14 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 10, 1922. WOMAN IS BOUND iTO GRAND JURY ON $10,000 BAIL r . -i - , " Mrs. Oilie Blowers Is Held In Connection With Slaying of Mexican Near Her Roadhouse Klamath Faljs. Kept. 9. Mrs. llie lilowers. charged with first decree lnurdpr in connection with the death fitar her noa'ihouw? near crescent. isptember lof Tom Montoya, a Mexi- a.ir shepherder. was bound over to he grand jury at a preliminary hear nC here today. She waa admitted to ail of ,10,0OO. Two pair of shoes, one misein. and l Dleoe'of rope may figure in the case. It appeared today, when it was brouit tnt that io shoes were found In Mrs. JlowerH house to correspond with racks Jeadlngr to the spot where Mon- lojra's tody va.s found, and that the (hoes found on Montoya were unfami- iar to Dan Rilpy, a sheepherder, who lad -seen Montoya earlier in the day. An attempt was. made to Bbow that be tracks on the road accompanying the woman's tracks were those of a nan other than Montoya ana wno may Jhave fired the fatal shots and then hanged phoes with the dead man. Testimony broupht out that Mrs. Blowers, in the presence of officers, had pointed to a rope saying. That was what started the whole business." It was alleged that Montoya had had an arjrument with his employer, John Singleton, of Lakeview, over the ques tion of borrowing a horse, into which a HUeBtion had arisen concerning the rope. Montoya, it waa .alleged, de clared that he would ' get Singleton." The state Introduced evidence purport ing to show that Mrs. Blowers had burned in "her fireplace the shoes she wore during the time she was alleged to have been with Montoya. Vegetable Growers Reported Hard Hit ( " The Dalles. Sept. 9. Manager C. It; Thompson of the Wasco county branch of the Oregon Growers coop erative association, today- character ised the present season as the worst on sales of vegetables that he had experienced- in 15 years of the work. Al though opening prices were good, Thompson eaid, '"the market slumped later to the point where It was prac tically unprofitable for growers to har--vest' their - produce.'- Heavy crops, overlapping seaspks, due to the cold spring, and bad freight conditions, were blamed. St. Helens Shipments Of Lumber Are Less s St i Helens, Sept. 9. Lumher ship aments from St. Helens for the week ending tonight will total about 1,500, "000 feet, as compared to S. 000,000 feet the previous week. In addition to the lumber shipments this week, the Japa nea stamr Tasmania Maru will clear "with 2.000,000 feet of small logs which will he resawed when delivered at a Japanese port It Is the first sh:p ,Tment! of this kind which has been .Tnade from . St. Helens. Bootleggers Given I Penitentiary Terms . j. ' Wenatchee, Wash.. Sept. 9. The heaviest penalties ever imposed on vio lators of the prohibition laws In this county were laid upon Clyde Brown and Archie Staley, convicted bootleg gers, -by Visiting Judge M. L. Clifford, .Friday evening. Judge Clifford sen vtenced the men to from one to five years in Walla Walla penitentiary. The -heaviest penalty imposed in previous sentences was $500 fine and six months -in the county jail. Several s"Uch sen tences have been laid upon liquor law Victims. MAKRIAGE LICENSES Kalama, Wash.. Sept. 9. Marriage licenses vfas Issued to Felix Maki and Hilma Calf of Woodland and C. H. Jewett of Janesville. Wis., and Mrs. Lena Worth of Burlington, Vt. "Why Not Buy the Best When It is Made in the West?" The Great Lang Gas Wood and Coal .Range Ona gas burner does all jont Cooking and Baking, heating the water at the same time with the same x- From $84.00 Up, - j - Installed F. S. LANG MFG. GO. 191 Fourth St Portland. Ore, Contracts for 100 -: Miles of Road Is to End Year Program Salenv Sept. 9. letting- of contracts for the improvement of approximately 100 miles of state highways t the meetings of the EtJ.cc highway commis sion in Portland. Jctooer 6 and 6. .is expected to concluie the improvement program for this year, according' to announcement, by ..he highway depart ment today. Improvements to be con sidered are : City of Fossi! section, John Day highway, grading, ' surfacing and brwiges, .S mile. Bear Creek' section, Josephine Caves road, grading 3 miles, v Mohler N'orth section, Coast high way. Tillamook county, grading and surfacing. 2.63 miles.. Summit section. Alsea highway. B-ntoii county, gradin, 6.6 miles. Sheridan-Bellevut section, McMinn-ville-Tillamook highway, shoulders and ditching 4 miles. Parkersburg section, Coquille-Can-don unit. Coast highway, grading, 4.75 miles. Lamms Mill-Port Klamath section. The Dalies-California highway, grad ing: and surfacing, 19.1 miles. Madras-Wapc county line section. The Dalles-California highway, grad ing and surfacing. 