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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1911)
-.,.V ! - ' , I t THE OREGON DAILY 'JOURNAL, PORTLAND. THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 21. 1811 13 ir I XAT SOCIETY Mrs. Pomeroy Complimented. , Mrs. L. Allen Lewis asked guests to make up four table of bridge yester day afternoon for the pleasure or Mrs. Carter P. Pomeroy of San Francisco who is the guest of her daughter, Mrs, Thomas Scott Brooke. Mrs. W. B. Ayer, Mrs. C. J. Heed, Mrs. J. Wesley Ladd and Mrs. Walter F. Burrell made the high scores. Additional players In the Karnes were Mrs. Florence O. Mlnott, Mrs. Jay J. Morrow, Mrs. Frederick H. Page, Mrs. Morton H. Insley, Mrs. Whitney I Boise. Mrs. William Mac Master and- Miss Hlrsch. Plans at At Home. Mrs. Frederick H. Page has cards out for an at home to be given Tuesday. To Meet New Arrival. Mrs. C. D. Brunn opened her beautl ful home, at Rlverwood station Tues day for a tea to meet Mrs. Carl Gray, wife of the president of the Hill lines In Oregon. Throughout the rooms pink roses and autumn leaves were used with charming effect. The guests spent much of their time on the ter race which Is one of the features of the Brunn home. In the dining room Mrs. William Grlndstaff, Mrs. W. A. T. Bushong, Mrs. Adrian McCamman and Mrs. Allen Ellsworth presided orer the table. Punch was served on the land ing of the stairs by Miss Mildred Qrlnd Ftaff and Miss Hazletlne Williams. As sisting In the living room were Mrs. George D. Schalk, Mrs. Rudolph Prael and Mrs. Frederick A. Nltchey. Dur ing the afternoon music by the Hawa iian orchestra added to the pleasure of the guests who numbered about 76. Rrantiful Wedding. At a quarter of o'clock last even ing Bishop Charles ffcaddlng read the marriage service which made Miss Ha zel Irene Tlchner the bride of William Joseph Lyons. Pink and ,whlto was the color scheme used In the rooms. The rcromony was read In the front narlor. which was all In white, with pillars and an arch of white chrysanthemums where the bridal party stood. Marking an Isle of ribbon for the bride came Mies Pansy Swectscr. Miss Lillian O'Brien, Miss Alma Laurltzsen, Miss Katherine Hunt. Mlsa Ruby Crichton and Miss Hazel Ferris, afl gowned In white lingerie. MIbk Ceclle Wiley attended the bride. The bride, who came In on the arm of her father. A. Tlchner, was gowned In n beautiful creation of white satin with court train and trimmings of real lace. A coronet of orange -blossoms held the flowing veil in place, and the bridal bouquet was arranged of Bride roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Wiley was striking In white satin, elaborated with corals and lace. She carried deep Pink roses. Oliver King Jeffery was the groomsman. After the wedding, which was attended -only by relatives and close friends, a large reception was held, when over 200 guests called. Mr. and Mr. A.' Tlchner, with Mr. and Mr. W. C. Lyons, parents of the bridegroom, Joined the receiving line: The back par lor was decorated In pink chrysanthe mums, and in the dining room pink rtfses were used, the penter of the table there-were Mr. Roscoe R. Glltner and Miss Clarissa Wiley. On the porch, which was canvased in and decorated with autumn leaves, punch was served by Mrs. Oliver King Jeffery and Mis Frances Jeffery. Wilder stringed or chestra was stationed on the veranda and the wedding march was played on the harp. Miss Gertrude Jones of Labblsh Meadows caught the bride's bouquet. Mr. and Mrs. Lyons left for a wedding Journey of three weeks about Banff. Simple Home Wedding. Miss Hilda Hegele and Henry W. Fries were united in marriage yester day afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hegele, on Fourteenth street Dr. T. L. Eliot read the service and there were no attendant. Mr. and Mrs. Fries left on an extended wedding Jour ney. They will be at home after No vember 1 at 691 Flanders street, w Engagement Announced. