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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1910)
13 THE 8U5TDAY OKEGOMAN. PORTLAND, JUNE 26. 1910. FESTIVAL DONORS MORE-THAN 1600 Amount Already Collected for Recent Rose Fiesta $38,- K OOO, With More Pledged. $16,400 PAID FOR PARADES President IKojt Gives Out Prelimi nary Statement, but Entire List of Kccelpts and 'Expenditures Is Xot Ready. Mora tharr. 1600 citizens subscribed to the Portland Rose Festival of 1910.. The amount already collected Is $38,000 and there is considerable moaey yet to come Into the treasury. At present these is a balance of cash on hand of 110O. The heaviest outlay was for the parades, on which 116,400 was expended. The full Rose Festival statement will be presented to the 'members at the annual meettn.gr In September. The following Is a preliminary state ment issued yesterday by Ralph W. Hoyt. president of the Portland Rose Festival Association, of the principal expenditures: Floats and parades.. SiHS Music B0 Publicity O?4'" Decorations and prizes -. Expenses of otflce and den 2M Soliciting and - collecting ?!? Csh on hand - l.lOO Total 38.000 The statement of the grandstands and other varied receipts is not yet completed, but will be listed with other receipts that have yet to be com piled. Following is a partial list of the subscribers, including all those whose donation to the funds of the associa tion was 50 or over: Adamant Company . - Albers Bros. Milling Company TS Allen & Lewis !;? L,. & M. Alexander C. W. Atkinson n 1. Aronson . ... ' " A. H. Averill Machinery Company.... CO BanHeld-Veysey Fuel Coqipany 30 Bank ol California lO" Baltimore Lunch Comi-any 30 Balfour. Guthrie & Co 300 Baggage & Omnibus Company 3 50 Barber Asphalt Paving Company 200 Blumaeur-Frank Drug Oornpany 50 Jonathan Bourne. Jr... JOO V. C. Bristol 100 Brownsville Woolen Mills SO Thomas Scott Brooke r0 Burrell Investment Company . .. 300 ' Bushong & Co : 50 J. Byron - "3 Buffum & Pendleton .50 Canadian Bank of Commerce 50 Carey & Kerr 50 Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Pttul Railroad 10O Chamber of Commerce - 3.10 Chinese Benevolent ABsociatlon... .... 400 Archbishop Christie 50 clossett &. Devers 03 City Dye Works , 50 Woodard. Clarke & Co loo Clarke Bros 50 i'itlsens Bank - 50 Columbia Milling Company..... no C. W. Cornelius 200 John Deere Plow Company. 50 Bilers Piano House , 300 East Side Mill & Lumber Company SO Eastern Otflttlng Company 50 Eastern & Western Lumber Company.. 100 H. W. Corbett estate loo Failing estate 300 A. C. Feldenhelmer. CO J- 1. Flnley & Son... . , no First National Bank 500 Flelsclmer. Mayer & Co... . . 200 Fobes Supply Company.. 50 mass & Prudhomme 50 . Foster & Ktelser 50 F. Friedlander ........... 50 W. P. Fuller & Company.. loo I. Gevurtz & Sen no Ft. L. Gllsan loo ioodyear Rubber Company........... 50 M. A. Gunst & Company.... 50 Hall's Restaurant ;. 50 Hartman & Thompson 50 J. E. Haseltine & Company no Hazelwood Creamery 200 A Heitkemper Company v 75 L. C. Henrickson Company..'... , no Hlbernla Savings Bank r0 -" Hlckc-Chatten Engraving Company 1.. 50 M.. . L. Hoi brook .' r,0 Edwara Holman 50 Honeyman Hardware Company . . . '. r0 Hotel Oregon ,, a. House .. "m Hotel Lenox Ao Hurley. Mason & Co "..'." " " " 50 Imperial Hotel "t 500 Independent Coal Company " ' a Irwln-Hodson Company ... . 100 Jacobs-Stine Company 50 Jaeger Brothers m 7-, H. Jennings & Son W. M. Killingsworth kn King estate '"" 10(1 Fred A. Kribs J,!o Theo Kruse ......... 20O Labbe Brothers" I!"" "no Ladd Tilton 1. 60o Lang & Company .............. km F. W. Leadbetter " " 50 I-(Tert Brothers no H. C. Leonard " loo Ton Lewis 50 Clementine F. Lewis 'm 50 Llpman-Wolfe & Co soo J. Lombard 3 00 Lumber mans National Bank '. 100 J. G. Mack Co 50 Ernest Miller ,10 Martin & Forbes 50 Marshall-Wells Hardware Co 50 Iaaon-Ehrman Company . - 100 Dan McAllen 54 W. O. McPherson & Co 60 S"eler & Frank Company 600 erchants National Bank 2SO Mitchell Lewis &. Staver 150 Musicians' Union 100 Kortonia Hotel 200 North Pacific Lumber Co , 100 Northern Pacific Railway.. 1000 O. C O'Reilly . 