.frtlE ttKEGPN DAILY JOURNAU PORTLAND; FRIDAY EVENING, : MAY; 31,-190 17 " MAIL ORDERS For Merchandise t 'i-. . , Advertised -'.V- ,.,,;. Will be carefully filled, and special clerks are delegated to select as particularly as if the buyer were .here in person. Remit tance, must accompany order, postoffice "OUT. OF IDE niGn RENT DISTRICT" "NOT IN THE fflGH PRICE CLIQUE" mMsrmfrMmffrym0cc We substantiate our claim, as every one who deals here will admit But this sale of the famed Singer Garments i -some 69k thing out of the ordinary, even for The Chicago, , for the offerings mea.n the world's best at the. world's lowest prices. money prder or certified bank check. Wiiw mmm .MEN'S SHOES The greatest value weVe ever offered sensational bargains. Follow the crowds to The Chicago's greet bargain-giving . Shoe Department. - A new pair free for every pair that goes wrong. , , ' , r- f2.es for Men's $4.00 Cadet Calf Leather-Lined Shoes. . t.d ' f 2.85 for Men's $5.00 Patent Leather - Blucher-Cut Shoes, r : f3.45 for Men's $5.00 and $4.00 Hand-' Made Shoes, all style's. - ;' 1.85 for Men's $2.50 and $3.00 Shoes, plain toe or box toe, Blucher or BaL - cut - .':,--; ' y - . . :''"r f 1.85 for Men's $3.00 Vici and Patent . Oxfords, Blucher styles. See them. S 1.50 for Men's $2.50 Work Shoes, best '-stock, satin calf, plain and capped toes. 1.65 for Boys' $150 School Shoes, sites 12 to $X. ';. See Window Display of Shoe Greatest . t . Values oa Earth. . , 3 85 For Genuine Panama Dais Worth $5 to $6 EDITORIAL f rfc.i Count them the people in this store at any. time count them more shoppers than any. other two stores combined, not all carriage trade, not all laboring class, but millionaires and mechanics rubbing elbows. Truly tOs is the store for the people betause this is the store that serves the mass es best Not the best fixtures, per haps, but the best bargains, sure Not the best terms, but gfoods exchanged, or money back and no argument No importuning to buy Just-the best showing, that none can dispute. Always the same- for less money or better for the same money, that no one4 can deny, and always the greatest attendance, which tells the tale of values and satisfaction, better by far than we can write it, or cold type express it. Some Sensational Special uiierings In . Men's Furnishings 50 f0 Men's 75c and $1.00 Dress : Shirts, hslt bosoms, madras and per cale, cuffs separate and attached. 35e for Men's 50c Balbriggan Under- -'. wear, Shirts and Drawers, , covered seams, reenforced seat, ecru only. 19e- for Men's 29c Balbriggan Under wear, pink and eru, well made. 8 for Men's 12tfc Lisle Sox, black and tan- ' -', 39e for Men's 50c Crown Suspenders. 19 for Men's 25c Boston Garters. NECKWEAR SALE 10 for Men's 25c Silk and Satin Shield Bows. 15 for Men's 29c Silk Four-in-Hands. 104 for Men's 25c Wash Four-in-Hand Ties. , . - 23e for Men's 39c Silk and Satin F.our-in-Hand Ties. $1.00 WU1 Buy Men's White and Fancy Vesta Made to Sell at $2.00 and $2.50. The entire unsold production of Kling Bros., Chicago, 33 to 50 bust measure, single or double-breasted styles. See them. Over 100 dozen to select from. On sale tomorrow at ...f l.OO' Ik Sale uf file $ mm SiirpflM mm SUITS . Jo Siimieir & Sang" $22.50, $25 & $30 Grades That stand in a class by themselves, head and shoulders above the .average. , Pure woolens, some America's ' best, some English weaves, but warp and woof wool, and satisfaction while there's a thread left to tell the tale. Tailored as only the skilled and costly artists employed by the Garson-Meyer shops can make them. Inside and out perfect if con struction, for the vitals are given the came attention as the visible nana. Newspaper talk is cheap compared with facts; but investigation' will satisfy the most skeptical that there is no clothing like the Garson-Meyer make. Sale price, f 22.60, f 25.00 and f 30.00 Grades, I Is Furnishing Greatest Clothing Opportunity Portland's Well-Dressed Men Have Ever Enjoyed Buys Suits as Good as Ever Sold for $15 MEN'S SIZES and YOUNG MEN'S, AS STYLISH AS THE HIGHEST PRICED TAILOR COULD POSSIBLY PRODUCE, neat checks, neat mixtures, neat nlaids. as well as tried and true blues and blacks. