Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, June 15, 1922, Image 1

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P NT P P
FIFTY-SIXTH YEAR, No. 24.
OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 15. 1922.
ESTABLISHED 1S6ff
TWO CANDIDATES
ENTER RACE FOR
SCHOOL DIRECTOR
EL T. Beverlin to Be Opponent
Of Present Chairman; Date
For Election Set June 19;
Heavy Vote Is Anticipated
2 MEMBERS OF BOARD
INDORSE J. E. HEDGES
Petition Favoring Incumbent
Signed By 66 Names; Poll
' Booth to be at City Hall.
E. T. Beverlin and J. E. Hedges, the
latter the present incumbent,- will be
. the candidates for school director at
Jrthe special election in Oregon City to
' lie held June 19. A petition- contain
ing. 66 names, together with, the ac-
.' ceptance of Mr. Hedges, was , filed
with the school clerk Monday.
The petition asking Mr. Hedges'
candidacy is headed by Roy B. Cox,
a member of the school board, and is
signed by J. A. Roake, also a member
of the board. A petition headed by
Carl 9. preen was circulated for Bev
erlin's candidacy and contained the
name of C. H. Meissner, who is also
a member of the board.
Service Is Cited
Hedges has served for a number of
years and at present is chairman ot
the board. The term Is three years.
The election this year will probably
see a 'comparatively heavy vote for
the reason that new territory has r
tently been annexed to me Oregon
City district. Mount Pleasant is now
under the jurisdiction of the local
board. Only one voting place, how
ever, at the city hall will be opened.
Petitions for a polling place to ac-
comodate the other, parts of the dist
rict, were received too late for the
board to take action this year.
The Hedges petition reads:
"Having faith in the good judgment
and independence of action cf Jos. E.
Hedges, present incumbent, knowing
of hi3 preparation and fitness for the
office, having known of his long and
yaluable service to our, school district
and our school children, and knowing
. his freedom from alliances that might
.hamper and restrict, his freedom of
: action in aiding in the government of
our schools, we..-.. request that -his
'name be placed on the ballot." The
signers were:
. . . Signers are Listed
Roy B- Cox, Fred Schwartz, Guy
Mount, Edward H. McLean, A. E.
Howard, Hugh S. Mount, Chas.
Schram, Joe Swartz, A H. Feitleson,
O. D. Eby, M. A. Lent, T. L. Charman,
H. P. Brightbill, W E. Good, H. S.
Goldman, J. B. Kerick, C. H. Roake,
J. A. Roake, Albert Roake, W. H.
Howell, P. S. ".Finucane, C. W. Pope,
W. H. Nelson, L. A. Harding, Julius
Goldsmith, Geo. M. Hankins, Henry
Boguslaski, Wm. Andresen, D. H,
Thomas, Frank Busch, -Annie Busch,
Edward J. Busch, F. W. Humphrys,
D. W. James, E. H. Strepmeyer, John
R. Humphrys, C. G. Miller, F. C. Gad
ke. Mary Kilmer, A. L. Beatie, L. R.
Noble, Theo. I. Payne, W. B. Stokes,
C. J. Hood, C. R. Hilgers, S. W. Hair,
Geo. A, Harding, Jennie B. Harding, J.
A. Kilmer,' Ed. KinzeL R. F. Caufield
J. G. Straight, W. J. Wilson, E. C.
Hackett, W. B. Eddy, Ralph J. Eddy,
Raymond P. Caufield, M. G. Nobel,
Elbert B- Charman, C. Barry, Mrs. C.
V. Barry, R. L. Holman, L. A. Nobel,
Wallace B. Caufield, Alene Phillips
Hal E. Hoss. '
OREGON CITY SCHOOLS
ADD 3 EXTRA TEACHERS
Petition For Added Voting
Booth Is Granted But No
Effective At This . Election.
Additional memers of the teaching
corps of the Oregon -City schols were
named at a meeting of the board of
directors Thursday evening. Miss
Grace Spiger, Oregon City, a gradu
ate of Belingham Normal schol; Miss
Minnie Davis, Gilbert. Or., and J. W.
Gantenbein, Pirtland, were elected to
positions on the staff.
The board elected the following jan
itors: -George T. Johnson and H. A.
