The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, October 16, 1914, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    14
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY 9 EVENING, OCTOBER . 18, 1914.
- s v
mm e
II1VII
TO HAVE
PEOPLE
E
CHANG
GREAT PRIZE CONTEST
;Smith & Wilson Department
: Store of That Place Adds
':. Another Source for Votes,
CAPTURE OF BLIND PIGGER
REQUIRED NO LITTLE NERVE
CHANCES FOR ALU EQUAL
; Allotment X Arranged So On District
Will Consist of All Territory
Outside of Portland.
"M oMInnvtlle peor.lp should have a
:rhre of those splendid contest prizes.
believe In helping them win, no Just
count the Smith Wilson deportment
'lore tn The Journnl's trade and eir
.culfttlon contest," said F. S. Wilson, a
.member of the M cMinnville firm.
And as a reeult of hi action, Mc
;Mlnnville people who trade at the big
merchandising ntor operated by them
'will enjoy an added source for votes.
The Smith & Wilson store is the first
outside of Portland firm to enter the
, rontejttt. Mr. Wilson derided to do It
bemuse he as he likes to help along
ambitious people. Tie Is enthusiastic
over the context arrnnpement whereby
people resldiriR in Portland, in Oregon
and the north went at lare are given
n e'iiii'1 opportunity to share In the
'5000 worth if prizes that will be
'-.awarded wideawake people February
24 when the contest closes.
Ho Favorites to Be Flayed.
In McMlnnvllle, the Smith & Wilson
utore will play no favorites. Each
candidate will be encouraged in every
Way possible but the store will not
use its influence for one or against
aonther.
That's the only fair way," said Mr.
Wilson. "All we want to see is that
.'McMlnnvllle people draw down their
-share of those prizes, and now that
we have provided another means for
-.them- to secure votes, we want to see
our townsmen get busy."
, The contttst Is so arranged that peo
" fAn reKiriiiig outside of Portland are
.absolutely certain of winning at least
ne-fourth of all prizes offered. Port
land is divided into three districts.
No's. 1, 2 and 3. and District 4 com
priwes all territory outside of Port-
land.
In addition to the two grand prizes
that go to the persons having the first
nd second highest votes of all dis
tricts, there are six prizes set aside
for each of the four districts.
Pianos Are First Frizes.
in each district the first prize Is a
Jilijh grade piano, the second prize, a
trip for two persons to the Panama
Pacific exposition with all expenses
paid for a week and 50 spendin?
money, the third prize the same trip
for one person, expenses paid and ?25
spending money. The fourth prize la
176 Columbia grafonola, the fifth a
$50 grafonola and the sixth prize a
,425 grafonola.
The first grand prise Is a $1280
. touring ear "Reo the Fifth" and the
. second grand prize, a Maxwell 25,
pcice $S50.
. i The. rules and Instructions In con
nection with the contest, along with
a nomination blank were published in
The Journal's advertising section yes
terday and will appear In Sunday's
Journal.
Truth has always been stranger than
fiction and the experiences of police
men in the performance Of their duty
in the underworld are no exception.
The archives of the Portland police
department contain no more stirring a
tale than the story of the capture of
"Cigarette Annie," a notorious blind
pigger. by Patrolman H. U Griffith,
who, in addition to his police duties,
also plays first K flat melophone In
the police band, which is to tour the
east next spring to induce visitors to
the Panama-Pacific exposition to come
by way of Portland.
A few years ago Griffith was as
signed to the task of running down
those who Illegally sold liquor in Port
land, keepers of blind pigs. Of their
number none was harder to catch than
"Cigarette Annie," although it was
well known that she was engaged in
the business.
One day the policeman was given
positive orders that the woman had to
be caught and so Griffith, after gain
ing admittance to her rooms In a rook
ery on a Sunday morning, was able to
persuade her that he had a thirst
that must be assuaged.
"Cigarette Annie" brought him a
glass of whiskey and another for her
self. The officer was to pay for both.