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Keating announce the engagement of their eldest daugh ter, Marie Franoe, to Joseph A. Taus- cher, the wedding to . take place Oc tober 11. Random Notes of Interest. r Mrs. George McBrlde is enjoying a visit from Mrs. Harriet Potter Nourse, a prominent club woman or New Torn. Mrs. Nourse will probably remain a week. THE INTERLOPER T Wrtten for The Journal by Darra More, HERB is a kind of woman for whom I have even les respect than I have for a faithless hus band, and her name ia Legion, She la what they call the "in terloper," the "affinity," the "soul mate." She is the snake that steals into a happy home and turn the holiness of wedlock Into dust and ashes. She is the skeleton in the closet. She 1 the can cer in the breast of marriage. If he wishes to ply her wiles on the unmar ried man, it Is of little concern to oth ers. But it Is high crime to come be tween a man and hi wife, a man and his children. It Is a terrible thing to be responsible for wrecked live. Mrs. Clara H. guest of Dallas. Waldo was a recent Miss Ruth Stelwer and Miss Helen Krausse are leaving Sunday night for Boston to attend Miss McCllntock's school. Mrs. W. A. Hathaway is leaving to day or tomorrow for a visit of two months in Omaha, Neb., with relatives. During her absence Mr. and Mrs. Dick Alden Hathaway (Miss Ella Doble) will occupy the Hathaway "home. Miss Mary B. Costello, a charming society girl of Dayton, Ohio, Is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Costello at their beautiful villa in Irvlngton. Mrs. J. A. Jamleson is home from Cascadla, where she spent the summer. Food Juices m Dye. (United Press Leased Wire.) Indianapolis, Sept. 21. At an exhibi tion of food adulteration here a stock ing was dyed a beautiful pink by soak ing It in strawberry pop. Tomato cat sup wti also used as a dye. The Steps THAT SAVE YOU MONEY Our Low Rent Shoe Store DOWN STAIRS Will Save You Half Your Shoe Bills SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN $2.50 Per Pair Worth &50 to $&00. ft " BOSTON SAMPLE SHOE STORE 131 Fourth, Cor. Alder, Under the Sidewalk. She is not always brazen and bold, as the story books pay, either. She some times comes along done up in pink and blue ribbons, with Innocent looking eyes that would begul'e old satan himself. and a manner o delicate and fragile that it is the very hardest work to re frain from taking her head upon your shoulder and helping her oyer the rough places. But within she has the seul of a mouse, and the destructive power of Niagara. She is the one kind of inter loper whom few men can withstand. Does that girl ever stop to think of the wife and children whose hearts she Is breaking? Does she stop to measure the sorrow and ditgrace that must come Into their Uvea, and that she is respon sible? Does she know where it will all end, even if the man In the case agrees to divorce hi wife and marry her? It is all very well to talk about the wife not "understanding" her husband. It Is all very well to ay that you can not live without this man. It 1 all very well to say that you have "a right to happiness." But a married man Is a married man. He belongs body and soul to another woman. When you become his companion you are stealing from an other woman; you are poisoning her life with a slow poison tnat Is worse than any known death. And you are digging your own miserable grave. For you must-pay with your life's blood for all the havoc you cause. The man who Has been unfaithful to one woman will be unfaithful to you Tou will have ostracised both yourself and him .from society. And that no man likes. The day will come when he will lay the blame at your door, and you'll have to take It, even to the one hundred and tenth lash. He will curse you and the world will curse you, and you'll curse yourself. Ton will have forfeited the respect of your fellow creature and your own self respect And after that God knows nothing else matter There is no such thing aa a divine right to happiness, nor a divine right of love. There Is no law sanctioning theft There Is but one divine right, and that Is duty, and respect for thy neighbor's property. WHY VETO POWER WAS EMPLOYED IS TOLD BY PRESIDENT (Continued from Page One.) These Chilly Evening! Remind one forcibly that Fall will return to us again. IT MEANS you will need and find use for Cloth Suits and Coats. Fall Styles Are Now Ready Ladies' Sample Garments" Fr6m the JLeading New York Manufacturers A Snappy Line Chic Stylet Suits and Coa.ts that would cost you elsewhere $30, $40 and $50,. we sell at $25 $14.75 $18.75 $9.75 These are by far the best values ever seen in 1 Portland. SEEING IS BELIEVING. COME AND BE CONVINCED National Sample Cloak and Suit Co Second Floor Swetland Bldg., Fifth and Washington Sts. ouneuj, zy ana Z05 for the purpose of protecting the indus tries. It passed the house and went to . l . i . . r v. ' mo venule, wnere tin iiiauigeiii nruu llcan senator proposed a substitute in which the duty on wool of the first class was fixed at 40 per cent, and of a second class, or carpet wools, at 10 per cent, and the average percentage on the woolen manufactures was made 60 per cent ad valorem. It