Rayl, high school;. Fred Erickson,
Barclay; Herman Biermanr,Eastham,
and Mrs. G. L. Durrell, Mount Pleas
ant.
A petition signed by several taxpay
ers, asking that an additional voting
booth be esfablshed at Seventh and
Molalla streets for the school election.
June 19, met approval, but, due to the
fact that the law requires that notice
of the date and place of meeting be
published more than two weeks pre
ceding the election, the board was
powerless to grant the request. It is
the plan of the board before another
election to' establish one or more ad
ditional polling places to serve the
widespread territory comprised in the
district.
SUBPOENA IS SERVED AS
LADY STEPS FROM BATH
Man Forces Way Into Home
And Accosts Nude Woman
Despite Screams of Maid.
RECALL ACTION IN
GLADSTONE FAILS
TO MATERIALIZE
Contract Is Let
To House Oldest
LO.O.R Lodge
On the wall of a. lodge room on one
of the islands In the Pacific ocean,
there hangs' an Odd Fellow charter
that once bore the name of Oregon Ci
ty. The name has been scratched out
with a few pen strokes and the word
"Honolulu" written beneath in a broad
hand. That charter is the original
document which authorized the first
I. O. O. F. lodge west of the Rocky
Mountains, and the events which
brought it to the-'Hawaiian islands
date back to 1853, the date of the for
mation of an Odd Fellow chapter on
the banks of the Willamette at Ore
gon City.. .
That was nearly seven decades ago.
On November 1, when the - seventy
year period has nearly elapsed, the
local organization ', will take posses
sion of new quarters, one of the finest
structures to . house any order of its
nature in the west. The final con
tract for the construction of the Odd
Fellows building at Seventh and
Washington streets, was awarded by
the lodge Thursday night. The lodge
The projected recall of the mayor .35.000. Th
Proponent Of Move To Oust
-Mayor. and 3 Members Of
City Council Refuses To
Discuss Status Of Affair.
COUNTER PETITION IS
UNDER CONSIDERATION
Street Committee , Chairman
Denies Any Identity With
Change In Adminbtration.
. . . : i . , mariatrmfl :
ana. inree couuunucu . , contrapt for th huildine. xclusiv of
failed to materialize over the week
end. The much touted peiuiona
which were to have been in circulation
Saturday afternoon for the recall of
Mayor Vedder and Councilmen .Frost,
R. Freytag and O. E. Freytag had not
made their appearance by luesday
evening.
A. D. Paddock, originator of the re
call, Tuesday refused to discuss the
status of the affair. Asked forf a
statement, he curtly replied that the
matter was none of anyone's d d
business.
Whether or not the threat of a re
call will be carried through was
doubted in Gladstone Tuesday after
noon. The movement was cnaracier-
ized as the outcome of a change made
in the office of water collector. The
And Accosts Nude Woman collection of water rents was formerly
handled by Mrs. Paddock, but .has
been transferred to Mrs. Carrie Terry,
and will be collected at the postoffice
instead of at Paddock's drug store
beginning the first of the month.
When Paddock broached the recall,
no definite grounds for the action
were given other ithan "inefficiency"
of the members of the administration
against whom the action was taken.
Hints at certain street improyoment
matters were made in a veiled way.
The name of Chambers Howell, a
member of he council and chairman
of the street committee, was widely
mentioned Tuesday in the discussion
of the recall movement. Howell, how
ever, denied any connection with the
recall and stated that he had no in
terest whatever in it. He said further
that he knew nothing of any petitions
for a recall being placed in circulation.
NEW YORK, June 13. Mrs. Robert
W. Chambers, wife of the author, had
a harrowing experience yesterday
when a process server forced his way
Into- her home, ran to the third floor
with a maid screaming at his heels
and served her with a. subpoena, while
she stepped" naked from her bath.
the wiring, plumbing and
was awarded to Stephenson and Kaul-
back, 386 Montgomery, Portland, at
approximately $27,000.
Division Oldest In West
Although It is to be the home of the
oldest division of the order In the
west, the building will be known un
der the name of Oregon Lodge Num
ber Three. The loss of the original
charter is the story of a trip around
the horn, an American postmaster in
Honolulu and a mystery which even
to this day has never been completely
solved.
