FOOT T R O U B L E S Dr. O. O. Fletcher, 212 Morgan Bldg Corns, Bunions, Ingrow ing toenails, and arch specialist. O k TLAN B U S I N E S S A M A TE R N ITY HOME Mrs. Hoffman, midwife. I2Q.00 Includes everything. 642 Oantenbeln ave. E 3602 M I L K A N D R E S T C U R E — T o build health and strength and cure dlgeaaee The M oore Sanitarium . O ffice 901 Belling Building, Portland. Oregon. O P T O M E T R IS T AN D O P TIC IA N aLAHAKH a t a s a v in g . " P atronage solicited on basis o f capable service and reason ­ able charges. Thousands o f s a t­ isfied patrona. A trial will r.onvln< e. Chaa. W. G oodm an, optom oirlai, 209 Morrison. O S T E O P A T H IC P H YS IC IA N DI R E C T O R Y SEC T H E LLW O R K TRACTOR Portland Demonstration and Salem State Fair. Price $1595.00. J. A. FREEMAN A SON. A « « « U . P o r t la n d . O r e g o n B.L.K.MILKER M ilktw low Dr. I ... R. B. N orth rop—302 M orgon B uild­ ing Catarrh, Catarrhal deafnesa and tg. Cata i N ervou s and chronic dla- Rheumatism . “ 8AVE8 HIRED HELP” P H YS IC A L T H E R A P E U T IC S Dr. R. A. Phillips, 202 Broadw ay Bldg. D isorders o f the stom ach, liver, kidneys, bowels, goitre, high blood pressure and fem ale d i s o r d e r s . ___________________ SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES cow * vs lUi h a lf tlio lalnir. ilio help A |»robl< 11'• Writ« tur iiin-ti ni. .1 dow ripü v« V um niuiiy r n U i l o j » M « . MID MONROE & CRISELL S i m p l e x Lir\e _ *»D A IR Y Wl *3 Kronl — S U P P L I E S PORTLAND. O K M .O N Fall Term Opens Taesday, September 3rd Knroll now «ml «ove money. Many already en­ rolled. Write today for rate« and term«. A. T LINK. Pnaopd. 500 TiUari BUf . PartUM. 0 ,t fONLEY’S ^Center 1 ^ S o u t h w e s t C or. 16th * W u h . S ts. Th« Large and Relaible Firm. Th« firm with a reputation mimry cannot buy. All make«, all siium. all prie««, All overhauled and ready to run. TKMMH TO ALL Liberty Umdii, par value. m m BAP» coyimi DEALERS USED CAR Clearing House. W ill teach you the trade In I weeks. Pay you w hile learning, get you a poel- tlon. 234 Burnside Ht B______________ Young w om en and men trained In few Many vacancies. ! I »«II all rnakea of rar«. Low price«; «aay term«. m onth« as operator« Mirny o f our graduate« now m aking over Liberty borni* taken. Leery Car Guaranteed. 21Z5 per mo. C o-operation of the Rall- roudn A Coml. Telegraph Coe. Railw ay Lewis EL Obye, Gen. Mgr. Telegraph Institute, Ry. Exch. Bldg. Grand Ave. and L u i Stari» St. AU W . H. W A L L IN G F O R D . * STATE DISTRIBUTOR Liberty Six 522 Alder Sired. F uller's T elegraph School, Panam a Bid., qu alifies you fo r 366 to |36 positions Is short time. W rite for catalogue. Electric Service Auto Premier Six I0RTLAND. ORE. CO.. *91 Oak «t. I Jet Park A 9th W«* repair and replace all makee. Starting. Lighting end Ignition System. Write u« for FREE Trou­ ble ^«rating rhart. MISS D E C K E R 'S Private Business C ol­ lege Allaky Bldg., 3d A M orrison Sts. H aw thorne A u to A Gas Engine SchooL 462 H aw thorne Ave. P ractical experience In overhauling and repairing every make o f au to and gas engine. O xyacetylene w elding Established 1907. SCH OO L S U P P LIE S _____________ Portland'« Loading N orth w est S ch ool Furniture Co., 244 3rd 8L E veryth in g fo r schools. Also theatre chairs, chu rch furniture. Folding chairs Beil Equipped Office« and s e a t s . ________________________________ end Laboratory. All work S W E D I S H M A S S E U R guaranteed. Dr. H assetstrom , 612 Dekum Bldg. M edical G ym nast. T reats every kind of Dr. Wheat stom ach trouble and nerve disorder sa tis­ 207 M oran Hid*.. Wuh* fa c to r ily ____________________________________ ln( at lln a d o ir . THE BEST EATS IN THE CITY Eyesight Specialist THE BIG BULL TRACTOR “ W ITH T H E P U LL.” 12 H P oo Drawbar; 24 H P on (be Belt Land Wbed Dnvr - --Self-Sleerins Device. TRAILERS St. N icholas Cafeteria A perfected light Tractor for ir**n**rai farm une. Ovrr now in operation. lateet nxxl«l now in «lock fur immediate delivery. Writ« for cat' Truck, Automobile, Camping A Touting •to* D. Your Efficiency W e s t e r n F a r m T r a c t o r C o ., Double at a Single Coet. ? m i wsifs itwit roirruM, oat. 125 Sixth Strmet, Portland. Oregon. J vh * what you want and pay for what you icet. w—w—vr—w—w—w—w w—w— WATT SHIPP TRAILER