Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1920)
'TOE OREGON' STATESMAN: MX1AT, FEnRARCY . 1020. ifM This is your last opportunity to buy new up-to-the-minute shoes at fall prices. Come in now before all the sizes are gone. We are closing oat hundreds of pairs each day. Entire stock on sale except ingjHanan shoes and all Rubber goods. New lines put out for Monday special Come in early. New prices for all this week. f f - f i i - t -.i f . w. -V. ! M mm :' . - - , Extra Special Men's Black Lace Shoes, All Sizes, Regular $10 Grades. Guaranteed Quality, Now Go At r. .. ".. . $6.95 Extra Special Edmond's Army Shoes, Dark Tan Only. Most Sizes, Regular $12 Grades, Now Go At ....;.: I... .... . . .... .....i..-.. ; $8.95 - MENS BLACK BUTTON SHOES Begular $10 grades, good last, go at..;;,. w $6J)5 MEN'S FLORSHEiM SHOES , Black lace, all sizes, new last, regular,; $13.00 grades, now go at. .". . .. .............. $10.95 ttrvtfi n nnritriif Ptinrr II . miui orLunonLii.i anuria r I English, dark brown last, the latest young men's mod- V I MEN'S FLORSHEIM , SHOES English, black, a ;Very stylish i new last, regular-$13' 1 (rnai'a.nteed nntlllv nnur em at ffA Af " 6- .......... "1V.?J i, ruivo.DLnur.iAii d-iiiui wuiuw ariULS Brown and Black, the highest grade Work Shoe made,' $13 grade.!..; .............. ..tf)OC 50 PAIRS DAYTON 6-INCH WORK SHOES The very best $10 grade, now go to dos out quick it i i $7.95 500 PAIRS MEN'S ELK BAL WORK SHOES A good Value at $4 to close out............... (2.65 iifAmimt iiinai $12 dayton toe GERS, BROKEN SIZES GO AT; .. .... $7.95 BOYS' DRESS SHOES Boys' black lace and button Shoes ranging in size from 84 to 1, regular $4.50 grades:. ; . . . . .-. . . .. .. ..65 BOYS' BLACK LACE AND BUTTON SHOES Banging from 2 to 6 in sise, regular $3 grades go ::,.....; l:$3.95 r BOYS' HEAVY YANKEE DAYTON SHOES- Sizes 11 to 2, go at (2.95 Sizes 2 to 6 go at. . $4JS 300 PRS. CHILDREN'S STITCH DOWN SHOES Brown and smoke, $3.50 grades go at. ...... . $2.95 $4 grades go at. $3JS 200 PAIRS CHILDREN'S SHOES Smoke, lace, high cuts, regular $5 grades, sixes sy2 to l0" -- ' " - $3.95 ' BOYS' WITCH ELK SHOES The best boy's shoe made, sizes $y2 to 11, $6 grades, ftt : '-$55 Sizes 11 y2 to 2, $7 grades go at. . .- $5.95 8izes 2y8 tor 6, $3 grades, go at .$$.Q5 BOYS' BERGMAN SHOES - Best heavy shoe for boys, $7 grades, sizes 2 to 6, vat- '$SJS $6 grades, sizes 12 to 2, go at. ........... . . . . tA or Extra Special Ladies' Pumps, Regular $5 to $8 Pumps and Oxfords. Broken Lines and Sizes, Now Go At ..v . v .... .... . .. .........r..r?:.. $2.95 Extra Special Hanan Ladies' Pumps, Broken Lines and Sizes. Regular $6 to $8 Grades, To Close Out, Go At ,....,..v.:.,.., . ..; ...........$3.95 Extra Special Ladies' Shoes, Broken lines, Button and Lace High and Low Heels, Most Sizes, To Close Out, Go At . $2.95 LADIES' NEW BROWN OXFORDS . High Low heel, latest last, all sizes, regular $10 grades, now go at $8.95 LADIES' NEW PATENT OXFORDS All sizes, Cuban Louis heel, latest last, regular $10 grades, now go at j, $8.95 LADIES' NEW BLACK OXFORDS High low heel, just arrived, best quality, regular $9 g $7.95 LADIES' NEW BLACK KID OXFORDS -. - ..-. . Cuban Louis heel, all sizes, new last, regular $10 grades ..r... $8M , LADIES' BLACK KID VAMP With best black cloth tops, all sizes, regular $9 grades, now go at $6.95 LADIES' YE OLD TIME COMFORT SHOES Begular $5 grades, all sizes, 2 to 10, to dose out $3.95 LADIES' YE OLD TIME COJlFORT SHOES Regular $6 grades, all sizes, 3 to 0, to dose out. $4.$$ LADIES' YE OLD TIME CdMFORT JULIETS Begular $5 grades, to close out all sizes. ..... .$3jj5 LADIES' TWEEDIE BOOT TOPS ' s All colors and kinds, $4 grades to go at. $2195 $5 grades to go at. .