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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1911)
( '1 THE OREGON .DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, ; THURSDAY; EVENING, MARCH 18, ' 1SH. .:-.; , t , ... ' " Chapman Appoints Men Who Try to Harmonize All Interests. ' Topics of Interest to the Realm remiriirie V i " IN SOCIETY i Z Tour of the five members of the i committee, which . la to have the duty ? of unravelling Portland's dairy snarl i and act as a board of arbiters between ' consumers and producers and dealers I and health authorities, have been ap ; pointed by C. C Chapman, manager ot ! the Commercial club. Only the con ' LiiBers IaIT of representation," and this because the Consumers' league has not yet nominated Its representative. - 61 the committee as announced today by fir. Chapman. W, W. Cotton, dairy i 'maiWvXrtend of the Consumers' league, and well known lawyer la to be chalr i maa Dr. Calvin S. White, secretary of i the state board of health, win represent I the t -health ' authorities; William 1 Sk'hwmertlch, a dairyman from Hlllsboro ', th dairy Interests, and Tv 8. Townsend i ol,4he Townaend Creamery company, j will represent the dealers. . ' All of the committeemen appointed ' have beea named from among the organ isations theynreprcsent, and are leaders , In their various , lines. Mr.. Cotton an nounced recently that he would stand i for an Increase in the price ot milk paid producers by dealers. At the present tin the amount 4 s four-cent-; quart from dealer to producer and 10 centa from consumer to dealer. One hundred Rnd fifty per cent profit for the act of delivering is considered unreasonable by. Mr. Cotton. Mr. Townsend Is particularly anxious that there be harmony among: all classes and that the Industry be reduced to. a purely business basis, where cleanliness I win be not a matter of sentiment . so moch as a necessity, If the business is to be continued. ; . ..Dr.- White's, aggressive attitude In re ' quiring the tuberculin est for "dairy rows and in insisting upon high stand ards of cleanliness as a measure of pub lic "health protection, - Is ' well known. Mr. Echumerlich is not eb'well known, lmfwas recommended for the appoint ment on the Important committee by : many of the dairymen' and dairy inter- ' tUL. '' i ' , i i i i 1 1. in i p j. i t s Ikdford commercial -club will have wt out 10,000 pieces of literature this Piles Driven Away FREE Cases of Extreme Torture Cured So Quick as to Amaze All Who Know ; the Terrors of s Piles. 1' Even a small and recent case of piles Is bad enough but tliousands are in ab ject misery. ..;. Great protrusions render life a torture in every community and yet, right within elbow room is certain ly a drug store that has the wonderful Tyramld Pile Cure. If not, it will be mailed free upon receipt of the regular prtcer-SOc, ', t It works like a, hundred swift streams of .water on a sudden, blaze, puts the f 1 re out, saves lived, ' saves the nerves, prevents gangrene, . stops, all ; pain, all itching, all bleeding; reduces all swell ings, internal or external, cures quick and complete to stay, cured.:;! Many se vere cases think they are hopelesaxnust be operated on. have part of their anat mf cut and carved. Don't lit It hap pen.;' 't:.: .vv1, .y.'-'-i i'i !: , Remember anything cut off Is gone forever. Pyramid Pile' Cure saves all this, cures rationally, restores the parts to normal healthy conditions. ; You can easily and qjfickly prove this by sending your - name and i address to Pyramid Drug Co., 2?8 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. A free trial will at once be mailed sealed . in plain wrapper and you will never afterwards be at a . loss to know what to advise when you ; hear of a rasef piles, no matter now severe It may be. ; Tor Bale at all drug stores at SOe a package and be sure you get what you ek for. ...iv. . . . . - GRAY HAIRS BANISHED. Tie