As he was about to pass her the money
he "flashed" his star and told her
that she was under arrest.
Annie's reply was typical of the des
perate "blind pigger." Like a flash
she picked up one of the glasses and
dashed the contents in the officer's
face. While he was blinded by the
fiery liquor she grasped him by the
neck and pushed him through the door.
Then running away she hid In a back
roomr.
Griffith had come to arrest the
woman. Jt was his auty ana so ne
wiped the stinging liquor from his
face and went back into the house.
After a long search he found her, took
. - - Artef?w
H. L
have Senator Potndexter and I voted
together."
He reviewed achievements of the
:"Wilson administration and dwelt upon
the provision of the amendment to the
Sherman anti-trust law which pro
vides that the "labor of a human being
Is not a commodity or an article of
commerce. This provision was writ
other Union, county Democrats., who
came from Ia Grande and other points
and who accompanied him In automo
biles to La Grande. They came by
way of Cove, where the senator spent
an hour meeting the citizens.
In La Grande during the afternoon
Senator Chamberlain said one of his
r k finf- of mercv and of ius- most pleasant experiences was a visit
!j tice, and it is a provision that long ago with George W. Webb, former state
should have been Imbedded in the law treasurer, who is now over 90 -years
h M.ir decisions of this country. ' I old- Mr. Webb was ill. and Senator
he said j Chamberlain visited him .at his home.
The senator said the onlv men In In Baker the senator also looked up
congress who voted against tins I some of his old friends who were ill
measure, and most of the other mea-jfl unable to attend his meeUng He
sures of President Wilson's construc
tive legislative program, are "the re
actionaries who don't think the com
mon people have rights that ought to
be respected." "Tou have asked for
bread from the Democratic adminis
tration, and it has been given you." he
continued. "What do the opponents
of the administration offer to you in
its stead? Are they going to reverse
the policies of Woodrow Wilson?"
Senator Chamberlain came from Ba
ker today. He stopped at Union this
morning and spent several hours vis
iting with old friends, many of whom
met him at the train.
took time to visit William Hindman,
94 years old.
Mr. Hindman had expressed the hope
that he might live long enough to cast
one more vote for Senator Chamber
lain, and the Senator said since return
ing to the state he had learned of no
expression of good will that pleased
him more than this one. He also vis
ited George W. Jett, another pioneer
of Baker, who was unable to leave his
home.
Today Senator Chamberlain is cam
paigning through Umatilla county, and
will wind up with an address in Pen
dleton tonight. Quite a number of his
He was met later there by Judge friends came from Pendleton to meet
Thomas H. Crawford, Turner Oliver,
Fred J. Holmes, Charles Dunn and
him at La Grande to accompany him on
his trip through Umatilla county.
Mrs. Neagle Sues
For an Accounting
Pendleton. Or.. Oct. 16. Charging
that her brother-in-law, Frank Neagle.
defrauded her by misrepresenting the
value of the estate left by her hus
band, James Neagle, and Induced her
to sell the real property at less than
half its value, Mrs. Rose Neagle. for
merly of this city and now of Santa
Rosa. ' Cal., has commenced suit in
the district court for a cancellation
of the deed, and to require her broth-
cr-in-Iiw to make an accounting of
the funds he has handled for her. Her
complaint cites in detail the alleged
misrepresentations ne made before
she sold her share In real property
to him for $3000. She also alleges
that he has not turned over to her
all of the interest accruing from the
$10,000 trust fund be has been hand
ling, and has not given her any part
of th rental secured from farm lands.
V
Griffith.
her to the station and the next day se
cured a conviction and fine of $100.
It was the first time "Cigarette
Annie" had ever been convicted, al
though she had been arrested again
and again. And Griffith deserves all
the credit.
cents, and mere a dozen tor tnem un
der a Democratic tariff.
Tm Just calling your attention to
these things to show you the absurdity
of the campaign being made to elect
a Republican senator and defeat the
Democratic administration."
Declares His Friendship.
