6 THE OREGON STATESMAN: TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1919 Easter Millinery Now Ready for Your Inspection Trimmed Hats $3.50 $4.50, $5.00, $6.50, $7.50 and $9.00 Hundreds pf 'new has, including the charming model sketched ($7.96) which is a type much affected by the younger women,. and nothing in recent years has been so artistic and becoming. Pokes in smaller sizes. Sailors of all kinds, including the 4fMit'zi,n Tnrhans, Tams and various other close-fitting kinds, new droop effects and cornered hats all are iu this collection. Plenty of -black, BVy blue, brown;., red, henna and dust, also the new light shades such as turquoise, DnBarry rose and henna, Flowers and fruits in new effects are used, wings are a vjpry important feature, drenched ostrieh feathers and other high-class imported and American-made novelties are used unsparingly. We also call attention to the many Ribbon-trimmed f hats, including the soft frilled . ribbon brims. ! v . . ' . 9 ;AI$b"New;;lay4o-War Hats Copied from highiprieed models, and shown in the season's best colors. Prices $5.95 to $12.50. "'GWs'-Sprmg RiiIImnr-$2.75 d $7.00 - . '. The newest School Hats and Sports Hats, the latest ideas in dress Hats, including the new Pokesand the large Soft Hats with flat trimming. Also - ' y , GWs Lacea Stravf The entire Hat is made of latticed or interwoven straw braids, in pretty color combinations. Some trimmed Avlth silk ribbon. ' - i it. ' (Old White Corner Building "A Salem's Greatest Y omen's Apparel Store Rate Adjustments to Be Submitted to Commission Important freight f rate adjust ments of, the railroad admnistration will be auhmiUedtothe public ser vice commission of the states affect ed before the rates are finally estab lished, says a letter received "by Chairman Fred G. Buchtel of . the Oregon commission from Max The len,, director of public service tinder the raflroad administration.' "We are makms nrovisinn tn have proposed rate adjustments oj , -- y iFTJr-yW' 4 DATS Starting Tomorrow WEDNESDAY i fi3 Trim tb. Oriftaal Story fcy Edftr Eica Burronj-hj SEE TARZAX'S HTRUGGLE Wrrfr THE LIOX-L TMV VI run i ' . .-. . . VU.I.AGK BATTLB BETWEEN AX APE WHITE JIKL BY APESL ELMO LINCOLN ENID MARKEY 'AXD 1.000 OTHERS PRODT'CED IV THE WIT HFST JCNGLKS OK BKAZIL AT A COST OK S300 OOO STAGED WJTH.WILI UOXS. TIGERS. ELEPlLivTS BABOONS, APES AND CAXXUJAL8. - Special I Orchestral Music : I I ' 'U I LIBERTY Matinees 20c Evenings 25c any importance submitted to the state cora mission affected before they are made,? writes Mr. Thelen. "We -hope -to have detrrls worked out shortly and have your commis sion kept well ' advised of matters relative to Oregon. The letter comes In response to a letter ; recently sent by Chairman Buchtel to . Director General Wilson E. Ilines suggesting that some me thod be worked out which will keep the commission informed as to rec ommendations of the district traffic committee, together with progress made, through the regional commit tee and such other administrative officials as are empowered to pass upon any case. . Canadians in Siberia Witt Be Brought Home OTTAWA. March 31, Arrange- ucu uae oeen maae xor the return of the Canadian expeditionary forces in Siberia, it was announced in the house of commons today by Minister of Militia Newburn.. The date Is lfe- '"5 nvpi secret. ; The dominion contributed approx nnaieir rntir ihnnnj ... - m uu mm II lis Kre be entire forc 8ent to the "ciKui iruni. general Newburn ex plained that In r,lvU. .v ... tion of withdrawal, he referred only uuiaa lorces. WASHINGTON. March 31 With drawal of Canadian troops from Si beria, announced in the Canadian house of common tnriaw k ui.ii of Mllitfat Newburnas imminent does not lmnlv th rrtnm' nr tf.. a , v. nuici" tcan expedition. It was said today by row 1 a . . " Hiwni oinciaia. The question of early withdrawal of the American trnnns n vi.i... tok was referred to Secretary Baker in a-conference with newspaper men a few days ago and at that time the secretary was emphatic that no such plans were under consideration. REVELATIONS OF, A- WIFE The Story of Ja Honesrmooh A Wonderful Romaace of Married Ufa Wonderfully Told by ADEfJS UA1UUSON . CHAPTER CCLIII WHAT THEY FOUND AT HOME " " f - ' I do not remember much of the trip from our house in I Marvin to Lillian apartment 4n- New ' York which Grace Draper's