In 1852 Oregon City applied for a
charter which was granted. With
much ado, the papers were started on
their way around the horn. But they
disapeared. Just how and why was
never found out. ) Then they turned
up in the Hawaiian islands. The post- j
master there had been attempting to I
organize an I. O." O. F. charter and
P1L&P. GRANTED
CONCESSION TOR
FREIGHT TRAFFIC
MM I.
New Franchise Approved By
Oregon City Council After
Conference With Officials
And Local Business Men.
LIMIT PLACED UPON
DAYTIME LOG HAULING
Changes In Original Draft Of
Ordinance Few; Provision
Meaning To Be Clarified.
A franchise, extending tne period of
heating ) freIgllt concessions of the Portland,
Railway Light and Power company
until 1942, was passed by the city
council .on first reading at a special
session held Tuesday afternoon. ' The
action of the coup cU followed a con
ference of a committee of local busi
ness men and the traction company
officials. Th concessions granted by
the city are in return for the aid given
by the P. R. L. & P. In the financing
of the South End road.
Practically no changes were made
in the ordinance from its form as pre
sented to the council Monday evening
when the business men requested a
committee ito look it over. The length
of the freight trains to be allowed the
P. R. L. & P. during the day time is to
be fifteen cars and the trains are to
be limited to uvo In number. The un
derstanding was reached that the use
of the day hours for freight hauling is
BIDS TO BE ADVE61
ON ROAD NEAR MulALLA
Four and Half Mile Stretch
From Wright's Bridge Will
Be Improved with Concrete.
Bids are to be advertised for the
construction of a nine foot concrete
road from Wrights' bridge to Molalla
corners, a distance of four and a half
miles, under the decision reached by
the county court Saturday.
The Improvement will be handled
under the bond road program if pos
sible, the court indicates. The deci
sion is the result of a conference with
the court held by a number of the
people from Molalla who were in the
city Saturday for the purpose of con
ferring with the court.
In the call for bids will be included
an additional, four miles of roadway,
two miles being South end road,
which will be of similar construction.
The remaning two miles is known as
the Central Point road, of which the
first half mile will be a sixteen foot,
concrete center and remaining por
tion a nine foot center. This will
make a road program for the coming
year that will call for the expendi
ture of $160,000.
aUTOCARAVANTO
TOUR VALLEY FOR
GROCERS' PICNIC
Meeting In Portland Plans Big
Parade To Advertise Retail
Men's Frolic At Gladstone
Park On July Twenty Sixth.
AFFAIR WILL ECLIPSE
ANY PREVIOUS EVENT
CANBY SCHOOL ELECTION
IS TO BE HELD JULY 26
VERDICT OF $750 GIVEN
IN AUTO DAMAGE ACTION
POLICE HOLD NEGRO FOR
MALLET GIRL MURDER
JACKSOJV, Mich., June 10. A ne
gro taken from a box car at Kalama
zoo, a short distance east of here this
morning, is held by local police for
examination in connection with the
slaying here Thursday night of Miss
Alice Mallet, matron of the Crittenton
Home for Girls.
The prisoner, who gave his name as
Freeman Hackett, was unable to give
a satisfactory account of his move
ments since Thursday, according to
the police. The cuffs of his shirt
were bloodstained and his right wrist
was bruised.
Physicians who examined Miss Mal
lett's body this afternoon announced
she had been criminally assaulted.
GERVAIS CATHOLICS LOSE
$10,000 CHURCH BY FIRE
GERVAIS, June 10. The Gervais
Catholic church was destroyed by fire
this morning at 1 o'clock. The origin
of the fire has not been determined,
but it is supposed that the cause was
defective wiring. The 'loss is $10,000,
with $3500 insurance. The school will
be rebuilt at once. Church services
will be held in the school building
temporarily. ..
V, '
A verdict of $750 was won yester
day in the case brought in the circuit
court here by Frank P. Strabat, of
Portland against the Pacific Highway
garage. The damages were asked as
the result of an accident when the
plaintiff was struck -by a truck oper
ated by H. A. Raynor, an employee of
the garage. The accident took place
at East Broadway and Victoria
streets, Portland, on ' November 18
1921.
In the original complaint $7,500 to
gether with attorney's fees and costs
was asked. The jury was composed
of Wiliam Lewis, ' Maggie Johnson,
Augusta B. Haberlach, Adam Keil,
Aurie Draper, Fred C. Gooderidge
Sam J. Jones, Grover C. Pomeroy,
Elizabeth M. Ingram, Clara E. An
thony and Louise Kamarath.
