Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, April 27, 1912, Image 1

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    3
The only dally newspaper be-
tween Portland and Salem; olrcu- $
les in every section sS Clacka-
mas County, with population of
30,000. Are you an advertiser?
THE WEATHER.
S Oregon City Fair; Northerly $
winds.
Oregon Fair; N ortler-
ly winds. $
WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 15 66
VOL. Ill No. 99.
OREGON CITY, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1912.
Pes Week, 10 Cents
BIGGEST
TER DAY C
IS WELCOMED BY
ENTEKPK
ROWD
OREGON
CITY
TODAY
TRANSPORT SENT
MiEUS
REFUGEES WHO DESIRE TO
LEAVE MEXICO WILL BE
PICKED UP.
URGENT APPEALS MADE FOR HELP
Bandits And Rebels, It Is Feared,
Might Harm, Them State
Department Will Take
No Chances
WASHINGTON... April.. 26. The
Army transport Buford will leave San
Francisco Sunday night for the west
coast of Mexico to pick up any Amer
ican refugees who may wish to leave
the country. The Buford will visit
Topolobampo, Altata Mazatlan, in the
State of Sinaloa; San Bias, Tepic
Manzanillo, in Colima, and Acapulco
in Guerrero.
The vessel is sent at the request of
the State Department, after urgnt ap
peals from many Americans stranded
in the states bordering the Pacific.
Since the rebels began to make
headway in their operations along the
Pacific Coast, communication has
been cut with many interior towns
where Americans reside. This has
left the State Department without
information as to their safety, and
this in the face of wanton acts of
bandits and organized rebels.
Constant appeals came to the State
Department to use some methods of
assisting the welfare of these people,
but the officials tried other means to
ward off the necessity of sending a
United States vessel to the Coast.
Today's reports declare the situation
throughout Meixco as generally be
coming worse. Marauders are caus
ing much uneasiness by their activi
ty, i
BODIES OF STRAUS
11
a.
AND ASTOR ARE FOUND
NEW YORK,. April 26. The bodies
of Colonel John Jacob Astor and Isa
dor Straus, the New York millionairs,
who went down with the Titanic,
have been recovered and embalmed
according to a wirless received at
the White Star offices here today
from the Mackay-Bennett, the "cof
fin" ship.
After wirelessing the names of 35
bodies recovered, the message add
ed: "Following have been embalmed:
C. C. Jones, Reg. Butler, H. Harrison
T. W. Newell, John Jacob Astor,
Milton Clong, W. C. Dulles, H. J. Alli
son, George Graham, Jacob Birnbaum
Austin Partner, Pyrol Cavendish,
Henrik Zilner."
JAPANESE TAKE OVER
T
SAN FRANCISCO, April 26. Pres
ent conditions at Magdalena Bay,
Mexico are reported as follows in a
special dispatch to the Examiner from
an expedition of "three staff corres
pondents: "An extensive concession of timber
and agricultural lands, accompanied
by a grant of fishing rights for 700
miles from Manzanilla to Salina Cruz
was obtained through the Japanese
Ambassador to Mexico last year.
Thirty Japanese scientists are now
on the ground, making elaborate sur
veys, among them Katsuyo Tago, of
ficial representative of the Japanese
government. The concession was
made by a private company backed
by Soichiro Aseno, president of the
Oriental Steamship Company, and a
weauthy banker."
It is explained that an expidition
of three men was sent to Magdalena
to investigate reported purchases of
Mexican lands by Japanese interests,
after the matter had been brought up
by a resolution in the United States
Senate asking President Taft for full
information , regarding the supposed
purchases. The dispatch is printed
as a report of the findings of the ex
pedition, and declares that the explor
ations of the Mexican coast are being
made under the direction of men di
rectly connected with the Japanese
Government. The account continues:
"This scientific survey is under the
personal direction of Itpey Yokaya
ma, a member of the Japanese Parlia
ment, vice-president of the Japanese
Mexican Fishery Association, incorp
orated in November" to develop the
fisheries and colonize the islands of
the concession. In the party is Kat
suyo Tago, as the official representa
tive of the Japanese Government.
