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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1913)
7 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF OREGONIAN TELEPHONES. Prlntlnr-Room Main 7070. A 8005 City Circulation Main 707O. A 60t5 Managing Editor Main 707O. A 6003 Sunday Editor Main 7070. A 609.1 CompohifC-Room Main 7070. A 6005 Superintendent .Building. . . .Main 7070. A 6095 AMLTSEME"T3. HEILIO THEATER (Eleventh and Morri son) "Everjwoman." Tonight at 8:15. ORPHLCM THEATER (Broadway and Tay lor! Vuudevliie. This afternoon at 2:15 end totight at S:lo. PANTAGES THEATER (Broadway and Al der) Vaudeville. This afternoon at 2:13 and toniltt at 7:30 and 0. EMPRESS THEATER (Broadway and Tam Mll) Vaudeviiie. This afternoon at 2:15 and tonight at 7:30 and 9. LVRIC THEATER (Fourth and Stark1) Musical comedy. "The Social "Whirl." This afternoon at 2:15 and tonight at 6:80 to 10:45 o'clock. PEOPLE'S. STAR. ARCADE. OH JOY. T1VOLI AND CRYSTAL, Klrt-run Pic tures. 11 A. M. to 12 P. M. COLUMBIA THEATER (Sixth and Wash ington) Continuous first-run pictures from 11 A. M. GLOBE THEATER (Eleventh and Wash-!ngto-i continuous first-run motion o'.c lurea. OAKS AMUSEMENT PARK (Cars from First and Aider) Royal Italian Band and vaudeville. Afternoons at 2:30; ven!n:s t S P. M. OREGOMAN AT RESORTS. For quickest delivery of The Ore gonian at Summer resorts subscribe through the following agents. City rates. Subscriptions by mail are payable in advance. Bar View, Or K. F Jackson Bay City, Or M. J. Miller Bar Ocean, Or....M. A. Shirley. 'Jr. Brighton Beach, Or. . .J. A. Baldwin Csraos, IVaik. . .Shepherd's Springs Cascadia, Or G. M. Gelsendorfer Garibaldi, Or C. F. Alexander Lone Beach, Wash Prult Hocbfleld Manzanlta Beach, Or . Emu G. ICardell Kahcotta, Waal.., jr. II. Brans Newport. Or George Sylvester Ocean Park. Waah...r. K. Beechey Rocltaway Beach, Or. . .Frank Miller Kockanay Beach, Or. . .F. H. WllkJaa it. Martins Springs, Wash . Mrs. ar. St. Martin Seaside, Or ...Clark Strattos Seaview, Wash. .Constable Putnam Tillamook. Or J. s. Lamar W heeler. Or IU II. Cady Wllholt, Or v. XV. McLrroa River Motorists Frolic. One of the most successful and delightful cruises ever undertaken by the Portland Motor boat Club was held yesterday, when more than 30 boats from the club raBtvrl the day on Cedar Island near Jennings "Sf. on me upper Willamette. An athletic programme had been planned, but because of the heat all the events were postponed, including the tug-of- war Detween the various boats. The wnoie day was passed in general Jol lification and many of the 235 per sons who made the trip indulged in swimming. The boats that partici pated in the day's pleasure were: Win nie H., Ruth K., Mathus, Kentucky, Nestor, Busy Bee, Auto Marine, Laur eate, Dix, which had 76 members and friends aboard; Corinnie, Yarrow, Snookey-Ookums, Saye III, Queen Bee, The Gem, Virginia, Lady Gray, Gee Whiz I, Olympian, Augusta, Flirt, Water Witch and others unnamed. Camp Meetino Scheduled. The Ore gon Conference of the Free Meth odist Church will hold a camp meeting August 13 to 21 at St. Johns Heights on the St. John's carllne. Prac tically a complete little city will be established with full equipment for meals and all the conveniences of a well organized camp. The programme will be the same each day, as follows: Prayer meeting, 6 A. M. ; love feast, 9: preaching, 10:30: children's meeting, 1:30; preaching, 2:30; young people's meeting. 7; preaching, 8. There will be a missionary meeting August 20. The committee on arrangements con sists of W. N. Coffee, chairman: H. V. Haslam. R. Trulllnger. W. F. Randall. E. I. Harrington, Sidney Scott and W. J. Johnston. Good Roads Talks BiuSed. To show the relation between bad roads and the economic and social -life of the people. . Miss Luna E. Bigelow, acting on behalf of the Oregon Congress of Mothers and the Parent Teachers' Assoclation,"will arrive In Portland today and will speak Wednesday. She will deliver an address during the day at the Parents' Educa tional Bureau and will speak at night in the East Side Library. These lectures are part of a speaking tour of the state which Miss Bigelow is making in an effort to arouse interest in the bet terment of rural roads. Dates have been assigned at Roseburg, Medford, Ashland and Phoenix, under