9.37 miles, grading, 15.64 miles surfacing, including bridge over Hay Creek. Keno-Hayden Creek section. Ashland-Klamath Falls highway, Klamath county, grading. 11.7 miles. Hayden Creek-Keene Creek section, Ashland-Klamath Falls highway, Kla.-nath county, 22.17 mls rock sur Spokane Fair Has Large Deficit, Due To Small Crowds Spokane, Wash., Sept. 9. The Spo kane Interstate Fair and Livestock ehow ahowed a deficit of $20,000 when the gates closed on the -9th annual exhibition tonight. This statement was issued by Thomas S. Griffith, pres ident of the fair association. To stage a fair next year it will be necessary to raise the amount of the deficit through a financial campaign," Griffith said. "Fifty per cent of this deficit represents the losses on the 1921 fair, the remainder on this year's, fair, due to lack of attendance. Although the gate receipts this year considerably exceed those of last year, the ex penses have been heavier." . Idaho won over Oregon in the can ning demonstration today In the Boys' and Girls' club work ' department Washington did not enter a team. The winning team, from Twin Falls, Idaho, included Miss Leona Stoddard, Miss Elizabeth Miller and Miss Ruberta Si ver, in charge of A. I. O'Reilley. The Oregon team included Miss Elizabeth Fehre.nvacher and Miss Elizabeth Dun ning. Blood Hounds Are Trying to Find Trail Of Unknown Fiend Olympia, Wash.. Sept. 9. Belief that the unknown fiend who terrorized and brutally assaulted Mrs, Kate O'Hare and her four daughters and beat her son and another youth Thursday night in her home, eight miles west of Olym pia, is still in that vicinity was strengthened by the report today of Matt Twohy, a farmer living within a mile and a half from the O'Hare home. Twohy, who had been away from home all day, found upon his return late Friday night that his cabin had been entered and food taken. It is believed by county and police officials that the fiend was the intruder and is still in hiding near the scene of his crime. - Matt Starwich's bloodhounds were again put on the hunt. Road Construction Program Given Up Dayton. Wash.. Sept. 0 In an ef fort to curb soaring taxes, the Co lumbia county commissioners adopted a program which, it is estimated, will reduce the total about $75,000. The road construction program planned last year will be abandoned and only enough work will be done on highways and bridges to make them safe. County agent work will be dispensed with, no extra help will be paid for at the audi tor's office, cars furnished county of ficials may be used for county business only, and the assessor will no longer be allowed an office deputy. " Levies for road districts will be reduced in every case from two to four mills, and the first of October the salaries of all deputies will be materially reduced. Train Crews Jump When Crash Occurs Roseburg, Sept. 9 A southbound freight. Xo. 221, and a work extra, collided near Oakland late yesterday, completely demolishing a freight car and causing other damage. The work train was pushing two heavily loaded gravel cars and the freight train was also moving at a slow rate of speed when they struck head on. Tha train crews shut off the power, applied the brakes and jumped to safety. The track was cleared in about two hours. A board of inquiry will investigate the accident. - Atlantic Liner Sinks Off Spain London, Sept. 9. (U. P.) The Hamburg-American liner Hammonia is re ported in a Lloyds dispatch to have sunk SO miles .off Vigo, Spain. The passengers, the report says, were saved. The Hammonia was of German registry, built in Glasgow in 1909. She was of 7291 tons. WIVES SEEK FREEDOM Dallas, Or., Sept. 91 Divorce cases filed in Polk county this week were : Alice Heath ' against Willi am A. Heath, and Annie L Cooper against Charles P. Cooper. LIPPMAN- : BORSKY EXPERT TAILORS TO BOTH MEN AND WOMEN SUITE 33 LAFAYETTE ELD8. X.' E. COR CTH sad WASH.. W ateo maintain a apecwl da-' paitoaent for jraur Cfeaantc. Prrsa in and Buabenns at erj nodetat lit We Do Remodeling EO MISSING VOTES FOUND; DO NOT CHANGE RESULTS Lost Ballots Are Discovered in Sealed Envelopes in Unlocked Drawer of County Courthouse The ' missing bahots of the primary election in precinct 197, for which dil igent search was made for several days. haVe been found. They were discovered Saturday afternoon by Deputy County Clerk