Was claimed by Its author to be a protection bill. It was never submitted to a committee, no evidence was ever taken In regard to it, and It was evolved from the Inde pendent investigation of a single sena tor. A majority of the Insurgents and the Democrats In the senate compro mised on a bill which made the tax on raw wool, first class, 35 per, cent; second class, 10 per cent; and the aver age duty on woolens, 65 per cent. The bill against the vote of nearly all of the regular Republicans and some In surgent Republicans, passed the senate and was sent to conference, where a bill was agreed upon In which the duty was 29 per cent on raw wool, and an average of 49 per cent on woolens. This bill had the effect of raising the duty on carpet wools, as fixed in the senate. 19 per cent, and as fixed In the house. 9 per cent. Here was the first case presented to me. There was nothing In the record in either the house or senate from which I could obtain any Informa tion as to the effect of this bill upon the wool and woolen Industry of this country. I submit that the history of Its making shows no principle whatever In the bill except a compromise between two opposing principles for the purpose of passing a bill, without any Indica tion as to its effect on the Industry to which It applies. Bay Too Knob. Haste Shown. "This bill reduced the duty on wool ens to an average of 49 per cent, with a duty on the raw material wool of 29 per cent. The Wilson bill, passed in 1894, had reduced the duty to 60 per cent, with no duty on the raw wool at all, a much more favorable arrangement to the manufacturers than in th pres ent bill, and yet the years of the Wil son bill were years of disaster to the woolen manufacturers. It may be that other causes than the tRrlff contributed to the failure of woolen mills In the time of the Wilson Mil. and It may well be that conditions in the woolen busi ness have changed so that It does not need as much protection as then; but I had no adequate information, and had been furnished none, upon which I couid bh.v that the bill presented to me, was in accord with the Republican plat form of protectlot upon which I was elected, and to which I am in honor bound to square my official act and policy. In the nbsenoe of such ade quate Information. nd with the pros pect of Recurlng it In three months, it became my bounden duty to withhold my approval of the bill. What whs the necessity for such preat hii.ste in pass ing the bill at an xlrn session called for another purpose? The hill as it passed the senate contained a sinul.ir provision. When the bill went Into conference, 1 am Informed that the sug gestion was made that the date of Janu ary 1, 1 r 1 2. for taking effect would furnish a strong argument for delaying Its passnKe until after lecemlier 1. when the t.irlfr board could report. The (late of taking effct was thereupon changed to October 16, 1911. Such care was not taken with the free list bill or the cotton bill, both of which were made to take effect January 1, 1912. Wonld I,oe Progress. "Schedule K had bern in force so long and Its percentages wur so high in many respects that 1 had not hesitated In times past to say that It ought to be reduced, and to explain how it came not to be reduced In the Payne bill as it ought to have been. But It is one thing to know that a schedule of this sort is too high, and It Is a very differ ent tiling in such a complicated sched ule to know upon what items the re ductions should be made and how great the reductions ought to be. If the principle to which I am committed and to which the party is committed in the strong terms of the resolutions, which I have quoted above, was to be ob served as a policy at all, here was the occasion for following It. If I had al lowed the wool bill to become a law, the progress made In public opinion to ward a better method of revising the tariff would have been entirely lost and the policy cast to the winds. "The . free-list fbill was called the 'farmers' free list,' for the purpose of giving an impression that it was passed to compensate the farmers for some sort of injury supposed to be done by the Canadian reciprocity treaty. This rea son was finally repudiated by the louder of the Democracy on the floor of the house of representatives und Is certain ly not true. 1 here was nothing- In the Canadian i reciprocity bill that required any compensation to the farmers, for In a very short period after actual opera tion it will .appear that they, as well as everybody else, have been improved In condition by bur larger trade