50 Olds. Wortman King 500 Otis Elevator Company 50 O. R. A N. Company ................. 10O0 Owl Drug Company 50 Oregon Brewers' Association ......... 750 Oregon Electric Company 150 Oregon Furniture Manufacturing Co. . 50 Oregon Hassam Paving Co 60 Oregon Real Estate Co 50 The Oregonlan " 500 Pacific Export Lumber Company CO Pacific Hardware & Steel Co "50 Pacific Iron Works CO Pacific Paper Company 50 Pacific Title & Trust Co 50 Peninsula Lumber Co.. 100 Perkins Hotel -, J. B. Pllktngton ' ' "50 33. R. Plttelkau 00 Porter Brothers 35O Portland Athletic Company 350 Portland Flouring Mills 100 Portland Gas Company 100 Portland Hotel Company . . . 300 Portland Iron Works 59 Portland Lumber Company .. 200 Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. . 2500 Portland Seed Company 75 Ira F. Powers . 1 Potter-Chapin Realty Company 73 Prince Shoe Company 50 Henry Rebe .'. 50 Richards Hotel Company ........... CO Roberts Brothers ot Robinson & Co "5 John O. Roebllng Sons Company yo J. R. Rogers 50 Samuel Rosenblatt & Co 50 Royal .Bakery .................... 200 Russell Blyth 59 J. F. Sanburn I 50 Sanitarium Company ................. "100 George Schultz ................. 50 Sechtem & Fait " 50 Ben Selling jn W. M. Seward " jqq John P. Sharkey Company 100 Sherman & Clay Company 75 Sherman & Harmon W. S. Slbson I 10V) , Skidmore Drug Company .i W. K. Smith. Jr ..." 50 Standard Box & Lumber Company.... 50 Standard OH Company ' cj A. B. Stelnbach & Co 50 F. C. Stettler 1ni T. A. Stewart r0 fitrobel A Barenatecher 150 Ptudebaker Bros. & Co. (wetland & Son 100 Title Trust Company 50 Troy Laundry Co ; BO Tull & Olbbs 2ft John Twohy 100 t'nlon Meat Company 350 United states National Bank, 250 . United Railways .iU , .......,,. . 100 Wadhams & Co ... 50 Wadhami A Kerr Bros 300 Warren Construction Company ....... 2i0 Ty. M. Watson 3O0 Western Timber Company 50 Willamette Iron r Steel Works 100 Willamette Timber & Investment Co. 50 Martin Winch 50 Wisconsin Logging & Timber Co 50 Wise Dental Company 50 Fred G. Wonder 100 UNION RUNS DOWN AGENT C. M. Haybl, Accused of Theft, Ar rested In Xevada City. Cecil M. Haybl, business agent of the Painters' Union, who left here some time ago, after having cashed a check for 775 belonging to the labor organ ization, has been arrested at Nevada City, Cal.. according to advices received by the Portland union. Three years ago Haybl was sent here to superintend a strike instituted by the Portland painters, and while in the capacity of their agent. It is charged, made away with numerous sums of money, though the count on which he has been arrested is based on the cash ing of the $775 check. He was traced to Nevada some time ago, but managed to disappear from there before he could be arrested. His capture at Nevada City is the result of persistent efforts of the Portland union to apprehend him. He Is said to have desrtod his wife and family in San Francisco, after leaving Portland. Arrangements aro now be ing made for his return to Portland for trial. "PERSONALMENTION. R. B. MeKen2ie, of Eugene, is at the Perkins. Harry Wood, of Nampa, Idaho, Is at the Seward. J. W. Bounds, a merchant of Eugene, is at the Oregon. John McMillan, of Pocatello, Idaho, is at the Lenox. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Llvealey, of Salem, are at the Portland. John P. Nyquist, of Seattle, is regis tered at the Oregon. F. N. House, a mining man of Payette, Idaho, is at the Perkins. . J. S. Dellinger, editor of the. Iaily Ai torian, is at the Imperial. W. E. Taggart and B. Mayfleld, of En terprise,' are at the Perkins. C. P. Spooner and family, of Seattle, are staying at the Portland. Mr. and Mrs. ' H. C. McAllister, of Salem, are at the Imperial. D. E. Kennedy, editor of the Baker City Herald, is registered at the Imperial. C. B. Zeek, a prominent member of the G. A. R. of. Bandon. Is at the Lenox. W. E. Carpenter, traveling freight agent of the Oregon & Washington Railway, Is at the Imperial. J. M. Root, editor of the Medford Trib une and president of the Medford-Crater LrfLke Road Association, is at the Seward. John A. Gellalty, Mayor of Aberdeen, and family, are at the