Soichiro Asano, the Japanese Morgan
president of the Oriental Steamship
Company, is the financial backer of
the colonization and fisheries enter
prise. The concession was abtianed
through the Japanese Ambassaidor to
Mexico, Kumaji Horiguchi.
i1
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES
TO MEET HERE TODAY
Livy Stipp, chairman of the Repub
lican County Central Committee, has
called a meeting of the nominess here
today. An organization will be effect
ed and a plan of campaign decided up
on. 2 Couples Get Licenses
Marriage licenses were issued Fri
day to Agnes Phillips and Leroy R.
Firebugh and Parona Workevicut and
Adolph Kibart.
SUING
omn
5
IGNORED
LEYLAND LNIER SAID TO HAVE
BEEN NEAR WHEN TITANIC
WENT DOWN
SAILOR DECLARES HE SAW ROCKETS
Vessel Few Miles Away, Stopped And
Remained Stationery For Three
Hours Story
Corroborated
WASHINGTON, April 26. Sworn
testimony going far to show that not
a single life need, have been lost
when the Titanic went down had not
a passing liner ignored the distress
signals and rockets of the dying lin
er, wa3 given today before the Unit
ed States senate investigating com
mittee, which is probing the great sea
horror. Two seamen, one from the
Titanic and one from the Leyland
liner California, told the story. They
agreed absolutely that a great ship
passed the crippled Titanic at a time
when moments meant lives and that
the rockets sent up by the great ship
went absolutely unheeded though the
other vessel was a scant score of
miles away or less.
Ernest Gill, a donkeyman, aboard
the Californian swore that from its
deck he plainly saw the Titanic's roc
kets and declared that the whole
crew commented on the fact that the
Californian's wireless operator was
allawed to sleep when it was plain
a vessel in distress was near.
Gill's testimony was given strength
by evidence given before Senator
Fletcher by John Buley, a seaman
survivor of the Titanic. Buley de
clared: "A ship was near when the Titanic
struck and passed by us. We thought
it was coming to us. If it had done
so we should all have been saved.
The vessel, which was only about
three miles away, had all her lights
burning. It couldn't have helped see
ing ou rockets. In fact, the ship was
close enough to see the Titanic her
self. I saw her from the Titanic's
deck. We told the passengers "there
is a steamer coming to our assist
ance.' 1 think that's what kept them
quiet.
"The vessel came bow on, then
stopped and remained stationary for
three hours off our port side. When
we got in the boats we started for her
but she went by us. Positively it
was a boat. It must have been. It
was' too low for a star. We thought
it was coming to get us."
Buley's story was partially corrob
orated by George Rowe, quartermast
er of the Titanic and Frank Osman,
a seaman, who testified before Sena
tor Burton. Both of them, however,
thought the vessel was a sailing ship.
Setbacks for the story came, how
ever, in the testimony of Captain
Stanley Lord and Wireless Operator
Evans of the Californian. Lord de
clared that Gill's statement of what
he saw from the decks of the Cali
fornian was absolutely false.
GENERAL GRANT HAS
NEW YORK, April 26. Military
men and prominent in public and pri
vate life gathered here today to pay
the last honors to Major-General
Frederick Dent Grant, who died here
April 11. The funeral exercises were
deferred until today to await the
arrival of the General's daughter, the
Princess Cantocuzenen, from her
home in Russia.
The services were held in the Chap
el of Cornelius the Centurion on Gov
ernor's Island. The little chapel was
too small to allow the admittance of
the general public, but an opportunity
was given to all New York to pay
its tribute as the long military pro
cession made its way, to the tap of
muffled drums, over a five-mile line
of march from the Battery to the
West Shore ferry at Forty-second
street. There the Government ord
ers provided for a special train to
take the body to West Point for in
terment. President Taft, Vice-presidetn Sher
man and General Leonard Wood were
perhaps the most distinguished per
sons who came to New York for the
funeral. The General's immediate
family- was present including . Mrs.
Grant, her son, Captain U. S. Grant;
her daughter, the Princess Cantacu
zene; the General's sister, Mrs. Nel
lie Grant Sartoris, and also Mrs.
Grant's brother and sister, Judge
Lockwood Honore, of Chicago, and
Mrs. Potter Palmer.
The pall-bearers included Senator
Root, Andrew Carnegie, Henry W.
Taft, General Tasker, H. Bliss, Gen
eral Horace Porter, General William
Crozier, General T. H. Barry, Gener
al H. G. Sharpe, Hamilton Fish, H.
H. Kohlsaat, Dr. Robert Abbe and
others..