with Canada. Rut the bill was framed and came to me in a form calculated to mis lead aa to its effect. In the first clause all ' agricultural implements were de clared to be free and a great many were named. These same implements were named in the Payne' bill, and were made free In that bill from any country whicfc permitted our agricultural imple ments to enter It without duty. This opened to England the market of the United States for agricultural imple ments. As a matter of fact, the price Ipt agricultural Implements In America Is. cheaper, as shown by a report of the bureau of trade relations of the state department, to the American farmers than to any farmers in the world. Eng land Is the one country that exports agricultural Implements to any great ex tent, and so successful is the comper titlon against her in this country of American agricultural Implements that practically very few have come In from England. This first clause, therefore, of the free-list bill offers no boon to the farmers at all. although onr,.,-.i drawn for the purpose of Inducing them to think so. It does contain some very general words at the close of the spe cially mentioned articles which by In- !r?7latlon mlght made to Include 160 different articles, used on the farm, but used In other vocations also. And these articles the hammers, the tools the cutlery, and the machinery of va rious kinds are now duttnht un- .i,. metal schedule. To admit thm this clause would be to destroy entirely the symmetry of the m.t.i .v,-....ii and produce such a oonfuslon as serlous- y. ?te,r.er8 w,th th administration of the tariff act. Would Affect Metal Schedule. "Another clause nrovtdea fn. .- mission of barbed-wlra f,M . " and then all w1r .. n,v, which could be used for fimHn. i eludes wire rods and wire rope. To let in barbed wire fenclnr lnn. , unimportant to producers, but the fram- WHY MOST SHAMPOOS RUIN THE HAIR we quote as roiiows from the Bos ton World, on Care of the Hair," by Mae Marty n: "The reason for the scant, unattractive tresses of most women lies In the persistent use of injurious shampoos. Few reallEs that soap shampoos do more harm than good. The deadly alkali In soap Is too strong for the hair, causing It to streak and become lifeless. Buch shampoos can only result fatally to the hair. Dry powders also are bad, bb they clog up the scalp pores and cause dandruff. "A perfectly safe shampoo Is made by dissolving a teaspoonful of run throx in a cup of hot water. This cleanses perfectly, dries quickly with out streaking, and leaves the hair bright, fluffy and easy to do up, It Is the surest preventive of baldness ever discovered." Ing of the amending clause Is uch that if it were to go Jnto law It would have a serious effect upon the metal sched ule and would utterly destroy the prin ciple which was followed in.lt framing; and would make free of duty some of tb moat highly wrought articles under the metal schedule not used by farmers at all. Then there Is a clause admitting Jute And cotton bagging free and ma terials from which made, which would allow common cotton cloth to come in free for any purpose, although under the cotton schedule, even as proposed to be amended by this congress, cotton cloth is to pay a certain amount of duty. Tbo bill also puts boots and shoes of all kinds on the free list. It did not put on the free list, except some kinds of leather, the materials which went into shoes. In other words, it put on the free list the finished product and con tinued the tax on raw materials. This would be such a burden on our manu facturers that its injustice must appeal to everyone. The fact is that under tho Dlngley bill imported shoes were taxed 25 per cent ad valorem, while in the Payne bill the duty was reduced from 25 per cent to 10 per cent, the duty on hides was reduced from 16 per cent to nothing and the duty on leather was re duced to 6 per cent. No evidence was taken as to what effect this putting of shoes on-the free list would have on the very highly Important shoe industry of the country snd as it violated the first principles of Justice In a tariff, namelv of putting the finished product on the free list and taxing the materials, it did not and could not commend Itself to one who was pledged to the support of a moderate protective tariff. Canada Only Affected. Finally, the free list has two elaaae affeotlng meat and flour. A they went through the house they put meat on the free list and flour on the free list In the senate, however, an amend raent was put on limiting the operation or these two clauses to