sister." Mrs. Gorman. Katie. Llillian Underwood and I took following the telephone iiirnnaRB i rum Harry underwood. Lillian had told us all she knew, that Grace Draper was ..seriously nurt. Dieicy slightly so. and that they were at the Underwood . apartment. , 'This news, coming upon the heels of the letter Grace Dfapr had written her sister, and which Mrs. Gorman had brought us. stating the girl's In tention to kill Dicky and herself, gave us a fairly good idea of what had happened. j Two thoughts clashed in my brain constantly In the hurried flight of the taxi to the Crest Haven station, the. interminable slowness of the ac commodation train from Crest Haven to the city, and the swift rush of the taxi Lillian had commandeered at the terminal to bear us to her apart ment. One was the terrible gripping query, which throbbed ceaselessly in my mind, "Will "Dicky live, or Is Lillian . deceiving me. as to the ex tent of his injuries?" The other was an emotion oi which I was ashamed. I felt that no hint of it should have entered my soul while Dieky was in such danger. . It was a fierce throb of Joy in an swer to the-question which had so tormented me concerning the real ity of Dicky's final emancipation from the thraldom of Grace Dra per's fascination. She Had said In her letter to her sister: "By the time you read this I shall have gone on a long journey, the longest of all. There is but one possibility that will make me defer this journev until later. That possibility I shall find ont tonight. But If the answer to the question-! shall ask is the one that will make me defer my journey It Is also an answer that will always separate me from you,' anyway.; If the answer Is such as to make me take my journey., rest assured I will not go alone " . If her letter -had meant I anything at all. It meant that she had made one final tnad effort to enslave Dicky, and failing had attempted to carry out the vengeance she had threatened that she would have "Oh! such rare company," on her; "longest Journey of all." f 'Dicky. Where is Dicky?" j ' Dicky must have refused j her tast wild appeal. He was all my own. even in death. Only a wife who has been through the living hell of jeal ousy that I had endured during the summer, can undertandlhe paean of wild. joy that went upfrfrom my heart, I would rather naW Dicky dead.' and know that his-l&sUieart-beats were mine and mine ilone. than to know that he lived and had yielded to the wiles of the beautiful siren I so hated. Betty. Lillian's colored cook, who was devoted to her mistress; opened the door for us as soon as she heard the taxi stop. "Fo de Lawd's sake. Miss Lillian!' she exclaimed, lifting her handa and her whole ponderous form in indig nation, "whateber am goin on in dls house? I jes tell yo" it's scan dalous, dat's what It is. I'se got a good name, I has, and I nebber was mixed wit' no ehootin's, and stabbin's and mysterious women in all: my life befo. : I'se got my reppertation " "Never mind your refutation. Betty." Lillian advised grimly. "I'll see that It remains spotless.- You get upstairs now at once, and tell Mr. Underwood I've come." j , She motioned us into the living room of the old-fashioned mansion, of which she had taken two floors and made a wonderful artistic home in lieu or the ordinary modern apart ment. . ' "Take off your things," she said, kindly stepping up to me. "I don't want you to go 'upstairs until, I have found out the exact state of things." I felt as if I were suffocating as I sank Into the nearest chair, to be so near Dicky and yet not be able to see him. The suspense was madden ing. ; . - - And in a chair near to mine all the misery, that must have shown in my own face was reflected on that of Mrs. Gorman, Grace Draper's sis ter, but she uttered no sound, only twisted and untwisted the large cap able housewifely hands that lay-In her lap. j IlarrylTnderwood'8 quick; firm step sounded on the stairs. In an other moment he was in the! room. followed closely by Betty. . Regardless of the staring, servants. of prudence, of decorum, I sprang at him. clutched his coat with both hands and shook him. crying hoarse ly: . ; . "Dicky, where is Dicky? " Is. he badly hart? I must see him at once." "My Sister, Is She " 1 Before he could reply Lillian in terposed sharply, f "Betty, take Mrs. Graham's maid to the kitchen with you and make her comfortable