old idea of tumf sage for darken tef tfc kiir is again eoalng la Togua. Our fraadaotkers Bse4 to save dark, flossx hair at the age ot aeventy-flve, rbils ear mothers have white hair before ' they era fifty. Oor grandmothers nsed to naka a "sage t" and applr K to tieir hair. Tkt tea nude tkehr hair soft ; and glossy and gradually restored the ! nttnjsj aolor. One objection te aslng such a preparation's tnetTuble of" i tnsklac it, especially as It had to be ; saade every two or three dais on acceoot af it sotrrr&g aukHj. Tale objection hu : been reroseae sad by asking almost ny firstlMs wrngliat tor "Wyeth's Saga sad olAar the pobUo can get a as i jwrior preparation of aagn, with the ad ! bxture of sulphur, another valuable rem tir toe Ms and scalp troubles. Daily use of this prepara&os. will est only ! lulddy ratters m ootor of tits fcsir hat will als stoe) tits hair frost tailing svt ti ssaks It grow. It la sold by aU frogglsta tor 60Q. ani $1.00 a bottl. or Is teat direct by the Wroth Chemical Ocfflpasy, T4 Corttondt St, New. Torij Dlty, open receipt of price. TOM BALE A WD BECOMaOIHSXS BT . .... XKZ OWL DKtTO CO. fluted Ifm&etf! fTrOUNTIMS,HOriLS,OR CLSCWHCRC Get the " Original and Genuine MMIGK'S HALTED MILK The Food Drink forAll Ages JUCH MUX. HaIT CKaQI EXTUa. IN i0WDEI Not in any Milk Trust lT Insist on ?HORLICK'SH . . Take package homo Slg. and Mrs. Alessahdro Bond and Harold Osborne Smith, Bond s brilliant accompanist, were guests of honor at a dinner presided over last evening by Mrs. JRose Bloch Bauer, In her hand some noma on fJlneteenth sirwt norlhr An artistic motif of yellow. was used In all appointments of tha dinner. Yel low tulle, daffodilla and candles shaded in yellow made an attractive board on which were marked covers for eignt. An interesting engagement recently made known at a family dinner Is that of Mls.s Letltia McKlnnon and Carleton Harding, both members of ..prominent pioneer families. Mla McKlnnon Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McKln non, Kast Salmon street Mr. Harding Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Hard ing, of Oregon City, He la a Berkeley Graduate and a member of the Phi Fsl raternity. The date of the wedding has nofr yet been decided upon. '.', During Bond s stay in Portland, MIbs Muriel Williams was accorded the priv ilege of singing for the great tenor and In so doing won his hearty praise and the declaration that she should by all means continue her mufloal career. Bonei pronounced Miss Williams' tone placement good and was pleased that she let the quality of her voice speak for itself Instead of making a possible sacrifice for big tones. Bond waa so taken with one of Miss Williams' songs, a folk song by Ulldach, that it ta to be added to his repertoire, he said. Mr. and , Mrs. E. H. McCrscken are home from the south where they have been for some time. r Mr. and Mrs. John C Lewis were reg istered at the Palace in San Francisco yesterday. :.... " ... Dr. Wmiain Hiram Foulkes read the marriage service at 8 o'clock last eVen-ing-4n-the-Flrst -Presbyterian church which made Miss Daisy Dean the bride of Chester Holt Struble of Holyoke, Mass., Palms decorated the church with pleasing effect.. The bride wore a gown of white satin, ert tralne, rich with trimmings-of duchesse lace.: Over her tulle veil was a beautiful veil of Chan- tlllylaco caught tnlseewithnrang blossoms. The bridal bouquet was a shower of Bride roses and Jlllles of the valley. Mrs. William Baker (Miss Helen Hudson) was matron of honor. She wore her wedding gown of white satin with a picture hat of pink.