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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY, JOURNAL, (PORTLAND. THURSDAY EVENING. JULY 16.' 1008. Structure More Than Mile ''Long and-One-Half Mile Wide Longest Artificial Lake in the World Is Be ins: Formed. lly FllEDEKIC J. IIASKIX. (Copyright. 1008, by Frederic J. Haskln.) , Washington, July 16. The Isth mian canal project naturally divides Itself Into, two parts. At the two ends they, are simply; digging big ditches 45 feet, deep andOO reel wide, which will have the same, sur face level as the ocean Itself. On the Atlantic side this big ditch starts at deep water In Union bay and extends inland seven miles to Oatun. On the Pacific "side,:, it starts at deep water and tndKto Miraflores, a dist&pco of five miles. From this It will be seen that ' ap proximately one-fourth of the rf-hole canal will be a bl sea level ditch. For the remaining 3 8 miles of the canal it Is necessary to have the surface of the water 85 feet higher than that of the sea level ends of the canal In order to get ships safely across the big con tinental divide at Culebra. To get this the engineers have planned a great dain at Oatun. on the Atlantic side, and two relatively smaller ones at the Pa cific side, one at Pedro Miguel, called bv the Americans "Peter McGIll, and the other at Miraflores. These dams will make a vftst lake shaped some thing liko a gourd, with the little end nt Pedro Miguel, the handlo being the Culebra cut They topography or 'he I The. Oatun dam will cover 288 itsef admirably to the pl , nt Its base and will be 135 feet engineers. The ha gres or 60 feet hlpher than the surfa. more than half way a1"os81,phist'inn"?- the water It will be called upon to along thu general line of the canal. hu i. ,vlii contain noma 20 crossing, the lino of the llg U'.tcii it times on its way to trie sea, wmium the canal ever going out of Its way to meet the river. All of thewe cross ings will of course be eliminated when the dam Is completed, and with all of Its windings, the Chagres will not be able to wind out of the big Oatun lake. Site of Dam. The Oimgres flows down through a valley which gradually widens as it nears the sea. At Oatun this valley Is about a mile ide. It terminates en tirely here, and the hills which form It lna themselves In a coastal plain. It Is across the valley at this point that they are . building - the Oatun dam and Its accompanying locks, 'this dam will be a veritable mountain of mud more, than a mile long and a half mile wide r.t the base. It will be 135 feet high, readv to dispute the passage of tne. grim-old Chngres, taking1 from 'Its miirkv waters such toll as Uncle Sam clear as any water that ever passed lbK,ush a filtration bed. If the water til ilia Oatun lake Is to honeycomb end af m.oia.'i liiK hArt of the (Jalun dam. as critic have prophesied. It will have I to reverse , every law of experimental Offineeriiiir to do so. , Znrlneers' Xaperlments. Hut even this experiment a, thorough enough one for any commercial firm in the world to accept the deductions from It as established facte does not eatlafy the army engineers. They have ar ranged a large number of auxiliary ex periments. In one of those they nave an iron cylinder, some four feet high and some eight inches in diameter. Into this thoy have put three feet of the earth of which they propose to build the big dam. They have subjected this to all degrees of water pressure up ifi 60 pounds to the square lncn. xei even with this tremendous weight of water against it the amount that seeps through is only an occasional drop. Of course. It naturally follows, so plainly that even the layman cannot fall to see It, that if only an occasional drop seeps through three feet of the-materlal with a pressure equivalent to-a head of 115 feet of water, there can be no danger of seepage through 2,000 feet of the material under the pressure pf a head of only 85 feet of water. The Im- ferviousness of the material which Is o be used in the dam has been proven In so many ways that no man who has seen these proofs can doubt It. ' Critics of Sam. The critics of the dam, most of whom. by the way. have never been over the ground, assert that the earth which is in cntixHriita the foundation of the dam Is filled with Innumerable underground springs, and that It bears so much wa ter aa to make It unfit for a dam site of such proportions. Here again facts are made to answer opinions. The alte has been delved Into by dozens and dozens of deep wells dug by the en gineers. These wells have been so lo cated that If there were underground wells, streams and springs, they would have been discovered. But they have never come to