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR THE .EXTREME? You'll find them in the showing. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR MORE MODERATE MODELS? They are here in abundance. LONG COATS? Here. SINGLE BREASTED?. Here. DOUBLE BREASTED? Here. , 1 NAME IT THE STYLE, THE COLOR, THE PATTERN YOU PREFER THE SAME' ANSWER HERE -v v . MEN'3 PANTS A Ji iio Clothing Co. 69 to 73 Third St. Horseshoes Over the Doort Men's Dress Pants, in new spring styles, with or with out cuff bottoms, including ail wool worsteds, blue and black cheviots and. serges, neat stylish M QC stripes and checks; values up to $4, all go at.pl OD Men's Imported English Corduroy Pants, guaranteed not to np, in dark and light shades; CO OC worh up to $5.00, at. iD YOU WANT TO OR YOUR. MONEY BACK WHEN? WHERE? Have you ever seen such; prices quoted on Men's Pants? THESE ARE THE GREATEST VALUES EVER OFFERED by this great store in all our 14 years of successful merchandising and value-giving. Q "A plCf? A aOPIs IVf Icn'8 ne wowtedPants, in 30 distinct patterns, the O J I O JL Jt J -1 1 V IN new peg-top styles are also represented in dtn of xvxens nnesi urcss jranis, m uic very oes manes on the market today, fine check worsted, neat stripes, blues, blacks, etc.; values up to $6.00, o A r goat ....... e)j43 That we keep pressed and repaired for an entire year any Chicago garment purchased from us. You want to know that The Chicago garments are shrunk under- a patent Process that nrevents the trousers barnnsr at the knees, or the coat bulging at the neck. You. want to know that the buttonholes, the lapels, the coat fronts, are made by hand, and that The Chicago garments are the only ready-to-put-on thatiiave the appearance of the most costly, made-to-order, though the prices are half, and in this sale less than half the custom tailor's Charges. ' , Come tomorrow, if only to Inspect. We've told you before that you needn't buy.because you look, nor keep because you buy. KNOW $16, $18 arid $20 Grades Some extremely new ideas patterns we control exclusively models - that the -mrist fastidious must approve. Plain weaves, and so many fancy patterns that the showing becomes almost confusing and all the Singer and Garson-Meyer makes. , Perhaps r you have not given -much study to the clothing of today; if not, it is well to compare these makes with any and all others. Better still, ask the wearer ox one of those garments to relate his experience and youir quickly understand tnat once a dinger or a Garson-Meyer earment. alwavs one. Sne. cial price, 816, fl8 and ?20 Grades, AA 1 O Chicago Clothing Co. 69 to 73 Third St. Horseshoes Over the Doors COUNTRY DEEDS Finnc r- t u c rniihi President-Discusses Induce ments to Offer Young Men - to Live in Country. DESPISES WOMAN WHO lISES NO CHILDEEN Itooserelt Addresses Students of Michigan Agricultural. College, Telling Them Their Calling Is of the' Highest. ' r -' (Xoarnat 8pdal Sarrle.) , Lansing-, Mich., May II. For : the flrat time In many iyeara the capital city t Mlchiaa.n today entertained the - chief executive of the nation. President Theodore Kooaevelt exriyea in tne city . this morning- over the Lake Shore rail road. -He found Lancing- awaJUn hie . arrival In rala. atttre. Flats were fly ln from eTry staff In the downtown section, and the city was bright with bunting. 'V ,.'.-. - i , - -The object of the president' ylalt was to attend .the seral-centenntal cele bration of the Michigan Agricultural college, but before prooeedlng to the college he we received at the state capltol by Governor Warner and the members of the . state - legislature. Crowds lined the streets on the way to the capltol, anxious for a view of the chief magistrate, and his " appearance always was the signals for an enthusi astic outburst of . cheers. The president was enthusiastically greeted at the college by the students and faculty. A number of distinguished eduoators t were on hand, among them President " Angell of the University of Miohlgan, ' President,: Benjamin Ide Wheeler of the University of California, President Henry C White of the Geor gia Agricultural college, and President Edmund jr. James of. the