The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 11, 1909, Page 41, Image 41

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    THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 11, 1903.
FAMOUS SONGS AND 1
THOR HISTORY
1
..No. 1. -"MY
-COUNTRY. 'TIS - OF THEEJ."
My country, 'tis of'thee, .
- Sweet land of liberty, , - ; "
Of thea I sing;
, v Land where my father died, :.
Lend of the pilgrims' pride.
From every mountain side,
If 1 Let freedom ring. t
My native country, thee, , . , '
. Land -of the noble, free, ;.
' Thy name I love,
! I love thy rocks and rills, - y .
Thy woods and templed hills, .
.' My heart with rapture thrills, .
s -Idae that above.
1 Let music swell the breeze.
And. ring from all the trees,
. ' Sweet freedom's song; . -Let
mortal tongues awake, ,
Let all that breathe partake, .
Let rocks their alienee break,' '
' i. The sound prolong.
Our fathers' Ood, to Thee,
Author of liberty, ' V
4 To Thee we sing: '
Long way our land be bright, . ,
With freedom's holy light, ,
Protect us by Thy might, . '
'. . Great God, our King; , . -'
Pr, Samuel Francis Smith,
ORB than three-quarters of a
. century has passed since Dr.
. Samuel -Francis Bmlth wrote
"America,", or as ; we js m(5re
popularly call our national
hvmn, "My Country, 'Tis of Thee."
Many efforts, particularly In late years,
shuve been made to find something more
original, not possibly more appropri
ate .for a national anthem. Different
American composers have written In
spiring woids and music, but still Dr.
Smith's "America" Is the accepted hymn,
and will' probably ever remain so.
Several years before Pr. Smith's
' denth, which occurred . In November,
186, to a friend In New York he wrote:
"As near as I can remember, "My Coun
try, Tls of Thee" was written on Febru
ary 2, 1833, and was first sung by the
children on the Fourth of July In that
year In Park .Street church, Boston. It
was first printed the same year in a
collection of music by Lowell , Mason
entitled The Choir.'"
- In this first edition appeared a fifth
tans a follows! - .
j i No more shall tyrants here, .. 1
:' With haughty steps appear,
Ana soiaier Danas;
No more shall tyrants tread.
Above the'patrlot dead
No more our blood be shed.
By alien hands.
. In the second edition of The Choir."
printed in 1883. this stansa, for some
reason, was omitted.' '-'
Dr. Smith, at the time of his death,
lived in a little old bruVn fratne house
at Newton Center, ' Mass., which had
been his home for more than SO years.
He wrote 'America." during his last
.year as a theologloal student at And
over. He became much Interested in a
German book of patriotic songs which
Lowell Mason of Boston had sent him
to translate. "While poring over this
book." he tOld a friend, "I was very
much Impressed with a patrlotlo song
contained therein," and while 1 'was
thinking of translating It I felt an Im
pulse to ' write an American patriotic
hymn. I reached my hand for a bit of
waste paper, and, taking my quill pen,
wrote the four-verses In half an hour.
7 sent It, with some translations of the
German songs, to Mr. Mason,- and the
neit I knew of It I was told of Its
having been sung at the following
Fourth of July celebration. The house
where I was living at the time was on
the Andover turnpike, a little north of
the seminary building. I have been In
the bouse since I left It In Beptember,
JK81. but never went Into my old room.
. This room in the Andover house Is
now visited by ; pilgrims from1 all Over
ins worm. ir. . amiin wrote aooui iou
hymns and poems, many of them for
special occasions, and nearly all were
written on the- backs' of letters, en
velopes or waste paper, as was Amer
lea," in accordance with a habit he al
ways had. - . . .- ..- -
Dr. Smith was born In Boston, October
21. 108.- When 12 years old he could
speak Latin, and later acquired the read-;
Irg and speaking of 15 languages. At
mi age oi so n was gcuaying tussian.
He. entered Harvard' at the axe of 11
and sustained himself there, by -the
money he made from coaching other stu
dents and making translations, . He was
a widow's self-supporting son, :-and not
only , paid his way through college, but
had a balance ahead when he graduated.
He was a niember'of the famous class
of 1828. which Included Dr. O. W,
Holmes, James Freeman Clarke, "William
ii Uhanning and others wnom toe world
came to know and honor.