light The water which the engineers find Is a negligible quan tity. A hundred dams have been built In the United States where there was five times as much underground water and no one thought of questioning the sites. If the Culebra cut is the backbone of the canal, the Gatun dam Is Its most vital orgaij. Without that dam the canal would be out of commission for three-fourths of Its length, and for the most part it would be high and dry. So theyare taking every possible pre caution to make every detail of the work perfect. Not content with dig ging dozens of wells several hundred feet to ascertain Just what there Is be low, they are now beginning to dig a test pit. This pit Is 20 feet square. and Colonel Goethals has planned to .AnH ft Hnwn tn flnIM pftfk flnmrt 940 feet below the surface, in order that he and his assistants may get right down i into It and see for themselves just what i Is down there acres high. face of hold .000,- 000 cubic yards of material, or enough to make a mound of earth one yard high and one yard across and nearly 12,000 miles long. 9 Immense Amount of Cement. Death Roll of ' The Pioneers ' Al Coolldge. (rHl PliiMtch to To Journal.! ' Bllverton, Or., July 16. Al Coolldge, who died at his home In this city Mon day, wa born in Union county, Ohio, February 16. 182J. In 1844 he started In life for himself and devoted his en ergles to the manufacture of brick lit his natlvt atate. The following year no removea 10 Wisconsin, where ne re mained until 1848, when he returned to I ) ;:?' 'lit' -.fMr:! ':; :H :i:T A i ,,: 'V':;:'i' .'t' ':fl Li-:''''' 1 -t '-."fit WP 2 A -.'T Al Coolldge. The concrete which will be required to build the concrete work of the canal would be enough to build as many houses as would give shelter to the entire population of a city twfslse ef Minneapolis. It would be large enough to' build a solid string of houses from New York to Richmond, Va., by way of .Washington. The splll-way of the Oatun dam .will carry off 140,000 cubic feet of water ,a second, or more than 60,000,000 gallons a "minute. The big water gates of the Oatun dam will have an aggregate weight of nearly 18,000 tons. The ones at the head of the upper lock will be a Rort of steel bridge on "wheels, the track for It being of 2fi feet jrauge. Each pound of water pressure on the dnm would have o push aside 63 pounds of earth before Tt the commerce of the vt.orld may exact. This toll will he tiig cnougn io COnld escape. fill the largest artificial lake in the The dam will make the Gatun lake world a lake whose water surface area afford deep water enough to furnish a will be about 165 square miles. safe riding place for half the shipping After the Chagres and Its smaller J of the world. All the sea-fighters of neighbors have filled the lake to the the oceans might gather there, as per requlred height the dam will allow the i haps hundreds of them will at that rest of the water to pass through Its! eventful time, some eight or ten years spillway and on to the sen, without hence when, with Uncle Sam as master further Intc-rrupJ ion, the only demand of ceremonies, the Atlantic and the Pa being that it shall not npnroach the line I clfic shall have their wedding day. of the canal AKain. in ouier wo row Ohio. In 1851 he resolved to make a home and fortune In this promising por tion of the country. iteacmng uregon Mr. coolldge camped a short distance from wnera Bllverton is now located. Subsequently he took up a donation land claim of a quarter section and erected a house thereupon. Some of this land he owned at the time of his death. Later he embarked In tha general merchandise business at what was then known as Milrord, one mile southeast of Sllverton, where the elec tric light plant is now located, but in 1855 this place was superseded bv the town of Sllverton. and Mr. Coolldge moved his building and store here, and for 10 years or more continued business successfully. A short time after com ing to Sllverton Mr. Coolldge was mar ried to Sarah S. Allen, who came hera with her parents In 1852 from Illinois. She, together with two children, survive. M. her Mrs. J. M. Kalston. (Special fHspM to The Journal.) Lebanon. Or., July 16. Airs. ,T Ralston, 52 years of ace. died at home in Albany July 13 of pneumonia. The deceased s maiden name van Lottie Behrens. She was born at Oregon Citv March 8. 