (1 1 ft SAD!' Knives Hen's pocket knives (with and without chains) at great reduc tions. $ 5.00 values... 2.98 $ 7.50 values... $4.49 $10.00 values... $6.89 Many others. 8&r Mr Chains Men's Waldemar watch chains are reduceclas follows: $3.50 values SI. 98 $4.50-$5.00 vals. $2.98 J8.50-J7.50 vals. 83.98 Many others. For the past two days everyone has been wondering what Davids was going to do. Well, the secret is out. We're "Going to Quit." We're going to sell out in a hurry. To this end we have decided to mark our goods at prices that will send them out in a hurry. In fact, we're going torsell our merchandise, at PRACTICALLY YOUR OWN PRICES. We're going to make jewelry history. We're going to make everyone happy with the greatest jewelry BARGAINS they have ever known. Everything, yes, EVERYTHING (except a very few contract lines) in this complete store will be thrown on sale EVERYTHING, without reservation. We're READY. Are YOU? LET'S GO! Cost and Profit Will Be Forgotten in This Phenomenal Jewelry Event AVF' EVERSHARP PENCILS A splendid opportunity to secure GENUINE Eversharp Pencils at sharp savings. buys a good Eversharp Pencil for a man or woman. $2.50 Values $1.59 , 3.50 Values $2.29 Many others. Mens Watches Some of the values: Genuine Elgin Watches $14.95 $12.98 Newest up-to-the-minute shapes in gold-filled Elgin watches. The $14.95 watches have white gold-filled cases. Elgin Streamline Watches. 17 jewels, 20-year tO"7 QI? cases B I $65.00 Illinois Thit Model Watches, luminous dials, solid Clft QC gold cases DtO.OiJ $60.00 Howard MQ OK Watches 1 D0.J $80.00 Howard TH Watches ,. POO. I V $35-$40 Watches, thin models, 17 jewels, fancy dials, cases GiyA Qti in latest designs PtiJiJ Many Others. DIAMON Final clearaway of beautiful diamond rings. Some of the VALUES: $30.00 Diamond Rings $13.85 Slfltls Newest "Onyx" rings set gold mountings. $115.00 women's two stone Diamond Ring set with blue sapphires ...... 879. SO $50.00 to $77.50 women's Diamond Rings, 18-kar-at Belals white golit mounting .... .S3S.75 $100.00 to $150.00 wom en's Diamond Rings, 18 karat Belais white gold mounting $89-50 $225.00 exquisite half karat Diamond Ring, 20 karat white gold mount ing set with blue sap phires 8148.50 with diamonds. Solid $213.00 women's Dia mond Ring 9et with three diamonds (total weight over 1 karat) 8157.54) $625.00 men's Diamond Ring, weight of stone 1.05 karat.. .. .$465.00 $575.00 women's Dia mond Ring, 1 karat, lat est style mount ing 8435.00 $725.00 men's Diamond Ring, llj karat, new style mounting. . .$589 Wrist Watches All of our fine Wrist Watches will be cleared at great savings: S22.r.O-$23.00 WRIST WATCHES $12,98 Solid white gold Wrist Wratches. Reliable timekeepers. . $27.50-535.00 values... $37.50-545.00 values... $47.50-565.00 values... ...815.95 ....824.95 ....838.95 High-grade 14-karat solid gold Wrist Watches In all fancy shapes, 15-jewel movements. ELGIN WRIST WATCHES $35.00 values 826.65 $45.00 values '. 838.95 $75.00 values 856.65 MANY OTHERS. Rings All our women's rings set with synthetic stones are reduced: . $ 5.00 values 82.48 $ 7.50 values.... 83.48 $10.00 values 84.98 $15.00 values.... 8 7.48 Children's Rings.... Rings Men's rings In a multi tude of styles and set tings reduced as fol lows: $10.00 values. .$ 4.9S $15.00 values.. $ 7.48 $20.00 values.. $ 9.98 $25.00 values.. 812.48 Others at One-Half. J. 1:4 Silver Tudor Plate (Oneida COMMUNITY made) tableware reduced: 6 teaspoons.. .... .89 6 knives 81.98 6 forks 81.98 $3.00 Sterling handle pie knife .. Many others. ..98t Sterling Sterling silver indi vidual Salt and Pepper Sets, in OQ. boxes, pair.... OJL $10.00 tall Salt and Pepper. Sets (stamped field) . . ... $4.98 Carving Sets Three-piece Carving Sets (knife, fork and steel) in at tractive boxes. Buy now for Thanksgiving. ' $ 7.56 values .$3.98 $10.00 values .--$5.49 $15.00 values $7.98 Many others." The Sale Begins Tuesday at 10 EA Final disposal of high grade Tea Sets at drastic reductions: $25.00 TEA SETS ETS Heavily silver pjatea Tea isets in a great many designs and shapes: $30.00 TEA SETS 9S 15- .98 $40.00 TEA SETS ?22-98 Many Others in Proportion Sandwich Trays While the quantity lasts wo will sell S.SO SANDWICH TRAYS $3.98 Quadruple plated Sandwich Trays in pierced designs. ALSO $10.00 Cake Stands 85.98 $15,.00- Cake Stands 87.98 $15.00 Sandwich Trays 87.98 EARL (Imitation) BEADS IP The sale of pearl (imitation) beads includes genuine La Tosca and Baroda makes in lovely boxes: $10.00 Values $ 4.98 $15.00 Values...... $ 7.98 $17.00 Values $ 9.98 $25.00 Values $12.98 Many others. Everything Is Exactly as Represented Plan to Be Here When the Doors Open Cut Glass Clearaway of cut glass ware, including Libbey and other fine makes: $3.00 Nappies and Bowls $1.98 $7.50 Celery Trays $2.98 Mantel Clocks Mahogany finish and solid mahogany mantle clocks. $22.50 Values.. .