the aus pices of the local Parent Teachers' Cir- ', t ics. iiio auuresses win De illustrated by 100 or more slides. Press Club to Be Host. Members of the Press Club and their wives and friends will be entertained at the club rooms tonight by Grace Cameron, vau deville star, who will appear in a se ries of interesting stunts. The en tertainment Is an annual affair. Miss Cameron never failing to set the club members up to a jinks when she comes here. This time the club members de cided to throw open the doors, not only to the active and associate member ship, but to all the wives, sweethearts and friends of members. A feature of the programme will be refreshments. Girl's Admirer Slashes Rival. With wounds in his face which required 86 stitches. Antonio Riso, a young track laborer, living at 646 Fifth street, is at the Good Samaritan Hospital and Detectives Moloney and Swennes are looking for Xick Juli, who Ms accused of being the assailant. The men had quarreled over a girl, and Juli. it is charged, suddenly attacked Riso, cut ting him from the mouth to the ear and again from the mouth to the neck. His wounds are superficial. Escaping) Girl Returned. Walking barefoot along Sandy Road, shortly after midnight, Marie Morris, 17, was intercepted by Patrolman Ulfers. Ques tioning .brought the admission that she had escaped from the House of the Good Shepherd, where she had been placed by her brother, a resident of Rainier. The officer escorted the girl buck to the institution. Y. M. C. A. Staff Back Today. Sec retaries of the Portland Young Men's Christian Association, who have bean attending the Y. M. C. A. Employed Officers' Conference at Delano Beach Wash., will return today. Nearly the entire executive staff attended this conference at which problems of utmost interest to the associations of the Northwest were taken up. Rot art Club to Meet. "Man's De pendence on His Fellowmen" will be the subject of discussion at the regu lar luncheon of the Rotary Club to be held tomorrow noon at the Com mercial Club dining-room. w. F. Woodward will lead the discussion. Dri G. H. Douglas will deliver an address on the subject, "The Care of th-j Skin." Fire Threatens Docks. Fire from an unknown cause, ' threatened Mont gomery Dock No. 2 at 2 o'clock yester day morning, when a boathouse adjoin ing the big structure, burst into flame. The fireboat and several companies re sponded and checked the flames in the building where they originated. Logger Hcrt at Bridal Veil Thomas Hamberg, a logger employed at Bridal Veil, was taken to the Good Samaritan Hospital yesterday, suffer ing from fractures, of the arm and leg. He was struck by a falling timber at Bridal Veil. Ice Cream delivered to all parts of the city. Phone Washington Cream Co. Will Sell Mt Home on MC Scott line at sacrifice. Tabor S9. . ?.',? WATSON RESTAURANT 108 Hfih St.. Perkins Hotel Block. Da. E. C Brown. Eye, Ear; Mohawk. Report of Water Is Denied. Re ports circulated in the northeastern part of the city that water is being supplied from the Albina standpipe were denied last night by City Com missioner Daly. He says the pumps at the Albina station have been dis connected for more than a year and that there is no way of using water from the standpipe. The residents of the district, he says, are being sup plied with. Bull Run water from the reservoirs. BrjRGiAR Robs Pharmacy. A sneak thief entered the Perkins Hotel Phar macy, at Fifth and Washington streets, some time Saturday night, and made away with $25 from the till. Entrance was gained through the front door. Temperance Workers to Meet. Albina W. C. T. U. will meet with Mrs. Christenson, 8S3 Borthwick street, on Tuesday at 2:30 o'clock. A full at tendance of the membership is desired. MOVING PICTURE ATTRACT Good -Programmes Provided at Peo ples, Arcade and tlie Star. Three splendid Summer entertain ments were offered yesterday at the Peoples, Arcade and Star Theaters, each programme containing a feature. At the Peoples the programme was remarkable in that it contained seven distinct subjects. Two of these were Intensely dramatic, three were humor ous, one a trick mystery and the other local. "Nature's Vengeance" depicted retri bution for sin. "When the Prince Ar rived" satirized the country girl whose head was filled with romance. The comedies were equally