Cornelius. They arrived by automobile and will return the same way they came. Mayor Gellalty says the roads are very rough. Mrs. S. Murray Williams will leave tomorrow for a visit with friends and relatives In Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. Williams intends to spend a week in Colorado and a week in Tennessee, where sh will visit friends. She expects to be away for at least three months. Mrs. James D. Ogden and daughter Helen left yesterday to spend Sunday In Seattle. They will then go by steamer to Victoria and Vancouver, thence by Canadian Pacific to Banff Springs, Winnipeg, and on to Minne apolis to spend the Summer with rela tives. H. L. Bohnstedt. B. H. Higbee, J. B. Halverson, O. Mills, Dr. A. E. Benjamin, Miss Cook, Miss Gayman, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. George and R. L. Russell, of Min neapolis; C. L. Schmidt and son, of Mani towoc, Wis., and G. F'sher, of England, are at the Cornelius. The party came from the East to look at land at Cres well. Dr. James Wendel Rosenfeld, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sol Rosenfeld, of 221 Ford street, returned this week from Johns Hopkins, where he has completed his course, having been graduated as one of the honor men. His brother, Arthur, who is expected home the end of the month, will finish his course in the same school next year. Both of the young men expect to spend a year or two In the universities of Europe before beginning the practice of their profession. NEW YORK, June 25. (Special.) The following persons from the Pacific Northwest registered at New York ho tels yesterday: From Portland At the St. Andrew, W. H. Smith; at the Woodward, Mrs. N. E. Ayer, Miss M. Ayer; at the Welling ton, Miss E. Binswanger; at the Hoff man, J. O. Yancey. From, Astoria At the Hermitage, M. Kerr. From Taeoma At the Martha Wash ington, B. S. McDonald; at the Grand Union, A. H. Brix; at the Murray Hill, A. M. Thomas. - From Spokane At the Gregorian, Miss J. Palmer; at the Continental, R. Dilkes, I and E. Horton. From Seattle At the Normandie, A. L. Forge; at the Hotel Astor, C. T. Miners and wife; at the Bartholdi, H. M. Bear. CHICAGO, June 25. (Special.) The fol lowing persons from the Northwest are registered at Chicago hotels: From Portland Kenett Mackenzie, Os- Cut this out and send votes to Boy Mayor Contest. The Oregonlan. OREGONIAN BALLOT FOB PORTLAND BOY MAYOR. One Cent a Vote. For Mayor. Help raise (10,0,00 tor Boys' Club. Boy Mayor, under 16. to be voted during week of June 19-20, inclusive. Cab inet to be chosen next highest in order. Boys' Week, June. 27-80. Vote as many times as you wish on this ballot at one cent a vote. Send money and ballot to Boy Mayor Contest. The Oregonlan. car Rittenberg, at the Blackstone; Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Scott, at the Brevoort; L. O. Swetland, at the Lsalle. From La- Grande L. M. Jensen, at the Majestic. CHICAGO, June 25. (Special.) Portland people registered at Chicago hotels today as follows: At the Congress Mrs. Amelia Smith, Blackstone; Oscar Riettenber. At the Lasalle Mrs. C. S. Jackson, Phillip L. Jackson, F. C Jackson. " OUR OWN. A well-seasoned pipe is man's solace, if if he has really good tobacco. It takes a particular tobacco to suit the fas tidious smoker. "OUR OWN MIXTURE" is not a haphazard, chance production. It is the product of experience, skill and care, both In selection and in preparation. It is composed of the finest Havana, perique and Turkish, with the famous rich Virginia leaf of the Blue Ridge dis trict, cured in the open air. In correct proportions, these make a smooth, mel low, satisfying blend which does not burn the tongue nor produce any injurious ef fects. If you desire the acme of smoking content, ask for "Our Own Mixture." if your tobacconist does not carry it you can secure it from Slg Slchel & Co., 92 Third, or branches. Third and Wasiirjrton and .Wella-Fargo BId& . WEINSTEIN IS BACK Former Leader Again Ahead in Boy Mayor's Race. DARK HORSES THREATEN San Francisco Visitors Due Today for . Week of Frolic Xew Youthful Executive to Be Inaugurated Tomorrow Night. 