Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1911)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1911. POLICEMAN BESTS MOTHER-IN-LAW Officer Sees That R. L Lamb Is Allowed to Enter Home Even if It Is 9 P. M. HOUR TOO LATE, SHE SAYS Ir. Martha Stevt-ns Would Kep Son-ln-Iw Ont of Own Horn IknaM of Conduct In Star In Out A fur Supper. R. X Ltmh, who disposition and gentle demeanor fit Ma name, laat nlfht appealed to Patrolman Welbrook to assist Mm In running a blockade, romiranded bv an Irate mother-in-law. at Ma own noma. 1IS Eeter street. Lamb was "out" Saturday night and returned home at the unse-mly hour of o'clock. He had not been imbibing aa titer waa not even an odor of liquor or coffee on bla breath, but for a son-In-law to ask admittance to bla own home at th we imi hour of o'clock In th evening waa more than Mra. Martha Steven, th mother-in-law. could stand, ao ah locked th door and denied entrance. Lamb begged for admittance, but th determined mother-in-law told him In plain language that If h wanted to com bom he should do so In davtim. Mr. Lamb then appealed to Patrolman Welbrook. Welbrook ha not a lambllk dis position and h bluntly told Lamb tr.at the latter had a right to enter hl own house. dr or night, mother-in-law or no mother-in-law. He walked boldly up to th house, with Lamb shrinking- . and tiptoeing behind. At th door Lamb nervouaijr aked: "What shall I doT" -Oo In." said Welbrook. "Hreak th door down and eject mother-ln-la w. Kaa- and baggage, if you want to. Ifa your house; you hav a right ther. and It Is no affair of mint If you elect to ehooe your own company." Th slirnlflcanca of the hint In th last clause of th sentence gave Lamb rourag and h cautiously knocked. Th mother-in-law responded, fac grimly aet. but she observed th ex pression In Welbrook's ey and talked over th officer head to the belated aon-ln-Iaw. Finally Welbrook man aged to gain a etrategle point In th conversation and diplomatically voiced Ma philosophy on th rights of man. Hut th mother-in-law got In th part Ing shot: "WeH, let him com bom In day time If he want In th house." Lamb's wife Is In th hospital, and re had gone to visit her. Patrolman IVelbrook oould remain only a ahort time and left Lamb and his mother-in-law alone In th house, but not until he whispered something Into Lamb's ear a something: that Is a aecret be tween th two. SWINDLE SALES FOUGHT I? rally Board to Glean Evidence Against Had Promoters. Determined to suppress questionable real estate operatlona In Portland, th Portland Realty Board will co-oprat with the county and city officials In ob taining evidence against promoters of doubtful reputation. Members of th Foara fel that It will b to th best Interests to property owners aa well as to them to enforce a atrict regulation of transactions. At th regular wekly luncheon to be held at noon tomorrow at Richard's caf. Iwputy District Attorney Page will ad crtaa the Board on this subject. Mr. Pag will review th McCarty-Donovan Caa which waa recently before Judge McGinn- department of the Circuit Court. Other cases which hav been prominent before th public will also fce reviewed. Prank McCrltIK general salea manager for Fred Jacob Company, will be chair man of the meeting. CONGRESSMEN MAKE PLANS Oregon Delegation Will Quit Capital When Session F.nds. OREGON! AN NEWS BUREAU. Washington. Aug. .With adjourn ment decided upon for nest Tuesday, trie Oregon delegation In Congresa la f reparlng to leave Washington. Sena tor Bourne will not visit Oregon dur ing the recess, but will start on a lec ture tour through th Kasl Senator Chamberlain la atlll unde cided, but will leave th capital toon, efctoer for home or a vacation In the J.a.l. Representative Hawley will ),it Thursday night for Salem and expects to superintend the planting of a large orchard on his farm near the state capital. Representative Lafferty plans to leave Wednesday, and de clared today that he would go direct to Portland. SAN DIEGO SCORES POINT (Hoosa Approve of Invitation of Republic to Expoeltlon. WASHINGTON. Aug. 10. Th Pan- arna-Ca.lfornla Exposition at San iMe.o todav won lis fight