1856. She was married at Eugene to J. M. RaJston October 30, 1876. They took up their residence In Lebanon where they lived until 1889; when they moved to Albany, where they had since resided. She was a mem ber of the Presbyterian church, active in church work, and or the Eastern Star, one of Its past matrons. She leaves a husbanS and son, Rolla. RUSSIAN AGENTS PLAIimiGII Sent to America to Offset Stories of Czar's Cruelty. (flitted rreni Leased Wire.) New York. July 16. Forty-two Rus sian secret service agents are on their way to America today. Where they will spend several months In a campaign or mlrnrniitn.tlnn of conditions In tho czar's domain, according to information received by Dr. Paul Kaplan, chairman pf the Russian revolutionists in New York. j Among the spies sent to the Lnlted Rtr.t. are 20 brilliant orators who win deliver courses of lectures calculated to deceive the American people inio Having conditions in Russia much bet tar than thv nctunllv are. Forces have also been sent to the principal countries of Europe, where similar steps will be taken. A. Knowledge of the movements of the Russian secret service agents reaenna the revolutionist society here through the chief of the Russian spy bureau, who recently desertcu the service of the czar and Joined tne reneis. v ncn abandoned his important post at St. Petersburg he took all his dooks anu records with him and placed them In the hands of his new friends. These will Drove Invaluable to the rebels, as thev contain descriptions of members of the Russian secr t nollce. The official. who drsertej me czar lor the rebels knows every member of tho secret police, having hired each one per sonally. While his identity is concealed by Dr. Kaplan It Is understood his name Is known throughout the world. HOT FIGHT OH 1 DRY OLD Ml Democracy Sees Chance to Win Prohis to Center Effort There. CANADA'S GREAT R T OUT Prince of Wales and Nota bilities Many to At tend Celebration. its vagragt waters will he sentenced to the canal workhouse and when that is filled to overflowing, they will be in vited to 'leave town" at onto by the spillway route. Another Problem. After we have the lake, the problem Is to get ships up into It and down out ot it. They . cannot go over the dam spillway like a piece of driftwood, neither can they get up Into It as a fish wiggles himself up .over a mill ilam. Here in where the locks come in. They are nothing more complex than a sort of Brobagandlan marine stair way for ships to climb. At Oatun there are three of these gigantic steps 1.000 feet wide In tW clear. And as Bhlpa do not like to pass on a single stairway they have put a partition in the middle of the big staircase so that they do not need to run Into one another. This partition Is no small boarded up affair, either. It Is of concrete and Is 50 feet across at the base and tapers up to 20 feet. Even with this bin pnrtltlon in the middle of the staircase thev will not -have to r'lb against the wall, since they have 110 feet In the clear. When a ship comes In from the At lantic and wants to get Into Gatun lake in order to make her the Isthmus, she wl lower lock. The big water gates will be closed behind 'her and water will be admitted Into tho lock from the dam above through Innumerable holes In the floor. When she has been lifted to the level of the next lock she g-oes Into that one and the operation Is repeated until she finds that she . has climbed un 85 feet In three steps. A ship de siring to go down has the topmost lock's gates opened and she g-oes Into It. Then the water Is allowed to flow into the next one until they have a common water level. Then the gate nhead is opened and the ship goes Into this lock where the performance la re- featej until she finds herself at sea evel again. Ho Question of Success. If any ono has any doubts about th success of the Oatun flam project. lt him come down here and she what Is being done and how they are doing it: Doubting Thomas would hsAe believed on lees evidence than one sees hero. AVIth that thoroughness and attention I to detail wnich has made the army engineers the peers of any lot of tnglneers on earth. Colonel Goethals and Major SIbert have Indeed elimin ated all the elements of chance bv In numerable proofs. T"or Instance, they have built a cross section of Oatun dam on a scale of one Inch to the foot, uslne identically the samn materials that are going Into the big dam, and In the same way. They have put the proportionate water pressure against It. and sre noting the results. Through nil this cross section only an oocaslonal drop of water comes out Into the basin they have arranged to catch It. And wnen a drop nor mm out. It Is as DREADED T1 Entomologists Say It Will Destroy Orange and Fig Crops If Xot Killed. (Uniteil Pre Leed Wife.) Oakland, Cal., July IS. Professor C. V. Woodworth, head of the department of entomology of the University of Cal ifornia, has reported to Governor Gil lett that the dreaded Argentine ant has made Its appearance in California, in East Oakland. Professor