'B WE Al il Pendleton agent for "Red fern" Corsets, Warner Corct, Kayer Silk Hote, Ivanhoe Silk Clove, Alexandre Kid Glove, High Clan Millinery. Cousins, flanan and C. P. Ford Shoe for Women. Pictorial Review Pattern. Athena Underwear for Women Hiirh Clasa Millinery. !?:' tsraaiE AI.HKItS BROTHERS' MIIXf.VG COMPAJTY IS HEAVY LOSEIt ix ma MjA7.k !,,,-TF"FHT FIT AT im.ILUU.M ILL Hi ID BIWIIS A DA'JASE GF $140,000 ' 1 11 J i A 1 V AGreen , 1 O A. B. t Co, 1?1J The Pleasure Is Ours DART of the wise clothier's policy is due regard for the satisfaction of his pat rons. Profit of course is welcome too. but profit is not all. We want you to feel that what you buy here is sold subject to satisfactidn or it doesn't "stay sold." BOND CLOTHES 315.00 to $30.00 BOND BROTHERS Pendleton's Leading Clothier. Aviators Try to Save Men From Drowning iiuiiAXE circus AnovE 4 ix TUE IIRKAKEK.4 BIT AT TEMITS AKE FVTIIJS. Crowds Ashore See Aid Taken by Sky to Sea Heroic Efforts Are of So Avail As Preservers Fall to Iloni'h Men Ktmggllnir In Uie Surf Their Names Are Unknown, SAN FRANCISCO, April 86. Val lant effort on the' part of Harry Chrlstofferson, an aviator, who cir cled above an overturned boat here Sunday and dropped a dozen or more life preserver! to men struggling In the breakers, was unavailing to save their lives. Four men were drowned. Te bout, which has been brought to shore by the llfesavlng crew, has no name, It Is believed to have come from Sausallto, across the bay from San Francisco. The men are be lieved to have been Italian crab fish ers. Their names are unknown. No bodies have been recoverd. Mounted Policeman Edward O. Pedgeon nearly lost his life In a des- pcrate attempt to save the drowning! men. With his revolver cracking to attract attention of the men Strug-1 gllng In the surf, he rode his horse at a gallop Into breakers until ha could no longer see the shore. But he could not locate the men and was; obliged to return to land. He and his horse were exhausted when they finally struggled to shore. Scores of automobiles and hundreds of pedestrians had been attracted to the scene, the boat having capsized about 500 yards off the Great High way, which Is the beach driveway. A Clear llraln and healthy bodyj are essential for success. Business men, teachers, students, housewives, ' and other workers say Hood's Sarsap-j arllla gives them appetite and strength, and makes their work seemi easy. It overcomes that tired reel ing Adv. Another ExpcdtJou Athletic. Event. SAN FRANCISCO,. April M.-rThe handicap track and field meet was held today at the exposition stadium. Whole lYont for a Time Seems Doomed But Efficient Work of firemen finally llritur I lanio vn der Control Eleven engine Coiii panlen Called Out to light lire. PORTLAND, Ore, April 26. Fire, which for a period threatened to de velop Into a disastrous waterfront conflagration, swept a portion of the. plant of the Albers Brothers' Milling Company on the west riverfront, be tween Lovejoy and Marshall streets, at 4:40 o'clock yesterday morning, resulting In a loss estimated at JH1). 000. The damage Is fully covered bs Insurance. The origin of the fire Is not known. In an hour's efficient fighting in heavy smoke which threatened a rep etition of the scenes attendant at the Blake-McFall fire the Sunday before when 80 firemen were overcome, the men. of n engine companies. In co operation with two fire bloats, gained control of the blaze. Water Plays on Stock. The fire started near the washroom on the third floor of Albers Dock No. t, In a frame structure adjoining the mill. Iron doors between the wood en structure and the main brick building prevented much damage, al though the fire finally broke through making It necessary to play streams of water over valuable stock. Besides the fire apparatus which responded were the two fireboats, David Campbell and George H. Wil liams. These boats tied up by the American-Hawaiian steamship Hono iuian, which lay at the dock where the fire started, and ran lines across the vessel. Unor Prffwres to Leave. Captain Anderson sounded an alarm by blowing his fire whistle and all his crew hastily collected on deck. All but two of the lines to the dock were cast and the Honolulan stood ready to steam away If the fire should get beyond control of the fire men. Prompt and efficient work of the Portland fire bureau saved a com plete loss and perhaps a grave