James Gleason, in charge of the registration and elec tion bureau, and immediately thereaf ter were taken into Judge Knowles' court and recounted in connection with the Coffey contest case. They made no material change in the figures as given by the election board, some two or three minor mioiaites being discov ered. Gleason Saturday afternoon began a systematic search of all the drawers in, the registration bureau, and eventu ally was rewarded by discovering the missing ballots in a sealed envelop, in an unlocked drawer at the northerly end of the long counter. With them were some ballot stub of precinct 266. , Gleason says hj recalls the placing of the stubs within this drawer, but has no recollection "of the envelop of ballots having been placed there. He believes that they ware brought to the court house in the canvass bag con taining other election papers, instead of within the wooden box supplied for the purpose, and that in the rush of the work they were tucked into the drawer where they were discovered by him. C. P. Benedict, chairman of the counting board, had previously tes tified before Judge Knowles that the box was not opened after It was taken to the registration bureau. Mabel Eastman, a judge of precinct 157, had testified that all of the ballots were initfaled as they were counted. When the ballots were recounted in court after their discovery it was found that they were not initialed. As the count in this precinct makes no difference in the contest case, it is probably the incident of their mis placement will be dropped. VERN0N1A HAILED ASJUTURE CITY (Continued From Faga One) 30-year supply of standing timber. tributary to the valley, so the citizens told the visitors. This mill, according to the plans out lined to residents of Vernonia, is to be unique in the milling business of the Northwest, It is to be of steel and concrete construction and is esti mated to cost $3,000,000. In addition the visitors heard of the plans of the Inman-Poulsen Lumber company to carry on operations on a 25,000-acre tract of timber, -with Ve---nonla as the center. Plans of California Barrel company and otlu-r Industries were detailed, all combining to throw out a lure of promise which attracted the Portland people. The trip over the new rail line would have been a tedious one for the Port land people, had It not been for the inspiration they received from the visit to the embryo lumber town and indus trial center. Leaving Portland at 8 :30 a. m., the special train traveled to Linnton and then over the United Railways to Wllkesboro. where the new line has its northerly terminus. The special ar rived at Vernonia at 1 p. m. Included in the party were city officials and rail executives, as well as business leaders of this city. ilayor Baker was head of the city representatives and the party of rail road officials included heads of the S. P. & S.. with which the P. A. & P. is 'affiliated, as follows : William F. Turner, president W. D. Skinner, vice president and traffic manager A. J. Davidson, general man ager : A. J. Witchel. chief engineer : G. V. Lintner, construction engineer ; Dr. James C. Zan, chief surgeon ; Judge C. II. Carey, general counsel C. Spencer, general counsel ; Votarw. superintendent. and Plckard, assistant general . agent. ; Omar G. K. R. W. freight In addition to the Portland special there was one from St: Helens with 165 people aboard. The Portland spe cial picked up an additional 135 pas sengers at Banks and Wilkesboro, so that the trains carried in excess of 600 visitors to the jubilee city. A thou sand more visitors gathered from th countryside and distant points by au tomobile. At the Nehalem valley city, the ex cursionists were met by a special re ception committee composed of Lester Sheeley, D. W. Keasey and C. D. White. Another committee headed by H. E. McGraw had started from Port land with the special train and had the Portlandere fully Informed as to the reception plans. With a band, brought by the Port land special, the visitors marched up the main street to the civic center, where a luncheon was served by the Vernonia Chamber of Commerce.' F. El. Andrews, vice president of the chamber of commerce,, addressed the meeting. Following the luncheon, all gathered In the- city park and there heard ad dresses from Lester Sheeley of Ver nonia, Mayor Baker, Judge Carey and Spencer of Portland and Judge Corne lius of Clatsop county. The special left Vernonia. at S o'clock for the return trip and arrived In the North Sank station at 9 o'clock. The Portland. Astoria