Woodworth states that un less measures are takpn At rtnrA tn ce her way across I drlve out the pest jt wlll tterv destroy 11 Ptnm Into the0ranKe and fig crops In the state. . The Argentine ant Is a small Insect only an eighth of an Inch long, but Is of a fighting nature and has driven all other ants from East Oakland. It Is one of the most dangerous nests that has ever been brought sk the United States from a foreign country. According to a report by the-Louisiana crop pest commission, the ant has de stroyed millions of dollars' worth of propei ty in mat state. Professor Woodworth asks that the governor take measures to exterminate tne pest here. AXXOUXCES SOTTKCES OF "EXAM" QUERIES Mrs. M. A. Miller. fSpeclnl niepntrh to The Joiirnnl.1 Lebanon, Or.. July 16. Mrs. M. A. Miller. 42 years of age, wife of Sena tor Miller, died at her Home in this city yesterday arter an illness of several months. Mrs. Miller's maiden name was Flora McCalley. Her parents settled In Marlon county In 1852. Mrs. Miller was born in 1S66. In 1872 the family moved to Lebanon, where Mrs. Miller has lived ever since. She was married to Senator Miller August 1, 1S8S. But one child, a daughter, has been born. She was married a few weeks ago to Sherman Miles of PorHand. Mrs. Miller svbb an active member of the Presbyterian church and also a member of the Eastern Star. She was loved and respected by all. (United Press Ieased Wlr.) Bangor, Maine, July 16. Declaring the prohibition law In Mains has be come a farce, ana mat tne majority hould sav whether the state shall re main dry, the hopes of the party leaders for a Democratic victory this year are running high. The prohibition law has been In effect hero for more than 50 vears. and tho Democrats assert that the stand taken bv the Republicans In upholding It has been responsible for the fact that the G. O. P. majority has been cut down from 48,000 to 8,000 in the -ast few years. Prohibition leaders from all parts of tho United States wlll participate in the campaign here this year. They realize that the defeat of prohibition In Maine, which was the first state in the union to go "dry," would be a serious blow to their cause elsewhere. (Six-clal Pli pat eh to Th Journal.) London, July 16. The Prince of Wales Is now en route to Canada. The supers cruiser Indomitable. upon which the heir to the throne Is travel ing, departed yesterday from Porti- mouth, udar escort of the cruiser Mino taur. The two vessels are now far out to sea on their first day's journey. The Indomitable expects to reach Quebec next Wednesday, when the t-r-oentenary celebration will he at Its helKht. No Canadian tour wl 1 be un dertaken by his royal highness, such as he made 10 years ago. According to the present Mans tho royal nnrtv will ie- nialn In the Dominion but one week The Prince of Wales Is accompanied to Canada by a very brilliant staff, it Includes Lord Annally as lord in wait ing. Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Arthur tggs. who has been private secretary to the Prince of Wales for a number of year and prior to that time was Queen Victoria's private secretary, Sir Francis 8. Hopwoofl, who has tieen perma nent secretary of the board of trade since 1901, and Commander Sir Charles J. Oust, bart., and Captain Bryan G. Godfrey Fausse-tt as eauerrles. Cause of Yesterday's Accident. After an Investigation of yesterday's accident to tho cruiser Indomitable, the following report was made: "An unusually high tide was runnine at the harbor entrance and the force of It threw the barge, which could not be managed, directly In front of the cruiser. The foremast of the barge was carried away and a huge hole stove In her slda, in spite of the fact that the engines of the Indomitable were reversod. Fol lowing the crash the cruiser lay to and experts examined her platen. whlU divers examlnud her armor below ih water line. The Investigation showed that the damage amounted .to little niore than the loss of some paint. The Prlnoe of Wales ami hie party were not perturbed by tha accident. The prince was on the bridge and waved a salute to the nearby craft when the voyage was . resumed, i Notables b Be at QucIhh. Quebec, July It. A list of the distin guished guests who are to be' In this city during the coming week on the oc casion of the great celebration of the tercentenary of the founding of Quebec would read like pages extracted from the "Almanaeh de Ootha" and the "Statesman" Year P,onk." First nnd foremost, of course, will be the Prince of Wale, who wlll be accompanied by a brilliant staff, so that none of the pomn and ceremony of the British court will bo misslnir. Jk After his roval hlarhneU the most pop ular visitor to Guebec probably will be General Lord Roberts, tho hero of the Hoer war and probably the most popu lap man In the Rrlttiih ftrmv. The United Statee wlll b Officially represented hv a nartv headed bv Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks ami which will Include a number- of promi nent army and naval officers. 