varied. "Oh, You Scotch Lassie" reveals a farcical complication over a girl's attendance at a social function in disobedience to her sweetheart's wishes. "Almost a Rescue" describes some of the trials and tribulations of a Broadway actor out of work. "The Girls and Dad" was thoroughly up-to-date and richly hu morous. "Clara and Her Toys" was a fantastical trick mystery. The de scription of the grocers' picnic, for which many have been watching for some days, was interesting. "Campaigning with Custer" was the regular feature on the Arcade Theater bill. It is a picture in the same class with the "Battle of Gettysburg" and "Custer's Last Fight." In this two reel film, however, the brave Custer did not lose his life at the hands of the savages, but he defeated all their scheming and reduced the hostile Sioux to governmental submission. The pro duction is full of stirring action and holds the unbounded interest through out. "Man's Duty," another feature film, describes the evolution from evil to good, and the conquest of a man over his own bad passions. "The Cook Question" furnished the main comedy of the piogramme, although Mr. Pif fles' "Summer Adventures" in cartoons by Hy Mayor, provides remarkably pleasing entertainment. Miss Marie Chapman, the little Portland violinist, will be retained throughout the week. The Star Theater was crowded at every performance yesterday with peo ple anxious to see "Zigomar III," which must not be confused with "Zigomar I," it being an entirely different sub ject. It is a thrilling picture describ ing the efforts of the Parisian police to capture one of the most noted crim inals of France. Two other comedies are added to the programme, which is unusually interesting. CONVICT REFORM IS SHOWN Suffragist Meeting- Among Current Events on Columbia Bill. Many convicts after 'release from prison have the desire to be honest and industrious, but are often forc ed to abandon their good inten tions because of the- methods pur sued by detectives. No better ex ample of this can be found than that shown in the throbbing: Biograph drama, "Under the Shadow of the Law," which is the big- feature oil the bill thatopened yesterday at the Co lumbia. Theater. The chief character In this play, however, overcomes the handicap which he encounters and finally is able to be of great service to others. Another gripping and spectacular number on the bill is the Pathe drama entitled "The Call of Blood," which contains many stirring' frontier scenes. It is the story of a little grirl who has been placed in the care of Indians by Jrer worthless father and who its res cued from her disagreeable surround ings by her brother and returned to a home of refinement. The big comedy feature on the bill Is "The Grocer's Revenge," a Sellg production which shows how a foxy grocer gets even on a miserly but wealthy man who steals a pound of butter which he Is too stingy to pur chase. Another Selig comedy which contains many amusing situations is "The Galloping Romeo." Views of a thrilling aviation meet in New York is one of the interesting features of Pathe's Weekly. Other at tractions in the weekly are a regatta In Kiel, Germany; a five-mile race on Kbbetts Field, in Brooklyn ; a gather ing of suffragists in New York being addressed by one of their leaders; and Mutt and Jeff. Songs are rendered by Matt Dennis, the popular baritone, and selections by Karp's orchestra are highly entertaining. The same bill will run today and tomorrow. POTATO ROWS 10 MILES Longest Patch In the World Found Along; Railroad Track. . LA GRANDE, Aug. 10. (Special.) Secretary C. M. Humphreys, of the Li Grande Commercial Club, has again placed Union County in the spotlight by his discovery of one of the longest potato patches in the world. Mr. Hum phreys measured its length from the speedometer of an automobile while en route to Elgin. He found that the patch was 10 or 11 miles in length and fol lowed the O.-W. R. & N. right-of-way. Upon investigation he learned that the owner of this novel patch had leased the right-of-way and planted tlie potatoes, several rows of them, on each side of the tracks. Aside from the money they will bring the owner, the bed has proved to be a great fire pre ventive, providing no dry fuel for the flying engine sparks. BANDON CASE CONSIDERED Attorney-General Crawford to In vestigate Trouble Personally. SALEM. Or., Aug. 10. (Special.) "I expect to go to Bandon early this week," said Attorney-General Craw ford today, "to investigate the alleged deportation of Dr. Bailey Leach. 