CO., t Su te SE. SALEM. ORE w—w- SMILES FOR ALL EVERY THI NG F O R THE O F F I C E O ffice F urniture a A ppliances P r in t in g .. E n g r a AIMI v in g To and For. ‘‘Everything I have In this world I owe to my wife.” “ I’m almost like you. too. Every­ thing I owe for In this world my wife bought” . B o o k b i n d in g v iry / f M .et ua at the nrtN e OA« «V egg re Tractor Demonstration ro«n»«»o o»ioo> C O M P L E T E L IN E O F S T E E L F IL IN G D E V IC E S A N D S Y S T E M S On the f'otton and Kuegg farms at Linneman Junction, near Portland. Oregon, G ET W E L L T H O U SA N D S O F S U F F E R E R S W H O H A V E F A IL E D to get relief In any other w ay are Invited to Investigate C hiropractic m ethods, which We will plow with C. L. Bent ‘ ‘Track­ ore perm anently curing hundreds every layer” and Buckeye “ Trundaar” Trac­ day. T H E R E ST O F C H IR O PR A C TIC tors. They will work on the hills or on D IAG N O STIC IAN S will thoroughly exam ine you. m ake a co m ­ any kind o f soil. Let us prove it. plete diagnosis o f your case and direct your treatm ents W IT H O U T A N Y COST TO YOU W HATEVER PORTLAND. ORE. 300 L. Salmon St. C H IR O PR A C TIC will perm anently cure 95 per cen t o f all diseases. PAC IFIC C H IR O P R A C T IC C O LLE G E | C om er o f Park and Yamhill, Portland. Or. I H O SP IT A L In conn ection w ith college. W ill handle o u t-o f-to w n patients at a The complete Electric Light and most reasonable rate. In order to show Power Plant what C h iropractic can do. Address all com m u n ication s to Pumps the water and grinds the September 5, 6, 7. WESTERN FARQUHAR M’CHY CO. DELCOUGHT feed. D R. O. W . E L L I O T T . P res. An extra huml at chore time. Giving Details. ‘‘Kitty murrled a man a good deal older than she la, so I hear.” “ Older! Why. he’s twice her real age and three times the age she says she is.” Numbers. “I always look out for number one," remarked the egotistical man. "Friend,” replied Mr. Chuggins, “ If that's the only number you look out for In these days o f traffic confusion you’re liable to get run over and never know who did It.” A G A T E C U T T E R S A MFO. J E W E L E R S Very Necessary. A rotund gentleman with a perennial ’smile had to have his dally Joke as he A U T O A C C E S S O R IES meandered Into his club. Motors, gears, bearings, wheels, ajeles. *‘I have here the most valuable mo­ and trailers W e w reck all m akee o f cars i and Bell their parts s t half price. Davtd torcar accessory ever Invented.” he ll.xles Co.. N. B roadw ay and Flanders. remarked. “ What Is It?” asked a tall, thin gen­ M otor I’arts M fg Co., 336 Burnside St. | Parts for all cars at h alf price. __________ tleman. LONO * S IL V A —462 H aw th orne Ave. “ A bankbook,” replied the first A uto W reckers. W e w reck ca ts and eell good parts $4 list price. See us for E n ­ speaker. Jew elry and w atch repairing. M iller's. 156 Wash. 8t.. M ajestic T h eater Bldg. MODERN APPLIANCE CO.. Seattle, Wn. TWrrt a drain is yaar ternary. Ptraar «rile it. $ 1.00 Willwal Balk $ 1 .5 0 gines. M agnetos, Carburetors, etc. CH IR O P R AC TO R — D R U G LESS MENT DR. RAYMOND E. WATTERS Accute and Chronic Caaea. Chi- ropracUc la the moat Scientific method of treating diaeaae. 305-6 Swetland Rldg., Corner 5th and Waahington streets. With Balk Weekly Rates Monthly Rates NORTONIA HOTEL PORTLAND, ORE. Central Location. Beautifully Fumiahed Excellent Cafe. 11th and Stark. Are You In Trouble? The Problems of Life: Fear, Worries, Sorrows, Love, Domes­ tic and Business Affairs, SOLVED; Nervous, Mental and Psychical Dis­ eases. TREATED; and Your Natural "Place”—Vocation— on Earth, FOUND by the PERSONAL TROUBLE SPECIALIST TREAT- DOG A N D C A T H O S P I T A L r. O. H. Iluthm an, eterlnarlan Moa Ital. 415 E ast 7th St. Phone East 1247, -1962. g Rheum atism , Constipation, N erve and Stom ach trouble. Dr. E lna Sorenson, BfiS Panam a R ld g .________ _________________ E L E C TR IC -T H E R A P Y Drs. M acPheraon A W illiam s. No. 12354 Grand Ave. A cu te and ch ron ic diseases, rheum atism , g oiter and fem ale troubles, treated b y electricity. DR. ALZAMON IRA LUCAS. FARM M A C H IN E R Y W^/WW\/VV/V*VWe>^VWN/\/\^N/\ra^N^A^ Threahlnp Machine for Salel 20, 24, 30 and 36-lncn cylin der v ib ra tor Threshing M achines In stock for Im m ediate sh ip­ m ent: also steam and gas tra ctors; new and second hand. W E S T E R N F A R Q U H A R M C H Y . CO. 303 EASt Salm on St. P ort’ -n d , O r e .