Imports from those countries with which We have a reciprocal relation and which admit certain agricultural products of ours free. This limitation made Canada the only country which would be affected by the provisions of the clause. Now, in our negotiations with Canada for reciprocity we attempted to secure free meat and free flour. Canada would not consent to this, because she feared the effect of our competition with her meat and flour. This showed that im portations of meat and flour from canaoa without duty would not have any effect to lower the price in this country of either In normal times. Rut this free list bill was giving to Canada something for nothing. This congress at the close of the act approving the Canadian reciprocity agreement di rected me to continue negotiations and expand Its terms, and yet In these pro visions it proposed to denrlve me of using the concessions of free meat and free flour to secure concessions from Canada. Thus the bill was so loosely drawn, and It purported to do so many things which It did not do, that I had no hesitation in vetoing' It. Wu Demoeratlo Bill. Finally, the cotton bill came to me. This bill differed from the others In being a bill for which the Democrats alone, and not the Insurgent Republi cans, were responsible. It had passed the house on the report of the ways and means committee made without the taking of any evidence of persons Inter ested In the manufacture or anyone else; It had completely changed the method of classifying cottons, classi fying them according to the threads In the yarn Instead of by the threads of the piece and the specific duty upon the square yard, as in the present bill. This was a most Important change, and It had been adopted after an informal communication in writing with the bureau of standards and after the ad verse report by the treasury experts. The bill was adopted avowedly as a free trade bill by the house. It came to the senate and was passed in the form in which it passed the house, ex cept that certain amendments were added. One was an amendment cutting down the metal schedule by a sweeping reduction of 30 per cent, and the other was an amendment Of the chemical schedule with a purported reduction ad valorem of 25 per rent. So hastily was the bill thrbwn together, so little atten tion was paid to the consideration of it in the senate, especially In the chemi cal schedule, that the most ludicrous results were reached. In the first place, although the amendments radically changed the metal and chemical sched ules, no change was made in the title, which still read "An act to reduce duties on cotton manufactures." An amendment was Introduced In order io make certain that In the cotton and rhemlcnf schedules there must be a re duction of all rates to not more than 80 per cent ad valorem, but It was ao placed in the act that by its language it could only apply to gooda already in the customhouse, upon which duty had not been paid. The calculations by which the specific duties in tbe chem ical schedule were transmitted into ad valorem rates and then reduced 25 per cent were exceedingly faulty. Then it passed the house under a r'ule that permitted no amendments what ever. I had the bill examined by ex perts, especially with respect to the chemical schedule, and even in the very short time I had. I found the greatest confusion produced by the amendment. Upon a number of the articles the re duction was greatly more than the pro posed 26 per cent, reaching in some cases 76 and 100 per cent, and on other articles. Instead of being a decrease, there was an Increase all the way from S to 100 per cent. The bill was sup posed to be a concession to the North Carolina cotton Interests, and to be In tended to cheapen the bleachlng.s dye ing, and coloring materials needed in that business. The very comical effect of the bill as amended was that instead of reducing the duty on bleaching powder 25 per cent, it Increased It 40 per, cent. But even a more serious de affectlng the alcoholic compounds eon- feet In the bill wa in those changea' tained in four or five items, In respect to which tn the Pajraeblll and. in all. previous tariff bills, in order to pre-, vent the use of these Item to Import alcohol at- a small dutyj compensatory duties had been Imposed of about 49 cent a pound, or U. 0 a gallon. Under the provisions of the new bill, these alcoholic compounds and article con taining alcohol would come In at a duty, making the tax on the alcohol from to 10 cents a gallon, while the Internal revenue tax on alcohol In this country is $1.10 