University of Illinois. President Bnyder of the Agricultural college entertained the president at luncheon.' After delivering his address before the graduating class the presl dent was shown about the grounds and buildings of the college. His departure for , Washington was made late in the afternoon,' f ,. The president said In part: The - fiftieth anniversary of the founding of this college Is an event of national significance, for Michigan was the first state tq the union to found this,' the first agricultural college in America. I . greet all such colleges, through their representatives here to day, and bid them God-speed In their work. I no less heartily Invoke success for the mechanical- and agricultural schools. ' No Industrial 'school can turn out a finished Journeyman: but it can furnish . the material :-out of , which a finished Journeyman can be made. . npe Moos. "Wi hear a great deal -of the need of protecting our - work! ngmen from competition with pauper labor. I have very little fear of the competition of pauper labor. The nations with pauper labor are not the formidable industrial competitors of this country. What the American worklngman has to fear Is the competition of the highly skilled worklngman of the countries of great est Industrial efficiency. The calling of the skilled tiller of the soil, the call lng of the skilled mechanic, should alike be recognised as professions, Just as emphatically as the calling of (law yer, of doctor, of banker, merchant,, or clerk. The young man who has the courage and the ability to refuse to enter the crowded field of the so called professions and to take to con structive industry is almost sure of an ample reward in earnings, in health. In opportunity to marry early, and to establish a home with reasonable free dom from worry. , Yltal to the mation. There is but one person whose wel fare la as vital to the welfare of the whole country as that of the wage- worker who does manual labor; and that is the tiller of the soil- the farmer. We cannot aford to lose that pre eminently typical American, the farmer who owns his own farm. Tet It would be idle to deny that in the last half , century there has been In the, eastern half of our country a falling off In the relative condition of Xha tillers of . the soli,' although signs are multiplying that the nation has waked up to the danger and is pre paring te grapple effectively with It "The chief offset to the various ten dencies which have told against the farm has hitherto come in the rise of the physical sciences and their applica tion to agricultural practices or to the rendering ef country conditions . more easy and pleasant. But these counter vailing forces - are as yet- in their in fancy, AmblUoua native bora young men and women who now tend away from the farm must be brought back to it, and therefore they must have social as well a economic opportunl ties. There should be libraries, assem bly halls, social organisations of all kinds. ', ' , Work of Oovernmeai. "Great as its services have been in the past, the department of agriculture has a still larger field of usefulness ahead. It has been dealing with grow ing crops. It must hereafter deal also with living men. "The farm grows the raw material for the food and clothing of all our citlsens; it supports directly- almost half of them; and nearly half of the children of the United States are 'born and brought up on farm. How can the- life of the - farm family be made less solitary, .fuller of opportunity, freer' from drudgery, more comfortable, happier and more attractive?', ' ' tet ' Parana Cooperate.-'-',; J "Farmers .