1 The government of the French repub lic will be represented by Vlce-Admlral Jauregulberry. U 8. Herbette. council lor of state, and J. De Loynes, consul general In Canada. Other visitors jit note will Include Earl Dudley, the Duke of Norfolk, Earl Ranfurly. Sir Alfred LytUeton, the Marchioness of Donegal, Lord Lovat and Sir Henry De Villlers. The prominent officials and other men of note from nil the provinces of Can ada have been Invited to attend the cele bration and hundreds of them have ac cepted the Invitation. Military organi zations from every part of the Dominion will be In attendance and there will nlso bo present a number of aeml-mlll-tnrv and civic orgnnizatlons from the United Stales. A special detachment of the northwest mounted police wlll serve as a bodyguard to the Prince of Wales during his visit to the city. Warships of Other Nations. Warships holnnglng to the navies of Great Prltaln. France Rnd the United States will fill tho harbor of Quebec during the celebration. Several of the warships have alrcadv reached here and others are expected before the end of the week. '- The crowd during the wk will b far the largest that lm ever ttm. bled lit' any city of Canada. All of hotel KcvomiiiodatlotiH wore . rrwrvwd weeks ago and Ilia , boardlnn hou. j likewise have booked alt of the .u.-ii they can socommodaU. But the holeU and boarding-house will take Cut of only a small proportion ef the eoluhrt tlon visitors. Private residences will accommodate hundreds and oountle others wlll be chartered. In the tentd elty, which wIlP be one of the unique features of the celebration. Aa on all such occasions It Is expected that the city wlll be the Mecca for pick pockets and other varieties of crim inals who are always attracted where the crowd Is largest. The local author ities are taking every precaution t pro tect the visitors from these sentry. The hwvil police and detective force will b more than doubled nuxt week and wlll have the asalHtance of leading dtc-tlv-ea from Montreal, New York, -Chi-' cago and other large cities. KX0CKER OX NAVY VISITS PRESIDENT (United Press Leased Wire.) ' s Oyster Bay., L. I., July 16. Henry'; Reuterdahl wag the guest ot President '"'j Roosevelt yesterday This Is the flrt u, time the writer has seen the president i since his criticism of the navy. It is ' understood that Reuterdahl went over.I the whole article with the president and pointed out to hint the basis of the criticism. . ; -rT , Companies Incorporated. (Salem Bureau of Tha Journal. :m Salem. July 1. Articles of lncorpor-"-! ation have been filed in the office of -the secretary of state as followa: Yaqulna Bav Land & Abstract oom pany; principal office, Toledo, Or.; cap-, ital stock, $5,000: incorporators, Ha,r :t Ion J". Ong. Carrie M. Ong and MUtort Helgestad. , The nissner Auto-Livery company;-, principal office, Portland; capital stock. -T . $250,000; Incorporators, Emma Becker.,.; J. E. Blssner and Harry Blssner. . ; Clatskame k Menaiem vauey jiaecirio . Railway company; principal office, ' Clatskanle. Or.; capital stock, $1,000,-,,' 000; Incorporators, A. B. Kurtz, C U,,, Conyers, Henry Kratj and J. L. Wooderu . Daniel Hcrron. (Special Dispatch to Tne Journal.) Sherwood, Or.. Julv 16. The funeral of the late Daniel Herron was held at Pleasant Hill cemetery. Rev. Reed of Hood View Congregational church of ficiating. Mr. Herron was a pioneer of 1854, having crossed the plains with an ox team in that year. He was S5 years old at the time of his death. He was married In whnt was then Yamhill county to Miss Katherlne West fall when 29 years old. Mrs. Herron died two years ago. To them were born four sons. Louis, Harvey, David and John Herron, and two daughters, Mrs. Ella Seely, deceased, and Mrs. Jane Gib son, of Salem. He leaves two grand children, Ernest and Goldle Seelv, of Wllsonville. Mr. Levi Herron of Salem, his cousin, who Is past SO. attended the funeral. Mr. Herron was born In Il linois In 1S23. crossed the plains in 1S54 and had continuously resided in Clackamas county. That which is popularly known as the "funny bone," Just at the point of the elbow, Is in reality not a bone at all, but a nerve that lies near the sur face and which, on getting a knock or blow, causes the well-known tingling sensation In the arms and fingers. a '? '1 lit FOR MEN 'and WOMEN HOURS OF TORTURE THEN QUICK RELIEF