Honorary pallbearers, representing
the military order of the Medal of
Honor were General Daniel S. Sick
les General Horace C. King.
Bishop Samuel Fallows, of Chicago,
and Chaplain E. B. Smith, of Gover
nor's Island, had charge of the ser
vices in the chapeL The honor of
serving as guard to the caisson bear
ing the coffin on the march through
New York City went to an escort
composed of General Bliss, temporar
ily in command of the Department of
the East, an his staff; General C.
F. Roe, of the New York National
Guard, and his staff, and the U. S.
Grant Post of the Grand Army of the
Republic.
MY
SIGNALS
The Beef Trust! "Sorry, ma'am, but
OF GIRL HE LOVED
LOUIS WHITLOCK, FORMERLY
OF OREGON CITY, KILLS
MRS BELLAIR
SLAYER PLEADS- SELF-DEFENSE
Uncle, Who Adopted Boy, Was Coun
ty Clerk Here About Fifteen
Years Ago--Lad
Is Defiant
Louis Whitlock, eighteen years of
age, who shot and killed Mrs. Marg
aret Beilair in Portland Friday be
cause she objected to his marrying her
fifteen-year-old daughter, Harriet,
formerly lived in Oregon City. He
was adopted when a small boy by his
uncle, W. T. Whitlock, ex-county
clerk oi Clackamas county. Mr. Whit
lock moved to Portland about fifteen
years ago. He is a member of a
prominent pioneer, family. The youth
went, tci thf nnartmATits nrvnnipH hv
Mrs. Beilair at 432 Stark Street and
fired five shots at her, killing her in- j
stantly. j
Whitlock then rushed with the smok-1
ing revolver still in his hands into the
street, where he ran into the arms of I
Julius Knispel and Sam Mandich, who j
held him until the arrival of the po-1
lice. I
The shots attracted the attention !
of Mrs. L. Gregory, the landlady at
the house, and it was her screams
of "Muider, he has killed her,' that
attracted Mandich and Knispel.
Police headquarters were notified.
Detectives Swenness and Maloney
were rushed to the scene. Whitlock
was turned over to Captain Moore
and taken to detective headquarters,
while Swenness and Maloney took
charge of the woman's remains.
Although the boy goes under the
name of Lew Whitlock, he is the
step-brother of Albert Lewis, thehus
band of Mrs. Bellair's oldest daughter
May. The youngest daughter, Gladys
was in the house when the shots were
firet and was thefirst to reach heis
mother. As soon as possible after
the shooting, Harriet, who is em
ployed in the auditing department at
Meier & Frank's was sumoned to her
home where she strongly denounced
her suitor. Albert Lewis the wom
an's son-in-law, was in jail recently
on complaint of his wife for abusing
their young baby.
Mrs. Beilair owned an interest in
the B. & B. Dye Works at 425 Stark
Street.
Mandich was talking to Knispel,
who drives a dye works wagon, about
a suit when the slayer, -after firing
the fatal shots, fled from the house.
Mrs. Beilair was a widow, forty-two
years of age, and had lived in Port
land for Beveral years. Three daught
ers, Mrs. May Lewis, Harriet, fifteen
years old, Gladys eleven years old,
and one son, Harry, survive her.
At the police station Whitlock said
that his real name was Lew "Torbit
"I am pround of what I have done,
not especially " for my sake but on
account of the girls," said young
Whitlock, at the city jail. "Let the
law takes its course, I am willing, "
he added, cooly refilling his pipe
which he smoked incessantly follow
ing his arrest
"I was attacked by the woman who
had a butcher knife. I feel that my
act was justified."
Young Whitlock purchased the re
volver at a store at First and Madi
son streets. He said he bought the
weapon before he visited the home,
"because she had a temper and I
knew would not hesitate to harm me."
Whitlock is a teamster and a fruit
packer. His real name is Lou Torbit
He and hir brother were left orphans
Lou was adopted by his uncle, W. T.
Whitlock, of Berkeley, near South
Portland, when he was two weeks old
and took the name" of Whitlock. His
brother was adopted by their grand
mother, Mrs. Rose Louis, and was
MURDERS
MOTHER
AFTER THE JURY'S VERDICT.
prices are up a little. I've been having
COPYRIGHT HARRIS ft EWING. WASH.