1 know nothing of the situation there, but if there is anyone who should be prosecuted he will be." Prune Crop Is Large. ONTARIO. Or., Aug. 10. (Special.) The prune crop of this section prom ises to be a bumper, one of the best known in years. AV. U. Sanderson, own er of the Idanha orchard, states that he will have 32.000 boxes from his or chard. Miles Cannon, of Weiser, who owns a large prune orchard adjoining the one of Mr. Sanderson, has sold his crop for $40,000. Of this he expects to net $20,000,1 MISS COLE IS BRIDE Marriage to R. MulhoIIand Celebrated at St. Mark's. SEASIDE TO BE VISITED Dr. Daniel Grant Is Best Man and Miss Ora Whit more Comes From elllngham, Wash., to Offici ate as Maid of Honor. St. Mark's Episcopal Church was the scene of a pretty wedding on Satur day morning when Miss Anna Cole, of Chicago, became the bride of Richard MulhoIIand, of this city. The impressive service was read by the Rev. J. E. H. Simpson In the pres ence of a few friends of the young couple. The bride was attired in a handsome robe of white crepe de chine and carried a shower of white roses PORTIASD GIRL CELEBRATES EIGHTEENTH BIRTHUAY, 1 Estella Padden. To celebrate the 18th anni versary of her birthday. Miss Estella Padden gave a birthday party recently at her home, 1S15 Iwight street. Miss Padden i the attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John V. Padden and is popular in her set. At the birth day festivity music and dancing were enjoyed and a dainty re past was served. The house was i beautifuly decorated by Mrs. James Shepherd, " grandmother of the young hostess. Eighteen boys and girls were entertained and helped to make the evening merry. tied with tulle. Miss' Ora Whitmore, who served as maid of honor, was gowned in a becoming shade of pink voile. Her bouquet was of pink roses, combined with maiden hair fern. Miss Whitmore came from Belllngham, Wash., to attend the wedding. Dr. Daniel Grant officiated as best man. After a wedding breakfast at one of the large grills, Mr. and Mrs. MulhoIIand departed for Seaside, where they will be guests at the new Locks- ley Hall. On their homecoming ' they will reside at 981 Vernon street, where an artistic bungalow awaits them. Miss Adella M. Parker and mother are the house guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Bransford. Miss Par ker and Mrs. Bransford were college classmates in their girlhood days and each have developed into active work ers in their respective fields. Mrs. Bransfid having recently been ap pointed as milk inspector in Portland, while Miss Parker is well known throughout Washington as president of the College Suffrage League of that state. Miss Parker started the cam paign in Seattle which resulted In the recall amendment to the city charter. Under this amendment Mayor Gill was recalled in 1911. Miss Parker is rec ognized as an able lnstrutcor in eco nomics and Is one of the editors of the Western Woman Voter. ... A number of Portlanders who are en- Joying an outing at Manhattan Beach were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Schaf er at Manhattan Hotel on AVednesday last. The occasion was the birthday of Alfred Acheson. Games, dancing ana a supper were features of the eve ning. Those present included Mrs. L. W. Acheson, Wayne Acheson, Loralne Acheson, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Cole, Frank Cole, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Stout, A. Kuhn hansen, Earl Smead, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Shafer. Mr. and Mrs. C. Geil, Mrs. Kuhnhansen, Hilda Kuhnhansen, Miss Ella Phalon, Miss Irene Phalon, Mrs. W. Welch, Ruth Welch, Mamie Welch. Mrs. Stanley Ott, Francis Stopper. Mrs. J. N. Bowman, Miss Zara Litson. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Wade entertained yesterday at an elaborate dinner party In compliment to Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Moore, of Seattle, and Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Moore, of Spokane, who had motored from their homes to Portland for a week-end visit. The table was centered with a basket of pink roses mingled with maidenhair fern. The house throughout was decorated with pink blossom,s. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Moore, Mrs. Edward R. Benson, Miss Fayne Benson, Mrs. Robert N. Clapp, W. A. Bloch and Mr. and Mrs. Wade. Mrs. H. C. Wortman was hostess on Saturday afternoon at a launch party at which she entertained on the Sea Otter for the pleasure of Mrs. William L. Jones and Miss Alice Louise Jones. of Los Angeles. Among those who shared Mrs. Wortman's hospitality were: Mrs. tawin uasweil, Miss Janet Noble, Miss Helen Wortman, Everett Wortman. Walter Loyd, of this city, and Miss Beatrice Reid, of Hermiston, Or., were quietly married in this city yesterday. They will make their home at tho Or lando apartments. The bride is a sis ter of J. H. Reid, banker of Hermiston. She taught school in her home town for a number of years. Mr. Loyd Is chief engineer in Portland for the Union Oil Company. Miss Otto Rush, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Rush, of Twenty-third and Everett streets, was married last week to Herbert Kauffman, in New York City. The bride formerly lived In Pom eroy. Waslu, where her father has ex tensive banking interests. Mr. and Mrs. Kauffman will reside in New York I City- m m m r The engagement of Miss Florence Waters, of Spokane, to C. Mathews, of this city, was announced on Saturday by the mother of the bride-elect, who is now visiting in San Francisco. Miss Waters received her education In the Holy Name Academy of Spokane and in the University of Idaho. Mr. ' V 1 t ;i Villi! i - :A a t Mathews is a business man of Portland. Wedding bells will ring tomorrow for Miss Edith Nordstrom and Harry E. Hobbs. The bride-elect is the attract ive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Nordstrom and is popular among her set. The ceremony will take place at the family home. 466 East Twelfth street, in the presence of a company of relatives and friends. Miss Ethel Verna Green and Edward Dawson have chosen the 13th as their wedding day, in defiance of supersti tion. Their marriage will take place in Eilers Hall at 8:13 P. M. -Wednesday. The ceremony will be quite unique. solemnized along the lines of the New Thought faith. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunn, who have been enjoying a sojourn at Newport this season, entertained recently at an elaborate dinner at Harkleroad Inn, Newport, in honor of W. B. Haines. Cards and dancing were the features of the evening. . The Misses Celia and Harriet Ward left last Friday for Spring Hollow Farm, Wash, where they will be the guests of Miss Madaline Salisbury for a fortnight. ' .... ,- Miss Katherine Barton, the Interest ing young visitor from Kansas City, who has been the guest of Miss Eliza beth Jacobs for the past few weeks, will leave today for her home In compliment to Miss Daisy Duthie. who is visiting In Portland, Mrs. Wil liam Christie entertained Informally on Friday evening at a 500 party. A sup per followed the game. Miss Gertrude Hoeber has returned from Tillamook, where she passed a month or more. CHURCH'S H1ST0RYT0LD PASTOR STAl'B OF SUXXYSIDE REVIEWS ACHIEVEMENTS. Congregational Society Observes Twenty-First Anniversary of Founding of Church. With special music and a special sermon devoted - to a history of Con gregationalism in Portland, members of the Sunnyside Congregational Church yesterday observed in a fitting vrjy the twenty-first anniversary of the founding of their church. The Rev. J. J. Staub, who hns been pastor since the church was founded In lt2, preached the sernon, explaining the various steps taken by the church in its advance from a small Sunday school class to one of the leading churches of the city. "It was in the Summer of 1892 that the church first sprang Into existence," said Dr. Staub. "I went out and gath ered in a few children and organized a class. We held meetings in the old Hunter's Hall each Sunday morning for about two years. Below us was a fire station which made our first horno a trifle inconvenient, but notwithstand ing our little class grew rapidly. We added children and adults at a most pleasing rate. "In 1895 we had grown to such an extent that we built our own church at East Thirty-fourth and East Taylor streets, holding the first meeting there in January of that year. From