Sc. Pacific rail way is 3Smils in length. Vernonia is 48 miles from Portland and begin ning about' October 1, regular train service of about two and one-quarter bours run, will be Inaugurated. Be yond Vernonia the new rail line runs 14 miles to a point On Rock creek about two miles beyond the .4 own of Keasey. - pn th outward bound trip the spe cial trains stopped at the Beaver Lum ber company Operations to view a tree felling" contest and - to see a high climber "top" a tree. . No Trace Found of Victims of Wreck Aberdeen. Wash.. Sept. 9. The south Grays Harbor beaches are being pa trolled today in the hope of Tecoverintr the bodies of "William Bennett and Lloyd Concer, Aberdeen fishermen, who it Is feared tost - their lives Thursday night when their launch. The Spray, was Wrecked on the beach near Gray la ad, south of Westport. No trace of the two men has been found. Salem Prisows Had Loot Stolen From Oregon City Salem, Sept. 9. Jewelry found in the possession, of Ed Da via, Dick Mor gan and John Augustine when they were arrested here Wednesday was today identified by a member of the Boland family of - Oregon- City as a part of the loot taken from the Bo land home on the night of September 2. The Identification strengthens the suspicions of Chief of Police Moffitt that the three men may have been re sponsible for several burglaries com mitted in valley towns lecently. Jewelry valued at $400 wa3 taken from the Boland home, it is said, but only a part of it was found. At the time of their arrest the men were peddling seemingly valuable jewelry to Salem residents at suspiciously low price's. Chief Moffitt suspects that Morgan is wanted in either Oklahoma or Kan sas for breaking jail, and that Davis is an escape from Leavenworth prison. Early this morning the men were detected in an attempt to break' jail by picking the lock to their cells with a piece of wirje. In a demonstration this afternoon Morgan picked every lock in the "city hall with simple tools in a kit found on his person when arrested. DEDICATES HER LIFE TO WORK AMONG LEPERS (Continued From Pase One) solute disinfectant since the remotest ages. We 'keep our powder dry as we believe, by constantly using this water, and trust for the. rest. We workers associate with the' lepers con stantly, but the work is so glorious that it is worth it. "These waters also work wonders in allaying leprosy and venereal diseases.; Directly above our leper village there; is another village inhabited mostly by; syphiletics and by those suffering' from rheumatism. Aside from the bathing in the spring water, leprosy' is treated by various uses of chamool gra oil, the only thing that is known to allay the disease. It is so difficult: to digest that physicians frequently; use it with "tha aid of a hypodermlcf needle. "Kusatsu is located 4000 feet above the level of the sea and is frightfully cold in winter, everything freezes tight and it is difficult for us to be' comfortable, as our houses are just the ordinary little Japanese house. It$ distance and climate make living there very high, but the presence of the: springs must be considered, and so wo stay. j "Not only do the lepers display won-t derful Christian fortitude, but we oc casionally have people come to give their lives to the work, who are not afflicted, such was Sugi San, who dropped down from the skies upon us. a very small and very smiling man of 3, who came to the church one day and after the service told us that he had felt called to Kusatsuj, had borrowed a little money from his mother to pay his fare and had come to spend the rest of his life among the lepers- Of talents he has about one and an eight, but of good will and desire to help he has 100 per centL He receives no wages, just his keep and one yen a month for pocket money. He chose of his own accord to live and eat and sleep amongst the lepers, and though at first we did not consent to this, he is now allowed to do so." ! Miss Cornwall-Legh has a small per sonal Income nad she receives a small stipend for her services, all of wlyci she turns back into the work, consid ering it a privilege to work among these wretched people. Douglas County to Have Fine Exhibit Roseburg, Sept. 9. The sum of $500 was today appropriated by the county court to be used for the Douglas coun ty exhibit at the state fair. C. cj. Garrett of Glendale, and County -Agent B. W. Cooney will have charge of the exhibit, which will be the best Douglas county has ever had. The melon exhibit will be the feature of the display. Melons and fruits are being placed