Income Tax Law
Bills Is Filed by
BEN DEY JR. IS HURT IN
AUTO TRUCK ACCIDENT
Benjamin Dey, Jr., six-year-old son
of Attorney and Mrs. Benjamin C
Dey, of Riverside, met with an acci
dent Saturday morning while seated
on the rear of an ice .truck near the
Dey home when he "was struck by
one of the large pieces of ice that
slid from the truck when, going up
grade.
The lad's arm was badly ' crushed
and lacerated, several bones "being
broken.- He was rushed to the Ore
gon City hospital where, the injuries
were attended to, and Saturday eve
ning the boy was resting easy; '
WATER FOR OAK LODGE
Whether or not Milwaukee will fur
nish water to the Oak Lodge district,
is to be decided by the council of that
c'ty after a oonfeernce with the, en
gineer who installed the r Milwaukie
system. It is indicated that if suffi
cient water is available the service
will be extended.
The matter was presented to the
council Monday night- by representa
tives or the Oak Lodsre district. This
district, recently formed for water
purposes, includes the valley territory i
Detween Gladstone and Milwaukie.
Originally plans were made for the
construction of an independent sys
tem (to secure Bull Run water but the
engineers reported that this would be
very expensive and the commissioners
regarded the cost as practically prohibitive.
State Grangers
SALEM,- June 9. iA bill providing
for a state graduated income tax,
initiated by the Oregon state grange,
of which C. E. Spence is president,
was filed with Secretary of -State
Kozer today.
The term "income," the bill ex
plains, includes the-following:
All rent of real estate.
. All nterest derived from money
loaned or invested in notes, mort
gages, bonds or other evidences of
debt of any kind whatever.
All wages, salaries of fees received
for services, provided that compensa
tion to public officers for public ser
vice shall not be computed as part
of the taxale income in such cases
where the taxation thereof would e
repugnant to the constitution of the
state or naion.
All dividends, sock dividends, prof
its or undivided profits derived from
stock or from th purchase and sale
of any property or other valuables ac
quired within three years or from
any business whatever.
All royalties derived from any
source whatever except those for
which there are specific exemptions.
Further, the measure provides that
so much of the income of any person
residing within the state as is derives
from rentals, stocks, bonds, securities
or evidences of indebtedness shall be
assessed and taxed whether such In
come is derived from sources within
or without the tate."
Certain deductions are provided for
In the bill and the following types of
incomes are listed as exempt:
To an individual income up to and
including $1500'.
To husband and wife, $2500.
For each child -.under the age of 18
years, $400.
For each additional person who Is
actually supported' by and entirely de
pendent upon the -.taxpayer for his
support, $400. - . ' . ..
The tax to be assessed, levied and
collected upon the incomes of all per
sons, firms, co-partnerships, corpora
tions, joint stock companie or associa
tions, except as -otherwise provided by
iaw,. aner malting - such deductions
and exemptions as hereinbefore al-
lQwed, shall be computed at the fol
lowing rates, to-wit:
On incomes of $1000, 1 ner cent:
$2000, 1 per cent; $3000, 2 per cent;
$4000, 2 per cent; $5000 3 per cent
$6000, 3'pr cent; $7000, 4 per cent
$8000, 4 per cent; $9000, 5 per cent;
$10,000, 5 per cent; $11,000 7 ner
kept the document. In the mean 'time to be only on the condition that the
Oregon City, worried over the loss, extra freight is necessary to the indus-
entered into communication with Bal
timore, but not before two other
towns in the state had secured their
recognition. Thus Oregon City, the
first lodge to M'pproved, becamo
Original Charter Traced
Then word of the original charter's
trip eastward was received, and sub
sequently the Honolulu applicants
were recognized. The original Ore
gon City charter, -however, was grant
ed them, and the name of the town in
the states scratched out. Today there
are two Oregon Lodges Number 1,
one in the summery islands and the
other in the states.
The new building which is to be
erected is to meet the growing de
mands of the order, which has now
230 members here. The upper floor
will be devoted to lodge rooms,' ban
quet hall, kitchen club room and la
dies' rest room. One of the features
is the installation of a large stereop
tican machine in the lodge rooms.