per proof gallon, and the' duty imposed on it as an import la SltO a gallon. The opportunities for the in-' troduction of cheap alcohol and the danger of evasion, or the breaking own of the internal revenue law by such a change in the chemjeal schedule. I need hardly elaborate. -The bill was Impossible , and of course I vetoed It, There was in the passage of the bill, In tne amendments, and in the general treatment an Indication that the sup port of the bill was based rather on a desire to make a political record In favor of lower duties thanhpon a seri ous proposal to change the law. At least this is the only explanation that can be offered of the careless. Inarti ficial, and altogether unsatisfactory character of the three bills. once chadless, now happy and physically well, with healthy children, will tell how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made all this possible. Here are their names and correct addresses. Write them and learn for yourself. They are only a few out of thousands. Mri APAnderion 1 mm MPS1 kBiRSchorrfS oy i Mv"bsbT"halTenllThTM healthiest and prettlMt." Mr. A. P. Ander son, 81 Highland Are., Indianapolis, lad. "I am the mother of a twelve pound boy aad be is strong and healthy." Mn. Mary Amnndson, R.F.I). JJo.l, Box 00, Cadott, WU. "My babr Is strong and healthy and I am rell." Mn. B. M. Soi well.' Street, Bt. Paul. Mlnu. 'Since dt baby earae we are a iimity. f-nro. oonj. n. otanit Box 18, Upper Bandmky, Ohio. "My health has been restot horn, 1083 Woodbridge nancv AAMraAABakmoer", Mrs. BenJ. H. Stanibery, restored and I now have a bis babr boy." Mrs. Anna Anderson, Box 18, Black t)uck, Minn. "Am now a well woman aad bare tbe dear et baby boy." Mrs. Frank fiarpham, K. B. Mo. 1, Holiteln, Nebraska. "I have a big. fat. bealthv hey." Mrs. A. A. Balengar, K. F. D. No, 1, Baltimore, Ohio. "I hare one of tbe flneat babr girls yon ever ''YVT ." Jin. u. ts.. uooawin. au a. ut& B tract, fl&Tl Wilmington. N. O. " vw 9 rv at laat uiutauu wiu m iim uiue baby girl." Mrs. O. A. Laperoose, Montegnt, La. "I harsaloTelybabrbey and yea eaa tell every one that he it a 'Pink ham" baby." Mrs, ixrals jriscber.K: man roe Bt.,uarutaat, j, I have three children and took Tour Com pound each time." Mrs. John Howard, WUV 1 mlngton, V arm oat. W "My hupband Is the happtert sum alive to-day." Mrs. (Jiara ifarBraae, V Marlemont St., Buffalo, N. T. "I have a line strong baby daughter new." Mrs. A. A. Giles, DelrtttTUle, N.T.,Ront4. "Our flnt baby is strong and healthy aad we attribute this result to the timely use of your Compound." Mrs. Jrred xonana, lIMriCGoodwin J ii 'it n l I Anrora. Oreson. "I owe my life and mr baby's (nod health . m . r HT II a 90 your UHupogna, an, jr v. opoiw, A. M T. D., No. 2, Troy, Alabama ft iiuw t. ut o m uic ifwiT bv wtj m vn home." Mrs. PosylTa Cote, 117 Southgate Mn.Cawirfj rvinv St.. Worcester Afas. "Am tbe mother of a JweWe peand baby boy who It the picture of health." Mrs. Flora Ahr, 1974 State Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio. "We have one of the finest baby boys." Mrs. A. C. Ia Vault, Elmo, Mo. "I owe the health ef myself and three children to Lydia X. Pinkham's Vegetable children to Lydia S. Ptnkbam's Vegetable I m Compound." Mrs. Alfred L. Gale, Box 89, sf f MeDonough, N. T. 1 "I harass aleven novad boy." Mrs. Mas gle Ester, R. F. D. No. 1, Wesleyrllle, Pa. "Tour medicine has brought happiness to oar home." Mrs. Joe Grantham, sag W. VandeTear St., Taylorrille. 111. "Now my home Is made happy by a big baby boy.'' Mrs. Mary Sedloek, Boa 1378, Negaunee, Miohlgan. KM. X I MrlJohn Howard I For further information, address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, always helpful and strictly confidential. When Your Home Demands New Things Anything Whatever in Furniture and Housefurnishings Jiist remember one place, the Morgan-Atchley Furniture Store, and that at this store your home demands will be better supplied. 1 j That everything is here that your home needs demand that the things are hew and artistic and of the very best grade that prices are right (always the lowest) and terms of pay nent most reasonable in fact, whatever things youll need ' at whatever prices you desire to pa v the Morgan-Atchley Store can and will meet your demand. ' - May we not look for you tomorrow? FURNITURE, CARPETS, DRAPERIES, BEDDING, STOVES AND RANGES, ALL AT LOW-EXPENSE PRICES w tm EVERY CUSTOMER SHARES THE $25,000 WE SAVE- ANNUALLY 4 IN TAXES AND INTEREST BECAUSE WE BUILT ON THE EAST SIDE. FURNITURE CT "Grand ATenue and East Stark Street. -l-. -