tlxn until 16 years later we held our serv ices there and considered our home one of the best In the city. Our growth was steady so steady, in fact, that we found our home unable to accommodate the members of the church. Ac2ord ingly we planned a new and larger church. . "On April 30, 1911. the congregation dedicated a new. stone edifice at East Taylor and East Thirty-second street, which is our present home." Dr. Staub explained the various ac tivities of the church in a reform line and explained the accomplishments not only of the early days, but of recent years. LAID DOWN HIS - Watch for It. An old soldier in San Gabriel. Cal., wrote us that he had a very bad case of Brighfs disease and was going to take Fulton's Renal Compound, due to the following letter received from a friend: "As to the kidney trouble, I can safely say there Is no one that has had more experience than I have, hence 1 feel competent to advise. Doctors were at a standstill. I had 16 of them, first and last. I received a case of Fulton's Renal Compound and took it accord ing to directions. My brother sent it to me from Lodl when I was at my lowest and the water had bursted, so you can see how bad I was. When I would stop I would fill up again. I got out of it one time and had no money and laid down my watch for a case. Now take it and see how much better you will be. You will soon see a big difference." We stand squarely on the fact that Fulton's Renal Compound reduces al bumen in many cases of Bright's dis ease, the reduction often resulting in recovery. We will send an unimpeach able witness to prove the fact., viz.. Esbach's quantitative test for albumen that will show exactly how It stands from day to day. Fulton's Renal Compound can be had at druggists. For literature write John J. Fulton Co., San Francisco. Postal Receipts Grow. SALEM, Or., Aug. 10. (Special.) A report for July Just made by Postmas ter HucKestem renecia the steady Every Good Citizen Should Personally His The Monthly Qregonifife Insurance Company Does This at Small Cost est for Oregonians Details Furnished Hm Office, Corbett Building. Corner A. I.. MILLS, 1- SAMUEL, General Manager. President. ENTIRE CHAXQE OF PRO GRAMME IX Ye Oregon Grill The New Week Opens With New SPECIALTIES by the Rathskellar Cabaret and Chorus. Headed by the Vivacious EVELYN GILBERT and Specially Selected Orchestra Conducted by Signor Pietro Marino Three s p 1 e n d id pro grammes every day one at lunch, dinner and after rhe theater your favor ite s e 1 e ctions rendered by request. THE COOLEST AND MOST AT TRACTIVE DINING PLACE IN PORTLAND. Merchants' Lunch 50c Hotel Oregon WRIGHT-DICKINSON HOTEL CO., Props. CHAS. WRIGHT. Pres. M. C. DICKINSON, Managing Director. growth of Salem, the receipts from the sale of stamps, post cards, etc., be ing $1681.27 greater than for the same month last year. Battle Between Police and Safeblowers Averted. Officer Prepare for Gnn Duel, and Spectator Gather, but Burglar Alarm Proven to Be False. N momentary expectation of seeing a battle between safeblowers and de tectives scores of Sunday saunterers gathered at Fourth and Oak streets yesterday, when a big alarm over their heads, for no obvious reason, began booming "Burglars! Burglars. Insistently the bell, intended to give voice only when unauthorized hands are laid on safety deposit vaults in side, clanged loud and long, drawing excited spectators from far around. De tectives Tlchenor and Abbott and Pa trolman O'Brien responded to the call and took, possession of the building, but were barred from an investigation by the presence of a high, spiked barri cade between them and the big vault. There was nothing to show that some burglar was not in the dark recesses behind the obstruction, and the officers kept close watch while awaiting the arrival of the manager of the -place. For more than half an hour the din kept up, and then the bell suddenly ceased its clanging. The manager, ar riving soon afterward, threw open the vaults and demonstrated that there had been no intrusion. Some contingency, believed to be the passing of a train on Fourth street, haol set the aparatus in motion, and a turn of the hand quieted it. SALOON MANAGER IS DUPED Man Who Cashed K-orged Check Xot Believed When He Tells of Crime. MARSHFIELD, Or., Aug. 10. (Spe cial.) After