-must learn the vital need of .cooperation with one another. Next to this comes cooperation - with . the government and the government can best give Its aid through' associations of farmers rather than through the in dividual farmer. A vast field is open for work by cooperative associations of farmers in dealing with the relation of the farm to transportation and to the distribution and manufacture of ; . DO TOT XiOYB . Sour babyt Tou wonder why he cries, uy a botOe of White's Cream Vermt- uge ana ne wui never cry. ' Most DSDles iave worms, and the mothers . don't know it Whlto a Cream Vermifuge rids the child of worms and cleans out Its system In pleasant way. Every moth er should keep a bottle of this medi cine in the house. With it fear need never enter her mind. Price 16a Sold bjr all druggiatav , raw materials. It Is only through such combination that American farmers can develop to the full their economlo and social power. "Agricultural colleges and farmers' Institutes have done much in instruc tion and inspiration. Without in the least disparaging scholarship and learn lng it must be remembered that the ordinary graduates of our ' colleges should be and must be, primarily man and not a scholar. "All over the country there is a con stant complaint of paucity of farm labor. Tou can never get the right kind, the best kind, ofjabor If you offer' employment only, for. a few months, for no man worth anything will permanently accept a system which leaves him In Idleness for half the year. ' . The Parmer's Wife. "Most Important of. all, I want to say a special word on behalf of the one who Is too often the very hardest woricea jaoorer on the farmthe farmer's, wife. Exactly as the first duty of the normal man Is the duty of being the home maker, so the first duty of the normal women la to be , the homo keeper. 5 But this does not mesn that ahe - should be an overworked drudge. No matter- how tender and! considerate the huaband. the wife will have at least her full share of work ana worry -and anxiety; but tr tne man is worth his salt he will try to take as much as possible of the burden off the shoulders of his helpmate. : ... The Crop ef ChUdresL "The best crop Is the crop of chil dren; the beet products of the farm are the men and women raised there on; and tne moat mat motive ana prac tical treatises, on farming, necessary IKan ark wKas Ka ais Ma mnva MawAaiaiat trw than the books' which teach, u our duty merous r to our neighbor, and above all to the neighbor who - is of our own house hold., "I have as hearty a oontempt for the woman Who shirks her duty of bearing and rearing the children, of doing her full housewife's work, as I have for the man who is an Idler, who shirks his duty of earning a living for himself and for his household, or who is selfish or brutal toward his wife and chll dren. "Nothing outside of home can , take the place of home, CONFEDERATES MEET IN ANNUAL REUNION (Journal Special Service.) Richmond, Va.,1. May II. The Con federate' reunion came into full, swing this morning, when the regular order of business was taken up. . Yesterday was a strenuous day for the veterans, but they wer astir early this morning nev ertheless and . prepared to . put in an other, busy day of it. ':-u , -,iyS . - The convention was called "to order at :S0 o'clock this morning and the greater part of the forenoon was occu pied with addresses, of greeting. Gov ernor Bwanson spoke ' for I the - state. Mayor McCarthy for the city, Senatir John W. Daniel for the veterans of Vir-1 glnift -nd B. B.- Morgan for - the ; Sons of Veterans. : . i The , grand commander, --. General Stephen ' H. Le, r delivered . his annual address and the reunion Oration was delivered by Colonel Robert E Lee Jr. Between the addresses there were se lections of mrtlo by the reunion choir.' composed of the students of the Rich mond high si-hoot During thm nfterrirtori thre vr rn- C f TC2 Alwar Bay TU8SrnJL tmiv aoerv eaaoa ao quick Hae "USOCOBD" eyelet bettaebolea Kmt to bnttoo. . S0OBS to hoieV SO. P. 101 a OO Meters T80V, M. V. brigades . and receptions given in honor of . the veterans by, the ..local chapters of the Daughters of the Conf ederacv and other' organisations. Various f ma tures of, entertainment also were Kivn In honor of the sponsors and maids of honor.. - Hot Enoogh Room. A-man who was doing his beet to convince the world at large and htmseif In partieular that he was perfectly so- oer tried to purchase a theatre srat an4 was told that there was only e'an.Ur f room.,-rile bought an admtsffion ti. k ? and mada another ; one of the rr- t standing up in the back at." ' j t show. -. After a few mhutci i r- the wlndiiwan l r i ' another d'-'Ur. i iimc t:. -t." r. ! ! m-re r-nn t f