Senator Chamberlain was vigorously
applauded when he declared his friend
ship for Senator La Follette and Sen
ator Miles Poindexter of Washington.
He had told of their support of the
Democratic tariff and other measures
because they believed them to be tn
the interests of Democratic tariff.
and of still other measures, because
they believed them to be in the Inter
ests of the American people.
"I am almost afraid to mention La
Follette," he said. "I have been ac
cused of being a La Follette Demo
crat and a La Follette Republican. I
want to say I am a I -a Follette man,
ladies and gentlemen, in the sense that
99 times out of 100. he and I have
voted together on measures in the in
terests of the people. In the same way
Maderite-i
In America
is a slogan that means
much to the American
Housewife. It means
the protection of the
U. S. pure food laws,
which demand that all
foods must conform to
a fixed
stand ar d
of purity.
CHAMBERLAIN
IN ANSWER TO
HIS ENEMIES
ELY'S CREAM BALM OPENS CLOGGED
NOSTRILS AND HEAD-CATARRH GOES
Instantly Clears Air Passages; You'at an' drus store. This sweet, fra-
. T . , grant bajm dissolves by the heat of
LfVt AH Grocers
One pound
25 cents
PurePork Sausage l l
If If TJ. 8. amsmmimt Inspected. J V J J
Nothing But Pure Pork and Spices Jrt
J I Packed in Sanitary Cartons I j
L J LINK or MEAT L
"The Saasage that has made If lit
i Jt good because made lit
Breathe Freely, Nasty Discharge
Stops, Head Colds and Dull Head
ache Vanish.
Get a small bottle anyway, Just to
try it Apply a little in the nostrils
and instantly your clogged nose and
stopped-up air passages of the head
will open; you will breathe freely;
dullness and headache disappear. By
morning! the catarrh, cold-ln-head
or catarrhal sore throat will be gone.
End such misery now! Get the
small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm"
the nostrils; penetrates and heals the
inflamed, swollen membrine which
lines the nose, head and throat;
clears the air passages; stops nasty
discharges and a feeling of cleansing,
soothing relief comes immediately, i
Don't lay awake tonight struggling
for breath, with head stuffed; nos
trils closed, hawking and blowing.
Catarrh or a cold, with its running
nose, foul mucous dropping into the
throat and raw dryness is distress
ing but truly needless. j
Put your faith just once in "Ely's
Cream Balm' and your cold or ca
tarrh will surely disappear. (Adv.)
(Continued from Page One.) n
in fine form and spoke with an ear
.nestneps that carried the big crowd
with him. H said he deplored the
kind of a. campaign that was being
waged and that no one could say that
he hud ever assailed a man's char
acter. "1 hope I will not have to enter Into
that kind of a campaign." he declared,
'hut If it becomes necessary for me to
defend my good name, and that of my
wife and nix children, who were born,
educated, and honorably reared in Ore
gon, 1 A ant you to know there is one
m.ui in the state who can and will
fight back and teach his enemies that
those who live in glass houses ought
not to cast stones either personally or
by their agents."
Discusses the Tariff. -
When discussing Ihe new tariff law,
Senator Chamberlain cleverly and
lorcibly drove home the point as to
who was Retting the benefit from a
tariff revised downward. He pointed
out that nince wool is now bringing
the highest price it has brought, with
the exception of two times in the last
S5 ears,' iind the prices of nearly all
products or tn larm and field are
good, that the Republican papers that
wont to discredit the Wilson adminis
tration are confining their harpings to
Chinese eggs and butter from New
Zealand.
"Wll everyone In this audience who
eats eggs plcaso stand up," he asked.
The crowd laughed. "I really mean
lt,"continued the senator. "I want to
see how many of you eat eggs."
. The, enttre audience arose to Its fet.
"Thank you." said the senator.
"Now let those who raise and sell eggs
please stand."
Three people arose. The crowd saw
the point and shouted with laughter.