1 IEADEB9 IX BOY MAYORALTY ' CONTEST. Sam Welnstein 18.608 1 Bud Kribs 15,228 . Harold Meier 4826 , Don Tarpley 4819 ' 1 George COlton 4438 ' Mosea Sachs 3630 . Lester Oakley '. 2335 1 Kiel Malarke 2457 ' Frederick Porta- 1976 Clymer Noble 16T7 ...... 4 Sam Welnstein, the newsboy candidate for boy Mayor, jumped back into the lead of the Mayoralty race yesterday, passing Bud Kribs, who had held first place. The newsboy practically doubled his vote, sending it to the large total of 18,808. Many votes were also cast for Bud Kribs, who now has 15,288 votes. It Is a close race between the two young sters and promises to develop into a great struggle up to the finish at 10:30 o'clock tomorrow morning, when the bal loting will come to an' end. So far it appears that one of these two will be the first boy Mayor of Portland, although there is a strong possibility that some one of the candidates who 1b now running in the ruck will come for ward some thousands of votes at the last minute and put a new face on the situation. Others Change Places. There were two shakeups yesterday in the order of things. DonTarpley and Harold Meier exchanged places, young Meier going into third place and Tarpley, for whom the voting was strong on Fri day, going back to the fourth, position. Save for these changes there were no reversals in the order of the eight lead ers, but the ninth man is a dark horse whose sudden advent to that position from 33d place has caused a commotion in the ranks. He is Frederick Porter, who kept in the background until yesterday. He held 125 votes on Friday night and now comes forward with 1976 votes. Porter's rise has put Clymer Noble down to tenth place and has forced Crosby Shevelin clear out of the list of leaders. The voting to last night was as follows :- 8am Welnstein .18608Eugene Murphy . 7 Bud Kribs .. .xooS'Walier oormacK. . . 420lpaul Cudllpp . 481H Louis Bremner .. . 4438;Carlton Yerex ... . 3'iBO1 Ernest Morgan .. . 2935Ed. Romlg. Jr. .. 56 Harold Meier Don Tarpley . George Colton 59 50 60 40 40 39 S7 37 27 25 23 23 23 22 22 2o 16 15 12 11 10 io 10 IO 10 10 5 5 2 1 1 -. 1 1 1 Moses Sacks tester uaKley reii Maiarkey 74oliJimei l eea Frederick Porter. 197rtRalph Calvin .. Clymer Noble 1677iRoy Assman Andrew Ovall .. Crosby Shevlln . Sam. Greenberg. Clarence Broddie Edw. Thompson. Percy Menefee .. Wade Irvine Wiley Bent Jack Dolph ..... Hugh McKenna.. Hunt Maiarkey . Paul Brown .... Howard Godal .. Wayne Coe Lambert Wood . Th. Kruse, Jr. . . Sam Tonkey . . . James Wall ..... Jack Tucker .... Leo Baruh ..... Robert Storey ... R. Cecil Holman. W. WIndnagle . . Fred. Benson . . . W. W. Patterson. Forest Berg .... Myron Kllgore .. 1147 Cameron Galln . . 1032 Kenneth Joy . 944 Edwin Feary .... 8H Jennings 590, Raymond Staub. . 568lLeo Hanson olOIThomas Hall 506 Ray Delahunt . . . 528 Geo. H. Tobias . . 44olAUan Hanson . . . 3S4IGeorge Murray .. 378 Gordon Manary .. 350;Earl Dakln SiitS'Wilson Shifter . . 28 Ralph Pollock .. . 206 William Wilson . 200 SUverstone 198 Isaac Wise 177 Harold Moell . . . 160 Woodford 156 George Maiarkey. 150 George Eber. .... 105Herman Friedman 100;phll Friedman . . 100 Harry Goodman . lOOj Eddie Mazurky .. 80 i San Francisco Boys Coining. The boys from the Columbia Park Club, of San .Francisco, will arrive in Portland on their special car at 10 o'clock this morning, and the programme of the Boys' Week will be taken up at 10 o'clock to night. The boys from San Francisco will be tired as a result of their long journey and do not wish any demonstra tion on their arrival, but prefer to spend the day in rest and in going over the city at their leisure. After that, how ever, they will be on the Jump all the time, and in the next four days they will crowd as much Jollity and fun as Port land has experienced In many a day. The programme tonight will consist of an illustrated lecture at the Y. M. C. A. by Sidney 3. Peixotto, the head worker of the club. He will talk on "Work With Boys," and will tell of what has been accomplished In San Francisco toward bettering the condition of the boys of that city and will point out how a simi lar institution will do