water front confragratlon. Had their been a high wind and the flames had reached the wooden docks the dam age might have exceeded that of any other Portland waterfront fire. At this place the docks are the thickest and the Broadway bridge might have been badly endangered as the mills lie on either aide of It THANKS FOR YOUR OFFER JUDGE, BUT THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW IS I (unA . e.ne-ra.r. I nafmr.r Tu at win r&u I i fnHoFTuOE FINOS THftT THtTf IREMAN IS ALWAYS PRXPAREoJ MAN, just -a small chew of "Right Gut, so small that nobody can notice it, gives you comfort and enjoy ment that you never get from the old kind of tobacco. "Right-Cut" is the Real Tobacco Chew. Ripe, rich, sappy tobacco seasoned and sweetened just enough. Cut a new way you get all the good of the satisfying taste. Take a very small chew-less man one-quancr old size. It will be more lotiifyinj than a mouthful of ordinary tobacco. Just nibble on it until you find the strength chew that suits you. Tuck it away, .i . :. . k.. n.ilv and evenlv the real men iciiii.", .. - , , j , tobacco tatte comet, how it satisfies without grinding, bow much less you have to spit, how lew chews you take to be tobsccoti.fied. That's why it i. Th Rtol Tkc, Chew. That's why it costs lest in the end. Il i. t rwdy ch.. ert fins snd .hort thred o th.t too won't h.v. to t"n" '. II will. your Ua. tirindiul o. ord.Mry o.od.l lobco Th. ..... .1 .ra.tr.A!rt lw. zxszmtmt Swric Swtisc huo lb. Mil bemt. oui ..v, - One small chew takes the place of two big chews of the old kind. WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY SO Union Square. New York fflUY FROM DEALER 0R5ENP IOtSTAMPSTOUS), 4 TOTS KILLED AS FAST TRAIN STRIKES AUTO CHILDREN GOING TO SUNDAY SCHOOL AJIE VICTIMS OF IIOItltllll.E ACCIDENT. Car Is Driven Directly In front of Uie Approaching Engine Which la Not Seen by driver Ittor Is Danger ously Hurt Train Kiieeds on Ig norant of Accident. GOLDEN RULE GAFE OPEN MEALS 25c AND UP. Meal tickets, good for 21 meals, $5.00. Under new management. 225 EAST COURT STREET. That patronage of the public cordially solicited. CRESSWELL, Ore.. April 26. The northbound Shasta Limited of the Southern Pacific Company yesterday struck an automobile driven by F. E. Sly In front of his home here, smash ed It to fragments and killed four small children who occupied the, ton- neau, besides Injuring Mr. Sly so badly that It Is thought he cannot re cover. The dead: Heulah Morss, aged 12. George Roblnette, aged 8. Vincent Treator, aged 8. Dorothy Treanor, aged (. Mr. Sly sustained concussion of the brain and a broken shoulder. The accident was witnessed by Mrs. Sly, his wife, and Mrs. Clara Maxwell, his daughter. H. C. Flick, a neighbor, al so saw It. Train Xot Noticed. Mr. Ply Is an elderly man. He had Just brought his automobile from the garage and alighted to open the gate leading to the Southern Pacific track, Intending to cross the Pacific High way, when the foud children came along on their way to Sunday school They were Invited to ride and clam bered Into the car. It was apparent that neither they nor Mr. Sly saw or heard the approaching train, for Mr. Sly got In and ran the automobile on the track directly In front of it. The horrified witnesses heard a crash and saw the automobile hurled high In the air and fall at one side of the track. The train sped on with out stopping, Us engine crew uncon scious of what had happened. Car Thrown SO Feet. "It was all so sudden," related Mrs. Maxwell, Mr, Sly's daughter. "Father looked up the track as he opened the gate, but then he waited a moment after that for the children and the train bore down meanwhile. Just as he went through the gate It came up on them. If we had only gone out to open and close the gate for him as we usually 1o, we could have prevent ed the tragedy." The car was literally reduced to scraps. It lay SO feet from the place where It was struck, with a child's slipper on either side of It. It was blown to pieces as though wrecked bj a terrific internal explosion. I'UKVAIIJXG TONE OF WHOLE EXPOSITION IS SHADE OF MEAITIFI I, YELLOW. liulldlnea rteflra-t Thin Color Inv nuiwity of Complete Dexlgn la One That Strike the Visitor With Awe I-ocal Man Writes Interestingly of Affairs at the Exm. BY C. K. CRANSTON. SAN FRANCISCO, April 26. I am going to write you a few words to de scribe some of my impressions