ijn cold storage each day, in preparafloin for the fair. ' . Uilii!!iiii!i;ii;iiiiiji:iiti!::ii:iiininiiin:iniiiiiilii; A Garage? BUILD IT NOW BUILD IT NOW whll the weather' fin and paint It, too. If it's a Redimade it's worth painting. BUILD IT NOW at the low lumbar price and SAWS MONEY. Lumber is active. adTuncicg in price and bound to so higher. TIP BUILD NOW! REDIMADES are lowest In price, but hlahett In garage value. Iue to our quantity purchase and manufacturing facilities. NOTE We deliver and erect sectional garages in Portland, with stain ap plieii. for SSO. " WE BUILD . regular board-at-a,time built garages, too, at exceptionally low pricea. IP THEY ARE THEY'RE BUILT TO ENOURE REDI.MADK BCII.DISG COM PORTLAND IIS 11th & 9 ttlnc k a Knwth Hawtborne-t-Phon East (114 i)llSltlllniilllIIIlitlll!li!IUI!)llilnli!It!IIIIlliMIIIil!ii1 450,000 Users ENTHUSIASTICALLY BOOST THE CORONA THE PERSONAL WRITING MACHINE COiLPLKTK WITH , CARKYIXli CASK $50.00 ASK TUB rKKSU.V WHO OWSS OXK ttiwmajed RebuiK Machine a All Outer ' aaa.. a A - OREGON TYPEWRITER C6. M FIFTH. BETWEEN STARK OAK BROADWAY 7 IKS SUITS ARE FILED ON STOCKHOLDERS DF THE STATE DANK Fifty Are Cited to Compel Pay ment of 100 Per Cent Stock Assessment Made in April. Suits were filed Saturday in the circuit court of Multnomah county against E0 stockholders ;n the State Bank of Portland to compel pay ment of a 100 per cent assessment levied on the stock of the , bank in April. Suits were filed by Bowerman & Kavanaugh, attorneys for the state banking department, and the State Bank of Portland and Frank C. Bram well. state superintendent of banks, were named as plaintiffs. The State bank suspended opera tions February 16. The concern had $300,000 in stock outstanding, distrib uted among 260 shareholders. Investi gations by the state superintendent- of banks ehowed an excess of liabilities over assets amounting to $639,588.3.1. STOCKHOLDERS SETTLE Bowerman stated that approximately $81,000 of the stock assessment had been accounted for by full payment in cash or by payment on the install ment plan. Four stockholders with shares aggregating $21,500, settled their obligations to the bank Saturday, Bow erman stated. Xo extensions of time will be allowed, according to the bank's attorneys, except where installments are actually paid. Names of the 50 defendants were taken in alphabetical order, according to Bowerman. Among the larger stockholders against whom suits were started are Victdr Brandt, $12,300 ; An thon Kckern, vice president of the bank, $6000; M. A. Brandes. $4000; W. Q. Buffington, $2000 ; F. M. Brandes, $3000; C. W. Roland, $5000; R. S. Coe Jr., $1000. Suits would be pushed through as rapidly as possible, Bow erman stated.. TO MAIL CHECKS A dividend of 20 per cent to com mercial depositors was ordered last week and Bramwell stated that checks would be mailed to depositors on or about September 15. A previous divi dend of 40 per cent was made to sav ings depositors and cash remaining with thi bank after tne commercial de positors are paid their Installment will amount to approximately $300,000. Liquidation of notes, bonds, real es tate and other assets of the bank would result in the payment of 85 cents on the dollar to depositors, according to an estimate by State Superintendent of Banks Bramwell. Simon's Fifty Years Of Law Practice to Be Luncheon Motif In commemoration of the BOth an niversary of his admission to the bar, Joseph Simon wiH be the guest of henor Tuesday noon at a. luncheon given by the Oregon Bar" association and the Multnomah County Bar as- f We Have Just Installed the Latest Improved Mattison Automatic Turning Lathe w9: "?t-T rwr"f -wtj-tL. f If - " j? With this wonderful machine and other machinery, we are prepared to do all kinds of wood turning work promptly. Octagon and Hexagon Work a Specialty Mangold Be Strauss Mfg. Co. i 161-165.Union Ave. N. Freeburn Cote Only necessary to fire once a day. No soot, no odor, white ash. "Cleaner and cheaper than any other fuel." . ' Phone Broadway 0070 301 Oak at Fifth St. W7e can deliver now all regular grades Coal, ' . . " V V Dry Wood. :, sodation t the Portland fcoteL Simon la 71 years old and. baa spent SS .years of hi life in Portland. was ad mitted to the .. bar when 'tl year xt age arid has since been actively en gaged in the practice of law. The luncheon was planned by Charles H. Carey, president of the Oregon Bar association, and Robert Tucker, presi dent of the Multnomah county Bar association. The principal -speakers are Judge Robert S. Bean.' Judge Thomas