wonders in a like way In Portland. It is purely for the purpose of establishing something of the same sort of an institution in Portland as is In the Bay City which has caused this big Boys' Carnival to be held here. All the funds, both from the voting eon test and from the many entertainments, will go toward buying a site and building a clubhouse for the boys, where manual training, healthy athletic exercises and reading-rooms may be placed to take the boys from the streets and start them to ward higher ideals. ' Lads Bring Entertainers. The boys, 40 in number, have an ex cellent band and a team of vaudeville and minstrel performers who have trav eled all over the country.. For 12 years these boys have been training together and they have a series of entertainments, both comic and athletic, which would do justice to any troupe of trained perform ers in the country. They promise a week of entertainment which w4U be well worth patronizing for the enjoyment to be ob tained as well as for the fact that the patrons will be aiding toward establish ing a boys' home here. The San Fran cisco youngsters . have played before crowded houses wherever they have ap peared, and on the repetition of their shows they have turned thousands away. The crowning event of the Carnival will take place Monday night. Then the boy Mayor will be inaugurated. Who -he will be no one can tell. That the present leaders will have a good chance for mem bership on the boy council of five- seems assured, but no one can ear wblcb. of the many candidates will come- out vic torious. The results will all be in Mon day and the boy Mayor will step into the chair for a week of absolute rule. The inauguration will take place after a banquet, at the Portland Hotel, at which the successful candidates and the visitors from Pan Francisco will be the guests of honor. This banquet will be given by H. C. Bowers, manager of the Portland Hotel. The San Francisco band will give a concert in the hotel court at 5:30 P. M., and immediately following the banquet some Portland youngster will cease being a youngster and will become the august Mayor of all the boys in Port land. Mayor Simon to Be There. Mayor Simon will be present and will present the boy Mayor with the keys of the city and incidentally will step down from his exalted position for a week, as far as the boys are concerned, and In stead of being a ruler will listen to words of wisdom from the boy council. Benny Katz, the first boy Mayor of San Fran cisco, will also be present and will de- J nvcr an aaareas iuuuwiiib me Mayor Simon. Other speakers will e the boy Mayor himself. General T. M. Anderson, Judge C. H. Gantenbein, Wal lace McCamant, Ralph Hoyt, Ben Sell ing, R. L. Sabin, Roger Sinnott and Father McDevitt. The programme for the week follows: Sunday evening. June 26. Y. M. C. A. Auditorium, 7:45 o'clock Illustrated lecture on "Work With Boys," by Sidney S. Peix otto, head worker of the club. Monday, June 27. Concert in Hotel Port land court at 5:30 P. M. by the Columbia Park Boys' Band. Banquet at Hotel Port land at 6 o'clock, with Inauguration of Boy Mayor of Portland. Speeches by Benjamin Katz. Boy Mayor of San Francisco, and the Boy Mayor of Portland, and by citizens. Tuesday afternoon. June 28. Parade ' to Multnomah Field, 2 o'clock. Sports day at Multnomah Field. Exhibition game of Aus tralian football, shown for the first time In Portland, as played by the Columbia Park boys 38 times In all parts of Australia. Base ball game. Portland Newsboys' team. vs. Columbia Park , Boys' Club. Tuesday night, 8:15 o'clock, at Portland Theater, original vaudeville programme. As given 132 times by the Columbia Park Boys' Club during their 30,000-mile tour through the South Seas and Australia, under the personal direction of Major Sidney 8. Peixotto, N. G. C. president of the Pacific Athletic Association of the Amateur. A thletio Union, the Public Schools Athletic League of San Francisco, and the American Boys Scout division of Northern California. HOTELS ASSERT RIGHTS Oregon Association to Take Part in Anti-Prohibition Campaign. The Oregon State Hotel Association, at a