- "My Country, "Tls of Thee did not
have a widespread popularity until the
civil war began. It was found in a
few hymn books. and was sung on stat
ed occasions, but as a national hymn
did not stir , the neonle to anv imores-
slvrt degree until tne flag was shot down
more frequently than any other of the
so-canea national nymns. - ..
- The story . of the melody . to which
we sing . this much beloved American
national hymn has "been.: written and
rewritten many times, and still there is
a question as- to its origin. . Some In
vestigators have traced it back to the
EcvDtians. and claimed that the Ger
mans acquired It from the Huns, who
naa, in an lMceiinooa, orougm it irora
Aia td Eurooe.-' r ;
Probably the most authentic story of
Its orlsln is that if was written bv
j,uny, an- Italian composer, to wnom
was suggested its writing by-Madame
do Malntenon, to honor Louis XIV on
his appearance at the official ' opening
of the convent school at St Cyr In 1688.
The text to Luliys muslo was said to
be by Mme. fle Brlnon, and read thus;
a Grand Dleu, sauves le Rot!
'Grand Dieu, venges le Koi!
Vive le Roll 1
i-;- Qu'a jamais glorleux, - - , ;
, Louis Victorleux,
: Vcye bps ennemies '
1 Toujours soumis. , '
On a visit to the su Deri or of the con
vent a short time afterwards the im
mortal Handel asked and obtained per
mission to copy both air and words of
tne - TencE invocation, ana it is saia
he later offered the music in his own
setting With an Ungllsh translation of
the words, to King George I of Kn gland.
There are many other claimants to Its
composition, notable among which are:
Dr. John Bull (1661-1622). Henry Pur
cell" (1658-1695); the Scotch claim It
through a carol that appears In the
Havenscroft "MeliamotaV' dated 1611,
and Henry , Carey, who wrote a very
similar tune to the words "Ood Save
Our Lord, the King which was printed
in ."Harmonica Anglicana" in 1741.
Besides being used as a national hymn
In Kngland, It has been adapted for the
same purpose by Prussia, Hanover, Wei
mar, Brunswick and Saxony in Germany.
In 1790 a Danish clergyman, ' Helnrlch
Harries, set to the tune a hymn he had
written - in honor of the birthday of
King Christian VIII of Denmark. The
Swedes also adapted' to it national,
words. Through ths Danish words the
tune reached Iceland. For many, years,
with Russian words. It was sung as a
favorite state melody of Russia, until
the Csar Nicholas, displeased that his
people should use. an Imported air, re-
solved that they should sing a national
hymn that had emanated from Russian
heart . and brain and Luoff composed
"God Preserve the Csar." And such
f reat composer as. Weber, Haydn, Bee
hoven and many others have used the
aria In different forms ot musical composition.
New
Their .
Books PuWhe"
Jm
'NCLB GREGORY," by George
Landeman. What "j "the real
HJnole Gregory" actually is. r
means. It would be difficult at
one sitting to determine, for
It is a hook of nuullnar croblema re
minding one of. a complete photograph
. where one likeness tantaltslngly fades
Into another, and Just as recognition of
the last i comes It lose Itself again in
another. Fiction, symbol, prohlem and
satire seem to have been 'thrown onto
the same plate to create Uncle Gregory
and yet the readers will close the book
with . a very distinct impression that
they may not nave gotten at tne au
thors meaning at aiu
The surface reading-of Uncle Oreg'
orv'a character was that he was a man
of such Immense strWgth of character
ana personality mat ne neia everyDoay
that came within his radius,-which ex
tended to the uttermost boundary of the
English village, with a sort of -occult
power that even death Itself could not
release, i JO" rasas sure or. mis contin
ued hold after his death he left a will,
' disposing . of an immense fortune,' but
leaving the beneficiaries a "trust" that
would perpetuate his greatness and keep
'the sceptre In his dead hands. His
nephew, niece and her-husband were to
carry, out the provisions -of the trust,
and the book Is the story of their wrest
ling With it. '.!' - -
.-It would be Interesting' to know ex
actly the point the author wanted to
emphasise most strongly, what, the real
significance of Uncle Gregory Is, and
the philosophy that is the background
of It alt for that the author had such a
background no one could doubt for a
moment, and yet to the reader the vis
Ion Is composite. 'At one time It would
appear-to be the futility and absurdity
of family- name and boasted ancestry;
rain It would seem to be the shallow
foundation upon which some lives are
f onatructed. and perhaps) strongest of all
n the human tendency to keep - the
rhosts of the twist with ' us.