In the House for authority to allow the President to Invite Mexico and the Republics of Central and South America to partici pate In the exposition In lli- The House passed the resolution lit) to SI. conferring the authority on the Presi dent, sfter a debate In which both opposition and support was voiced by members of both parties. The House resolution will be pressed rpon the Senate at the regular aes len of Congress In December. POPE LONGS FOR OPEN AIR With Cane Pontiff Walks About His Apartment Impatiently. ROME. Aug. 10 Pope Plus, with the aid of hi cane, today walked to a window of his apartments and stood trere for some time, taking the fresh His Holiness said he waa longing to runiri Ma accustomed outings In th Vatican garden- A .Matter of Belief. rrr Say. BUI. wots the difference bteen a atheist and a agnostic? pill Well, yer see. a atheist don't believe In nuthlnk. and a 'gnostto only believes In abaht art of It. TWO PICTURES OF AVIATOR WHO IS MAKING CROSS COUNTRY FLIGHT. X T a V - .. . i : p - v '7 . ; i i J i. -V fUI mmmfP WiSTJ-J- SOCSnsOrS, MMM,,,BMMMassssaawssssssssssMasaa --. " .-:.:.-.-. ABOVE, ATWOOD'S AEROPLANE AS IT APPEARED IS RKCF.VT FLIGHT TO KS.TIOXAI. CAPITOL BELOW. ATtVOOD WITH LIKUTKX A.T FICIIEL, V. 9. A, WHO ACCOMPANIED HIM O.V fOME OF HIS FLIGHTS WEST HOPE DAWNS Waning of New England's Old Time Power Is Chance. NOTEWORTHY' FIGURES GO Value of Continuous Srrvioe Empha sized by Commanding Place At tained In Past Borah Con spicuous for Ability. Ington. Aug. 10. New England's domi nating Influence In Congress has gone; Its big men. with a alngle exception. have been removea or . . . i lnnvr do tne six llttl statea of the North Atlantic Coast dictate terms to the rest of th Union, but hav taken their place Jn th ranks, with representation that does not now tower above representa- - . . .i n. ...k .nnnlr. lion xrom oiner icvuwui v ' - New England's rise to power and prominence In Congress, however, car ries a lesson to the West, which ever has been weak In the National Legis lature; a lesson inai cr.."j -lr right now. For the story of New England's dominance carrlea with It the secret of power In both houses of Congress. New England never domi nated by reason of Its numerical strength In Congress, for numerically It was wesk. It became a power be cause of th big caliber of Its men In Senate and House, and becaus of the positions they held by reason of long service. Lessons for West to Learn. And If the West but emulates th ex ample set by New England. It can. In a few yeara. attain that distinction which once belonged to New i-ngland. None except men of ability ever be come great and powerful In Congress. but ability alone will not bring power; that comes through long service alone, and neither of these can be achieved In a single terra. New England picked good men for Congress duty, and once It picked them. It retained them In of fice, until recent times. Now the old guard. If such they may be called, have passed out of publlo life, save Senator Lodge of Massachusetts, who probably was the least Influential, though th most-hlghly educated, of all New Eng land men In Congress. In her palmy tlaya New England pre sented to Congres a large proportion of the "big men' 'then holding seata la the Senate and House of Representa tives. Main sent Hal and Fry to th Senate Hale being chairman of the Naval Committee, and Frye chairman of Commerce; while In th House Mains a "Big Four" were aa unques tioned dominating Influence. Tom Reed became Speaker; Nelson Dtngley headed the Ways and Means Committee and attached bla name to a tariff law; Beth Milllken and C A. Boutelle com pleted the House delegation, and both occupied poslttona of Influence. At that same time Massachusetts was represented In the Senate by Ueorge F. Hoar, whose history needs no recount ing, and by Henry L. Dawes; but Its House delegation contained no note worthy men. save J. D. Long, who later entered McKlnley's Cabinet New Hampshire presented Henry W. Blair In the Senate. Mr. Galllnger. now Sen ator, then being a member of the House. Vermont, never strong In the House. had a mighty