until I come to you. Katie, go with Bet ty. And remember, whatever v has happened here tonight Is none of your business. See that you keep your mouths shut." As they hurried out of the room, Harry Underwood took my hands down gently, and holding them In his own, wun a cmvairic reverence utterly foreign to the Ilarrv 1'ndor. wood I had known, said quietly,1 "Of course, you , 'shall: see him. lie Is waiting for you. You may come up with Lillian right away,, but be very, very quiet." . I Mrs. Gorman stumbled to hei feet, came forward 'with- hands groping as as If she could, not see. "My sister, she moaned, '"is she ' She could not finish the sentence. Harry Underwood's brilliant! eyes softened with pityas he looked at her. He paused lone moment be fore answering her. . ', Mrs. Gorman -seemed to brace her self as if for an expected blow. "If she's dead tell me " she 'said. monotonously. "Knowing the worst will, be better than this suspense." Mr. Underwood drew a rlomr breath. - I "She is not dead vet" he 'said. Slowlv. Dltlfullv. "but w rfITrv 'much afraid she will not live through the night." (To be continued) HE ESCAPED INFLUENZA "Last spring I had a terrible! cold and grippe and was afraid I wan go ing to have inflnenxa," writes A. A. McNeese. High Point. Ga.. "Ijtook Foley's Honey and Tar. It was a (sight to see the phlegm I coughed up. I am convinced Foley's Honey and Tar saved me from influenza." Contains no opiates. Good .for children, i J. C. Perry. SEttlslELD CAUSE OF WAR Dr.. H. W. Lewis, New York, Speaks in . Salem on New Movement SMCHiUPSET? Get at the Real Cause Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's vht thrtrMSiv wS fMIl. sufferer are doing now. Instead of fralrirM tonic mT tnrintT tl TMIty-K m a poor digestion, they art attacking the rM Kuse ox ue ailment aoeged uver and disordered bowel. : Dr. Edwarris OHra TaMtc mmm id. livr hi a soothing, healing way. When uvcr ana ooweis are pertonning their natural functions, away goes favijgrstkm and stomach troubles. 1' If you have a bad tasterid your month, tonoua ma mA Mn;, , ; yuw : imam. lazy, don't-care feeling, ho ambition or energy, troubled with mAimA . you should take Cflhre Tablets, the nb- Or. Edwards Olfe TnMAf. . Durelv veffetaUii ojiva oB. You wiU know them by their uuvc uor. iDcy oo the work; without griping, cramps or pain, - s Take oik nr tm b dlriia. .-i-t- you can eat what you like. That education In. Christian prin ciples and simple brotherly Interest for the Americans generally and for the people ef foreiga countries would have prevented the great war, was the assertion pf Dr. H. Wj, Lew is, of New York, who delivered a number of addresses In Salem Sun day and Monday. e gave the (sermon 'at Ijenlle Methodist church at the Sunday morning service and Sunday night was in the pulpit of the Jason Lee Methodist church. , Testerd ay morn ing he was the speaker at chapel at Willamette university and at nocn addressed a luncheon of tha Metho dist minute men. He was in Salem as a field representative of the Meth odist Minute men centenary cam paign. ' In his addresses he said In part: "The American natioi could have prevented this war and saved mil lions of lives, and billions of dollars, and it must answer to God that it did not. , . - "We can very easily curse the kaiser and the German people and the world knows that they are guil ty, but how about looking at our guilt for a time. If we did we would find that we allowed the sin of this world to mature and bear fruit when God had cried to us for fifty years to warn us and to tell us to stop it. .. , . "Bishop Bashrord said that--he million a year for forty years spent in Russia for missionary work would have saved earth ! this awful war. President Wilson said that Bishop Bashford was one of ,the world's greatest statesmen but we refused God the right to do the task God's way and 'then we had to resort to the horrp-s of battle fields to do lt the other way. "The selfishness and the narrow ness of the American people for the last fifty years will be written on the records of God as the greatest failure of a nation's In the the cen turies of earthly history. "We'were told of the people in Tadia who died of -preventable caus es every year to the number that exceeds those killed in all th. font- years of war on the allies' side and we refused ' God the 1 few millions enough