The lower floor will be divided into
two stores, fronting on Seventh street.
One is to be occupied by Friedrich
and Son and the other is still under-
negotiation. Each is to be 26 feet in
frontage, running the entire length of
the building, 120 feet. The structure
itself, which is two stories high, will
be of reenforced concrete construc
tion, faced with light pressed brick.
The designing of the building was
done by White and Wilson.
Construction on the building is to
start at once, the contract calling for
completion by November 1. The ex
cavation for the basement and foun
dation is already completed.
OREGON GIRL BRUTALLY
SLAIN WITH AX, RAZOR
JACKSON, Mich., June 9. The
body of Miss Alice Mallott, 40, as
sistant matron of the Crittenton
Home for Girls here, was found with
the head crushed and throat slashed
near the home this morning. An ax
and razor had been used by her as
sailant and indications are that a long
struggle took place. No clew to the
slayer has been uncovered, but blood
hounds are being used in the pursuit.
Miss Mallott's parents are paid to
reside in Ontario, Ore.
:ol rv14 J .JU. 1.
that it cannot be handled during the
night hours.
P. R. L. & P, Head Attends
The conference preceding the coun
cil meeting was attended by Franklin
T. Griffith, president of the P. R. I.
& P., F. I. Fuller, vice president, Har
ison Allen, chief counsel forjjlie com
pany, Clarence Fields, uaffic manager
of the local road, Ralph Shepher, rep
resenting the Hawley Paper company,
O. D. Eby, city attorney, Wm. Andre
sen, Jack Toban, Linn Jones, John
Humphrys and M. D. Latourette, rep
resenting the business men. Mayor
Shannon, I. C. Bridges, Charles Kelly
and City Engineer J. R. Stafford.
Several additions to the wording of
the franchise were made at the sug
gestion of the ciijr attorney to clarify
the meaning of the provisions. Under
the terms of the franchise, the paving
on Main street south froi Third
street will be maintained by the com
pany until April 17, 1929, or to the ex
piration date of the old Fields fran
chise. After this time the thorough
fare reverts back to the city and th6
improvements incumbent upon the iff
dustrial plants who form the abutting
property.
Franchise Cut Stands
The reduction in the franchise fee
'rom $1000 to $500 will stand. The
session of the business men which
met during the morning made the sug
gestion that the original rate be main
tained but this action was afterward
dropped, he extension of the freight
franchise for 20 yeai was also ques
tioned but not changed when it was
pointed out that tne tue had been sat
to correspond with the existing pas
senger franchise
The morning meeting was attended
by William Andresen, John Hum
phrys, Fred Hogg, Linn Jones,vW. A.
TT..1T Tit . . . , .
iiuunor, w. ii. uauiieia, jonn Busch
jacK lODin, O. D. Eby, H. C. Stevens,
M. D. Latourette, Charles Kelly, AI
Price, c- G. Miller, W. T. Wright, Ben
Harding and G. F. Anderson. Andre
sen and Humphrys were named as
chairman and secretary and the com
mittee which appeared at the confer-
once named by the chair.
Consolidation of Fourteen of
Districts There Are To Be
Voted On; Petitions Out.
Entertainment To Be Evening
Feature; Many Prizes Given
By Merchants Open To All.
Petitions for a special election for
the consolidation of fourteen districts
and parts of two joint districts in the
vicinity of Canby were put into circu
lation at a special mas mseeting there
Monday night. The consolidation,
which is to be for high school admin
istrative purposes only, is to be -voted
on July 26.
E. E. Elliott, director and supervisor
of agricultural edacatlou of the State
Board for Vocational Education, and
Brenton Vedder, superintendent of
Clackamas county scnools, addressed
the meeting, wheh was attended main
ly by representatives' of the outlying
districts. The vote, it is pointed out,
in order to.be successful, will require
not only a majority of the total bal
lots, but 'also a majority in a majority
of the districts.
The consolidation plan involves the
operation of the Canby High school as
a union district and will bring tie
supervision of high school education
of the entire district under the con
trol of one board. The plan is in line
with a general consolidation policy
which Superintendent Vedder has in
augurated over the entire county. It
has been the subject of many meet
ings and has been under way for near
ly a year. The consolidation as being
presented to the people Is substan
tially that which was outlined at the
outset by Mr. Vedder, and from the
endorsement received throughout the
entire territory is expected to carry
by a sizeable majority.