$9.98 $30.00 values.. $14.98 $35-37.50 values Jtn.ilK $70 chime clock S45.98 1 t i 13 L1 A 343 Washington St. Just Off Broadway Your Money Back ii Not Satisfied ti yw iwriri Vtiirtir-,.iiii(-...T-'r I M.UIL,.i!ll!!,)t.liy .......-...;.r, H-Uf w pit", piij tiiifnii .iiiiwitiK;Lij.iiwwiJf 9 14 -3 !!IIll!I!Elll!i;iliy!ll!:illliiil!!!!l!!!!lllll!!!!!!ll!!!llillili:i!l!ll!l!I r-'aawi'.'ii'iBt-iiri 1-1 21 FLDDD CDNTHBL IS UHEED PLYAIXUP RIVEIi SITUATION SUBJECT OP HEARING. Engineer Officer Takes Evidence to Guide Action of Congress Regarding Improvement. . TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 25. (Spe cial.) The damages which have oc curred on the Tacoma tide flats from recent floods do not constitute all, the reason for control of the Puyallup river in its lowest reaches, but there is present danger that a devastating flood such as he believes has oc curred several times during the last century may come and wipe out all the great property and industry on the tideflats, said (Uenn L. Parker, !n charge of the Tacoma office of , the geological survey, in speaking at the hearing held at the chamber of commerce by Colonel Edward H. Schulz. The hearing was for the purpose of collecting material to guide Colonel Schulz in making his report to congress upon the Puyallup river flood conditions, the probable cost ot control and the extent to which the federal government should assist the community in the work. Scott Z. Henderson, attorney, gave tine chief argument why the govern ment should assist in the control work. Three reasons exist, he urged: The government has jurisdiction over the channel of the Puyallup river and must give its consent to any changes; the government is inter ested in the preservation of the com merce and industry of tta ports, and the Puyallup river has the legal standing of a navigable stream. MARKETING IS PROMOTED Reorganized Co-operative Council Represents 12 Organizations. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LKGK, Corvallis, Nov. 25. (Special.) The Oregon co-operative council as roorgani7ed represents 12 organiza tions with 20 delegates, as follows: Oregon Farm Bureau federation1, Ceorge A. Mansfield, Portland, presi dent; Oregon State grange, C. E. Spence, Oregon City, master; Oregon Farmers' union, A. R. Shr?hway, Milton, president; Oregon Co-operative Wheat Growers, A. R. Sljum-w-nv. president: T. H. West, The Dalles, public director, and A. H. J.ea, 1'ortland, manager; Pacific Co operative Poultry Producers, P. C. Sehroeder, Portland, president, and K. J. Pixon, Portland, manager; Pa cific Co-operative Wool Growers, . W. HeTia. Ashland, president; C. J, Hurd, Corvallis, public director, and R. A. Ward, Portland, manager; Oregon Co-operative Hay Growers, F. W. Jewett, Hermiston, president; L. A. Hunt, Hermiston, manager, and Fred Bennion, Pendleton, public director; Oregon State Bankers' as sociation, C. D. Rorer, Eugene, president; agricultural committee, Portland Chamber of Commerce, E. E. Faville, Portland, chairman; bureau of markets, Oregon Agricul tural college, Hector MacPherson, Corvallis, director; extension serv ice, Oregon Agricultural college, Paul V. Maris, Corvallis, director. The purpose of the council is to promote co-operative marketing and so co-ordinate the work of the exist ing associations as to hold the con fidence of the public in the economy and desirability of co-operative han dling. R. A. Ward is president and Paul V. Maris secretary. -. T COMEDIAN T0AID CHEST Ed Andrews, AVith Opera Com pany, to Entertain Crowd. . Ed Andrews, comedian, will lend his support tomorrow noon to the cause of the Port land Community Chest. Mr. An drews will arrive in Portland today with the Ameri can Light Opera comtjanv. which vlj opens a season of Ji 3 comic and light opera at the pub lic auditorium this afternoon. Mr. Andrews has consented to an. Si pear at the noon gathering at the Community Chest indicator at Sixth and Morrison streets and entertain the crowd for a short time and raise the indicator. He will be in troduced by Mayor Baker. Mr. Andrews has the distinction of having been the original Ko-Ko- in America in the opera "The Mi kado." In the '80s. while conducting his own company, he produced "The Mikado" and played the eccentric part of lord high executioner. POWER DIM PROTESTED, PERMIT TO TACOMA OPPOSED BY FISHERIES BOARD. Paving Ordered Reassessed. CHEHAL1S, Wash., Nov. 25. (Special.) Judge Abel in the Lewis county superior court has Issued a peremptory writ of mandamus re quiring Mayor H. J. Maury of Win lock to sign ordinance No. 195, passed by the city council of that place, reassessing the cost of the paving leading from Wlnlock'B busi ness center to the Winlock-Cowlitz paved highway. This matter has been a subject of a warm contest for the past two years at Winlock. Read The Oregonian classified ads. Renewed Attempt to Block Lake Cusbman Project