representation In the Senate In George F. Edmunds and Jus tin 8. Morrill. Edmunds outshone Mor rill. It Is true, but both, by reaaon of their Important ocmmlttee assignments. and by reason of their natural ability, wielded a mighty Influence on National leKlslation. Rhode Islsnd's prominence for years hlngsd on the fsct that Nelson W. Al drlch was Its shining Senator a man who. before his voluntary retirement, wielded greater Influence over legisla tion than any one'roan who ever held a seat In either branch of Congresa He had th natural ability, but It stood him In ltttl stead until hs became chairman of the Finance Committee, a place that came to him at first not be cause of bis abiilty. but on account of bis long service. The last f th New, England States. -A 4 y -91 flf mr ;: 1 : -r , : -jiff: '. . Connecticut, like most of Its neigh bors, wss never prominent for Its House representation, but It had two Intellectual giants In the Senate Or ville H. Piatt and Joseph R. Hawley and. having aelectcd strong men. It kept them there until death called. Both died In the harness, at a ripe old age. and at a time when they had passed their xenlth. Yet history re cords both as great men. With the exception of Maine, none of the New England States held the same power In the House as In the Senate, due probably to the whims of voters and to the fact that the House Is elected every two years, while the Senate term Is six years. This same fact probably will operate against the attainment of nnusual strength In Western House delegations. But there Is no good reason why the West, by selecting the right men for the Sen ate, should not now achieve the prom inence and the power in the Senate that once was New England's. There Is no danger that New Eng land, with Its present coterie of Sen ators, will become again a dominating Influence, for New England has only one "big" man In the Senate, and his austerity Is a handicap to him. Nor can It be truthfully said that any other section of the country Is represented by men big enough to make it all pow erful. There are big men In the Sen ate, but they are scattered. The West today has but one -'Dig- man, competent to fill the vacancies left br New England, and one man aione cannot supplant a doxen who have passed out. The West must nave other big men. and. once sending them to the Senate, must keep them there, else the West will continue to trail along, taking the -crumbs let fall by the Eaat and the South. Borah "Biggest" Man of AVcst. Senator Borah, of Idaho. Is the one shining example contributed by the West to the Senate galaxy. His col league, posaessed of ample natural ability, has developed traits which for ever made It Impossible for htm to become a power, other than as an ob structor. And. If you will, compare the Sena tors from any other Western state with the men who made New England a power In the -American Union. Where among them do you find a single man who measures up to the old New Eng land atandard? Some, possibly, may develop, but there are others who will not, and before the West can hope to lead It roust weed out its mediocre Senators, Its cranks and faddists. Its dronea and Its Incompetents, and send In their stead men of brains and abil ity: men who can endure the test. The passing of New England'a great men opens an exceptional opportunity to the West. Will the West grasp the opportunity? IS COCXtV PRISOXEHS TO BE SENT . TO KELLY BCTTE. Contractors Tardy In Delivery of Steel for Sew Cages Will Be Penalized, Says Court. Arrangements were made for the abolishing of th present County Jail, at a meeting of the County Com mis sloners yesterday. The prisoners will be moved Into temporary quarters to be erected at Kelly Butte, September 1, The steel cages at the Courtnouse building will be taken to the Butte and an addition made to the present building to hold the cagea Women prlaoners and some of the men who are In Jail on light charges will be cared for In the new Jail In the new east wing of the Courthouse. This place was to have been ready for all prisoners the middle of next month, but the contractor will b be tween 10 and' SO