of the exposition. The first thing that strikes me la Its Immensity, in toto. and the next the vast extent and minuteness of Interesting detail In every feature. It Is difficult for me to go out for a bit of lunch at noon time and get back In any sort of reasonable time on account of the compelling attraction which catches the attention at al most every rod of my route. On en tering at the main or "Scott street" entrance the first thing a lover for flowers, and who is not? will probably notice Is great beds of yellow tulips and pansles. There are acres of them, surrounding great fountain bas. Ins and bordering the wide avenues. I suppose the color has been chosen to emblemlse the golden state of Cal ifornia. Both the tulips and pansles are in perfect bloom, but of course the former, at any rate, will not last very long. I presume they will be replac ed by something else before they get to looking very ragged. The prevail ing color of the whole exposition Is a shade of yellow. The plastic ma terial from which most of the build ings are constructed, has evidently been colored when it was mixed and then when the parts were moulded or spread on the forms the places where the plaster does not fill out completely shows a few shades dark er and that gives a sort of mottled ap pearance, that Is entirely without reg ularity or des gn. but adds to the pleasing effect. Then, to add to the color effect, and maintain the har mony of the scheme, most of the driveways and many of the foot paths are thickly strewn with clean yellow sand which is about the shade of the buildings. Artificial means of locomotion for visitors at hand are numerous and some of them novel. First of course is the familiar wheeled chair, both single and double, which is propelled by a man or boy. Then there Is a sort of chair or go-cart which seats two, or on a "pinch'1 three, which is driven, I think by electricity. It has very slow speed and seems safe for anybody. I see children and old la dles driving them and they roll nois- lessly about the paths at about thej pace of a slow stroll. They are fnc for any weakly person who can af ford to use them. Then there is a modification of the common wheel chair In which the driver, or rather "pusher" is mounted on a bicycle frame and works pedals. Then there are a lot of trains of rather slowly moving, rubber-tired wheeled, little cars, with seals running lengthwise and set back to ba"k, which are drawn by little "automobile" loco motives. There Is a driver and a con ductor and I am not quite sure wheth er the latter acts aa the "barker" or whether there is a separate man who answers questions and describes fea tures. And lastly there Is the minia ture railway, which traverses the whole length of the water front. This is the same sort of a railway as is in use In a great many amusement parks. The track gauge is about 16 or 18 Inches und the cars are open and seat a single passenger, or two children, in each of a few seats and the engihe, The Great White Sale WILL CONTINUE THIS WEEK. THE PATRONAGE ACCORDED US LAST WEEK PROMPTS THIS MOVE AND WE HOPE YOU WILL COME, BRING YOUR FRIENDS TOO, AND SEE WHAT WE ARE OFFERING YOU IN NEW CLEAN MERCHANDISE OF QUALITY AT PRICES THAT ARE MAKING FRIENDS FOR THIS STORE. If It is White, You Buy For Less DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE ONLY. PENDLETON'S QUALITY STORE The Ladies' Store. .v,lni ia tk. altcVit ctt mpchanlllv Inclined boys, is an exact duplication, in miniature, or a tun swea ra.irunu locomotive. There are stations at In tervals and the trains rush along with a great show or wnisiung anu clatter. The expo police or guards, are numerous and are uniformed, In mtli tnrv tvlA In a sort of a yellow-brown suit with bell-crowned cap and yellow-tan leggings. Each carries a "bil ly" In a scabbard which may De seen peeping from under the side of his blouse and wears a police star on the left breast and sleeve chevrons indi cating military grades. I had a very pleasant call rrom "Uncle John" Bentley recently. He is "taking In" the fair and from his talk and actions Is getting full bene fit. He surely carries his "3 years lightly. British Routed in Africa. BERLIN, by wireless to Sayvllle, N. Y.. April 22. Among the Items given out for publication by the Over seas News Agency was this: "Special mail report from East Africa say that In a two days' battle German troops