Complicates Matters Despite Decision. TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 25. (Spe cial.) The state fisheries board is protesting the granting of a permit to the city of Tacoma to build a dam on the north fork of the Skokomish river and divert 1000 second feet of water therefrom for the generation of power.it was stated today by Com missioner Davisson of the municipal light department. The board has written to Marvin Chase, super visor of hydraulics, who granted the city the permits recently after the state supreme court had upheld the city's right to condemn state fish eries lands, requesting that the per mits Immediately be revoked. City commissioners were startled at the disclosure of further attempts to block the city's Lake Cushman power project, after defeat at the hands of the supreme court, being made, as claimed,-by the state fish eries board, of which Ed Sims 1 is chairman. They were not appre hensive that the effort would be successful, however, as City Attorney Dennis expressed himself as believ ing the state supervision of hy draulics was bound to grant the per mits and cannot now withdraw them on protest of the fish board. RUST MENACE ,IS SEEN Oregon Declared In Danger of In vasion by Timber Disease. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE. Corvallis, Nov. 25. (Special.) Oregon is still entirely free from the white pine blister rust, but is In serious danger of invasion so long as the scourge is ravishing tha Brit ish Columbia forests and breaking out in many Washington areas, re ports H. P. Barss. plant pathologist of the state experiment station and director of control work In Oregon. The state and federal authorities are fighting to prevent spread of the rust into the Oregon pine belt. "Rigid observance of the quaran tine laws by the citizens of Oregon and full co-operation In discovering and reporting the first appearance of the rust, will go far toward sav ing Oregon's great lumber industry based on its white- pine forests," says ProfessorBarss. "The most dangerous channel of infection . into . Uiis country from British Columbia Is along the pine ridges leading from Canada into Idaho and into western Washing ton," asserts Professor Barss. 'Should the disease spread eastward along the Canadian border, thence into the vast white pine belt of Idaho, the chances are that it would continue on into Oregon and Cali fornia, thus laying open to the de vastating fungus disease one of the most valuable bodies of soft-wood timber in the world." ' CITY UTILITY PROSPERS Tacoma Light and Power Bureau . Nets $677,532.19 for Year. TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 25. (Spe cial.) The kTacoma municipal light and power department Dassed the $1,000,000 niarK in gross business for 1922 during October, the monthly report of the department sent to the city council showed today. Net income for the year stood at $677,532.19. - October operating receipts were $118,003.21 and operating expenses $31,987.33. The net income for the .month, after - addition of miscel laneous receipts and deductions of taxes and depreciation, was $S1. 972.33. The ten months of 1922 produced operating income of $1, 039,142.78. The operating- expense of the period was $349,918.21. The water department had a somewhat better showing for Oc tober, with operating receipts at $49,337.85 and operating expenses of $24,187.13. It had $10,737.86 et in come after deductions for taxes and other charges. For the year the net Income stood at $91,643.58 at the close of October. , ONE-DAY VACATION GIVEN Mount Angel Students to Get Hoi-, lday Thursday. MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE, St Benedict, Or., Nov. 25. (Special.) With the approach of the Thanks giving vacation the question arises again as to whether a holiday will be allowed on the Friday following Thursday, November 30. La-st year the faculty adopted a reaolution to the effect that students would b given two holidays, but in the reso lution was contained a provision that the Friday vacation would b withdrawn if the prevalent cutting of classes before and after vacation continued. This was averted last year when an appeal was made to the students to attend all classes and not-miss them to take convenient outgoing trains. The college calendar pro vides for Thanksgiving day only, and the faculiy has consented to have only oot day thia year. I. DILL GIVES SHOCK .. A SENATOR-ELECT IS AGAINST HEARST'S PET MEASURES. Successor to Poindexter Opposes Sales Tax and Ship Subsidy and Always Has Been. 1 PUGET SOUND BUREAU, Seattle, Wash., Nov. 25. Having helped to the defeat of Senator Poindexter, some of the forces busily engaged in the recent state campaign are set ting gentle shocks of surprise as they appraise certain and probable features of the course to be pur sued by Senator-elect Dill. Take th case of Mr. Hearst's