days late because of a delay In the shipping of the steel from Ohio. The old Courthouse must be surren dered to the contractors oa the new building on September IS. and with the Jail In the east wing of the new struc ture not complete the arranging of temnorarv ouarters was necessary. The County Commissioners Informed the contractors who are delinquent with the steel thst they will hold -hem to the contract of a forfeiture of ISO a day for every days dlay after the time set originally for tiif compie tlon of the building. In this -way ensfegh money Is expected to be de rt-red to pay the county the cost cf establishing th temporary quarters. 15 BURIED WHEN MINE WALLS CAVE Fellow Workers in Minnesota Open Pit Dig Frantically to Save Them. RESCUERS ARE IN DANGER Second Avalanche of Soil and Ore May Imprison Men Striving to Free Those Caught With Steam Shovel by Earth. nr-i.tTTH. Minn.. Aug. J0 Fifteen nen are burled under rundreds of tons of earth as the result of a caveln at the Buffalo Sc. Susque hanna open pit Iron mine near Hlb- blng, Minn., tonight. More than 100 of the miners co .Arlror, o r tvnrknor frantically to save them. They are In danger continuous ly In their errort to dig oui moir un fortunate comrades, hoping that some of them may be still alive. At the place where the disaster oc curred, the bottom of the pit was ap inn feet from the surface. The first Intimation of trouble came when tons of earth struck the steara- shovel working in the pit. The men had just arrived anu menced work, when the bank caved from the top. burying the entire gang with the exception of three men. FATHER FINDS HIS CHILD Parent Meets Ixt Tot Begging on Streets. baicp T4uh, Ann- n 0 Special.) The discovery of his golden-haired seven-year-old slaughter t-tnei. wnum he supposed, was with the family of a wealthy Tennessean begging on the streets of Boise with musicians, yes terday has caused F. N. Warren, former ly of Walla Walla and Spokane, to In stitute legal proceedings In the District Court here to recover posseshion . of When the father discovered his lost daughter here the little tot was in pos- r r r. Whittaker. a blind musician, and his wife. They had pos session of the cnna lor a year uu ..,v, j i. it that thev refuse to part with the girl, declaring they will fight the contention oi mo through the courts if necessary. They tviot har nsrnnta virtually de serted her and they have legal title. They make their living Dy piaying on -. . - .I lie. in the West, the little girl acting as alms collector for them. Warren tells a pitiful story of the i. ol,lrh ha lost his child, or rather children, for there were two of them, the second being namea inona. ,.t. i. .hnnt a venr now since I lost them," he said.- "I was living in Walla Walla wiin my who m - , v, Hm. .nil was In the emnlo of a construction company. When I was thrown out or worn sumo umc, wo soon became very poor. I decided to go to Spokaae to look for work. Be fore I left, my wife said that we had better give the children away, but I was not willing. She Insisted, saying that she knew of some wealthy people who would taae incm. x wcu. ww kane and later my wife joined me without the children. When I asked her what became of them she declared that she had given them to wealthy n.n..saon whn were in Walla Walla, and that they had taken them back to their nome. t . .ifA anH T senarsted. 1 bad neither heard of the children nor seen them, until walking aown in streets of Boise the other day I recog niort mv daughter Ethel begging for the street musicians." The Whittakers ten an entirely an .......... tn.v ThBu Heclnre that while in Walla Walla they heard about the Warren children tnrougn tne aaiva- A.m.. lra U'hillolf,r W MrS. Warren and the latter gave the former the custody of the two children, and seemed to be glad to oe na oi ineua T-lnnno th. vntms-er of the tWO. WSS sent to Texas, where she is being raised by friends of the Whittakers, Ethel was taken In charge to ask for alms whrls the musicians played, and before they left Walla Walla, she worked In this capacity for them. Later they toured the Norinwest ana sums inrrr