- We believe this last to be the true
tnteroretatlon of Mr. andeman's story.
Tradition, superstition, musty laws and
outsrown constitutions have; been - the
world's srrestest enemies, and like Uncle '
Gregory's trust It usually takes a trag
edy to lay the ghosts--? -. -
- Uncle Gregory, -while dead and gone
before the story opens, holds the unique
and rather paradoxical position of being
the active character of the book, and
being ever present with those who sur
vive, him, as we see so of ten dead and
gone "public benefactors'' . Impressed
upon a community, and there are many
"nephew Roberts"' who feel Just as Un
cle . Gregory rtid when he returned to
take up the trust and said: "As we ap
proached the regions of the kingdom, the
monuments of the dead man's hearty
beneficence began to crowd upon us. We
crossed the little river by the Rowley
bridge, ad passed Into, town iv the
Rowley public park. He was vulgar and
Astentatlous. if you like: all his works
were hideous; but to the townspeople
they were not.' of 'course. In anv decree
I distasteful, and In a way shameful, as
PtkAV WAM - AM A MA U.K. .
his almshouse; there his fountain; s
little further the florid facade of his
town hail" Or again when he sees the
marble statue of his uncle, erected by a
grateful community: "The - way ,the
Graven Image beamed on my perplexity
was Intolerable. . It wae Just in; that
way-he beamed on me. and ; on my
rather and mother before me, and on
my grandfather before -them, time out
of mind: and upon my word, he looked
good for another six generations. 'No,
I thmignt,-.nardiy- sixr- Jack great
grandson may take an axe to him. ' "
- There- Is not enough romance In the
Story to nolo) it together,' but there Is a
fine ' thread of s psychological develop
ment , that carries It Into the fiction
class. Indeed, the book from start to
finish Is a study, and a much deeper one
man Tan oe appreciateo in a - nurried
readlns. - It Is full of telllnr nointa
breaking through Into bits of philosophy
at times tnat are startling in weir orig
inality and force.- v. ...
' The book isf written In a- remarkably
well and finished literary stvle. which
shows careful nrenaration and nonscl.
rauoui wora, t. x minim i sons.
Old-Jim Case- of Soath TTnllrtar , hv
Edward I. Rice. This is said to be a
story taken from real life, and few,
after reading it, but will believe the
statemeiit It Is so human, so natural,
and SO full of everyday life the life
that Is perhapn vanishing' from our out
of- the way hamlets and crossroads, with
tne .a vent or- rural aeiivery,- rarmerr
telephone and the many things, that are
brlnrlnr city .and eountrv. . cloAr - to.
rether, and leaving no excuse for such
delightful Ignorance and childish sim
plicity as was found In Old Jim Case
and the other habitues of Cat Heming
way's general -store. t . , v . - ..
The .scenes - of- the story are- laid - In
AGENTS FOR. PICTORIAL REVIEW, PATTERNS
'. . '-
145-147 SECOND STREET,1 BET. ALDER AND MORRISON
prMilliritiy
Trimmed Hats worth to $4.00, special at...., .95
' ' All other Hats it similar redactioni, - , . .
Big Variety Flowers, worth 50c, choice.. ..!..25f'
Ladies Furnishings at SPECIAL PRICES.
SHIRTWAISTS
la fancy tailored and with Dutch clbllar attached, white or colored
Regular price $r,25 ahd $1.50 special.....,...;..,.....':......, 7
Regular prices .175, to 2S special, i ......... ...-.V. . . f 1.10
See our window display of sample of UndeVmuslins Your choice at
r. . . HALF PRICE. -
'fwlP'
Onondaga county. New york, and the
story Is principally told through the
KoeulD that itucii on amnnr a set of old
.cronies tit the store, which has serveil
as club ana rendezvous lor many years,
with Jim . Case always the life, body
und philosopher of the ' group, all of
whom have the proper appreciation of a
good story, and possess the saving grace
of dun or,-and are not averse to a practical-
joke no matter who the victim
maybe. -j--,
It is one of those good, wholesome,
stimulating books that would scorn to
shelter a problem, but at the same time
contains many good things that touch
right down -to the very quick of some
of our social and economic conditions.:
- r It la a story without a piot, but with
a scheme that makes it Interesting and
entertaining and it may be said with
perfect truth that there Is not .a dull
or tiresome page in it. s .