"Why should , a tax be placed Upon
H of you people for thP benefit of
three men?" he asked. "But even so,
the assertions that the lowering of the
; tcrlff on eggs has reduced the price of
eggs is not true. A Republican wrote
a letter to the Oregonian the other day
saying he had bought eggs for eight
rents a dozen . under a Republican
tariff, and now you have to p&y 35
THIN FOR YEARS "GAINS 22
POUNDS IN 23 DAYS"
While Qover Cartoii Emitter
Made From Strictly "Graded and Pasteurized" Cream
Remarkable Experience of T. Chig
non. Builds TJp Weight
Wonderfully.
OPERATION
every cell and fibre of the
body demands pure blood.
Drugs, extracts and alco
holic mixtures are useless, j
Nourishment and sunshine
are nature's blood-makers and
the rich medicinal oil-food in
sootrs unuision enlivens
the blood, aids the appetite,;
gtrengtneiu tne nerves and
fortifies the lungs and 0
enttre system.
frets Alcsnel er Opiate.
Refuse Sabtitt for
SCOTTS
"l was all run down to the very
bottom," writes P. Gagnon. "I had
to quit work, I was so weak. Now,
thanks to Sargol, I -look like a new
man. 1 gained ZZ pounds in 23 days.
"Sargol has put 10 pounds on me
in 14 days," states W. D. Roberta. "It
has made me sleep 'well, enjoy what 1
ate and enabled me to work with inter
est and pleasure."
"I weighed 132 pounds when I com
menced taking SargoL After taking
20 days I weighed 144 pounds. Sargol
is the most wonderful preparation for
flesh building I have ever seen," de
clares D. Martin, and J. Meier adds:
"For the past twenty years I have
taken medicine every day for Indiges
tion and got thinner every year.
took Sargol for forty days and feel
better than I have felt in twenty
years. My weight has increased from
150 to 170 pounds."
When hundreds of men and women
and there are hundreds, with more
coming every day living in every
nook and comer of this broad land
voluntarily testify to weight Increases
ranging all the way from 10 to 35
pounds, given them by Sargol, you
must admit, Mr. and Mrs. and Miss
Thin Reader, that there must be some
thing In this Sargol method of flesh
building after all.
Hadn't you better look Into It. Just
as thousands of others have done?
Many thin, folks say: Td give most
anything to put on a little extra
weight,'' but when someone suggests
way they exclaim, "Not a chance.
Nothing will make me plump. I'm
built to stay thin." Until you have
tried Sargol. you do not and cannot
know that this Is true.
Sargol has put pounds of healthy
stay there" flesh on hundreds who
doubted and In spite of their doubts.
lou don t have to believe in Sargol
to grow plump from its use. You Just
take It and watch weight pile up, hol
lows vanish and your figure round out
to pleasing and normal proportions.
You weigh yourself when you begin
and again when you finish and you let
tne scales tell the story.
Sargol is Just a tiny concentrated
tablet. You take one with every meal.
It mixes with the food you eat for the
purpose of separating all of Its flesh
producing ingredients. It Drenarea
these fat making elements in an easily
assimilated form, which the blood can
readily absorb, and carry all over your
body. Plump, well-developed persons
don't neef. Sargol to produce this re
sult. Their assimilative machinery
performs Its functions without aid.
But thin folks' assimilative organs do
not This fatty portion of their food
now goes to waste through their bodies
like unburn ed coal through an open
grate. A few days' test of Sargol In
your case will surely prove whether
or not this Is true of you. Isn't It
worth trying? . - ,,...,.;-
: Aw Mtm III
-'.Ait - I Mil
7 - . 1
.A I-
TWItr jJj
Every Package
bearing this
brand and trade
mark is of itself
a guarantee of
the standard of
quality ap
proved by our
customers and
backed by us.
Right from the vines1
Perfect tomatoes, -red-ripe, juicy
and delicious these are what we
use m 1
Campbell's Tomato Soup
Their natural flavor is cojrlipletely
retained by the Campbell Imethod;
and made even richer
tempting by means of the
exclusive Campbell blend-ing-formula.