ftie and the child was al ways with them. They declare that the girl looks upon them as her par ents and does not want to leave them. TALK AT TELEPHONE FATAL Engineer of Nome Power Plant Electrocuted; Wires Crossed. NOME. Alaska. Aug. to. While talk ing at the telephone today tus Larson, engineer of a power plant, was electro cuted, dying Instantly. The telephone wire had become crossed with a heavy power wire. PERSONALMENTION. A. B. Lamb, of Fossil, Is at th Bow P. 8. Steenstrup. of Medford, is at th. Pnrt 1 n d George E. Goodwin, of The Dalles, Is at the Oregon. R. A. McPherson, of Moro, Is at the n,nn 1 1 ri t . 1 H. Wilson, a merchant of Newberg. Is at the Cornelius. R. E. Booth, a cspltaltet of Eugene, is at the Imperial. Charles Wesley, a merchant of Bel a. is at the Perkins. Mr. and Mrs. 8. Bolton, of The Dalles, m mt the Imnerial. Guy Stockman, a merchant of Forest Grove. Is at the Perkins. F. F. Knight, a merchant of Forest Grove. Is at the Perkins. Fred C. Mullen, a business man of Eugene, is at the Imperial. L. N. Rooney, a contractor of Eu gene. Is registered at the Imperial. F. A. Richardson, a merchsnt of Preswell. Is at the Cornelius Hotel. G. L. Agger, a fruitgrower of White Salmon, le registered at tne rerxina C. W. James, of Salem, warden of the State Penitentiary, is at tne imperial. T d T dr.. 1. v m hnnbuver of Salem. and' Mrs. Ltvesley are at the Portland Hotel. P. B. McCracken, a fruitgrower of Husum, Wash.. Is at the Bowers Hotel. F. J. Parker, orchardlst and business man of Newberg. Is at the Cornelius Hotel. J. 6. Fish, a business man of Th Dalles, is registered at the Cornelius HoteL C. K. Marshall, capitalist and or chardlst of Hood River, Is registered at the Perkins. J. A. Forehand, manager of the Postal Telegraph Company In Seattle, Is at the Oregon. J. F. Reisacker, a merchant of Con don, and Mrs. Reisacher. are, regis tered at the Imperial. F. E. Zimmerman, manager of the Western Union Company in Salem, is registered at the Oregon. H. Halterman and William Halter- man, of Creswell, prominent orchard lsta. are registered at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. M. Fish, of Helena, Mont., and children are at the Port land and will spend some time in Portland. Mr. Fish is a leading busi ness man of the Montana capital. Mrs. Florence Embody, Mra Charles L. Tostevin and daughter, Dorothy, and son. Jack, are visiting Mrs. Robert 9. Oliver at the Stelleda bungalow at Sea side. CHICAGO, Aug. 19. (Special.) The following from Portland, Or., are reg istered at Chicago hotels: Congress, N. E. Tingle, Mr. and Mra L. A. Bow man; Great Northern. C. H. McGeecan, Eugene Hester; LaSalle, E. R. Thomas. PUZZLING LAKE BAIKAL The Varied and Peculiar Animal Life Found In Its Waters. Japan Advertiser. The riddle of Lake Baikal, in Cen tral Asia, -is similar to that of Lake Tanganyika, in Central Africa. In both cases a large body of fresh water remote from the ocean contains organ isms apparently marine. Both lakes, again, contain a very large number of species not found elsewhere. Lake Baikal contains numerous salmon and seals, as well as three species of her ring. It also contains a few mollusca of apparent marine forms. One of the most remarkable features of the lake, perhaps. Is that although It Is frozen over for about five months in the year the animal life is extremely abundant and varied. This may be partly accounted for perhaps by the existence of hot springs. One of the latest attempts to answer the riddle of Lake Baikal Is that of the Russian Investigator, M. Berg. Of the thirty-three species of fish found In the lake he finds that fourteen are peculiar to it. while nineteen have a wide dis tribution in Siberia and Europe. Many of these peculiar species are without near relations anywhere. Ji tne moi lusca 90 per cent are peculiar. M. Berg does not think the facts ae and the hypothesis that the lake was once marine, tie Deiieves tnat it iihs always been fresh and that the fauna peculiar to It has had a two fold or igin. A part has originatea in tne use itself during the long ages of Its ex istence, and the rest is a portion of the