- The publishers - have conceived a
unique covering for the book. It looks
like the most ordinary sheet of news
paper, but upon examination It proves
to be a copy of "The South Hollow
Gazette," containing the business adver
tisements of many of the characters of
the book and many of the news Items
that are gossiped in the back of the
store. The cover is almost as humorous
and entertaining as the story itself.
lKrtibleday, fage s Co. Price .$1. V
"Wild Flowers Kvery Child Should
Know."; by Prederlc William Stack.
This Is the' latest , of the "Jfivery Child
Should Know": series now being issued
by - Doubleday,,. Jfage He, co.
'-As the author says. It requires no
preparatory course, nor any special in
struction to become acquainted with the
more common wild - flowers and their
individual traits. . Kvery door-yard ana
field, wayside, mountain and valley,
from the pplar region to the tropics, and
from ocean ' to . ocean, abound in these
free-born gifts of nature. There Is no
reason why. everyone .should not become
acquainted wlto ana enjoy tnem.
- The descriptions which the book con
tains brimrs the youna- reader in direct
contact with many of the common spe
cies, in a most interesting manner. The
time of flowering, the range and locality
where each flower may be sought are
given,, and the book includes many sim
ple accounts of plants and flowers con
nected with history, medicine. legend
and 'folklore, v - -.' , -
The flowers are divided, first accord
ing to color, j then according to natural
classification. As coloring is difficult
to arrive at, the author has taken as a
basis tile . primary colors and arbi
trarily uiviaed them into red. pink, yel
low and orange, gretmlsh and white, blue
and purple, so mat u is a very easy
matter to find just what is wanted. The
book is beautifully gotten up, and elab
orately Illustrated in black and - white
and colors : .The author makes freauent
reference to well known authorities, and
takes great pains to make clear oo
soure points. The author says: "The
scientific names and classification In
the text follow the method adopted by
the International Botanical congress at
Vienna. June. 106. and now incorpor
ated in the new seventh edition of
Gray's Manual,' most extensively used
as a class text book in the public
schools, thus appealing strongly to both
teacher and student by Us uniform sys
tem of -nomenclature. '
The beautiful Tainding, Illustrations
and entire make up of the book Is so
fine .and: the text matter so attractive.
it seems almost like a special holiday
edition, and the pity of it is that par-j
ents do not select such books as thesCT
Instead of the garish creations that ap
pear at the gift season of the year.
Loubleoay, Page- & Co, Price $1.80.
Th Art of Painting ln! the Nine
teenth Century," by Edmund Von Mach
This is a valuable little addition to
art literature and written in a style to
excite tooth interest ana criticism, its
statements are clean cut and bold and
its opinions given in the positive man
ner that carries conviction or provokes
argument. - .-
Tne wor ' 1S oiassitiea unuer eia
heads, via.: French, German, British
and American Painting; - Painting In
Italy, Spain and in the Netherlands;
Palntlns in Russia. Denmark and Scan
dinavia, with a list of the artists dis
cussed appended.
Of American painting the author
says: "American painting today -is the
worthy second of the best art of the
world, and In some branches, perhaps,
ranks first. It is sincere and whole
some technically sound and Inspired by
lofty Ideals. It also shows much com
mon sense and reveals the vigorous
stock from which the artists are re
cruited. Nowhere does it fall subject
to the over-delicate taste of those last
scions of highly cultivated races who
are known as degenerates. It Is a pleas
ing art. often brilliant and generally
good to live with. - Of course there are
exceptions, hut, on the whole, visitors
to American" exhibits are well satis
fied; they have coma In contact with
the work of noted men. Amer
ica, however, is singularly fortunate in
possessing not only Chase and Du Mond
and Francis D. Millet, but many many
mors who keep sacrqd the nobility of art
and, unconcerned about popular applause
teach what Is true -and paint 'what Is
gOOd." - , - -,-v
The book throughout Is most Inter
esting and. as the author says, "If yon.
too, are caught up by ' the whirlpool of
interest in modem painting, and are
bewildered by conflicting claims, this
little book Is for you," and - he might
have added, . "If you are interested in
the beautiful this book is also for you."