- Her flowers were pink roses:- Charles Dean, brother of the bride, acted as best man and the ushera were William Baker, Mr. Buston, Richard price and Mr. Booth. Following the wedding, which was attended by about -200. an informal .reception was held at the Dean home when some 70 friends came to extend good wishes. Pink carnations were used to decorate the house. Mrs. Dean was gowned in black marquisette and lace over Cham pagne silk. Mrs. Struble is the only daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Dean and a sister of Charles Dean. Mr. Struble Is a Lehigh man and a member or the Phi Psi. , Mr. and Mrs. struma left this morning for their home in Holyoke, stopping en route at Washing ton, D., c, New York and Baltimore, Mrs. Btruble's former home. Mrs. W. B. Scott entertained with five tables of bridge Tuesdajffor Mrs. Oliver King Jef fery, when prises were won by Mrs. Jeffery and Miss Alice Dougherty, The guests Included Mrs. Millard Holbrook, Miss Frances jeffery, Mrs. Norman Paterson, Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Mrs. Ray Warriner, Mrs. Lam bert Dunbar, Mrs. Oliver Walker, Mrs, Clifford., Marshall, Mrs. Howard F. lt ourette, Mrs. W. D. Brewer, Mrs. Nor rls Gregg, Mrs. John dravley, Miss France, Batchelor, Miss. Jessie Harkins, Mrs. "Charles Craft, Mrs. Frank Law, Miss Hasel Tichner and Mrs. Henry Gaylord. REWARD OF $750 SPURS (Continued from Page One.) which the detectives. might work. Sev eral well known citizens and business men called Chief Cox on the telephone today ' and told him that they would contribute money to swell the rewards. Even -members of the detective depart ment volunteered to help Increase the reward. The autopsy held by Coroner Ben Norden yesterday afternoon showed that the girl had. been Suffocated to death. This, aver the officers. Indicates that the girl was murdered in the room in which she was found; when the man started to attack her she attempted to make an outcry and be threw the bed clothing over her and smothered her. JTo trots Zs Heard. The occupants of rooms 9 and 11, in the Nelson rooming bouse, said today that they were in the rooms all of the evening of Tuesday, but did not hear any noise coming from No. 10. The partitions are thin and it would not take much noise to roasethe whole house. ' Voellin Holtaman, the father of the child, Is lending every help to the offi cers.. He is working with them on every clue that turns up. He has quit work at his trade for the time being. It is believed that the assault took place At about 3 o'clock In the after noon of Tuesday. Mrs. Lydia Matthel son, who lives near the corner of Mis sissippi avenue and Morrta street, and Is an intimate acquaintance of the Holtzman family, declared she saw the child going in front of her home at about 2:30 o'clock. She was going In the direction of the rooming house where she was later found dead. BANQUET IS HELD BY PORTLAND CREDIT MEN Members of the Portland Association of Credit Men held their monthly meet- Ing, accompanied by a banquet, at the Commercial club last evening. More than 100 business men were present, i J. W. Briscoe, district auditor of the ! General Electric Co., and chairman of the committee on credit department methods, "delivered an excellent talk on tha necessity of, system and proper methods In the credit department. He urged credit men to recognize their posi tions between customers and the house, to cultivate warm feelings and to as sist the sales organization as much as ponslble. Several credit department forms were thrown upon canvass, accompanied by a talk by U B. Smith, secretary of the association. A model credit depart- menfwas on exhibit and attracted much attention. X V M W Wi 4 1 -TTv niXK.iw in.,. ,i..,'iiu 1. Wlri BRICKLAYER FALLS FOUR STORIES DOWN SHAFT Milberry Corp, a bricklayer, who re cently came here from Dexter. Ohio, fell four stories down an elevator shaft in the new Covey Motor Car Co.. bnild- iln g fi t ,Twntyfirst and Washington J ixeeis Monday and cut his cheek through from mouth to ear. He was taken to St. Vincent's hospital, where he is recovering. . CAN TRUE LOVE EVER: DIE? T ' By Darra More, t ' ? RUE love never dies. The physi cs! soon crumbles away, but true love Is eternal, deathless. The