Order this perfect soup
by the dozen and have it
on hand. That is the
most satisfactory way.
21 kinds 10c a can
arr more
-corns:
11
21 KINDS
mm
IAIUr rUK 1 nt KtU-ANU-WniTg. LABEL
Specially Designed for Sanitary Production
of "White Clover Products" Is Located at
Our New Home
East Seventh and Everett Streets
SMrsssSBKssSfiSlttlBc!'l
The angry husband says: "Why? donH you get some
bread that I can eat Order Butternut''
The NEW
SUTTER'NUT BREAD
made with our new-idea mbdne process, is tie perfect bread.
We couldn't improver the ingredients, so we japded m,ffa
tne last toucn or exceuenco 10 mo mixing prutasif
Tell yotir grocer today to send out a loaf it's jpents
10 cents for the larger size. 1 1 .
But be sure to look for the Butter-Nut label. - f
Order at Your Grocer ll
rf
sf
UNITED STATES BAKERY
Corner East Eleventh and Flanders ,
Plump, wen developed men and I
women attract attention at thai
beach, as well as in. the city.
50c BOX FREE
To enable any thin reader ten pounds or I
more underweight, to easily nuke this test I
we will gite a 50c box of Sarjrol absolutely!
free. Either Sargol wUl locream your weljtht I
or It won't, and the only way to know It 1
Is to try it. Bend for ihis Free Test Paick-
age today, enclosing 10c in surer or (tamps I
to help pay postage, packing, etc., and a
full size 50e package will be sent by retnm
mall free of charge. Mall this coupon with!
your letter to the Sargol Co., 02-Y Herald I
Bldg.. BiDgbamton, N. Y.
COME EAT WITH US AT
OUR EXPENSE
i FREE COUPON
This coupon entitles any person to oinel
50c package of Sargol. the concentrated
Flesh Buflder (provided yon have never I
tried It) and that 10 cents is enclosed i to I
cover postage, packing, etc Read oor
advertisement printed above, and then putl
10c in silver In letter today with connon. I
and the full 50c package will be sent to I
you by return post. Address: Tea Sargol
Company. 2-Y Herald Bldg.. Blnghamton.
N. Y. Wrire your name and address!
plainly and PIN THIS COUPON TOAOCUl
I,KTI K K.
Statewide Prohibition
eans Bigger Taxes
M
They're Too Big Now
Vote 333 X No
Against ProlbiMtioo
(Voting Qualifications: Six Months' Residence in the State, 30 Days in Precinct.)
Defeat of the proposed prohibition amendment will have no effect on the ef
ficient local option or home rule statutes now in force, and each community
will continue to determine its individual stand on the matter of granting licenses
.. - . T' '-'V ' . ' ! -
CFaid At Taxpayers aad War Xaraers' league of Onsroa, SC. O. Allen, 807, atoryari Bldf, VortasAA, Or.)
GOING EAST?
On Your Next Trip Try ti
ORIENTAL LIMITED
Via the
GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY
Leaves Portland Daily 7:25 lfM.
Through standard and tourist sleeping cars tfjftt. Paul and Minne
apolis in 59 hours, Chicago 72 hours. Comf;Jrtment Observation
Car Unexcelled Dining Car Service Elective Lighted Vacuum
Cleaned Afternoon Tea-Served Free No Miter service anywhere.
H:- - - .
Tickets and Sleeping Car Reservations at City
Ticket Office. 348 Washington Street (Morgan
Building) and at Depot, 11th and r Hoyt Sts.
-It-
H. DICKSON
C. P. & T. A.
Telephones
Marshall 3071
A-22S6
r4tKfrtiTtfi'J
COAST LINE SERVICE
Portland to Tacoma, Seattle, Vancoufcr, B. C, and
Intermediate Points. 1
5
.:sl
10 A. M. 5:00 P. M. 12130 Midnight
5:00 P. M. train carries through Stalidard Sleeper
Portland to Vancouver, Bip. '
vfl
or
J w
. 3
r
U