It Is most' attractively gotten up and
copiously Illustrated from the master
pieces of modern art. Ginn A Co. Price
fl.26. -rt-r- '
7
'On the Sunset Shore, by Joseph W.
Dorr This is a voluminous collection
of poems and pictures, -the character of
which the title describes, ' v- r
A little prose sketch gives- a very
pretty description of the Sunset coun
try and so. flowery and bewitching are
the descriptions that, few .easterners
could resist - the 1 temptation to come
west,. If .they were fortunate enough to
get hold of Mr,7 Do it's book. . The poems
cover, everv rihane and feature, almnat-
of western life and scenery -and It does
not 'require close observation to- learn
how ardently the author loves and ad
mires the sunset shore of America This
admiratlan lor the beautiful in .nature
comoenaates for - occasional laosea in
correct meter and a rather limited vo
cabulary displayed In. the poems. The
volume has a large number of beautiful
Pictures reproduced from -photograohs
of Oregon, Washington and California
natural - scenery. There are also some
portraits .Intended to -be allegorical.
Published, by. the - Souvenir Publishing
oompany of Seattle. . . ;
Ernest Oldmeadow, who wrote "Su
san." has lust completed a novel which
The- Century - company; will bring - out
In a few davs and 'the Biihllohera ho.
lieve that 'It will find an army of read
ers. . it taaes its name, xrotn tne- hero,
"Antonio." a monk.' cultured and strnn :
In the faith, who Is dispersed with him
brothers by the - government 'f his !
country.- He vows to worfcr fnr,-ha
restoration of his Orderthen comes the
:iri ana tne story, a struggle between
he vows of -the monk and ths nuiinn
of the raio.'.':.'- ..v,,;;,,.
Through 'Welsh Doorways,', by Jean
ette Marks The author of these charm
ing stories has spent much time In re
mote parts of Wales, and knows the
country-and the life of .Its people with
peculiar Intimacy. The range of these
stories, their . humor, . their . human
pathos, la remarkable, yet they possess
a unity of Interest that makes them not
a collection of short stories, ,but a sin
gle book of memorable appeal.
'?.c,l ,of A"8 tc:re have been
printed In the best magazines have'
made many friends, and this complete
collection In book form Illustrated in
tint from the admirable sketches .by
Miss Bettsi mad dn the ground in
mmmiiv with tv,o -,A .1..T.U -
- - - .. .... . , nn.M( iu nt Tor
tha hv wave nf txntlna arh., a t.i . 1
TZX ,5id-.!?Uan,1 Houghton.
-u ... .... v. ,1..V. . :s . .
- 1 1 1 i - .
. Wabash Plans Huge Terminal.
CTIoago. July 10. It Is stated that
F. A. Delana president of the, Wabash
railroad, has-submitted to the city and
" "u" " ior a JlOU.000.
000 transportation center for. Chicago.
The project comes in connection with
the erection of a new terminal station
tf the Western Indiana railroad, and
contemplates the abandonment of pres
ent, freight and passenger terminals
and the centrsliiaHo-rr-of many lines In
a great structure half a mile south of
the present limits of the buslresn dl.
trijjl.j No formal action has been taken.
THE. GOLDEN E.AGLL. SOARS ABOVE. ALL OTHERS WITH BICCE.R AND BE.TTI.R BARGAINS
Our Monday
Bargains ...
Will Convince
You That We
Never Permit
- Anyone to
Undersell, Us.
Portland's
Great
Bargain
Store
NEW
THIRD AND , YAMHILL STREXTS
Tor the ,
Great :
Working
People
Our Monday
Bargains
Will Convince
You That We
Never Permit
Anyone to v
Undersell 'U.
1E1111111S MONEY S AVWG
HBHLITnE , FET MONDAY
PO
'50c Jabots 'and
Collars, 10 Cents
:A? great " aMoriaient,
of fancy Collar v Lace
Jabots,, etc.; i great
valuei that , usually
sell at 50c, a wonder
ful reduction (12
for Monday at . 1UC
$2.50 Mushroom
t v ... '
Sailor Hats, 79c
Mushroom ' Sailort in
great variety of col
ors, and shapes. This
is a . hat that usually
sells! at $2.50- else
where, here at Hd
$1.49,4 Monday I JC
Sale Fancy Hair
Pins, 9c and 23c
A 1 great ' assortment
of. fine fancy Hair
Pins, ? regular values
at 50c and 35c per
card of three; a great
bargain Monday . fl
at 23c, and, card 7C
Bead Necklaces
Sale 8c and 19c
Pretty Bead Neck
laces, lonj? and short
lengths, all varieties
of fancy beads; val
ues easily worth 50c
and 75c, choice; Q
each, 19c. and OC
embroideries at
14C, Reg. 85c Val.