SENATOR HENRY A. DUPONT, Of
Deleware, whose election as United
States Senator is in question.
named Albert Louis. He is a son-in-law
of the woman whom Whitlock
killed. .
BABY ARE DEAD
Mrs. Pearlie Stromer, wife of James
Stromer, of Marion Avenue, Sellwood,
died Thursday evening. The funeral
will be held at the Baptist church,
Sellwood, tomorrow afternoon at 1
o'clock.
Mrs. Stromer was formerly Miss
Pearlie Tamblyn, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James Tamblyn of Oregon
City. She and an infant, which died
at birth will be buried in the same
grave. Mrs. Stromer was married
about two years ago, and was twenty
one years of age. She is survived by
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Tam
blyn of Oregon City, and a brother
and siater, also of this city and her
husband.
HURT TWICE SAME DAY,
HE GETS GOOD VERDICT
The jury in the damage suit at N.
J. Sundergard against the Oregon
Electric Friday awarded the plaintiff
a verdict of $3,800. He sued for $25,
000". While working for the defend
ant November 11, 1910 Sundergard
fell from a. trestle near Wilsonville,
his right leg being injured. He was
placed upon cushions in a car and
hurried to Portland for medical treat
ment As the carpentered the city
it collided head on with another, and
the man's injured leg was broken in
three places. He was thrown from
the cushions against a seat and the
sides of the car. Judge Campbell
held that only the suit against the
company for injuries received in fall
ing from the trestle could be tried
in this county, and an interesting
feature of the case was the effort to
show the seriousness of the injuries
received in the first accident It is
understood that Sundergard will file
suit in Multnomah county for dam
ages as a result of the injuries re
ceived in the . second accident The
plaintiff was represented by Dimick
& Dimick and H. Daniels.
SHOW TO BE HELD JUNE 8
The Rose Show Society announced
Friday that the , annual exhibition
would be held June 8. It is believed
that the roses will be in full bloom
by that time and the exhibition will
be the finest ever held in this city.
The program, classes, and entry rules
will be announced in a few days. -
How strong are you going ia the
support of your candidate in the En
terprise automobile contest?
some extra heavy expenses lately."
ENTERPRISE
OPEN
TOB00STERCR0WD
CANDIDATES IN AUTO RACE URG
ED TO MAKE OFFICE THEIR
HEADQUARTERS
PLANT TO BE IN FULL OPERATION
Manager Will Show Contestants And
Friends How Dailey Paper Is
'Made Votes Are Doubled
Today
$"$$?$$$$$
8 STANDING OF CANDIDATES 8
$ Ruby McCord 119,200 $
S Joseph Sheahan 47,200 S
Kent Wilson 28,600
S John Brown 15,000 $
S John Weber 6,800
John Haleston 6,000 &
A. G. Kindler 7,200 8
The Enterprise will today throw
its office and plant open to the candi
dates in the big automobile contest
and their friends. The candidates are
urged to make the office of the paper
their headquarters while in the city.
They are further invited to bring
their friends with them. The paper's
plant will be open for inspection, and
the contest manager is desirous of
having every visitor of the city see
how the only daily between Portland
and Salem is published. He believes
it will not only aid the paper but will
aid the county. ""There is no better
medium for advertising a community
than in the columns of a daily paper
like the. Enterprise. Because you re
ceive your copy every day or read
neighbor's copy you have come to
accept it as a matter of course. But,
Honest Injun, wouldn't the county be
in a sorry pligth now without a daily?
The candidates in the great race,
which is attracting attention through
out the county, undoubtedly will reap
a harvest of votes today. The visit
ors will have plenty of money, and
most of them will spend it freely.
Those who are not subscribers for
the Enterprise will want to subscribe
for- it today. The contestants will
have no trouble in obtaining scores
of subscriptions. All they have to
do is to mingle with the crowd. And
after the votes have been obtained
all the entrants will have to do is to
bring them to theofnce of the Enter
prise and be given credit for twice
as many ballots as were polled.. This
is double vote day, and the indica
tions are that all ballots held in re
serve will be brought from their hid
ing places. The contest manager de
sires to say that it will be to the in
terest of all the candidates to poll all
reserve votes today, for there is no
probability that another double vote
day will b decided upon.
HUMPS PLAYS HAVOC
WITH CANBY BAND
The mumps has captured Canby.