near Pangaln routed a strong force landed from British cruisers and transports. The British lost 700 men, among them four com panies captured besides many rifles and large stores of ammunition. The German casualties were seven offic ers and 13 men killed, four officers and 22 men wounded." CAPE TOWN, Vnlon of South Af rica, April 22. Forces of the Union of South Africa have occupied Keet aanshop, the most important town In German Southwest Africa next to Windhoek, the capital. It is an im portant railroad Junction, and gives General Botha, the Boer leader com mand of the railroad to Wlnhock. Aerial passenwr Falls. SAN FRANCISCO, April 22. Charles Strauss, a visitor to the ex position from Cedar Falls, Tex , had the experience of falling 75 feet In an aeroplane Into San Francisco Bay. He was riding as a passenger with Robert Fowler, the aviator, In the latter' hydro-aeroplane. Fowler at tempted to alight on the water, but lost control of his machine, which plunged Into the water. Neither was injured. FACE COVERED WITH PIMPLES ALL HER LIFE But Mis Arret Cot a 'Beautiful Com plaxion ' at a Cot of Only $2.00 Kov. 23, 1914: "All my life my face was covered completely with a mass of pimples, blackheads and blotches. I spent a lot of money on numerous remedies aid treatments without success and no relief at all. I tried so many things that I was afraid my case could not be cured. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap seemed to do me good right from the first. I used two jars of Resinol Ointment and some Resinol Soap, the total cost being only $2.00, and this completely cured my case. My skin is without a blemish and I am the pos sessor of a beautiful complexion.'" (Signed) Mabell Avres, Stone Moun tain, Va. Every drupjrfst sells Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment, and physicians have prescribed them for twenty years in the treatment of eczema and other tormenting skin troubles. A Cure for Soar Stomach. Ura. Wm. M. Thompson of Battle Creek, Mich., writes: "I have been troubled with Indigestion, sour stom ach and bad breath. After tajtlng two bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets I am well. These tablets are splen did none better." For sale by aL dealers. Adv. But Just Why was the Japanese warship Asama fooling around In th treacherous waters of Turtle bay? TORHAM.WBW A SIODREN CITY WITHIN ITSELF. Is tlris hotel. 5. bedrooms; beautiful lobby ; many dining and reception rooms; good cafe: fin est grill In the West and ex tremely low rsts. Stop here whea in I'ortlaud. 50 rooms, per day $1.00 101 rooms with bath, per day l.SO 100 rooms with bath, per day 2.0O 200 large ontslde rooms, bath, per day 2.30 Extra proa In room, ad ditional 1.00 lllilllltllilllllllllllllllllllliliiilliil "1 f T ri.i.)i.iiimmi ui"n i,om4'"iw.p nrn BEAT EVERY DAY PRICES AT ANY OTHER STORE CHE-HALF COME TO THIS SALE IF YOU WISH TO SAVE MONEY ON GOOD CLEAN STAPLE MERCHANDISE. MER CHANDISE THAT ANY OTHER STORE MUST ASK DOUBLE OUR PRICES, BECAUSE THEY PAID FULL PRICE FOR THEIR STOCKS. BUYING FOR 30c ON THE DOLLAR ALLOWS US TO QUOTE PRICES LIKE THE LIST BE-LOW. Stomach Troublo Cured. Mrs. It. O. Cleveland, Arnold, Pa., writes. "For some time I suffered from stomach trouble. T would have sour stomach and feel bloated after eating. Nothing benefited me until I got Chamberlain's Tablets. After taking two bottles of them I was cured." For sale by all dealers. Adv. Read this List and Think It Over I Ladies' 20c tleeveleo vest only Men'a pring suit a low a gi.OO Ladies' 35c sleeveless veU only 18 Boy' knickerbocker suits $1.95 Ladies' 35c knee lace drawer 17 White handkerchief for men 5 ; 16 Button kid glove only $ 1.9S Extra good work ox 5 ; I Two-clay kid glove only 59 Black and tan ox 7 16 Button silk glove 59 Men'a work hirU 39 i Ladies' coats as low a 25c Extra quality overall 3 Ladies' tailored suits a low a $1.98 All leather work glove ?. 49y t79 Peter Thompson dresses $3.95 Men' high grade union suits 59 Kabo corsets as low as 29 Ladies' party slippers 4)f i To 65c embroidery 4? Baby shoes 15 I To $5.00 allover laces 9S? Children's shoes, Goodyear welt, 2-5 79j j 15c dress ginghams 9 Children's shoes, Goodyear welt, 5Vto 8 V, 9S 1 Beat grade calicos only 4$ Baby shoes, first step .59 I 1 m 1 I I -3 WMi!fl!(srg Store j iini 1 Sale Being J j Conducted at fj Former woMMnmnm !im!!!Hffl!ilH!!lP!HH!! MUIUUMhMi "r,i