heart ms have a. few drifting - fancies and-spasmodic Outters,- but there Is only one real love. It may be modified, moderated, tempered as the years go by, -but it nevtr ceases. - Dis loyalty, deception Infidelity, cruelty, cannot strangle true love. . It may withdraw within Its shell, but the elec tric spark never goes out Nor does the dnth of the one kill the love of the other. The living one goes on existing upon the memory of the love-filled years that have gone before, inaccessi ble, Impervious to the admiring eyes that may surround.'' And when we speak of true love, we do not necessarily mean the love of husband and wife. Some of the great est love stories ever written have bees those that have known not marriage. There are those whose love has been unrequited, spurned, who "have sat, like Patience on a monument, smiling at grief true, loyal, ( constant until death. 4 There are those who have loved too late, and have found their one great love bound to another. They have fol lowed the single foot-path of a love Iharknows BOTcbangereven though the object of their devotion Is beyopd their reach. These see others basking In the love that the covet, they see ethers receiving the caresses that they have Ion gd f or Silently bravelyoh ey -fight their way, loving greatly, loving truly until the end, with never s moatt of their disappointment, . ; ' ......v There are women whose, husbands beat them, bruise them, women who go out by the day to wash and scrub, only to bring their earnings home to be squandered by a man-brute. In every police court you will see these same women, disfigured .deformed, lying to protect the beasts that struck them.' There are women who have been petted and pampered, -who so stumbling down to the depths of poverty and disgrace with the men they love without a com plaint. Tliere are men who work"their fingers raw and their brains mad that the objects of their affection may be warm and happy. There are . men -who endure the tortures of Hades from thoughtless,, heartless women, and who accept ruin and oblivion because of their, will caprices and stilj love truly. There are many, whose bosoms harbor a love that knows no change, no death. In fact, their cases aire so common that nobody ever bothers to write about them and who nowadays la Interested In the commonplace mart and woman who really love each other? If they were written about, nobody would read. It is 'tha sensational, the .unusual; that appeals to our modern fancy.- But, towering high above tha vulgar mass, avoiding (he prying eyes of publicity, Self sufficIont,perptuat "lrtrue love, the most perfect heaven known to mor ula. ' ' - ' r' " , -. ''--.-V r ess--" i -j.-A - 1 -." . Tomorrow "Do - Most - Marriages Come Through Propinquity?" ; , HOIman Bays Socialists Did It. . Seattle,7-Marchrl.JudgeJtHanford of the federal court Is considering the petition asking for ' a Vw trial, tiled by Clarence D. Hillman, the millionaire land operator, who "was convicted ot us ing the mailsto defraud.- Hillman de clares that socialists who wars on tha Jury convicted blm because . ha is re puted wealthy. . ' ; Hillman was convicted on 13 counts, carrying a maximum - sentence of 65 years In prison and fines aggregating I13.00J. - ' .First at Target; Second io Brain. (Unite Pre LeaieA Wire.) ' i San Francisco, March IS. -Jack Kane, a theatra employe, suffering from ill health, went to a shooting gallery last night, fired a' pistol, once at the target to sea If It worked, and then killed him self. Authorities a re holding his body, awaiting replies ftom Stockton friends who were notified n accordance with s , note found in hi pocket , . TRIED EVEtYTIIKC? SURELY. K0T iliiiit If yoa had, yoa wouIJ Lave stepped the pah and the lanpicg. It is t mity hard case that this tried, cld-tiae remedy won't alleylite after a few applications. - Xn druggists," 25c. and 50& - v ' ; - The 50c Bottle Contalna 3 Tlm'ea as