A great lot of fine
Embro i defies, real
wide, values that sold
as high .as 85c ' the
yard, r An irresistible
Monday spe 1,
cial, the' yard ItC
.Trimmed Hats
$6 Values, $1.98
' n.l ,, ,., ''J 'J "V'
A beautiful assort-"
ment of chic, ' np-to-date
Millinery;' great
, values tot $6; shapes
to comply with every
taste, ! spe- (l -QQ
cial, Mon.- OI.0
lymphatic Price Shattering On All Apparel
$35.00 Silk Dresses
$12.19 and
$9.21
$25.00 Lingerie Dresses,
$7.92 to
'$3.84
5
Seasonable Garment Sale
Without Peer or Precedent
'J
T
'Price slashing without precedent will prevail throughout our
Women's Apparel Dept. tomorrow. Evefthing in seasonable I
wear you will find cut in price to the lowest possibility. "New II
stocks arriving call for room is the cause; you get the bene-!
fit. BUT BUY EARLY 'twill be to your advantage as-welHi
as ours. . i ne cierics -win te tresner, tne stocks more complete,
and yon will help us to avoid the' great afternoon rush.
Enough said read the prices youll buy tomorrow.
r- All Silk Dresses, Vals. to $35.00, in1
Two Great Lots at $12.19 and $9.21
Lovely Messaline, Taffeta, Foulard, etc.. Silk Dresses, all fresh Summer
garments- gowns that sell as high as $35.00 in many Portland stores
all must go Monday" at almost ndiculousljr low prices Youll find -'em
divided into two great price lots for your convenience, at $12.19 and $9.21.
Great values in Silk Gowns, a price
event unparalleled; values to $35.00,'
at only, Monday while
they last, each..; .
$12.19
Great values in Silk Dresses, values
unheard of before; wbrth to $25.00,
Monday's selling while A O-l
they last, at only. . . ; .
ALL WASH SUITS AT ABOUT ONE - FOURTH
.Lovely Wash Suits. A arrest lot of fins I Pretty Wash
s;rest values, xnsi m waw uuus, values mat
Jsold as high as SS. all ssU as blah as 120. sll
g-o Monday at .7.51Ifo t ....... ...g5.88 lonly
VALUE.
Suits. ftAA
slsss sreat lot, worth
to IIS. all sro Monday st
Ling
ene
Dresses in Three Lots 'for Immediate Clearance
Lot 1t-$25:00 Values, $7.92
Lovely ' Lingerie Dresses, wonderfully,
pretty all stylishly designed in all up-to-date
modes; a value for Monday that's really
v unprecedented; 'values that usually sell at
prices ranging to $25.00, in all : J7
rnlrtr all trci Mrmdav at onlv lOltJu
Lot 2 $15.00 Values at $5.17
Beautiful Lingerie Dresses,; a great assort
ment of values, worth usually to $15.00. A
great reduction unheard of before. All new,
fresh "garments, in all colors and styles; a sen
sational value worth your early at- flC J
tention, for Monday at only, each $) 1 1 '
Lot 3 $10.00 Values, $3.84
AH other Lingerie Dresses, great values
worth to $10.00. .This sensational clearance
sale enables you to procure a fine, season
able garment at a price 'way below regular
cost. ! Your choice of this great OA
lot while they last. Monday, at sDO.Ot
Attend thl great
wash goods sale,
, Come Monday and attend this great selling
event, ete you miss the greatest Wash
Goods sale ever held, in Portland. Yards
' and' yards, thousands of 'em, of beautiful
'wash materials batistes, lawns, dimities,
; organdies." percales, Swisses, veilings, etc,
at less thaa one-third regular value. -,
"Lot 1 Wash ' Goods, regr.
jjOt s wash
Lot I Wash
uot wasn uooas, win zia ya. mod. .
"Lot 5 -Wssh Goods, iVe'th-JOo yd.-Mon.;-Lot
I Wash Goods, , Wth lBo yd. Mon..