special meeting yesterday after noon, elected George Dixon, publisher of the Hotel News, assistant secretary of the association. Mr. Dixon has been commissioned to carry out Important work for the association in the com ing campaign. The American Hotel Men's Protective Association, representing the most prominent hotels of the United States and Canada, will hold its third annual convention In Portland some time in the present year. The local association will arrange for the entertainment of the visitors and endeavor to impress them with the fact that Portland is the best city on the map. The entertainment given the visiting members of the Hotel Men's Mutual Benefit Association last April has resulted In untold good to Portland and Oregon. The hotel men are looked upon as bureaus of Informa tion and their report of a city" or state has considerable weight among tour ists and homeseekers. The Oregon Association will take an active part in the antl-prohibltion cam paign this year. The hotels assert their right to maintain a supply . of liquor to meet the requirements of their patrons, and because of this contention they have been attacked by the prohibi tion forces. The fight will be carried to the polls. 'Among the prominent hotels of Portland that are members of the association are the Portland, Im perial. Oregon, Perkins, Cornelius, Bel vedere and others. GUILD ARRANGES FOR BOND Xew Receiver at Vale Prepares to Take Office July 1. H. G. Guild, who was recently appointed receiver of the land office at Vale, Or., a newly-created land district, has been spending the past few days in Portland awaiting the arrival of his bond from Washington, D. C. Receiver Guild ex pects to leave about the middle of the week in order to assume charge of the office about July 1. The district of which he will have charge has been created out of the old T,a Grande and Harney districts, and comprises, for the most part, arid land which can be improved by Irrigation. As there are several good-sized rivers in that section of the state, the already numerous irrigation projects will be increased ex tensively. Much of this land can be taken up as desert land, and many set tlers are commencing to realize the ad vantages of Irrigation and irrigated lands, as well as what is known as "dry farm ing." FREEMAN FEELS CONFIDENT Candidate for Piles' Seat Says He Expects to Win. Leigh R. Freeman, candidate on the Republican ticket for the United States Senate from Washington, was in Port land yesterday. Mr. Freeman is now finishing a cam paign tour which has taken him to almost every section of the State of Washing ton and which has lasted ten months. He will now tour Southwestern Washington In the Interests of his candidacy, planning to be in the field right up until the pri mary elections in September. Mr. Freeman is very enthusiastic over the outlook, saying that he expects to get the nomination very easily, although there are five other candidates against him. JOHNSON'S BODY GOES EAST Murdered Man's Brother Awaits Disposition of $1900 Savings. The body of William A. Johnson, who was murdered in a room at the Grand Central Hotel last Monday afternoon, was sent to the home of his parents at Lansford, N. D., last night. Walter Johnson, the brother of the deceased, will remain here, pending the disposition of the $1900 owned by the slain man, found in the possession of Carrie Kersh soon after her arrest for complicity in the crime. "LORIOT." A pure, invigorating confection, im ported by us from Europe. It has im portant medicinal qualities, is delightful to the palate, kills the odor of tobacco on the breath and is a remarkable aid to di gestion. Five cents in original packages. Carried by druggists, confectioners and tobacconists. If your dealer does not carry it Slg Slchel & Co., 92 Third, or branches at Third and Wash, and Wells Fargo Bldg. J. W. Rice Bead at Castle Rock. CASTLE ROCK. Wash., June 25. (Special.) J. W- Alee, u old resident l Wlisit $1 OO IBoys at ILsijke ILytle, PFtla.odPs Nesure LOCATION Stop and think" what made Coney Island, Atlantic City and Manhattan Beach, the popular watering places of