A. McBride and Martin L. Pipes. The following members of the city council and olty executive com mittee during Simon's term of office as mayor of Portland in 1909-191L nave been invited . to the luncheon : . Ei Councilmen Thomas C. Ievl!n. - J. Annand. George B. Cellers, M. J. Drls coll. Henry E. Belding. T. J. Con cannon, Hugh W. Wallace, XSeorge D. Dunning, F. E. Wat kins. George L Baker. A. G. Rushlight. K. K- Kublt, R. E.. Menefee. ex - Committeemen Qeorge W. Brown, Samuel Connell, S. u. Jr-ier, jonn w . tjampoeu. lienry Corbett, Robert T. Piatt. Charles Smith, . John F. O'Shea and Louis G. Clark. Eeport Concerning Harding's Second Term Termed False Aberdeen, Wash., Sept.. 8. A story that President Harding has no in tension of being a candidate to succeed himself, sent from Washington several weeks ago and which caused wide editorial and news comment, was un authorized, says Secretary George Christian son Jr. The Aberdeen man who sent Secretary Christianson clip pings from several newspapers refer ring to the matter, received acknowl edgement of the newspaper comments and the further intimation that any opinions expressed. at this time as to the president's intentions with respect to bis candidacy for reelection are without foundation. New Trial Denied in West's Suit for Fee Dallas, Or., Sept. 9. Judge H. Belt of this city, who, presided at the trial of the suit of Oswald West versus Coos county at Eugene a few weeks ago. has overruled a motion by the county's attorney for a new trial. The case involves collection of a commission of $19,000 from oos county for serv ices rendered by West in collecting back taxes from the government on O &. C. railroad land in Coos county. Judge Belt decided the case in favor of West. Man Facings Action For Divorce Suicide Aberdeen, Wash., Sept. 9. Despon dent over Impending divorce proceed ings, August Johnson; 37, a lumber grader, shot himself through the head today in the kitchen of a rooming house. Johnson stuck the revolver into his mouth, .sending a . bullet through the roof of his mouth, piercing the brain, and emerging at the top of the head with enough velocity to lift Johnson's hat, without piercing it. The bullet was found Inside the hat about three feet from where the body lay. I Phone East 5845 Anthracite Summer Price $16.75 Ton in Bin Ordinary Delivery I Lecture on Jewett Public Invited to Attend Beginning Monday and Every Evening This Week . From 8:00 P. M. to 9:00 P. M. THESE LECTURES' WILL BE EDUCATIONAL IN CHARACTER Every Working Part of s Motor Cat ."Will Be Explained The Jewett is -the sturdy : six built- by Paige and its marvelous performance's the talk of the nation. - Come and See What Modern Motor Car Engineering Has Developed COOK & GILL CO., Inc. Ninth and Burnside Sts, ! i Let y bur Mon8y Work Awhile I We offer values for cash unequaled anywhere. Don't take our word. We are here to prove it to your entire satisfaction. LOOK OVER THE FOLLOWING SAMPLES OF REAL VALUES YOU WILL FIND HERE $22.50 Floor Lamp and Lamp . . . . $14.40 $420:00 9y2 foot long Overstuffed , Davenport. Figured K97K Aft mohair DW i OmW Vk-Price About 40 WILLOW AND REED CHAIRS, ROCKERS AND TABLES p Finished Frosted , $40.00 pieces $30.00 pieces $20.00 pieces ' $10.00 pieces for $ 5.00 j YOU CANT AFFORD TO MISS THESE TABLES h 3 ;- Solid Walnut Period Dining Tables, also Mahogany, Oak and Imitation at prices that save you money. Seeing is believing; come and see. We make good. All sizes; both round or oblong, Queen Anne or William and Mary. $48.00 TABLE FOR ONLY $36.50 $72.00 TABLE FOR ONLY $54.00 $55.00 TABLE . FOR ONLY 1 $42.00 $82.00 TABLE FOR ONLY $64.00 Save on Rugs Look at These Rdom-Size Rugs: AXMINSTERS $74.50, 9x12 size; QETQ tZ( special at t?tJU $47.85, 9x12 size; QQQ OA special at. ..... tpOOoOU $36.50. 9x12 size; QQQ special at .. Always Your lioloufc Consult the OREGON STATE C0LLEGE0F CHIRO PRACTICS, Sixth and Oak Streets, Acorn BuUding.. TOMORROW THE FALL TERM BEGINS 7 TOMORROW , This is the BEST CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE IN OR EGON OR THE NORTHWEST. .;: "J ' ; Uiassis .'1 1 $279.00 Davenport and Chair; very massive heavy fer7: $150100 179.00 Overst uf fed Davenport, veloiir cover ; 7 ft. 3 in. g-i-f 9; rn long . . D 11 0J Brown and Ivory for $20.00 for S15.00 for $10.00 $57.50 TABLE FOR ONLY $43.50 $90.00 TABLE FOR ONLY $67.50 Hard-Wearing Velrets. 9x12: $59.75 for ........ .$47.75 $45.75 for $53.00 for $39.45 for 36.50 42.35 .$31.45 $21.80 $24.30 $27.25 Brussels for". . , $30.50 Brussels for. . Money's Worth