Goods, regr. 45o yd. Mon.. II
Goods, 'wth 40o yd. Mob.. f
Goods, "wth 86o yd. Mon..lj
75c Fancy Belts Women's Reg,
on Sale at 22c 33c v. Hose. 23c
A arrest lot of pretty Women's stylish Hos-
Befts, fancy bucklss. lery in whltej - grrest
belting of plain and values . that sell at
fancy materials, in- 860 , pair usually, K
eluding; elaatlo, regu- great reduction for
lar 7So values, while Monday, while' they
Uiey last Mon... 2X6 J laat only, pair 23
Your Unrestricted Choice of
Any Parasol in the House at Y
A sensational reduction on all fancy. Parasols,
prices and values worth from $L25 to $15.00,
including all . children's Parasols; values up
from 25c, all go at ONE FOURTH LESS
MLN, BUY YOUR SUP
PLY OF SHIRTS NOW
A great lot of over 500 dozen men's and
youths' fine Shirts, in negligee, outing and
dress, Shirts, collars attached and detached,
a number of well-known makes. This great
lot comprises values worth to $2 choice of
the. great : lot, beginning Monday, at 691
Men's Fine Hosiery, m plain clacks and
fancy colors; a grade that sells usually at
16c an ioe pair Monday only, pair 22
great lot of 1100 JMne Neckties, all ' styles
and colors, the vreguiar-- four-bit -- kind
your choice Monday at only, each for 19
Silk Gloves, $1
Values for '49c
ttomen's Short ' Silk
Glovest In all colors;
great values that are
sold to $1.00 ths pair
elsewhere, - a great
Monday bargain, per
pair only ...... 49
Any- Trimmed
Hat, Sale $2.49
Tour choice tomor
row of any hat in the
entire store, lnclurt.
lng trimmed molls,
worth to 19 and tU,
t ,1
AhotheriShoe 'MahiiiactureT?
f. :
- ' -- a
Canvas
Oxfords
Women's and
Misses' canvas Ox
fords,' In all -mite;
an extra fine val
ue, turns and
heavy ' soles; in
lace -bluchers and
button styles. . A
regular seller- at
12. 60, we offer
them at the sensd
tionsl r td a c tion
price, during this
g rwat - reduction
sale, at S1.29
Boys' line $3.50
Shoes for $1.89
Boys' Patent, Box Calf and
Vict Kid Shoes, wonderful
values thst sell at f 3.60 the
pair elsewhere.. Beginning
Saturday, at this great sale
at, i. the pair,. ....... S 1.89
Ch'ildr'ns Shoes
$1.50 Values, "89c
Children's Shoes, with pat
ent tips, great values worth
to 11.80 all go Saturday
during this sale, pair 894
The fires ot enthusiasm ever our mammoth
shoe rale were, kindled anew when a gre at
shipment of fine, seasonable footwear fresh
from, at Philadelphia manufacturer, who had
overestimated his . demand and was glad to soil
to us for less than, half arrived today. SpeedV
My marking the ew arrivals, we placed them
with our great lota of manufacturers' ' o ve r
stock footwear, to go regardless of real 'worth.
The great. Interest shown Inl this great Sale
the thousands of pair of shoes which have
been sold ths past weeks all show the gTeat
appreciation of Portlanders for a real reduc
tion sale of fine footwear. ' Come Monday
bring the whole family to be fitted with shoes
you'll be surprised at the small amount of
the total cost 'way less than yo- even imag
ine. Read the grat offers , noted a few of
hundreds of great lots selling, in many cases,
at less than iOa on the dollar.
Women's Shoes
$4 Values, $1.79
' Women's ylct kid ShoeaV In
many cuts., patent , tip.
' great 4 vala eensatlonal
reduction, this sale.Sl.T9
Women's OxVds
$3.50 Vals. $1.49
A great assortment wom
en's vlci, tan and pat'tit
. Oxford, frru t vlue wor'h
to 13.S0 pr; this vale
Sandals,
Duy Now
Children's, Hoy',
O I r Is', ' Mle',
Youths', ' Wonwn'i
and Men's Ij-Mher
K.-indals, In gra..-!
array value on I
prices unpantl
! led. In 1 srtat
lots accur.'llna i
prtri-d t c !.
iJ.S. rturlr, i. :..
great sale t !.
up to, p:r y I. t t
I
T
'l