the Atlantic Coast. There is only one answer their accessibility to the large cities. That's what makes Lake Lytle popular, but that's not all. The above sketch shows just where the P. R. & N. R. R. crosses Lake Lytle. It's right where the railroad and all the roads of Tillamook County meet at the Pacific Ocean. . Mr. Lytle, president of the P. R. & 1ST., in going over the survey of the road to Tillamook City, realized the many advantages of the Ocean, a beauti ful fresh-water lake with magnificent Garibaldi Beach between them. It afforded every attraction which resort patrons could command. He at once acquired the property, including the lake, had the beach platted, and it is now offered to the public as beautiful Lake Lytle. A Large Lake It is 1300 feet wide and 2600 feet long. It lies about 1000 feet back from the ocean. Lake Lytle lots are platted on this 1000 feet of beach. Can 3ou paint a-prettier picture? The ground around the Lake is covered with beau tiful spruce and pine trees, which offer ideal building sites for cottages. The Lake is pure mountain water, has a hard sand bottom and is warm in the shallow inlets. Being protected as it is from the winds, it is ideal for bath ing, safe for boating and fishing just the place for the women and children. WHAT $ 1 OO BUYS A lot 50x100 feet, covered with beautiful shade trees, graded streets, pure mountain water, all within a few minutes' walk of a railroad depot on the property. Sold on very easy terms. If you want one of these lots write or call this week. The railroad will shortly be in operation between Portland and Tillamook. Before it is, Lake Lytle will be sold out. Now is the time to buy. Leave it for two months and you cannot buy without paying a speculator something on top of present prices for his foresight. If you knew, that an investment of $25 now would buy you a $100 lot, which in one year, say next Summer, with the railroad carz-ying thousands of tourists into Lake Lytle, would command a price of $300, would you buy? That's what you may expect of Lake Lytle. Call upon us for a plat, a price list and particulars. " . V m ' RALPH ACKLEY, Agent, 605 corbett building and prominent farmer living west of this city, died yesterday afternoon of a complication of diseases. To add to his sufferings, he submitted to X-ray treat ments some time since and was badly burned in the operation. The burns never healed and caused him Intense pain. He leaves a wife and several children. Mr. Rice was born January 9, 18SS, in Brown Valley, Tuba County, California. The funeral will take place tomorrow afternoon. Exhibits Sent for Oregon Car. THE DALLES, Or., June 25. Special.) ALL PIANO Coupons Any Check From By GRAVES MUSIC CO. Ill Fourth Street ONE PRICE TO ALL WE NEVER RAISE ea.cii An exhibit of Royal Anne, Bing and Black Republican cherries and red rasp berries has been shipped by the secre tary of The Dalles Business: Men's As sociation to Spokane to be preserved for the Great Northern Railway Company. They will be placed in the Oregon demonstration car which will be sent into the Southern states for exploitation pur poses. More shipments will be made as fast as the products mature. Mrs. H. C. Dupuy Dead. OREGON CITY, Or.. June 25. (Spe cial.) Mrs. Leita Ownby Dupuy, wife of H. C. Dupuy, of this city, died at MANUFACTURERS' CHECKS and certificates, no matter by whom issued TAKEN AT FULL VALUE $1 to $131 Allowed on Any IResort the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Ownby, Friday morning, after a lingering illness. Mrs. Dupuy was born at Independence, Or.. November 20, 1881, and came to this city with her parents several years ago. She was a graduate of the Oregon Agricultural College at Corvallls, and married H. C. Dupuy October 5, 1904, at Dayton, Wash. She leaves beside her husband, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Ownby, two sisters. Mrs. A. C. Cox and Miss Bunny Ownby, of this city; two broth ers, Ivan Ownby, of Portland, and Pliny Ownby, of this city. The funeral will be held at her parents' home at Green point on Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. New Piano in Stock