$3J)5 500 PRS LADIES NEW SPRING DftESSHOES - : - . ... .... i . ' Latest styles, regular $12 grades, while they last, go ftt r : :; ':$9.?5 LADIES' BR0W7I AND BLACK KID SHOES, all sizes, Babie Louis heels, $12 jrades go aU LADIES' "BUCK KID SfiiOES, CUBAN LOUIS HEELS, high tops, regular $10 grades go t....,... .... . LADIE BROWN CLOTTl TOP, best grades, high and low heels, the best $10 Shoe on the market goes at . $7.95 TIIEPRICE Hsu Ami foefmap txilmitoali REVELATIONS OF A WIFE THe Sfo A' Wonderful Romance of )tarrfd Life Wonderfully Told by ADELB OAHRISOX , CHAPTER DXIII WHY MADGC IS ! WORRIED BY THOUGHTS SHE'S SURE AREN'T - AROUSED BY JEAIX)USY. For some week 1 heard , nothiav more of the play on which Dicky and Edith" Fairfax were " J collaborating the secret of which Lillian had wrest ed from Dicky on the night follow ing my farewell luncheon with Dr Pettit. In fact. Dicky had made but one reference , to it toi me and that was but a brief one upon the same night, when fn his arm I bad. re veired and granted forgiveness" for our misunderstandings of the day. been supposedly asleep in Lillian's boudoir adjoin- Ing -her llring room when she was giving Dicky the "grooming" with which she had threatened him. "That yoa were collaborating with her on a play?" I replied, try ing to make my own voice as matter df fact as possible. "Yes. I couldn't help overhearing." - "It really doesn't matte.' He was- elaborately' indifferent; -' She has about finished it. I -dont thtnk she'll need me any more." He did not offer. 'then or after word, to tell me anything about the play or to show me any 6f the manu script. From the fragment of the "Dd you bear what Lil said about love letter I had discovered, and the nature of Miss , Fairfax's ' work with which I'm helping her?" h asked. casually referring to the fttt which had been the primary cause of the quarrel endinr iii Lillfm'i it. tug room. T reasoned that it was a This Pretty? Girl Defies1 Age bv using uroinary Bunermi ( To Beautify Her Complexion . T . 1 Tell Drvaaia K Take Amr'm HmCilM ThU DeUsbtfca ftew VaalsMaar Crrmm Blklr SImwc J a OeMd laterevea-wat. Try i - It Teeay at Pit tUuw. ' '','-. ' i" 1 ' J ' ;' i Buttermilk Cream create txetr al most tika maatc. Tha most wonderful thinrf ahrtit tt l th fact that whilit it turn the d uncut, most; lifls com pletion to radiant beauty and make rMt or rurh hand or irnu anowr white, ret Ibera la not tha slightest iffn of its iiae after application It actually vanishes Imm aught and tha most haatd atrtosphere will not pro duce th least lininesa or aTeaainea ot tha vkln. , . . Ko matter Whether yoa are trlmMed with tt-r complex ton. wrinkle, puff fines armind tha ere, freckle, crows feet or: lines around tha i mouth, na-ly finiser nails, or Just a simple rourhness of tha face; hands or arms caused br w,,.ndT-'"", OUwwm ,,n r or all of these trouble will ; qntrklr dis appear with the Oloward But termilk team, - - -, " To prov, thi tt jfr camptete sstls- .f.i Iw-!!! ,l&Uty today HI. the understandTmr that the mir' chasa im.ne will b cheerrutly refund- swi tA anv A tum i.i.a ' , 111 plli fen P ' if- il i fteaatlful im.... .... '. r. " . enori mas- necesary- " drama with much "heart Interest". And I . may have been prejudiced, but if the diction of that fragment waa any criterion of the rest of the drama I feared that it wasn't re markable for literary workmanship. The Voice That Convinces. I was wise enough to say nothing of this to Dicky. Indeed. I didn't mention the play of Miss- Fairfax again. I-took the goods the god the gods provided, otherwise Dicky' evenings at home he had no more "engagements" with' art editors and ' made no attempt to enTTanger their peace by question or comment. But any wife win understand that my repression only made the thin an obsession with me. I didn't be lieve that Dicky was in love with th. glrf-there had been a note in hi voice when he made nis denial of th. idea to Lillian which had convinced me; But I was wild with' curiosity and wounded vanity. I would have given a month of my life span to have read the drama, the brain child of which these two were the parents. A remembrance of a little speech Dicky had once made came back with a sting like that of a venomous In sect. Once one of the women taking my history course at the Lotus eluO had praised my lecture extravagant ly, and had queried whether I had ever wri tten any short stories or novels with historical settings. I ha repeated her remarks to Dicky, and be had seen, what I haraly recog nized myself, that her words had roused in me an ambition to follow her suggestion. A Memory That Troubles. "For heaven's aake, Madge." Dicky had aaid irritably. "Don't get the writing itch. You're not fitted for it. by temperament, and frankly, rdon't think you have the ability for ? t had never forgotten the sneertn tone in which Dic4y spoke, and 1 had never