9 MONTHS TERM PLAN
FOR OAK GROVE SCHOOL
NOTED JERSEY BREEDER
DISAPPEARS AT SHEDD
ALBANY, June 13. Friend3 and
relatives of C- C Dickson, of Shedd,
one of Oregon's most widely known
and extensive Jersey breeders, have
Instituted a search for him. 4Je has
been missing since Friday afternoon,
having been Been last in Albany,
where he was transacting business.
Before leaving he deeded all his prop
erty to his wife.
Dickson is believed by his relatives
PAPER COMPANY BUYS
CANADIAN TIMBER PLOT
to have wandered away. He was suf-
cent; $12,000, 8 per cent; $15,000. 10 ferine from after effects of influenza.
per cent; $20,000 11 per cent; $30,000, j it is said. Fears for his safety are
i per cent; $40,000, 13 per cent: $50.- entertained. He is a member of the
vvr c-em, over ou,uuu ie per I Shedd Masonic and I. O. O. F. lodges also own mills at West Linn, Ore.
- "and of the R. A. M. at Albany. and Camas, Wash.
000
cent.
VANCOUER, B. C, June 12. One of
the most important purchases of Brit
ish Columbia timber land for some
time past has just been consummated
by the sale to the Pacific Mills, Ltd.
or Vancouver ani Kan rTancisco, oi
a large tract of merchantable timber
holdings in the Queen Charlotte Isl
ands. The deal involves an expendi
ture of approximately $1,500,000, the
sale being made by the North Amer
ican Timber Holding company.
The Pacific Mills, Ltd., practically
controlled by San Francisco interests,
already has large timber and pulp
holdings in this province. Including
areas of pulp, created by the provin
cial government, and the new acreage
to be acquired will make it one of
the biggest timber concerns on .the
Pacific coast. The company is owned
oy interests in San Francisco, who
As a result of a majority of patrons
having signed questionnaires favoring
a nine months' term of school, the
Oak Grove school board has decided
to hold a nine instead of 10 months'
term next year. For several years a
10 months' term has been in vogue
here.-
The local schools will close next
week. The closing exercises will be
gin Friday of this week with an oper
etta by the primary grades. There
will also be two days of events next
week. Monday will be sports day and
observed as a holiday by the business
concerns of the community.
In the morning there will be the
tryouts and in the afternoon the fin
als. A picnic dinner will be held on
the grounds and all are invited to re
main for the evening when the eighth
grade play will be presented,
Tuesday at 1 p. m. the students will
assemble at the school house to get
their report cards. That evening the
sixth and seventh grades will give
their class play, a Japanese, under the
direction of Miss Gordon, to be fol
lowed by the eighth grade graduation
exercises, the class numbering 18
students.
BRITISH ACCEPT CHANGE
IN IRISH TREATY TERMS
LONDON, June 10. The British
signatories of the Anglo-Irsh peace
treaty today agreed to accept Arthur
Griffith's draft of the proposed con
stitution for the Irish Free State. The
document has been amended from its
original form to meet British opposi
tion to clauses which had been-- in
serted at the instance of Eamonn de
Valera and his Republican followers.
Griffith is president of the Dail Eire-ann.
Plans for an automobile caravan to
tour the Willamette valley as far
south as Albany and over the Mc
Minville loop to advertise the Grocers
picnic at Chautauqua July 26, were
laid at the meeting of the general
committee and the Booster club in
Portland Thursday evening. Joe
Dunne, of the Hazelwood Ice Cream
company, is in charge of the caravan.
Cooperating with the Portland mer
chants for the success of their annual .
frolic, to be held at Chautauqua park
this year for the first time, is a com- -mittee
comprising Arthur G. Beattie,
secretary of the Clackamas County -Business
Men's association, James A.
Brady, president oi the association,
Brenton Vedder, mayor of Gladstone,
Charles Dickey of the Hub Grocery,
and Hal E. Hoss, manager of the Ore
gon City Enterprise.
The affair, which always attracts
many thousand people each year, is
expected to eclipse any former picnic
by far, as the location at Chautauqua
park will permit many to attend the
evening performances. Previous pic
nics at Bonneville did not attempt en
tertainment after late afternoon, as
the . distance from Portland was too
great.