Post-Intelligencer, for example. Earnestly desiring the defeat of Senator' Poindexter, the representa tives of Mr. Hearst, after the pri mary election of September, didn't think very highly of Mr. Dill's chances as an opposing candidate. Not until late in the campaign, after William M. Short, president of the state federation of labor, almost had exhausted himself in trying to con vince the Post-Intelligencer that he could swing a lot of votes from James A. Duncan to Dill, did that newspaper resume its fight on Poin dexter. And it now seems that when the fight was resumed it was with out inquiry s to how Mr. Dill stood on any matters of state, national or international importance. For more than a year all Hearst newspapers have been campaigning lustily for the sales tax and the ship subsidy. On the proposal to impose such a tax and provide such a sub sidy an unlimited amount of jour nalistic force has . been expended. Senator-elect Dill is an uncomprom ising opponent of both the tax and the subsidy, always has been and expects always to be. He is per fectly frank In saying so now, and doubtless would have been just as frank had anyone taken the trouble to ask him during the campaign. RED. MEN TO DEDICATE New Building to Be Opened This Afternoon 'With Ceremonies. The new two-story building of Willamette tribe, Improved Order of Red Men, at East NintTi street and Hawthorne avenue, will be dedicat ed this afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. The ceremonies will be in charge of W. W. Seaholm, who will be as sisted by Mayor Baker, Circuit Judge Gatens, Circuit Judge Mor row, Louis Carlson and, C W, KHy, the great sachem of Oregon. Be-1 sides the addresses, there will be other entertainment features. The building Is In the mission styie of architecture. The upper floor will be occupied by the lodge and the lower floor has been fitted with store space. The property on which the build ing stands was given to the organi zation by John V. Larkin, a member of the Red Men for 47 years. Plans for the building were prepared by Claussen & Claussen. The opening dance of the season In the new building will be given by Willamette tribe Wednesday eve ning. This tribe was organized in Portland 48 years ago. It was one of the first fraternal organizations in the city. FAMILY ASKS FOR RELIEF Wife and Nine Children of Man In Jail Aided by Mayor. Mrs. George J. Freas, whose hus band is serving a sentence of 55 days in jail and in addition faces a fine of $400 for transporting liquor, ap peared before Mayor Baker yester day with her nine children and made an appeal for food. The children, poorly clad but well behaved, range in age from 14 years to 2 months. The family resides on a 12 -acre farm just outside the city limits. Frea was employed as a re pair man at the Albina railway yards prior to the shopmen's strike. Mayor Baker referred the case to the public welfare board, which took immediate steps to provide for the family. T i What is rheumatism? Pain only. St. Jacobs Oil will stop any pain, so quit drugging. Not one case in fifty requires in ternal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating St Jacobs Oil directly upon the tender epot and relief comes instantly. St. Jacobs Oil is a harm less rheumatism and sciatica lini ment, which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small trial bottle from your drug gist, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic ad sciatic pain, soreness, stiffness and swell ing. Don't suffer! Relief awaits you. Old, honest St. Jacobs Oil has cured millions of rheumatism suf ferers in the last half century, and is just as good for sciatica, neural gia, lumbago, backache, sprains and swellings. Adv, 777777777777777777777777777 7 O'CLOCK-Your Golden Hour of Oppor tunity! sa mi" r s iiEsEEStL. How you can profit by the experiences of successful men Hundreds of our graduates who gave one or two nights a week to spare-time study between the hours of 7 and 9 gained knowledge which paid them handsome dividends in the years that followed. We can show you testimonial after testimonial from men who took up the very kind of work you are interested in. No doubt many of them were undecided to begin with. If you are looking for that bigger job ahead come in, let's talk it over; you will not be obligated in the least. We are anxious to help any man, regardless of creed or circumstance. DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOLS Business Schools Elementary School for Men Engineering Schools Radio School Automotive School College Preparatory School If you live out of town, send ns your name and address and we will send you "Success Information"; otherwise, phone Main 8700, or better still, come to Educational offices, 4th floor. OREGON INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Y. 2YL C. A. Bldg.. - Sixth and Taylor 777J777777JJ777777777777777