Prominent business men are the vict
ims. The epidemic is singular, hut
it has plural aspects, inasmuch as it
is no respector of personages. Mem
bers of the Canby band with one or
two exceptions, are sufferers. It
seems that the trombone player
bought a new instrument No one
knew that he had suffered from the
dread disease a few days ago, and all
the members of the band "tried" the
trombone. Result: most of them con
tracted the mumps. Among the vict
ims are W. H. Bair, the commission
merchant; Chester Wills, merchant;
John Hurst, electrician and Ralph
Knight J. Alba Sagar, the -leader
has quarantined the trombone. He
escaped infection, and the reason is
he came from Oklahoma.
INDUSTRIAL CELEBRATION
TO ESTABLISH NEW RECORD
$$SSSS8S$
8 $
S PROGRAM $
$ 9:00 A. M. Oregon City Band
$ of Thirty Pieces, 7th and Main
streets. $
$ 9:30 A. M. Arrival Oak Grove $
8 Girls Band 4th and Main streets.
S 10:00 A. M. Big Horse Pa
$ rade, moves from 3rd and Main-8
streets to 12th and Main and re-
turns.
$ 10:01 A. M. Arrival of Dem
3 onstration train from the Ore
8 gon Agriculture College. On sid- 3
near S. P. Depot Do not fail to
see it 3
S 11:00 A. M. Base Ball Game $
between Fountain Hose Co. No. $
1 and Green Point Hose Co. No. $
5, Canemah Park.
' i:uu a. m. Horse judging,
S 4th and Main. $
S 11:00 A. M. Concert, Oak S
Grove Girl's Band, court, house
S lawn. '
$ 11:15 Slide for life by Dare
$ Devil Minor from suspension S
bridge across ' the Willamette 3
river. 3
12:45 P. M. Wire s walking, $
S Head, Balancing and other per- $
3 formances by Minor the Wonder $
Q at 5th-and Main Streets.
1: 00 P. M. Address 6y Dr. S
S Jas. Withycombe, director Ore-
S gon Experiment Station, court $
$ house steps. Dr. Withycombe has
-$ addressed more farmers than
any man in Oregon, do not fail 3
S to hear him. $
-S 1:15 P. M. Address by Hon. S
Grant B. Dimick and other prom-
nent speakers, heralding the $
$ 'Coming of the Clackamas South
$ em.' " $
2:00 P.M. The Grand Parade $
s of Automobiles, the first in
i Clackamas County, leaving 13th. $
and Main streets and passing to
S 3rd-and Main and return. This J
3 parade to' be headed by the first 3
and only Automobile Band in the J
state. 8
S 3:00 P. M. Grand Concert,
$ Oregon City Concert band, R. V. 8
$ D. Johnston, director, court ?
house lawn. - 8
5 3:00 P. M. Hose Cart Races S
$ between Oregon City Compan- S
$ ies. No. 1 Hub and Hub race. $
$ No. 2 Wet Contest between 8th $
$ and 10th streets.
$ Companies competing, Fount- $
ain No. 1, Cataract No. 2, Hill S
5 No. 3, Mountain View No. 4, 3
3 Green Point No. 5.
3:00 P. M.-r-Base Ball game be- S
S tween Estacada and Oregon
S City High Schools, Canemah $
$ Park. S
S 3:30 P. M. Organization of S
J Clackamas County Automobile 5
3 Club, Commercial Club rooms,
S Masonic building, M. D. Latour- S
3 ette, presiding. $
$ 4:00 P. M. Drill of the Oak
Grove Girls Band, court house S
s lawn.
J Dance afternoon and evening, S
$ Busch's Hall.
$ " '
SUIT IS ON TRIAL
The damage suit of W. F. Schooley,
the real estate broker, against the
Portland Railway, Light & Power
Company is on trail before Judge
Campbell and a jury. The plaintiff
who is represented by Brownell &
Stone, alleges that he was seriously
injured October. 27, 1911 when an
automobile in which he was riding,
was struck by a car belonging to the
defendant 'company at Seventeenth
an Main street, this city. Schooley
alleges that he sustained permanent
injuries. He asks for $10,000 amages.
J. E. Hedges represents the defend
ant BROTHERHOOD TO GIVE
BALL THIS EVENING
The first annual ball of the Modern
Brotherhood of America will be held
this evening at Busch's hall. Music
will be furnishe by the Philharmonic
Band, and refreshments will be serv
ed. It is believed that the ball will
establish a new recor for attenance.