______________ F IN A N C IA L — M O RTGAG E LOANS Paycho-Analyat and Vocational Director. S3S-B Morgan Building. Write your troubles or want«. Enclose 2 cent a tamp. Address P. O. ho* 5S7. Portland. Oregon. F or M ortgage Loans see O REG O N IN ­ V E ST M E N T * M O R TO A G B CO., Stock E xchange Rldg., T hird and Yamhill Streets, Portland, Oregon. Cause and Effect. “ That famous financier has such an angular coun­ tenance.” “ No wonder; he made himself by corners.” Easily Arranged. “How are we going to get any quo­ tations out o f these press notices?” asked the theater’s advertising man. “ The most generous o f them says, 'This is not a very good show.’ ” “ Well,” replied the manager, “for billboard purposes you’ll have to con­ dense It n little.” . “ How?” *Just leave out the word ‘n o t’ " Such Is Lova. “ Too had about Jack and the girl he’s engaged to. Neither of them Is good enough for the other.” "Where did you get thut Idea?" ‘T ve been talking the matter over with both families.” WELL-PAID WOMEN BUY NEW CLOTHES New York.—A wounded Anznc had When a woman knows there are three come to America to lecture. He bore thousand Jobs open to her and that some honorable scars on his body, she can command as good a salary as which were symbolized by stripes on ■ the man she sent to war, she is not his arm. A woman touched the stripes j going to be niggardly about getting and asked what were hIn vorst wounds.! new clothes, enjoying herself and re­ He described one, which was a clean furnishing her house. hole made by a bullet. In his Informal llumau nature never changes, no Anzue manner, he asked If she would matter what else changes on this plan­ like to see It. She wtfuld. Ho would j et, and spending will be a woman’s an­ everyone else at the luncheon. So he tidote to hard work. If she has been showed her the. bullet hole below the repressed In the matter of buying at­ collar bone. tractive things for the house or for “ How very disappointing!” she e x ­ her body, she will go out and gorge her­ claimed. "I expected a great gash.” self on those things when the first free­ The Anzac buttoned his coiiar dom from debt gives her a buoyant thoughtfully, and turning to the table feeling of happiness. said: “ Now, I ask you, what are we The business of feminine apparel going to do, with women If they begin j should always have been attended to to expect so much of men In this war?” i by women, not men. This channel of And what will they do with them? | activity Is being directed to Its right Men have begun to expect so much of course. A million or more men on this themselves, that the situation Is the continent, who are mixed up In wom­ most vitally Interesting thing on this en’s apparel, will have to give up their planet, next to the war, observes a dis­ places to women, who have an Instinc­ tinguished fashion writer. tive knowledge of what other women Women are gaining so much more by 1 want, and do not want. With train­ this war than they ever demanded, that ing, which will give them a cool head, many are puzzled and some are near-! a smooth tongue and the ambition to rise, they will make admirable clerks, hysterical. Once we were a contented race; then floorwalkers, heads o f departments, we became an unquiet se x ; then w e I buyers and shopkeepers. became a restless fo rce ; and then w e It is toward the apparel huslness that became a militant power. they are rapidly drifting. That is their Those with the keenest visions saw desire, and all their preliminary train­ uhead o f them a long struggle. T?iey ing o f the centuries has fitted them for this particular sector of industry. Be­ ing In the business, they will spend more money on clothes, and they will Influence the expenditures of other women. It Is useless to tell women that they must nop. buy clothes. The reformers mean well, hut they are planting seed on barren soil. There must be some pleasure In this world, or we would all go mad with the pain and anxiety of It and If you ask three million women to work for their living, you must give them the chance to deck themselves out in a bit o f gay plumage and go out and eat and laugh; otherwise, they will become useless for all service, pa­ triotic or Industrial. Demand for Evening Clothes. Let me tell you an odd thing about this development of women’s work, which has been brought about not only through their service in paying posi­ tions, but in war relief work. It is the growing demand for eve­ ning clothes by women who have here­ tofore never indulged in them. We are only following in the footsteps of human nature as It has asserted Itself in France and England during the last eighteen months. Paris has shown an extraordinary Interest in this develop­ ment, and the London thinkers and merchants have found it to be an en­ grossing by-product of the war. Evening dress has always been a thing for the luxurious. It has been indulged in by those whose lives were more or less given to leisure. Millions 1 of women have not considered it nec­ essary to change their somber street Black satin, tulle and lace. There is clothes into low or half-low, fragile a long tunic, which starts with a ones for the evening meal or evening pointed bodice built of the satin and gayetles. The street suit, with a few swings free over a tight petticoat of changes, has served during the waking black Chantilly lace. There is a hours. The shirtwaist and sport skirt shawl of black tulle, which stands : have filled in the rest of the service well away from the shoulders and needed. But this condition no longer exists reachr „ to the elbows. i in Europe, and it has change!? in Amer- outlined the propaganda of self-educa­ ] ica in the twinkling of an eye. Why? tion for women ; they lectured to men Women have more money; they have and of men concerning what we should more opportunities; Industry, charity, have In the way of Industry and com­ war relief, hospital service and com­ mercial opportunity. Whenever men mittee work have brought women from said that we were not sufficiently edu­ the depths of social obscurity into cated to take over the commercial bur­ | hourly contact with those who lead dens of Hie world, we retorted that we fashions and live leisurely lives. would never be educated If we did not All of this has lifted the art of begin to study. dress instead of degrading it. It en­ Women Spend More Money. livens life; it brightens the prospect Of one thing the prophets are sure; of our sacrifices; It is a light to our that women, making money, will spend endurance. more. Not having to ask for It. they (C opyright, 191S, by the McClure N ew spa- per Syndicate.) will cense to be petulant about it. I C OLORS FOR T H E RAINY DAYS Red, Golden Brown, Purple, Bright Shades of Blue and Green . Are Cheerful. “ If we gh e but a few minutes to the selection of our clothes for rainy days, we can add with our dress much of the warmth and cheerfulness that is lacking in nature.” asserts a stu­ dent of attire. “ Bright-colored dresses are appropriate, nnd give a pleasant note to otherwise gloomy surroundings. “ If one must go outside of the home In rainy weather, high shoes with rub­ bers, n short (lark skirt which does not soli easily with raia and mud, a rain­ coat, a rain hat, and dark gloves should he worn. However, a bright-col­ ored tie or blouse will give a warm note to the costume when the wrnps are removed. “ Red Is a color of warmth, and looks well on rnln.v days. Golden- brown, purple and bright shades of blue and green are cheerful colors. Dull grays, blues nnd greens should be worn only on bright days. Light materials should be saved for warm, sunny weather or evening wear." New Idea in Curtains. The soft graceful hangings at the doors and windows of a pretty room were the subject of comment by some visitors, so the hostess revealed the secret. "It hnngs as softly as velvet, yet It’s lighter In weight,” commented nn Interested observer. “ What is It— a new nrt fabric?” “ Rather,” laughed the hostess. "It’s Just a good grade of flannelette, dyed with ordinary com­ mercial dyes. I used orange dye with a little deep pink, experimenting until I got this peach nnd apricot combina­ tion. It wasn’t at all hard to do, and now I feel that I have a sunset at every window, even on the darkest day.” Wide Girdles. Very effective and useful are wide girdles with sash bow nnd ends made of fancy flowering ribbon when worn on simple white dresses. The color­ ing In the ribbon of such girdles Is chosen usually to match the colors In the hat trimming.