Acs cylnf I tea Censed by Bnnuner Baebee, Prickly Seat, Hosqnlto Bites, Xlves, eto Can Be Instantly Bellered. Don't suffer another Instant from the Itch of hives, nettle rssh, mosquito hltee. po'son Ivy. e'c. Don't rub or errat-h as that only makes the Ttch worse, and may result In something terfous Thre Is a ft tiles nd aure relief fer ell forms of skin disease and Itch. D. D. D. Prescription. (purely vegetable preparation and only known positive cure for externa end other skin dl." eewa. la equally valuable frtr mmmer rashes, and when applied to the Itchlna) kin gives Instant relief, takes away all Irritation. e othaa and roots the tkln end rernsnently curra the Itch. Oo to Fkldmere Drug Co., Woodare, Clerk Co., r write dfrct tn the IX I. D. Co . Ill Michigan PC. Chk-ngo, 11L. for hrl sample ent free t any one h nrloee 1 cents to help pay cost of natans and packing. (Salem Bureau of The Journal.) Salem, Or., July It. It Is announcVl by Superintendent Ackerman that the sources from which questions will te taken for state and county papers will be as follows: Bookkeeping, offlco methods and practical bookkeeping, part 1: physiology, Hutchinson; United States history, Doub; civil government. Strong & Shaefer; theory and practice. White's Art of Teaching; arithmetic. Smith; grammar. Buehler; geography, Redway A Hlnman. national school geography; pscycholoyy. Buell; Engllsn literature : A. one-half from Newcomer' English Literature; B. one-half from the following classes: 1. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice; ed. by W. J. Ro!fe. I. Scott Ivanhoe. (Riverside llterarv series. 1 a. Irvlnar Sketchbook Rio Vn j Winkle. Legend of Sleepy Hollow. West Minister Aooey, btratrord-on.-A von Christmaa. The Specter Bridegroom. Re maining subjects, state texts. Life dlplomaa and flve-yea,r certifi cates were Issued from the superin tendent of public Instructions office yesterday as follows: Ellen Elisabeth Johnson, diploma, 4 Kerby st, Port land; Joaenhlne M. Locher, dlplomv. Burns- Emilv O. Brown, dlpoma. Hills dale, ft 2; Ella Jena Haya, certificate, Tillamook, t veara; Ethel Qrosa, certifi cate, Oakland; Emma Knapp, certifi cate, Anrora; Echo Naaon. certificate, Woodlawn; Louise Putnam, certificate. Drain: Gertrude Brehaut, Condon, cer tificate on papere from Prlnoe Edward Island: Aubrey O. Smith. Joseph, cer tificate on papers from Missouri; L B. rancher. Pumrter. certificate on pa pers from North Dakota. 2.70 WASHINGTON STREET. Sharp Pace for a Short Race All Discontinued Lines and Broken Sizes Must Vacate in a Hurry A straightforward business proposition. We have been in Portland less than a year, have established a splendid following, and have already arranged for the most elaborate assortment of fall shoe styles ever shown in this city. During past season popular demand has been heavy on some particular shoe patterns, and light on others. The purpose of this sale is to clean up the lines in which sizes are broken, and to stimulate business on such styles as have run second in public favor. Not an old model in the entire outfit. I Regular $3.50 and $4.00 Values Regular $4.00 and $5.00 Values NEW ELECTRIC R. 1L IS FRQ3I0TED (Keertel THanatrfc I" TW JevraaL) N Astoria, Or., July I (.A new electric railroad from Clatskanle to Jewell n the Neheieni raJley ta being promoted. The parties sak for a free riah f wey and etm-k subscriptions to the amouat of e,w, - . i FOR MLN High and low shoes; button, Rlucher, buckle or regu lar lace patterns; pumps, Yale ties. Tuxedo ties, low shoes with two buttons and fancy buckle, high or low shoos with combination colored tops; patent colt, pjiu calf, box calf, vici kid, gunmctal calf and tan leathers in all shades. A large assortment. FOR WOMEN e very stylish pattern in demand this season colonials, pumps, garden ties, Gibson ties and low shoes with one, two or four buttons. A great variety of regular high shoe models, in but ton, Rlucher or lace. Different weights of sole and heights of heel. All the stvlish shades of tan leathers, patent colt, gunmetal calf and vici kid. This is a clear call. A genuine opportunity to secure shoes of exceptional high" grade at prices ex traordinarily low. Every pair will be sold in our usual careful manner and well backed by the lib eral "Crawford" guarantee of satisfaction. Only the price is discounted no restrictions as to ft- ting, exchanging or having your money refunded if you want it. Come in while assortment is largest. Km i Ta , v 's are saape4 mm the soles ef aQ "Cravfors neNT Vefere taay laere &e factory. Ta srtcee) are rer!ate4 It wa ree taee tie shao; mot y erkat we hi ret eat of rax ewstomers. Therefore raaacUeaa wena waruuBf. C '