Much as the 2Jc Site ii , js1ssMBaMBawBMsjg i. y ; Esublished 1 847. Tl ' 1 Pains la the Back AllcocKs Hasten have no equal. - Strengthen Weak Backs -sa nothing alia can. . Pnins In the Side AUcock's Rasters relieve promptly snd at the same time . itrangthan aids and restore energy . AUcock's is the original and genuine porous plaster., '- It is a standard remedy, sold by druggists in every part of the civilized world. Apply wherever there is Pain. When you need a Pill take a Drandretlis Pill For OOMSTIPATIOM, (ILIOUlMiaS, HKADAOHI, DIIZIMISS, IMDIOtSTIOM, tto. Pkirs FasMa. , "Swissco" Brings Back Natural Color to the Hair Removes Dandruff; Grows New Hair, and .Stops Hair and Scalp Troubles ' I 1 ' VlH)ML.n How Much More Sweetly Attractive You Can Always Make Yourself Appear With an Increase of Luxuriant, Fluffy iia.il. aw&c xius. i mun rum races juook seautuuu awissco xias rroven its kb markable Hair-Growing Power in Thousands of Cases. Try -It t There la no need pf being gray any hair, peoole tortured with Itching your name and address !to the Bwlssco more Tor -swissco" aosoiuteiy Drings scalp, and humiliated by dandruff falls Hair Remedy Co., 3643 P. O. Square, oacic me onmnai coior ana iormermg .on tfte collar and shoulders, all Clnclnatl, Ohio, and enclosing 10c to healthy condition to the hair. "Swissco" have-, used "Swissco" with astounding help pav cost of ackinar. postage, etc. absolutely forces the hair to grow out results. - . . , V. " - r Hundreds have been wonderfully bene 'HrrfJ? it1-8 -?ifr.t-irVm.d: ?V! "Swissco" is for sale at druggists st td by the trial bottle alone., suit, It trows out long, healthy, silky it you nave not tred sw88CO and For sale and recommended In Port- ana ueauiiiuujr mlUBay. , , do not wish to buv a fulUslsed hotti. ana Men bald for yars, women with thin, , you can have a 25-cent bottle, all scraggly hair, lyoqng anu old with gray charges prepaid by simply . sending THE OWL DRUG CO. r T Great Offer in Ladies' Tailored t 1 '.IB: 1 . 11 1:R: HI: ;' It - -n- mm prta Slits The assortment grouped for this special sale comprises handsomely Tailored Suits in best French serges sharkskins, worsteds,' etc., in a great variety of pretty color shades.. $30 Regular Prices Special Coats are in the popular lengths with ihawlraHOFollarSj-or-piam-tail- ored jackets; Skirts panel front and back, trimmed or plaited, in all sizes. The special opening sale that means money saving to you. Lash or credit. Portland's Best rtvi SL50 Lingerie )p Waists at OnlyGAv r.-.- ,- .- ,v:sv.: ::, . vv , Smart style effects that have 'no parallel elsewhere except in $1.50 grades These are fine lingerie Waists of. sheer white lawn, 'front prettily trimmed with Valenciennes laces tucks and embroidery medallions, as shown in illustration, at 98c. Long and short sleeves. Special sale price lor Thurs day and Fridayl Sufficient-to meet all de mands for two days' selling. Dps 'Afternoon or House Dresses The Greatest Bargain Offer lificent Gown's si. so ill ff .11 Ml. m Niglitgowns Special Muslin. Nightgowns at a big special. Attractive garments in slipover style, with round yoke of choice embroi dery insertions, ribbon drawn, as il lustrated.; Others with, hijrh neck 55 and long sleeves, trimmed with em- n broidery and tucks. Regular $1.50 -fir t r o 1 ii A" , fn rt 1 pa1a ft i- af ' only .................. yoC C For Values oUpto;$40 New line of Mi mmoimos At Very Special Prices From 75cUp For Fme Silks, Foulards, Voiles, Taffeta, Messa- f Jines, Marquisettes, Etc . in the nev styles; some with low, necks, .others ' with' silk lace yokes; peasant or Russian sleeves; r also few with long sleeves?, some' with slightly. high . waist line; - all .very', handsome ' gown's fit " ror. anernoon or evening wear. : '''They Come Jn All Sizes ji: AND First and Yamhill--Second and Yamhill Most-Dcsirablc-- colors w-$iyirt tm'H"fi.nV pJflW soa. If i J - ,. fU"'.'-". -: " : I - v r i