to teach that nation how to lire right. We were toM of t. m. tionali3m of thought spreading over uermany ana instead or opposing it we allowed it to have a place in our schools and universities "We did not ,have time for the gos pel and the church, we. were too busy making money for our seliish interests to heed the cry of the world. We were too bfsy with ed ucation to train our children in the principles Of Brotherhood and wtth the character forces Tit for world tasks. "We hare Paid a mice in blood rnr our failures but God forbid that we shall not have learned our lessons. We are enterinr a view and tv cnurcn cnauenxes the bnnln man and the professional man to the big gest) task ever attemntcd "To ma v. the 'world safe for democracy" - as well as to "make demoerarv i-r. for the world." j : ' - ' Ladies CoaiLs Suits The best and biggest as sortment in town at popular prices. Showing of the latest models direct from the manu facturers at New York and Philadelphia. Our buying di rect saves you all the middle man's profit. i Ladies' Coats.. 10 to $35 Ladies' Suits $11.90 to 38.50 OUR PRICES ALWAYS THE LOWEST" GALE & CO. Commercial f- and Phone 1072 -Court j Streets, formerly Chicago Store in this war-paid "the price for) our selfishness and our failure to grasp the great fact that we thought more of self than fif Chirstian education ! 1. along international lines. "At last we have sot together: and the Christian denominations are kub jagating the service f the people to the church to the idea of the service of the church to the people. We are spending, from now on, five million dollars, a iyear for war reconstruc tion work which includes aiding; the soldiers and the helping of the peo ples left destitute by the conflict, -"We are" spending forty millions during the: next five years in foreign work, helping the peoples to help themselves and educating them away from rationalism and infidelity. An other forty millions is being spent la the same period In home service work helping those who come to our shores -to be men. treating them as human beings and not as out casts, helping them io that they will not have to live in squalor fin .the worst sections of onr cities but may be homebuilders, helping them to learn. I "All of our work Is being done along on saao Christian business methods and. we are going to get results and avoid a repetition of the war, which has Just ended.'' MaaasBBMaaBBaaByBBBBBaaBBBBBaBaBBB.aa " You Can Cure That Bat Pain alone la. back, diixiacaa, . hradar. and grnr-ral lan poor. O.t a parkare of MthT ?ray' AE-OMATIC-IXAr. U pleaa ant Mnlirinal Tea. I e it at fimt ef told. Stira . yon t el all raa iova, tired, and withoct enerxr as tbi rrasark able romhination of rtttrc'i hrrbi and rooai. Aa a tonic lazatir. it has no rqaal. V Uothrr Urar'a AroBatic-Loaf fa sold by drugitiaU o' aont by mail for 60 erata. RaaiBlo a FUEE. Addma. Uotaer Gray Co La Uof. N. y. , ;. Gasoline and Distillate j - Tax Money Sent to State " ' x - :. The first receipts under the new law imposing a tax of one cent, a gallon on gasoline and one-half cenl a gallon on distillate have been re ceived by the secretary of state's of fice. The sum of $236.44 is received from the Union Oil company,' repre senting a tax on 21.360 gallons of gasoline and 4567. gallons of distil late sold in the state during the month of February. - , C Children Cry for nctcricr'o Z v S' i v y m M 1 The Elad You Haye Always Bought, and vhlch has tea la cse for orer over 30 years, has borne the signature ef has been made under his per- : C&&&jte B?al wPYisIoa lace its Infaocy; TTn LtYS . Allow no OMto deceive you in this. AU Counterfeits, Imitations and "'Justus-good t are Ibut " F??11"1 trits with endanger the health -cf Iiifanaad Children-Experience aeainrt Experiment. r What is CASTORbP - neither Opium, Morphia nox other Narcotic imbstena. ge is its guarantee. Fcr more -than thirty rears it S heea in constant use for the relief of Constipation Flatnienrw therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels.iS GENPIKE CASTORIA ALWAYS PBcars the Signature of . In Use for OverO Years Th" You He A'wairs Bouoht I yfniu i ryjrx. CAPo FRINGE SHAPT? surrw rod, Zh't L -7 ' STARCHED OR SflgT twp Re ARROW PAA r COLLAR . ' ' " " ' 1 . i. ' -. 1 ft, - a H r i ? I : n V i i : i i u avw uu asc per box. All druggista. "The boys who shed their blood