mentioned the matter again. Indeed, his manner had ef fectually quenched any spark of am bition kindled by the dub woman's praise. -But the remembrance of his disap my ability made 4he knowledge of h I t literary collaboration with Ed ith Fairfax a bitter draught for me to swallow. I had never spoken to the girl, never met her. but I had seen her. had scrutinized her elnnely upon one or two occasions. That she was a gentlewoman, with all that the old- 3Z6 atatea-Hnct lo LaXc& Rubber Heel Day Each Vednesday We Put On The Beit Rubber Heeli at Price .......2$c Bring shoes any day and leave f6r Wednesday. avt's'f1 fashioned word implies. I was cer tain. But that her pretty, daintily poised head held atfy exceptional brain power I very much doubted. And I was sure that jealousy did n't bias my judgment. In the days when Grace Draper was such a men ace to my happiness I had never un derestimated her ability or her men tality. But my trained powers or observation told me that the art stu dent from Virginia, while the pos sessor of patrician traditions and breeding which Grace Draper lacked completely, yet was much the inferior In mentality to the other woman. And . then something else seized me, something which put all thought of Edith Fairfax and of her play out of my braht. It was one of the sin ister premonitions wMch come to me sometimes, and which have almost without exception foreboded unhap piness for me. I tried to fight against it. to tell myself that It was only a brain phan tasy born of my mental comparison of the two women who had cared for Dicky but to no avail. For there was born upon me the conviction that nearer to me than 1 dreamed, there lurked the malign in- STOMACH ON A STRIKE "Pape's Diapepsin" puts Sour, Gassy, Acid Stomachs in orderfat once ! Wonder what upset your stomach which portion of the food did the damage do you Well, don't both er; if sick, gassy and upset, and what you Just ate has fermented and turned sour; head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food just eat a tablet or two of Pape's Diapepsin to help neutralize acidity and In five min utes you wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. If yonr stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebel lion; if your food is a damage In stead of a help, remember the quick est, surest, most harmless antacid t Pape'a Dtapepyln. which cot 8o Uttl. at drug stores. fluence of the woman who Laied no Grace Draper. (To be continued) NEffilEMRAPS LAND AND LABOR PARTY OF STATE " . i Salem Man Urges Spreading; of Propaganda to Combat Non-Partisans OREGON MENACE IS SEEN " w-aaa-aaa-aa-aBaaassaaaBBBSBSl interstate Realty Association to Make Active Campaign for Sound Government PORTLAND. Feb. 7. Measures to combat the non-partisan movement in the northwest were adopted by the executive committee of the Inter state Realty association today. The single tax movement and tbte newly organized Oregon land and labor party were assailed bitterly by the members of the committee. The doctrine of the Land and labor party is practiced woutd be a serious blow to the rights of property owners and real estate dealers, members de clared. On motion of Charles W. Nrimeyer of Salem, a resolution was adopted providing for the appointment of a committee to outline a definite plan or spreading propaganda throughout the district of the northwestern states to combat the non-partisan lea cue and all other organizations which may be considered a menac? in real estste. The propaganda Is also to outline the objects of th in terstate association. District chairmen are to be ap pointed to take charge ot the work in districts, with a slat echairman directing the work, . Property own ers throughout the northwest are M be taken Into the association as af filiate members. i THERE'S 011I7 one kind.of ser- vice here, and that is tbe sore we'd look for if we stood injour shoes. We serve as promptly as we would ask to" ie served. We . give the sort of advice we: would value as to battery care. We make repairs as carefully as we would ask to have them made. Anto thieves are universally r ferrcd to as being youthful. Why not allow them to grow old grace fully in jail? Degg e & Burr ell AUTO ELECTRICIANS ' Through' Service: We Grow 238 North High Street WMii STORAGES BATTEY L I f ,:.) V