passing a forged check on Billy Cox, bartender at the Brewery saloon here, Cas Banford returned to the place and informed the manager, Clay Roberts, formerly of Wallace, Idaho, that the paper was forged. Roberts thouprht he was joking and paid no heed until the next day, when he found that Banford had told the truth. Banford was missing then. The name of W. W. Nason, a former Hood River contractor, who Is now a resi dent of Maishfield, was forged to the check. Banford also took a suit of clothes belonging to C. B. Jones when he left and borrowed $10 and $15 from each of several friends. He was about 30 years old and a plasterer. CARD OP THANKS. "We,-the undersigned, wish to express our heartfelt gratitude to the kind and loving neighbors and friends who so willingly and completely extended their aid and sympathy to us in our bereave ment of our dear husband, father and grandfather, C. J. Hayes. MRS. A. E. HATES. MRS. E. W. UDELL. C. E. HAYES, AND GRANDCHILDREN. Income Policy on Application Fifth and Alder Streets. Portland. , I.. SAMURJ, Assistant Manager. Widow HOTEL MULTNOMAH Monday, August Eleventh, will be presented in The Arcadian Garden Stupendous production of The Hotel Multnomah ' Revue Follies 1913 Nine Beautiful Girls All New Faces New Songrs Each an Artist. By far the best entertainment ever produced in this or any other city. This week will be Oriental Week The Arcadian Garden transformed into a Jap anese Garden Beautiful Decorations Beautiful Gowns Catchy Music. Entertainment will begin at 6 and 10:45 P. M. Lasting one hour. Kindly make table "Yes. I was prejudiced, too".' "I never realized how pure and wholesome good canned foods can be, ' ' 1 remarked a very 4 'parti cular' ' Philadel phia housewife, recently, "until I visited the Campbell establishment and saw them making Campbell's Tomato Soup. Now. I wouldn't want any thing finer". f That is quite a common experience. And we only wish that you, too, could come here and see the neatness, care and scrupulous cleanliness which prevail throughout ourplant; and the fresh and perfect materials we use. You wouldn t wonder that Campbell s Tomato Soup is so delicious. Come if you can, always De welcome. back if not satisfied 21 kinds 10c Look for the red - and FOR THE SMALL MERCHANT better Investment presents Itself than one of the sma WHITE MOTOR TRUCK Jill ani the chance to spread out after more business. It's paying" ''WV jjtJj: others. . Let us show you how it will pay you. Sm The White E. W. HILL, MGR. In the business district A SUMMER NECESSITY ' the properly served noon luncheon, enjoyed among pleasant surroundings is even more important in summer than in winter. Phil Metschan personally insures a carefully se lected, menu suitable for these sleepy days. The Imperial Grill LUNCHEON FIFTY CENTS. Annex Mot ei Washington Street. Corner 12th. Main 5081 Phones A 6621. CHAS. H. ROWLEY, Mar. Rates' per month, one or two persons in same room, $15 to $25 per month with bath privilege, $30 to $45 per month with pri vate bath, $50 to $75 per month for two rooms with bath be tween. SPECIAL RATES PER WEEK AXD REASONABLE RATES PER DAY F.W.BALTES& COMPANY INVITE YOUR INQUIRIES FOR First and Oak Streets PRINTING Phones Main 16S A 1165 g Si- a w BEN F.GREENE. PRESIDENT 34-54: STARK STREET reservations. A. C. BOWERS. Manager. GAINER THIGPEN, Ass't. Man. you will fS5 1 our money a can - white label Company l BROADWAY. for your convenience. Kingcraft The King of Chairs You would be drawn to it in the midst of a hun dred others. It adds to the home that sense of luxurious comfort and cheerful welcome. Your dealer will show you Kingcraft Chairs.' (The name is -plainly stamped on every piece.) Oregon Chair Company Portland, Oregon THREE CLASSES OF MEDICINES are the Animal, Vegetable and Min eral, of which the "Vegetable Kingdom furnishes by far the most and the best. , Over 700 varieties of roots, plants and herbs are known by phar macists to have medicinal value, and probably the "Indian Medicine Man" knows of as many more. It was in this most interesting study, more than forty years ago, that Lydia E. Plnkham, of Lynn, Mass., discovered her now famous Vegetable Compound for woman's ills, which has proved of in calculable value to hundreds of thou sands of American women. Its won derful success proves its merit.