Prizes for various, events this year
will include a host of valuable arti
cles, a partial list of which follows.
Awards will be made for a great va
riety of stunts, and every person at
tending has an opportunity to win
valuable merchandise.
Some of tHe prizes are:
Pacific Coast Syrup Co.: 6 jars 1-lb.
Tea Garden Orange Marmalade, 2
gal. tins Tea Garden Golden Marsh
malow, 1 Case 12 gal. Tea Garden
and Liberty Bell Syrup.
' T. W. Jenkins: 1 Case Choc. "Ex
cello" Cake Flour, 1 Case "Curtis"
Marshmallow Cream.
The Fleischmann Co.: (Fleisch
mann's Special for Grocers' Wives
only) 1st prize, $4 cash; 2nd prize,
$3 cash; 3rd prize, $2 cash; 4th prize,
$1 cash.
Portland Flouring Mills Co.: 1 Case
2 doz. Cartons "Olympic" Assorted
Cereals, 1 bb. "Olympic" Flour.
Knight Packing Co.: 2 Cases 24 jars
Knight's Assorted Products, Bottle
Mustard for stand.
Mutual Creamery Co.: 10 lbs. "Maid
O'Clover Butter," 3 bricks Ice Cream.
Tru Blu Biscuit Co.: 1 box Krause's
"Large Fancy" Chocolates, 1 2-lb. box
Krause's "Fruit and Nut Chocolates,"
1 Family Tin Tru Blu Ribbon Sodas,
doz. Household Sodas, doz. Tru
Blu Ribbon Sodas, 1 1-lb. box "Stellar"
Chocolates, 1 large box "Lavista," .
Doz. Grahams.
Crown Mills: 2 Doz. Cartons "Gold
en Rod Cereals Assorted."
Calumet Baking Powder Co.: 1 Case
"Calumet" Baking Powder.
Libby, McNeil & Libby (Mr. G. F.
Stowell): 2 Cases "Libbys Products."
Hazelwood Ice Cream Co.: lo Car
tons 12 each Polar Cakes, 5 (4 ricks)
Hazelwood Ice Cream.
Wadhams & Kerr Bros.: 1 Doz.
Monopole" Assorted Products.
Hudson Gram Co.: 1 Case 4 .doz.
Otter Brand Canned Fish.
Pacific Manifolding Book Co.: Or
der for $20.00 worth of salesbooks.
National Biscuit Co. (Mr. French) :
1 doz. "Uneeda Biscuits," 12 lb. Ca-
dy "Nabisco" Wafers, 12 lb. Cady
Lotus" Wafers.
Connor & Co.: 1 Doz. 2 lb. "Crim- "
son Rambler" can and maple syrup,
1 Doz. 2ys lb. "Melomar" Syrup.
Williams & Co.: 4 Doz. pkgs. Sara
toga Chips.
Allen and Lewis: 6 bottles "Sauers"
Vanilla extract, 1 box 50 "Toekda" Ci-"
gars.
Johnson-LIeber Co.: 8 pkgs., 3 each,
Hornby's Oatmeal, 6 Lots, 2 one quart
Cans Hipolite Marshmallow Creme,
4 Lots, 3 one lb. boxes Walter Baker's
Eagle Ground Chocolate, 6 Lots, 5
each, Creamettes.
Charles F. Berg: 1 pair "Phoenix"
Hose.
Neustadter Bros.: 1 pair "Boss of
the Road" overalls.
Wildman Cigar Co.: 1 box 25 "Tam
pa Star" cigars.
Winthrop Hammond Co.: $5 mer
chandise order.
Miles Mfg. Co.: 1 Case -Jellwell."
Swift & Co.: One case 30 1-lb. Car
tons Silver Leaf Brand Pure Lard,' 3
pieces Premium Bacon, 2 pieces Prem
ium Hams, 5 2-lb. pails Jewel Short
ening. H. J. Heinz Co.: 1 Case( Large Bos
ton Beans.
Brownsville Woolen Mills: 1 $1.50
shirt.
Albers Bros. Milling Co.: 1 case, 2
doz. Cartons Assorted Cereals.
Crescent Paper Co.: 1 box station-
prv. ,