The time to read the Morning En-
terprise is at the breakfast table enterprise is at the breakfast table or"
a little before. a little before.
No. 172.
REPORT OF
THE BANK OF OREGON GIT Y
at Oreaon City in the State of Oregon, at the close of business April 18th,
Resources
Loans and discounts $150,722.61
Overdrafts, secured ana un
secured 2,007.87
Bonds and warrants 386,930.93
Banking house 28,646.40
Furniture and fixtures .... 5,202.62
Other real estate owned.. 8,257.40
Due from ap
proved reserve
banks .$372,420.60
Check3 and other
cash items . . 563.10 489,818.58
Cash on hand . . 116,834.88
Total .$1,071,586.41
STATE OF OREGON, County of Clackamas, ss.
I, E. G. Caufield, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
E. G. CAUFIELD, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 26th day of April, 1912.
E. H. COOPER, Notary Public.
- " - Correct attest:
CHARLES H. CAUFIELD,
GEO. A. HARDING,
fr ?l f"!
(Seal) ' .
I;.
GREAT HORSE PARADE, JUDGING
AND'MUSIC, FEATURES OF
MORNING PROGRAM
FIRE COMPANIES WILL PLAY BALL
James Withycombe, Mayor Dimick
And Others To Deliver Address
es Dance Arranged
For Evening
Hail Oregon City and Clackamas
unty! As pretty a city and as fert-
,e a county as ever the sun shone
on will assert themselves today. It
is Booster Day a day that has long
been looked forward to. Just like in
Portland, the Rose Festival is the
time of rejoicing, or in New Orleans
Mardi Gras is the day of days, or Po
lice Day- in New York when thousands
of "The Finest" in their blue raiment
parade Fifth Avenue, from Washing
ton Square to Sherman's statue, this
is the annual event hereabouts, and
right merrily, as the Elks say. will
it be observed.
It is fitting that Clackamas County
and Oregon City should have such
a celebration. With land so fertile
that all the effort necessary is to
tickle it with a hoe to have it laugh
with a harvest, with men and women
so energetic and so resourceful that v
no matter where they might go they
would, be leaders, with a patriotic
people modest yet assertive enough to
proclaim to the world that they have
the besc that Creator of all has giv
en to the human family, is there any
wonder that once in a twelvemonth,
these people assemble in the great
capital of the West, for such it once
was, and felicitate themselves upon
their good fortune in having been
drawn to Buch a land?
The exercises will start at 9 o'clck
and continue until long after dark.
One of the features of the program
will be the big horse parade given
in the morning. The demonstration
train of the Oregon Agricultural Col
lege will arrive at 10 o'clock and re
main in the city until Sunday morn
ing. Industrial exhibits will be ar
ranged in tents along Main street and
music will. be furnished by the Ore
gon City Band of 30 pieces and the
Oak Grove Girls' Band. There will
be a "slide for life" from the suspen
sion bridge, wire walking, head bal
ancing, addresses by Dr. James With
ycombe, director of the Oregon Exper
iment station; Mayor Dimick, and in
the afternoon an automobile parade.
Other features of the celebration will
be baseball games, fire drills, and
judging of horses.
The indications are that the largest
crowd in the history of this historic
city will be here today, an there is
no question that the celebration will
be the finest M. J. Lazelle, secre
tary of the Promotion Department of
the Commercial Club, who has charge
of the Booster Day arrangements, in
formed the Morning Enterprise late
last night that everything was in read
iness for the great event. That Main
street will be thronged virtually all
day is assured. Improvised benches
have been arranged all along the thor
oughfare and Windows are at a prem- .
ium. The weather forecaster gives
an encouraging report, and with a
clear sky above the beautiful city by
the Fails of the Willamette all day,
the greatest booster celebration in
the history of the county seat is as
sured. ' The time to read tfce Morsmg En
THE CONDITION OFTHE
Capital stock paid in $ 50,000.00
Surplus fund 50,000.00
Undivided profits, less ex- -penses
and taxes paid .. 23,023.38
Individual depos-
its subject to
check $629,146.96
Demand certifi
cates oi deposit 112,692.46
Certified check.. 5.00 948,563.03
Time certificates
ot deposit 86.308.26
Savings deposits 120,410.35
Total $1,071,586.41
: T. L. CHARMAN, " ,
, Directors.