prehistoric fresh water rauna oi Siberia which it has preserved. AFRICA'S MAMOTH CAVES A Missionary Explores Where the Natives Feared to Go. New York Sun. A remarkable system of subterra nean caves In German East Africa has been discovered and partly explored w.. AmKnslnn n Roman Catho lic missionary, and H,err Thurmann, a German orriciai. mo raitu uated in the Matumbl Mountains and .i - .. ....... v.ntnrftil further than a small grotto, the first one encountered. They said an evil spirit awwi wmim. The two explorers vscovered a hole at i e .vita D-T-ntto which led to a great cavern 3300 feet In length, filled with deep pools in wnicn siraneo like fish lived. Stalactites and stalag mites 25 feet long were plentiful here. T,ih.i- Marches resulted in thedls' covery of other huge caves at deeper levels. A second level lay 150 feet . hi.j n feet helow the sec ond and a fourth 90 feet below the third. From this the explorers naa to . . .. - .hAaanHfti nf hstn attacked reiresi. , .h.i.. lanterns were In danger of being extinguished by these crea tures. ' ART OVER A COUNTER A Painter Opens a Shop In Venice to See Keal Life. - , i Vonntllin KCAneS. M. TUB pauner w " , - , t ,n id .Qth vAn.r. wanted real ... tt tie, i ifo One season, in. SVflring a Studio in the City of JJOQ KCB, HO a.W"sv ' " , , booths on the Rialto bridge. He stocked It with all the oia ana uew .. , .fT. that he could tret to- j kan a tuilesman with a seiner m.ii , . . voluble tongue. He had orders not to mind about selling, but simply to keep the customers busy as long as possible, haggling and bargaining at the door of the shop. Women of all ages and styles ..,,ii ntnnnwl. "How mucn is mis bit of lace?" "Fifteen lire." 'Til giv . a v hava fourteen and i you ton. lid half" "No, I shall give only ten, and ,h. time the artist so on. uuLiiiB 1 - - would be quietly sketching the Pretty customers and conecuns life. Says Diamonds Often Explode. Vnrlr Pr.HH Diamonds often explode. That Is the assertion of Dr. A. E. Tutton the world's leading expert on crystallog raphy, who recently gave a lecture rapny. w,. the Roval So- on aiaiuuiiuD - - - . clet-v of Arts In London and told many things that He explains diamonds may explode at almost any time and that thousands of dollars put into tne gems iujr "'"w .. - w. rltad man v In pear iiae "- , . . k.-a HiTnnnt1 exnlode On stances wc z . being taken out of the earth, and says that sucn an i""'M"" months or even years after they are - - .w (n.. Ha aava (lfA- released irom wi monds in all probability were formed through the fusion oi temperature under such pressure as could exist only at great depths below ground. Speaker Out of $1000 Weekly. L ; - t- n irat-aid. Speaker Champ Clark Is losing flOOO "The writer wishes to go upon record as saying that with hon lest workmanship and honest materials the bitullthlc pavement in his opinion has larger per cent of de slrable qualities than any material he is ac quainted with. It ap proaches -very nearly the Ideal pavement, says Ernest .McCul lough, formerly con sulting engineer for the Merchants asso ciation of San Fran Cisco, an authority on bitullthlc street pavement in his standard work known as "Engineering Work in Towns and Email Cities." ' lumber mens National Bank Capital $ 1 ,000,000 A Progressiva Commercial Bank with a Savings Depart ment Under Government Supervision . 4 Per Cent Interest on Savings Established 1886 Merchants National Bank Portland, United States OFFICERS: R. L. Durham, President. M. L. Holbrook, Vice-President. Wilfrid P. Jones. Vice-President. Geo. W. Hoyt, Cashier. S. C. Catching. Assistant Cashier. C. Detoring. Assistant Cashier. Accounts of corporations, firms and individuals invited.4 Four per cent paid on time deposits. First National Bank Capital $1,500,000 . Surplus 750,000 Oidest National Bank West of tho Rocky Mountains Bank Notice Security Savings and Trust Company Corbett Building, Fifth and Morrison Streets Capital and Surplus $1,400,000 Invites Accounts of Merchants, Individuals and Savings a week because Congress Is remaining In session. He had a contract with a Chicago lecture bureau to take the platform July 1. WESTERN BOND & MORTGAGE CO. Capital Stock. $100,000. Loans Made on City and Farm Property. MORTGAGES PURCHASED 416 Commercial Club Bid Port land, Oregon. THE BARBER ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY sio, Portland, Or. Osaar iiubsA Manager. TBATELEB8' CCTPE. LONDON PARIS HAMBURG - 4 ili.a1'ni1 fisnt. O l .... . ai 11 A XT IflnVssil'nd. S6Tt 9 :pr:GraDv?r.":::svP.2ltAm.ka.sept. tRlts Carlton a la Carte Restaurant. Will call at Plymouth and Cherbourg, C.IBRAI.TAK, ALGIERS. GENOA fS. B. HAMBURG 8Pt- M- 8. 8. MOLTKB Utt" M IWlll not call at Alsiers. Hamburg-American line, 160 Powell St., San Francisco. Cal.. Northern Pacific. O. . A N Burlington. Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry., and other railroad otfices in Portland. HONOLULU $110 ITKHT CLASS ROUND TRIP Xhs most dellglitlul spot on an lira world tour tor your vacation. osllghUul s;a b"b tec at the famous beach o Walklkl. Ths SDlsndld SB. Blerra 410,000 tdns displace ment) makes the round trip In 1 days, and one can visit on a side trip the living "1 cano ot KHauea which la tramendousiy ac tive and see for himself the process of world creation. No other j-ip compares with this for the marvelous and wonderful in nature. Visit the Islands now. whUsjM can do it so easily and quickly and while the volcano Is acUva. Prompt attention to telegrams for bertha Sailings: Sept. Sepu 23. Oct. 14. etc. OCEANIC a 8. CO. S1S Market atraet. Ha a 1-ranriaCa. NEW YORK-PORTLAND REGULAR FREIGHT SERVICE. Low Rates. Schedule Time. AMERICAN - HAWAIIAN S. S. CO. 215 Railway Exchange Bid Portland. Or. Main 8378. - -a. 8923. Steamer Anvil sails from Albers Dock No. 3 Monday, August 21. 7 P. M., for Tillamook, Bay City, Newport, Florence, Bandon and Coquille River points. Tli-ket office l'g Third St. Phone Main f.2B, A 4596. Dock phone A 1902, Main 151. Freight and passengers. Corner Fifth and Stark Oregon Depository DIRECTORS: ' R. L. Durham A. F. Smith M. I Holbrook J. F. Watson Geo. W. Hoyt Wm. T. Mulr A. C Mowexy John B. Baa.Il Joseph M. Healy H. TRAVELERS' GUIDE. BAYOCEAN Short Ocean Tonrlat Trip From Portland to Bayocean Oregon's New Summer Resort Ten Hour Trip on River and Ocean Leave Portland Tuesdays at T P. M. Saturdays at 7 A. M. Elegant and fast ocean-going boat. BOUND TRIP 10 Meals a la Carte. Bertha $1 aad SLM Boat Leaves Supple's Dock T. B. POTTER REALTY COMPANY, 720 Corbett Building. Astoria Centennial Sir. "Monarch" Daily AT 7 A. M. FAKE $1.00 Music, Dancing; Cafeteria. No Liquors. DOCK FOOT WASHINGTON ST. OPEN BITEB TRANSPORTATION CO. o-v-n t KT TP a t Freight received dally at Oak-st. dock for Tha Dallas, Hood River, Whits Salmon. Umatilla, Kennewlck. Pasco. Richland. Hanford. -White Bluff, and . ..... .rti.u i li mieiuiguioi. v nBST-CISS PASSENGER SERVICE. FARE SO CENTS TO HOOD RIVER. WHITE, SALMON. THB DAI.LES. Steamer leaves Portland Sun., Toes., Thurfc i A. M. Returning leaves The Dalles Mo", Wed. FrL. 7 A. M.. arriving at Port land about 6 P. M. same day. W. S. Buchanan. Supt.: W. S. Smallwood. Gen L Mgr. Phono Main 2960. A 827. SAN FRANCISCO PORTLAND STEAM SHIP CO. FronT Alnsworth Dock. Portland. 9 A. M. 68. Rose City Aug. 81. Beaver 26, Bear 81. From San Francisco, northbound, 1- M. 88. Beaver Aug. 19. Bear 24. Rose City .9. From San Pedro, northbound. 12 M. S3. Bear Aug. 22, Rose City 27, Beaver hep. 1. H. A." Mosher, C. T. A., 142 Third St. J. W. Ransom, agent, Ainsworth Dock. Phones Main 4Q-2. Main 268, A 1402. San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Pedro Direct. , North Paclflc S. S. Cc's 8. S. Roanoke an 8. S. Elder sail every Wednesday alter nately at 6 P. M. -Tltcket office 132 Third su, near Alder. MARTIN a. HIGI.KY. Passenger Agent. W. K. SIX SSER, Freight A genu . Phones M. 1314. A 1314. COOS BAY LINE STEAMER BREAKWATER. Sails Irom Ainsworth Dock. Portlsnd, 9 A. M. Aug. 4. 9. J4, 19. 24. 29, Sept. 8, 8. 13. 18, 2o. 28 and every 6 days. Freight re ceived at Ainsworth Dock daily up to 5 P. M. Passenger fare, nrst-clasa, $10; aecond clats, (7. including meals and berth. Ticket office Ainsworth Dock. Phones Mala .tut. Uala 170, A 1234, WW